LTV Steel Company, Inc. (“LTV Steel”), and three wholly owned subsidiaries, BCNR Mining Corporation, Nemacolin Mines Corporation and Tuscaloosa Energy Corporation . (collectively, with LTV Steel, “LTV”), appeal from a judgment of the district court encompassing two separate decisions. The first decision held that LTVs obligations under the Coal Industry Retiree Health Benefit Act of 1992 (“Coal Act”), Pub.L. No. 102-486,106 Stat. 2776, 3036-3056, were not pre-petition claims that must be disallowed under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In re Chateaugay Corp.,
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The roots of this controversy stretch back to 1946, when the United Mine Workers of America (“UMWA”) launched a strike over the issue of health and pension benefits. When labor/management negotiations collapsed, President Truman invoked his powers under the War Labor Disputes Act and.ordered Secretary of the Interior Julius A. Krug to take possession of the nation’s mines for one year. See Exec. Order No, 9728, 11 Fed.Reg. 5593 (1946); see also Exec. Order No. 9758, 11 Fed.Reg. 7927 (1946). Seeking a rapid resumption of production at the idled mines, Krug negotiated with UMWA Presi- ■ dent John L. Lewis to establish terms and conditions for the period of government control. The resulting Krug-Lewis Agreement established an unprecedented system for providing health and pension benefits to workers at the center of which stood two separate, industry-wide benefit funds. The first, the Welfare and Retirement Fund, was financed by a flat five-cent fee levied on each ton of mined coal and was jointly governed by representatives of the UMWA and the federal government. The second, the Medical and Hospital Fund, depended solely on miner-approved wage deductions and was administered by trustees appointed by the UMWA. The following year, the UMWA and the major mining companies agreed to make permanent the existence of the funds, though in different form. Marking the return of the mines to their corporate owners, the National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement of 1947 merged the two Krug-Lewis funds into a single entity, the United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund. Perhaps unavoidably, various disputes between the UMWA and the coal operators accompanied the new fund’s first several years of operation, generating labor unrest and periodic strikes.
In 1950, a successor National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreement (“NBCWA”) was negotiated by the UMWA and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association (“BCOA”), a newly formed multiemployer association of major coal companies.
Until 1971, the successor NBCWAs and related amendments left essentially untouched the operation of the 1950 W & R
Second, and perhaps most significantly, the 1974 Wage Agreement included an explicit promise that health benefits would be provided to covered retired miners, their spouses, and certain dependents for life. For example, the 1974 Wage Agreement provision for past retirees stated:
Any pensioned miner covered in this Plan will retain his Health Services card until death, and upon his death his widow will retain a Health Services card until her death or remarriage.
1974 Wage Agreement, at 99; JA 247.
Ironically, the 1978 negotiations between the UMWA and BCOA resulted in the partial dismantling of the 1974 benefit scheme. In simplest terms, the parties agreed to shift from a centralized multiemployer benefit trust to a decentralized scheme in which each signatory operator established and financed its own individual health benefit delivery plan. Each post-1975 retiree was assigned to the single-employer plan operated by his or her last employer. Pre-1976 retirees continued to receive their benefits from the mul-tiemployer 1950 Benefit Trust. The 1974 Benefit Trust was also retained, but with the sharply limited mission of providing health benefits to the so-called “orphans”: UMWA retirees whose last employer had gone out of
Unlike the prior NBCWAs, the 1978 Wage Agreement contained a so-called “guarantee” clause:
Guarantee of 1950 Plans and Trusts and 1974 Plans and Trusts
Notwithstanding any other provisions in this Agreement the Employers hereby agree to fully guarantee the pension and health benefits provided by the 1950 Pension Fund, the 1950 Benefit Fund, the 1974 Pension Fund, the 1974 Benefit Fund and all other benefit plans described in Section (e) of this Article XX during the term of this agreement.
In order to fully fund these guaranteed benefits the BCOA may increase, not decrease, the rate of contributions to be made.... These contributions, which may be adjusted from time to time, shall ■ be made by all Employers signatory hereto during the term of this Agreement.
Id. at 113-14; JA 276-77. This clause obligated signatory mine operators to make sufficient contributions to insure payment of the benefits that had been promised for life in the 1974 Wage Agreement, but only until the expiration of that agreement. Signatories to subsequent National Bituminous Coal Wage Agreements were similarly bound.
In addition, the 1978 Wage Agreement added to the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts “evergreen” clauses which provided:
Any Employer who employed any Participant eligible for coverage under, or who received or receives benefits under, the [1950/1974] Benefit Plan and Trust, or any Employer who was or is required to make, or who has made or makes contributions to the [1950/1974] Benefit Plan and Trust, is obligated and required to comply with the terms and conditions of the [1950/1974] Benefit Trust, as amended from time to time, including, but not limited to making the contributions required under the [1978 Wage Agreement], as amended from time to time, and any successor agreements thereto.
The D.C. Circuit has interpreted these clauses to require coal mine operators who signed the 1978.or a subsequent Wage Agreement and who continue to operate in the mining industry “to contribute to the trusts at the rates specified in the current NBCWA, irrespective of the employer’s failure [to] sign that NBCWA.” UMWA 1974, Pension v. Pittston Co.,
Through its corporate' predecessors, LTV played a central role in the negotiation and implementation of the various NBCWAs and was signatory to each NBCWA through 1984. Olga, Nemacolin, BCNR and Tuscaloosa were signatories through 1984, J & L through 1981, and Youngstown and Republic through 1978.
By the late 1980s, the retiree benefit plans had sunk into deep financial crisis. The sources of the crisis were varied and complex. First, during the 1980s the number of employers contributing to the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts declined, while the number of “orphaned” beneficiaries — that is, those whose former employers no longer made contributions — increased. Following a series of court decisions, the 1974 Benefit Trust found itself liable for the health benefits of a substantially greater population of retirees than its architects had anticipated. See District 29, United Mine Workers of America v. Royal Coal Co. (“Royal Coal I”),
Second, as throughout American industry, the costs of health care rose steeply. Between 1980 and 1990, the total cost of health care benefits paid by the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts doubled from $117.4 million to $245.3 million. In short, an ever-smaller number of mining companies incurred the increasing costs of providing benefits to ever-greater numbers of retirees.
In 1986, LTV became part of this exodus from the mining industry. Along with over fifty subsidiaries and affiliates, LTV filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on July 17, 1986. The Federal Reporters abound with the fallout from LTV’s bankruptcy, and we need not recount its history here. See, e.g., In re Chateaugay Corp.,
By the beginning of the 1990s, the Benefit Trusts had reached an untenable state of financial crisis. The looming insolvency of the Benefit Trusts spurred significant labor strife in the coal fields, culminating in an eleven-month strike against the Pittston Coal Company in 1989. After failed attempts at collective bargaining by the UMWA and Pitt-ston, the Secretary of Labor intervened and brokered a settlement. Responding to the prospect of continuing disruptions in the nation’s coal fields, the Secretary created the Advisory Commission on United Mine Work
In November 1990, the Coal Commission submitted its findings and recommendations to the Secretary. See Coal Commission Report: A Report to the Secretary of Labor and the American People (Nov. 1990), JA 393. At the heart of the Coal Commission’s report was the following finding:
Retired coal miners have legitimate expectations of health care benefits for life; that was the promise they received during their working lives and that is how they planned their retirement years. That commitment should be honored. But today those expectations and commitments are in jeopardy.
Coal Comm. Rpt., at 1, JA 405. Reviewing the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts’ funding crisis, the Commission predicted that, absent legislative action, the trusts would run a combined deficit of $300 million in 1993. Id. at 3, JA 407.
The Coal Commission recommended that all companies signatory to at least one NBCWA, whether or not they continue to engage in mining, should bear the cost of providing health benefits to their own retired miners. Also, the Coal Commission recommended that current and former signatory operators collectively share the cost of the “orphaned” retirees. In the Commission’s view, the fairest method of financing health care for retired miners would combine several key features:
[T]he imposition of a statutory obligation to contribute on current and past signatories, mechanisms to prevent future dumping of retiree health care obligations, authority to utilize excess pension assets and the implementation of state-of-the-art managed care and cost containment techniques.
Id. at 60, JA 464.
After two years of study and deliberation, Congress responded to the Coal Commission’s report by enacting the Coal Act, Pub.L. No. 102^186, 106 Stat. 2776, 3036-56 (codified at 26 U.S.C. §§ 9701-9722). The essential thrust of the Coal Act is “to identify persons most responsible for plan liabilities in order to stabilize plan funding and allow for the provision of health care benefits to [coal miner] retirees.” Id., § 19142(a)(2),
The Act merged the existing 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts into a new private trust fund, the UMWA Combined Benefit Fund (“Combined Fund”). 26 U.S.C. § 9702. Only those retirees actually receiving benefits from the Benefit Trusts as of July 20, 1992, were declared eligible to receive benefits from the Combined Fund. Id., § 9703(f). In allocating financial responsibility for costs of the' Combined Fund, Congress determined that “those companies which employed the retirees in question, and thereby benefited from their services, will be assigned responsibility for providing the health care, benefits promised in their various collective bargaining agreements.” 138 Cong.Rec. S17,603 (daily ed. Oct. 8, 1992) (reproducing proposed conference committee report). Accordingly, Congress directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services to levy annual health insurance and death benefit premiums on each “assigned operator.” 26 U.S.C. §§ 9704, 9705. An “assigned operator” was défined as a signatory to any NBCWA since 1950. Id., § 9701(c)(5). The Secretary of Health and Human Services “assigned” each beneficiary to the signatory operator for whom he or she most recently worked when possible, otherwise to the signatory operator that longest employed the beneficiary. Id., § 9706. Where the signatory operator is no longer in business, the liability for its beneficiaries passes to “related persons,” such as successors in interest. Id., §§ 9704(a), 9701(c)(2). The costs of providing health care benefits to the remaining unassigned “orphans” were divided among the assigned operators in proportion to their share of the assigned beneficiaries. Id., § 9704.
■ To mitigate the financial burden on the coal companies, the Coal Act authorized the transfer to the Combined Fund of certain surplus funds accumulated by the UMWA 1950 Pension Plan and the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund. Over the first two years of the Combined Fund’s operation, the Coal Act directed that $210 million be transferred from the 1950 Pension Fund. As a practical matter, the transfers from the 1950 Pension Plan have entirely eliminated the unassigned “orphan” and death benefit assessments for the first two fiscal years of the Combined Fund’s operation. See Declaration of Donald E. Pierce, Jr., at 5, JA 607. Beginning in 1995, transfers from the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund will reduce the coal companies’ liability for unassigned beneficiaries by up to $70 million each year through 2004. 26 U.S.C. § 9705(b); 30 U.S.C. § 1232(h). To enforce compliance, the Coal Act authorized the Secretary of the Treasury to impose penalties in the nature of taxes on companies failing to meet their obligations under the Act. See 26 U.S.C. § 9707.
The Coal Act became effective on February 1, 1993. For the first full fiscal year, beginning October 1,1993, LTV was assigned a total of 5,667 beneficiaries, or roughly 7% of the 79,650 Combined .Fund assigned beneficiaries. Pierce Declaration at 4, JA 606. The total premium to be paid by LTV that year was $12,727,118.61. Id. at 2, 4, JA 604, 606. By fully covering both the health benefit premiums for the 25,565 unassigned beneficiaries and the death benefit premiums for all beneficiaries, the first $70 million transfer from the 1950 Pension Fund effectively reduced LTVs per beneficiary premium by 18%. Id. at 2, JA 604. After the transfers, the total premiums to be collected by the Combined Fund from all assigned operators in its first full fiscal year of operation totalled $178,880,359.50. Memorandum from Donald E. Pierce, Jr., to LTV Corp., at 1, JA 610.
LTV filed this action on January 23, 1993. The complaint raises both constitutional and bankruptcy law attacks on the validity of the Coal Act as applied to LTV. First, LTV alleges that the Coal Act violated its Fifth Amendment substantive due process rights and that it constituted a taking of private property for public use without just compensation. Second, LTV claims that its Coal Act premiums are pre-petition claims that must be disallowed under applicable bankruptcy law. In two separate decisions, the district court rejected LTVs claims and dismissed the complaint. See In re Chateaugay Corp., 154 B.R. 416 (S.D.N.Y.1993); In re Chateaugay Corp.,
II. CONSTITUTIONALITY OF COAL ACT
LTV alleges two constitutional deficiencies in the Coal Act: first, that the Act violates the Due Process Clause, and second, that the Act constitutes a taking of private property for public use without just compensation.
A. Due Process
Under the due process standards set forth by the Supreme Court, we review laws “adjusting the benefits and burdens of economic life” for arbitrariness and irrationality. Usery v. Turner Elkhorn Mining Co.,
The doctrinal landscape which confronts LTVs due process challenge encompasses unusually inhospitable legal terrain. Since its decision in Railroad Retirement Board v. Alton Railroad Co.,
In Alton, the Supreme Court struck down a statute requiring railroad carriers to provide pension benefits to recently retired employees. While Alton has never been expressly overruled, courts over many years have expressed doubts about.its continuing validity. See, e.g., Peick v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp.,
We need not attempt here a definitive measurement of Alton’s jurisprudential vital signs because the provisions of the Coal Act are easily distinguishable from those of the Railroad Retirement Act. First, the Alton Court found that the pre-enactment railroad retirees, who became eligible for employer-funded pensions under the Railroad Retirement Act, had retired without any expectation, legitimate or otherwise, of receiving pension benefits.
Congress is well within its authority in viewing the history of collective bargaining in the mining industry to determine that operators like these Plaintiffs created an atmosphere that promised lifetime health benefits to those who would retire from the industry. In return, such operators received labor at the time.
Consistent with such findings, the Coal Commission rested its legislative recommendations upon the premise that a legitimate expectation of lifetime health benefits had been created. Coal Comm. Rpt. at vii, 1, JA 397, 405. Accordingly, we hold that, unlike the provisions challenged in Alton, the Coal Act operates to enforce a legitimate expectation generated by the parties in the course of their voluntary contractual relationship.
Second, the Alton Court’s finding of irrationality derived in large part from its finding that, by making benefits available to all those employed by a railroad during the year preceding the statute’s enactment, the Railroad Retirement Act extended pensions “to thousands who have been unfaithful and for that cause have been separated from the service, or who have elected to pursue some other calling, or. who have retired from the business, or who have been for other reasons lawfully dismissed.”
We turn then to an assessment of LTVs claims under the post-Alton economic regulation cases. LTV claims that it is arbitrary and irrational to require a former party to time-limited contracts, whose obligations have been fulfilled and terminated, to now finance the provision of lifetime health benefits not only to former employees but also to a number of retired miners who at no time worked for LTV. Absent the Coal Act, LTV argues that both it and the UMWA miners got what they bargained for: The miners got contributions to the Benefit Trusts during the term of the agreement, and LTV got the right to withdraw from the system upon the expiration of the 1984 Wage Agreement. With the Coal Act, says LTV, the government has not merely rewritten our old contracts with our own former employees, it has created from whole cloth entirely new contracts obligating us to provide lifetime health benefits to retirees we never employed. In short, LTV argues, Congress’s retroactive construction of new liabilities on the .rubble of past acts violates the Due Process Clause, particularly where the parties involved have already fulfilled their contractual obligations to one another.
We agree with LTVs contention that the Coal Act has some retrospective effect. To some degree, the Coal Act “upsets otherwise settled expectations,” and “impose[s] a new duty or liability based on past acts.” Turner Elkhorn,
[T]he strong deference accorded legislation in the field of national economic policy is no less applicable when that legislation is applied retroactively. Provided that the retroactive application of a statute is supported by a legitimate legislative purpose furthered by rational means, judgments about the wisdom of such legislation remain within the exclusive province of the legislative and executive branches.
The Court has cautioned that “[t]he retrospective aspects of legislation, as well as the prospective aspects, must meet the test of due process, and the justifications for the latter may not suffice for the former,” suggesting that, for example, theories of deterrence and punishment may be insufficient to justify the retrospective imposition of liability. Turner Elkhorn,
In Turner Elkhorn, coal miners challenged the constitutionality of provisions of the Black Lung Benefits Act of 1972, 30 U.S.C. §§ 901 — 15, that required operators to pay benefits to miners who. contract pneumoconi-osis and their survivors even if the miners had ceased employment in the coal industry
the imposition of liability for the effects of disabilities bred in the past is justified as a rational measure to spread the costs of the employees’ disabilities to those who have profited from, the fruits of their labor [ — ] the operators and the coal consumers.
In Gray, the Court considered a due process challenge to the retroactive application of the Multiemployer Pension Plan Amendments Act of 1980, 29 U.S.C. §§ 1381-1461 (“MPPAA”), a. statute requiring employers withdrawing from multiemployer pension plans to pay their pro rata share of the plan's vested unfunded liabilities. The Court concluded that Congress was “eminently rational” in imposing the MPPAA’s obligations retroactively in order that employers who withdrew from plans during consideration of the proposed legislation would not thereby achieve any advantage.
LTV’s efforts to distinguish Turner Elk-hom, Gray, and Concrete Pipe are unpersuasive. In essence, LTV suggests that the rational bases accepted by the Court in those cases constitute a closed set of permissible justifications. On the contrary, these cases all reiterate the principle'that retrospective cost-spreading statutes must be upheld if there exists a rational connection between a legitimate legislative purpose and the chosen statutory means.
, We have no difficulty discerning .in the Coal Act a ‘ rational scheme to achieve a legitimate legislative purpose. As the district court below accurately noted, the critical flaw in LTV’s claim “that there is no rational relationship between its past payments for its former employees’ health benefits and the requirement that it now pay for those benefits, and those of certain orphan beneficiaries, for the balance of those beneficiaries’ lives, is that at least between 1974 and 1986, LTV was signatory to a series of NBCWAs that included language that gave retired coal miners a legitimate expectation of lifetime health benefits.” In re Chateaugay,
While LTV might well have expected that other coal operators would be required to pay for those benefits after LTV left the coal mining industry, LTV also could reasonably have anticipated that the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts would not be able to support the financial burdens imposed*491 upon them as a result of escalating health care costs, the aging of the beneficiary population and the “dumping” of beneficiaries into the 1974 Benefit Trust, both by companies going out of business totally and companies who, like LTV, ceased coal mining operations but remained in business in other industries.
Id.
We find eminently rational Congress’s decision to apportion liability for the promised lifetime health benefits among all the companies that collectively made the promise. Cf. National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
In light of the mounting crisis in the UMWA benefit trusts, the resulting strikes and disruptions in the coal fields, and the very real danger that 200,000 retirees would fall onto government assistance unless the coal industry were held to its earlier promises of lifetime health benefits, we hold that Congress acted neither arbitrarily nor irrationally by shifting the burden of the crisis onto those most responsible for creating it. Nor do w.e find evidence of arbitrariness or irrationality in the Coal Act’s formulas for assigning retirees to former employers and for calculating pro rata shares of death benefits and unassigned retiree benefits. Our conclusion is buttressed by Congress’s provision of mitigating transfers that first eliminate and then substantially reduce LTV’s liability for retired miners that LTV never employed.
LTV separately argues that the Coal Act is arbitrary or irrational due to its “unprecedented degree of retroactivity.” LTV Br. at 31. The proposition that the Due Process Clause imposes a time limit on a law’s retrospective effect elicits no support from the case law and runs afoul of the numerous decisions upholding the constitutionality of the unlimited retrospective temporal reach of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-9657. See, e.g., United States v. Monsanto Co.,
B. Takings Clause
We agree with the district court that its exercise of jurisdiction over LTV’s Takings Clause claim was proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331(a). We find no merit to the government’s suggestion that the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a), acts to remove from the federal district courts jurisdiction over an
On their face, the Supreme Court’s decisions on federal Takings Clause jurisdiction have not been consonant. Certain obiter dicta, if taken literally, would preclude our jurisdiction over LTV’s takings claim on grounds of ripeness. See First English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles,
In any event, our jurisdiction over this case is proper in light of the fact that LTV seeks only declaratory relief on its takings claim. As noted above, under the Tucker Act the Federal Claims Court has no jurisdiction where no claim for monetary relief is involved. Given the clear availability of declaratory relief for asserted Takings Clause violations, see Duke Power,
Where a regulation mandates contributions to a benefit fund, the proper yardstick of economic impact is that of proportionality. Our assessment of economic impact “is not made in a vacuum ... but directly depends on the relationship between the employer and the plan to which it had made contributions.” Id.,
LTV’s obligation to contribute to the Combined Fund derives from Congress’s rational decision to require the entire class of signatory coal mine operators to fulfill their promises of lifetime health benefits for retirees. As a leading member of the BCOA, LTV participated in the collective bargaining that created the 1950 and 1974 Benefit Trusts and in their operation for nearly four decades. Moreover, the employment relationship supplies the rational link by which LTV’s Coal Act premiums are tied to its past experience with the benefit plans. As with the other signatory operators, the size of LTV’s annual contribution depends entirely on the number of its former employees receiving benefits from the Combined Fund. By thus mooring a given company’s funding obligations to a legitimate measure of its prior benefit from the UMWA health care system, the Coal Act rationally apportions future financial responsibility according to past participation. Consequently, we are not confronted with a case of Congress “‘forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.’ ” Penn Central,
Furthermore, as .the district court observed, “[t]he fact that [the Coal] Act has provisions intended to mitigate its economic impact also has been, held to be a factor that weighs in favor of its constitutionality.” In re Chateaugay,
Neither do we find that the size of LTV’s Coal Act assessments, viewed in isolation, render the burden constitutionally impermissible. As the district court observed, “very large obligations, or diminutions in value or net worth have been upheld on numerous occasions.” Slip op. at 10-11, JA 27-28 (citing cases). “[M]ere diminution in the value of property, however serious, is insufficient to demonstrate a taking.” Concrete Pipe, — U.S. at -,
The second factor to be considered is the degree to which the Coal Act interferes with LTV’s reasonable investment-backed expectations. As noted above, we believe that LTV could reasonably have expected to be held accountable for its promise of lifetime health benefits to its workers. LTV argues that the Coal Act destroys the legitimate contractual expectations of the parties to the NBCWAs. LTV points out that the Wage Agreements expressly limited the duration of signatory operators’ duty to pay for those promises. Though it is true that LTV’s contractual liability has been held to have terminated at the expiration of the 1984 Wage Agreement, see In re Chateaugay,
“Contracts ... cannot fetter the constitutional authority of Congress. Contracts may create rights of property, but when contracts deal with a subject matter which lies within the control of Congress, they have a congenital infirmity. Parties cannot remove their transactions from the reach of dominant constitutional power by making contracts about them.” Norman v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co.,294 U.S. 240 , 307-08,55 S.Ct. 407 , 416,79 L.Ed. 885 (1935).
If the regulatory statute is otherwise within the powers of Congress, therefore, its application may not be defeated by private contractual provisions. For the same reason, the fact that legislation disregards or destroys existing contractual rights does not always transform the regulation into an illegal taking.
As to the legitimacy of LTV’s alleged expectations, we reject LTV’s contention that it was reasonable to expect to be held no more accountable than society at large for the health care of its retired coal miners. As a voluntary, active participant in the creation and operation of the Benefit Trusts, LTV was familiar with the federal government’s involvement in the regulation of the UMWA and other benefit plans. Against that backdrop, LTV’s claim that it expected to unload its retiree health care liabilities onto the remaining operators without ever paying another dollar rings hollow. In light of the fact that LTV benefitted enormously from the
We turn finally to the nature of the governmental action involved. “It is well settled that a ‘ “taking” may more readily be found when the interference with property can be characterized as a physical invasion by government, than when interference arises from some public program adjusting the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the common good.’ ” Keystone Bituminous Coal Ass’n v. DeBenedictis,
In fact, we find that the Coal Act closely resembles the withdrawal liability provisions of the MPPAA found constitutional in Concrete Pipe, - U.S. at -,
In conclusion, we find that all three factors weigh against a finding that the Coal Act effects an illegal taking. Accordingly, we hold that the Coal Act does not violate the Takings Clause.
III. BANKRUPTCY CLAIMS
In addition to its constitutional challenge, LTV claims that its Chapter 11 bankruptcy protections operate to relieve it of its Coal Act obligations. LTV claims that its Coal Act obligations constitute pre-petition debts which must now be disallowed because no timely proof of claim was filed. The district court analyzed these claims in detail and rejected LTV’s arguments. The district court further held that the assessments under the Coal Act are in the nature of a tax, therefore according administrative priority treatment to those assessments accruing during the bankruptcy period. We agree.
The critical issue before us is the scope of the term “claim” as employed by the Bankruptcy Code. If the Combined Fund’s premium assessment is a “claim” against LTV that existed prior to the filing of the petition, then those premiums must now be disallowed. The Code defines a “claim” as a “right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliqui-dated, fixed, contingent, matured, unma-tured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured.” 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(A). As this court noted in a prior iteration of this case, “Congress unquestionably expected this definition to have wide scope.” In re Chateaugay,
A claim will be deemed pre-petition when it arises out of a relationship recognized in, for example, the law of contracts or torts. “A claim exists only if before the filing of the bankruptcy petition, the relationship between the debtor and the creditor contained all. of the elements necessary to give rise to a legal obligation — ‘a fight to payment’ — under the relevant non-bankruptcy law.” In re National Gypsum Co.,
We reject LTV’s contention that its Coal Act obligations arise out of pre-petition “consideration” for purposes of bankruptcy analysis. LTV argues that its contributions to the Combined Fund represent additional compensation for the labor of its former miners. We disagree. The obligations here at issue are exclusively statutory in origin and cannot be considered a “pay-back” for pre-petition labor. Coal Act premiums are no more compensation for past labor than- were those mandated by the Black Lung Act. Most important, they do not constitute the maturation of a right to payment that vested at the time labor was supplied. LTV’s liability to the Combined Fund is newly imposed by the Coal Act, not á revival of old contractual obligations. No right to payment on the part of the Combined Fund existed until the enactment of the Coal Act six years after the filing of LTV’s petition. Our conclusion in no way narrows the definition of the term “claim,” but rather represents a common sense recognition that its reach is not infinite.
In this case, the distinction between statutory and contractual obligations is of paramount importance. The cases cited by LTV for the proposition that its Coal Act liability constitutes consideration for pre-petition labor all involved unmatured or contingent contractual liabilities. See, e.g., PBGC v. LTV Corp.,
Our conclusion is supported by the courts’ treatment of CERCLA liability in similar bankruptcy cases. In Matter of Penn Central Transp. Co.,
(a) An involuntary pecuniary burden, regardless of name, laid upon the individuals or property;
(b) Imposed by, or under authority of the legislature;
(c) For public purposes, including the purposes of defraying expenses of government or undertakings authorized by it;
(d) Under the police or taxing power of the state.
In re Lorber Indus. of California, Inc.,
In sum, we agree with the district court that “the Coal Act obligations are appropriately described as ‘taxes’ due to their overwhelmingly involuntary nature, their explicitly stated public purpose, and their obvious potential to be imposed pursuant to the taxing power.”
IV.- CONCLUSION
We hold today that the Coal Act neither violates LTV’s due process rights nor effects an illegal taking of property without just compensation.
The judgments below are affirmed and the ease is dismissed.
Notes
. The four original members of the BCOA were Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation ("J & L”), Youngstown Sheet and Tube Corporation (“Youngstown”), Republic Steel Corporation ("Republic”), and Olga Coal Company ("Olga”). Each of these companies was represented on the first BCOA Board of Directors in 1950. In 1984, LTV Steel was formed by the merger of J & L, Youngstown, and Republic; in addition, LTV Steel currently owns the majority interest in Olga.
. For purposes of simplicity, and where appropriate, we hereafter use the terms “retiree,” "employee” and "retired miner” to include all related qualified beneficiaries, including spouses, widows, and dependents.
. The 1952 amendments raised the signatory operators' contribution to forty cents per ton of coal mined. Also, the 1964 amendments levied a fee of eighty cents per ton of coal purchased by signatory operators from non-UMWA coal mines.
. Citations to "JA_" refer to the parties’ Joint Appendix.
. In Duke Power, a case concerning a statutoiy limit on utility liability for nuclear disasters, the Court stated:
Mr. Justice Rehnquist [in dissent] suggests that appellees' "taking” claim will not support jurisdiction under § 1331(a), but instead that such a claim can be adjudicated only in the Court of Claims under the Tucker Act. We disagree. Appellees are not seeking compensation for a taking, a claim properly brought in the Court of Claims, but are now requesting a declaratory judgment that since the [challenged statute] does not provide advance assurance of adequate compensation in the event of a taking, it is unconstitutional. As such, appel-lees' claim tracks quite-closely that of the petitioners in the Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases .... which were brought under § 1331 as well as the Declaratoiy 'Judgment Act.... While the Declaratory Judgment Act does not expand our jurisdiction, it expands the scope of available remedies. Here it allows individuals threatened with a taking to seek a declaration of the constitutionality of the disputed governmental action before potentially uncom-pensable damages are sustained.
. Of course, at this point it is by no means clear that the Combined Fund constitutes part of the federal government. For purposes of establishing jurisdiction we need only determine whether “ 'the cause of action alleged is so patently without merit as to justify ... the court’s dismissal for want of jurisdiction.’" Hagans v. Lavine,
. In connection with our jurisdictional holding, we emphatically reject the government's suggestion that the district court could " 'assume' subject matter jurisdiction for purposes of finding the statute constitutional." Brief of Donna E. Shalala, at 38 (citing Browning Ferris Indus. v. Muszynski,
. Our decision is thus consistent with the rulings of every other court to examine the constitutionality of the Coal Act. See Barrick Gold Exploration, Inc. v. Hudson,
