Freeman v. Mulcahy

250 F.2d 463
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1957
DocketNos. 5194-5199
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 250 F.2d 463 (Freeman v. Mulcahy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Mulcahy, 250 F.2d 463 (1st Cir. 1957).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

These are appeals from two orders entered by the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in a proceeding for the reorganization of the Boston & Providence Railroad Corporation under Section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, 47 Stat. 1474, as amended, 11 U.S. C.A. § 205. One order approved a plan of reorganization for the debtor-railroad; the other classified the securities of the railroad for the purposes of voting on the plan.

The Boston & Providence Railroad Corporation (B & P, or the debtor hereinafter) was chartered in 1831. In 1888 it leased all of its properties, including its locomotives and rolling stock, for a term of 99 years to the Old Colony Railroad Company. Since that time it has not operated over its lines or carried on any railroad operations of any character. In 1893 Old Colony leased its properties and assigned its rights under its B & P lease, also for 99 years, to the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company which in one capacity or another has operated the B & P properties ever since.

On October 23, 1935, the New Haven filed a petition in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut alleging that it was unable to meet its debts as they matured and that it desired to effect a plan of reorganization under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, supra. On the same day the Court approved the petition as properly filed and two weeks later it appointed three trustees to manage and operate the railroad’s properties. These appointments were approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission on November 30,1935. 212 ICC 75.

At the time New Haven went into reorganization its operating system consisted of 19 different segments. It owned 11 of these segments and operated 8, including the B & P property, under leases. The 11 owned segments were subject to 10 different underlying mortgages, and there was also a First and Refunding Mortgage which constituted a first lien on some parts of the road and a junior lien on others.

Because of the separate legal rights in the several segments of the system it was necessary for the purposes of reorganization for the New Haven to allocate to each segment its fair share of the reve-[466]*466núes and expenses of the system as a whole. To this end the Trustees, as contemplated in § 77, sub. c(10), undertook financial studies in which they were assisted by the New Haven staff and experts representing creditor groups of both New Haven and Old Colony. These studies soon indicated that the Old Colony lease was a burden to the New Haven system and in June, 1936, the Trustees by court order rejected it.1 The Trustees at that time, however, did not reject the B & P lease even though their preliminary studies indicated that its property was also being operated at a loss. Indeed, in spite of these apparent losses, the New Haven directors on June 1, 1937, filed a plan of reorganization for their road in which they proposed that the reorganized New Haven assume the B & P lease. Hearings were held by the Commission on this plan between July and November, 1937, at which B & P and other interested parties intervened. No plan, however, was approved at that time.

While hearings on this plan were in progress, on October 6, 1937, the trustee under New Haven’s First and Refunding Mortgage, asserting that operation of the B & P properties was a burden on the New Haven system, petitioned the District Court in Connecticut for an order directing the New Haven Trustees to cease making payments under the B & P lease. The Court issued an order on Old Colony and B & P to show cause why the petition should not be granted, and also to show cause, if any they had, why the Court should not forthwith refer to the Interstate Commerce Commission a segregation formula devised by the New Haven Trustees on the basis of their financial studies to the end that the Commission after due consideration might transmit it recommendations to the Court as to the method or formula by which New Haven system earnings and expenses should be segregated and allocated between its separate segments. On October 21, 1937, B & P, which had intervened generally in the New Haven proceedings the preceding May, filed an answer opposing the mortgage trustee’s petition and challenging the New Haven Trustees’ segregation formula, and thereupon the Connecticut Court pursuant to § 77, sub. c(10), referred the formula to the Commission for its consideration and report.

After hearings in which B & P participated actively, the Commission, on April 9, 1938, by its Division 4, filed a detailed report wherein it gave full consideration to the Trustees’ formula, and the criticisms leveled at it by B & P and other interested parties. The Commission recognized that the formula had defects and deficiencies. It nevertheless said it was of the opinion that in view of the “(e)haracter of the debtor’s operations, involving short hauls and heavy terminal expenses, * * * the trustees’ method is well adapted to the debtor’s system,” and then the Commission went on to say: “Considering all available data as well as the criticisms thereof, we find that the trustees’ method of segregation and allocation of the debtor’s revenues and expenses between and to its various mortgaged and leased lines is as fair and equitable as the circumstances will permit.” Wherefore the Commission recommended the New Haven Trustees’ formula to the reorganization Court. But in doing so the Commission was careful to state that its “recommendations herein are in no wise intended to express any views with respect to the use of the results obtained from the application of the formula or the weight to be given such results.”

■ On May 25, 1938, the Connecticut Court, after reciting that all parties had been given an opportunity to file exceptions but had not done so, and that all parties had been heard or given an opportunity to be heard, entered an order affirming and accepting the Commission’s findings and recommendation. No appeal [467]*467was taken from this order, but on July 8, 1938, B & P filed a petition to reopen the record of facts. This petition was not pressed and was orally denied without exception on July 15, and on July 19, 1938, the Court, after reciting the above facts, entered an order over the objection of B & P wherein it directed the Old Colony Trustees and the New Haven Trustees, who were the same, immediately to stop payment of the rental reserved in the B & P lease to Old Colony and to disaffirm and reject it, but ordering the New Haven Trustees pursuant to § 77, sub. c(6) to continue to operate the B & P properties for its account “without expense to the New Haven estate.”

The resultant loss of income to B & P prevented it from meeting its obligations on its debentures and the holder thereof, The Provident Institution for Savings in the Town of Boston,8 on August 4, 1938, filed in the court below a petition for the reorganization of B & P under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act.2 3 The Massachusetts Court promptly approved the petition as properly filed and appointed trustees whose appointments were subsequently approved by the Commission.

B & P owns no locomotives or rolling stock and it has no operating personnel.

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250 F.2d 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-mulcahy-ca1-1957.