RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION v. BANKERS TRUST CO., TRUSTEE.
Nos. 387-388
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Argued January 8, 1943. Decided February 8, 1943.
318 U.S. 163
Briefs of amici curiae were filed by Solicitor General Fahy and Messrs. Daniel W. Knowlton and Daniel H. Kunkel on behalf of the Interstate Commerce Commission; by Messrs. Fred N. Oliver and Willard P. Scott on behalf of the Mutual Savings Bank Group on New Haven Railroad Bonds; and by Mr. Hermon J. Wells on behalf of Howard S. Palmer et al., Trustees, urging reversal; by Mr. H. C. McCollom on behalf of the Irving Trust Co., urging affirmance; and by Mr. Frank C. Nicodemus, Jr., on behalf of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co. et al.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This controversy arises in a proceeding under
The Commission approved a plan of reorganization, and the District Court, with the plan before it, directed the filing of all petitions for allowance of “compensation for services rendered or for expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) incurred either under clause (12) of subsection (c) of Section 773 ... or otherwise ...”
The respondent filed two such petitions, numbered respectively 266 and 267, each praying stated amounts as compensation for services as indenture trustee, for counsel fees, and for expenses. The sums named and the services recited in the two petitions were identical, but in 267 the compensation was claimed under
In 266 the respondent alleged that the services had “not been rendered or incurred ‘in connection with the proceedings and plan’ ” for reorganization, but by respondent as trustee under the mortgage in performance of its fiduciary duties, for the benefit of the trust estate, as distinguished from the debtor‘s estate.
Over opposition by petitioner, a creditor and an intervenor, the court ruled that
The court refrained from passing on this portion of the Commission‘s report. The petitioner appealed from the order in 266, and the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment.5 Due to the importance of the questions raised in the administration of the statute and a conflict of decision,6 we granted certiorari.
Section
The questions presented are: (1) does the subsection apply to the respondent‘s claims, and (2) if it does, is it valid? We answer both in the affirmative.
First. The respondent contends that the expenses and services for which compensation was allowed were not those referred to in
The basis of the contention and of the decision below is that the services and expenses in question are “not within the meaning of” the subsection as the claim for their allowance is based upon the contract expressed in the mortgage9 and is for services required by the mortgage
The subsection applies in terms to allowance of claims such as those here in issue. No legislative history is cited to the contrary. The statute deals with other claims arising out of contract and secured by liens fixed or inchoate, and no basis is suggested for excluding the respondent‘s claim from its sweep.
Second. The main argument advanced in support of the judgment is that to apply
Three diverse conclusions respecting the effect of
None of these views seems to us rightly to construe the statute. We think the Congress did not intend to deny the courts all power of review of Commission action in such cases. The statute plainly requires reference to the Commission of claims of the class under consideration, a hearing by that body, the setting of a maximum and action by the court on the footing of the Commission‘s report. It does not contemplate a hearing de novo on the issue of the reasonable worth of the services rendered or the propriety of the expenses incurred, or a reappraisal by the court of the facts. Moreover the procedure suggested by petitioner does not comport with the evident purpose of
Thus understood, we find no infirmity in the statute. The committal to the Commission of the fact finding office raises no substantial question under the
At law the jury‘s verdict settles issues of fact and defines rights, subject only to questions of law. In administrative procedure, the findings of the administrative body may likewise be made conclusive of fact issues, and equally define rights and duties subject only to questions of law. No question is made as to the competency of the Interstate Commerce Commission to appraise evidence and to draw an informed and intelligent conclusion as to what is a
To prescribe a method of trial of facts, subject to a court‘s supervision in matters of law, is not, as respondent suggests, to destroy vested rights, but to provide a method of appraising and liquidating them. The statute awards the claim priority of payment, so that respondent is not called upon, as are some other classes of creditors, to suffer an abatement of its claim.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the District Court with instructions to proceed in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring:
While I concur in the result and in most of the opinion of the Court, I am in disagreement with the majority on one phase of the case.
I do not think that the maximum allowance made by the Commission for fees and expenses is subject to review by the District Court. Sec.
That construction also squares with other provisions of
It is of course the duty of the Commission not only to fix the maximum amount of the aggregate allowances for fees and expenses but also to determine in the first instance how much each claimant should receive. That is made evident not only by subsection (c) (12) but also by subsection (d) which requires the Commission in its approval of a plan to find that it meets the requirements of subsections (b) and (e). The latter, as has been noted, requires that the amounts to be paid by the debtor or the reorganized company for expenses and fees be “reasonable” as well as “within such maximum limits as are fixed by the Commission.” Since the main services rendered in connection with a plan of reorganization under
My conclusion that the aggregate maximum allowances fixed by the Commission are not reviewable does not make
MR. JUSTICE BLACK joins in this opinion.
