George Alpert v. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, Debtor

348 F.2d 304, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 1965
Docket399, Docket 29443
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 348 F.2d 304 (George Alpert v. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, Debtor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Alpert v. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, Debtor, 348 F.2d 304, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018 (2d Cir. 1965).

Opinion

J. JOSEPH SMITH, Circuit Judge.

George Alpert, Chief Executive Officer of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (New Haven) from 1956 to 1961, moved in the reorganization proceedings of the New Haven for an order directing the New Haven’s Trustees to pay him as a preferred claim $295,833.24 allegedly due under an employment contract dating back to May 9, 1956. In that contract, Alpert, a successful Boston attorney with no prior railroad experience, was employed for the period June 1, 1956 to May 31, 1961 as the railroad’s Chief Executive at ah annual salary of $60,000. The agreement further provided that he would receive $25,000 annually for a period of twelve years following the expiration of his employment in 1961 “by way of severance pay and as deferred compensation for the services performed and to be performed by him hereunder.” At a special meeting of stockholders called for July 25, 1956, the stockholders were asked to approve, and did approve, the employment contract; the proxy solicitation statement, however, advised them that their approval was not necessary since the agreement was binding on the company in any case. 1 After the New Haven took refuge in the bankruptcy court in 1961 and following the appointment of Trustees, on August 21, 1961 the District Court, at the request of the Trustees, issued Order No. 12 which authorized and directed the Trustees to continue making pension payments to those receiving payments under the company’s pension systems and to all others thereafter eligible under those plans, but which specifically directed that such payments were not to be made pursuant to the individual contracts with Alpert, Howard S. Palmer, William K. Tate and Samuel J. Massey, Jr. The Trustees then disaffirmed the separate retirement or other compensation provisions under the four contracts.

The District Court, Robert P. Anderson, Circuit Judge, sitting by designation, denied Alpert’s claim holding that the retirement provision was not a part of the New Haven’s regular pension program and that the employment contract was void from its inception since Alpert was hired as Chief Executive in contravention of the corporate by-laws which made no provision for bifurcation of the top administrative office, providing only for a President who also was to serve as the chief executive officer. The court further found that the contract’s infirmity was neither waived by the vote of the stockholders nor cured by Alpert’s performance under the contract for the full five year term since the stockholders were falsely advised that they had no powers under the by-laws to disapprove the employment contract and since Alpert, aware himself of the falsity of these statements was moreover adequately compensated for his services. Tate v. New York, New Haven and Hart *306 ford Railroad Co., 332 F.2d 449 (2 Cir. 1964), where this court authorized reconsideration of a pension claim by Tate, whose pension agreement had been rejected in Order No. 12, was distinguished by the court on the ground that the equitable considerations supporting Tate’s claim were not present here.

The District Court properly distinguished the Tate decision and correctly denied Alpert’s claim for preferred treatment. In affirming the denial of Alpert’s petition, however, we reject his claim, not because the agreement was defective or illegal- — -we find it unnecessary to reach this question — but simply because payments of this kind under the circumstances in which they were provided for cannot be construed as being the equivalent of or as a substitute for regular railroad company pension payments. The contracted for compensation was precisely what it was labeled to be — deferred compensation, and as such the claim for this sum is entitled to no preference under any section of the Bankruptcy Act. Alpert’s claim is a non-preferential ordinary contract claim, and the only way in which he may hope to recover is as a general creditor.

Alpert draws a very bright picture of the services he performed and the self-sacrifices he made in behalf of the New Haven when he assumed the Chief Executive’s position in 1956 and during his term of office. He points out that he left a lucrative Boston law practice to take on a difficult job that offered a salary of $30,000 less than had been paid to preceding New Haven presidents, that he saved the Néw Haven a minimum of $63,000 by serving as president of two subsidiary companies without receiving the additional compensation paid to former presidents, and that he was instrumental in delaying the claims of preferred stockholders and in securing additional financing for the beleaguered company. He argues, in attempting to put himself in the same posture as Tate, that to deny him a pension “would be the rankest kind of discrimination” and “would disrupt morale and impair recruitment.” It would be discriminatory, he contends, to permit payments to two of the executives named in Order No. 12, Tate and Howard Palmer, 2 and at the same time to refuse to make the payments to him when all four of them were employed under individual contracts and in executive capacities; and it would impair recruitment because a candidate for employment with the railroad would be adversely influenced by the fact that a former president had been denied a pension even though he was granted one by the Board to induce him to take the job.

Alpert’s comparison to Tate is lacking in merit. There are several important distinguishing features between his contract with the company and Tate’s which make it clear that the payments to Alpert were intended to be deferred compensation payments and nothing more. Alpert’s retirement compensation was peculiar to himself in that it bore no relation to the New Haven’s pension plans, was subject to no conditions respecting either age or length of service, was limited to the twelve year period and did not terminate upon his death, and was never referred to in the contract as a “pension.” Moreover, the sum total of the payments is far in excess of the maximum permissible pension that could have been paid to Alpert for the twelve year period under the New Haven’s regular pension plan. Tate’s retirement compensation, which the court was authorized to grant, on the other hand, although his claim was based on a separate contract, was no different from what he would have received without the contract. According to his contract, it was to be computed according to the formula specified in the company’s pension plan, was subject to reduction by the amount paid to him under the Railroad Retirement Act in accordance with article 1(a) of the pension system, as in the case of the usual pension terminated upon his *307 death and not before, and was specifically designated as a “pension” in the agreement. Consideration of Tate’s long service on other railroads prior to coming to the New Haven was customary in the industry. The order of this court did not require that pension be paid according to the contract, in any event, but held that existence of the contract did not bar payment of such a pension to Tate as might be found equitable.

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Bluebook (online)
348 F.2d 304, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-alpert-v-the-new-york-new-haven-and-hartford-railroad-company-ca2-1965.