MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON PETITION BY SIX MONTHS CREDITORS FOR PRIORITY
ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.
Several unsecured creditors of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, the Debtor in reorganization, have asserted claims to a priority in the assets of the Debtor based on the so-called “six months rule”. For the reasons set forth below, these claims are not entitled to be paid on a priority basis which would have to be satisfied from the corpus
of the mortgaged property of the Railroad. Since it appears extremely unlikely that any assets other than corpus will be available after satisfaction of all claims prior to those of the mortgagees, it is unnecessary to make any further determination regarding six months claims at this time.
The “six months rule” was developed in railroad equity receiverships during the late nineteenth century.
By 1900 the rule had been stated and applied with sufficient inconsistency to cause the Supreme Court to remark:
“It is apparent from an examination of the above cases that the decision in each one depended upon its special
facts. This court has uniformly refrained from laying down any rule as absolutely controlling in every case * *
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Southern Railway Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., 176 U.S. 257, 284-285, 20 S.Ct. 347, 358, 44 L.Ed. 458 (1900). With one exception,
the principal decisions on the six months rule since 1900 have been made by lower federal courts,
and these decisions have hardly clarified the situation. One court recently commented: •
“The researches of counsel supplemented by such research as has been at my command have not resulted in the discovery of any principle which would account for all of the decisions or even enough of the decisions so that one might say that there was a principle behind them.”
In re Third Avenue Transit Corporation, 138 F.Supp. 623, 625 (S.D.N.Y.1955), aff’d per curiam, 230 F.2d 425, (2 Cir. 1956). In construing the rule at the present time, ambiguities must generally be resolved against those claiming the benefit of the rule:
“The so-called six months’ priority rule is an invasion of the established contract rights of lienholders. As an invasion the rule should be strictly contained within narrow confines and limited to the purposes which brought it into being.”
Johnson Fare Box Company v. Doyle, 250 F.2d 656, 657 (2 Cir.), cert. denied 357 U.S. 938, 78 S.Ct. 1385, 2 L.Ed.2d 1551 (1958).
In broad terms the six months rule provides that claims for labor, supplies and material furnished to the debt- or-railroad shortly before reorganization shall to a certain extent be afforded a priority in the debtor’s assets. It has been generally held that certain requirements must be met in order for the rule to apply:
(1) The claim must have accrued within a reasonably short period prior to reorganization (usually six months). Southern Railway Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., supra, 176 U.S. at 292, 20 S.Ct. 347.
(2) The claim must be for a current expense in the ordinary operation of the railroad necessarily incurred to keep it running. Burnham v. Bowen, 111 U.S. 776, 780, 4 S.Ct. 675, 28 L.Ed. 596 (1884).
(3) The claimant, when furnishing labor, supplies, or material, must have relied on the railroad’s current earnings for payment of his claim, and not on the railroad’s general credit. Southern Railway Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., supra 176 U.S. at 285, 20 S.Ct. 347.
Guaranty Trust Co. v. Albia Coal Co., 36 F.2d 34 (8 Cir. 1929); FitzGibbon, The Present Status of the Six Months’ Rule, 34 Colum.L.Rev. 230, 235-236 (1934).
The Supreme Court’s first statement of the rule, Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U.S. 235, 25 L.Ed. 339 (1879), re
mains as clear as anything thereafter handed down:
“The business of all railroad companies is done to a greater, or less extent on credit. This credit is longer or shorter, as the necessities of the case require; and when companies become pecuniarily embarrassed, it frequently happens that debts for labor, supplies, equipment and improvements are permitted to accumulate, in order that bonded interest may be paid and a disastrous foreclosure postponed, if not altogether avoided. In this way
the daily and monthly earnings,
which ordinarily should go to pay the
daily and monthly expenses,
are kept from those to whom in equity they belong, and used to pay the mortgage debt. The income out of which the mortgagee is to be paid is the net income obtained by deducting from the gross earnings what is required for necessary operating and managing expenses, proper equipment and useful improvements. Every railroad mortgagee in accepting his security impliedly agrees that the current debts made in the ordinary course of business shall be paid from the current receipts before he has any claim upon the income. If for the convenience of the moment something is taken from what may not improperly be called
the current debt fund,
and put into that which belongs to the mortgage creditors, it certainly is not inequitable for the court, when asked by the mortgagees to take possession of the future income and hold it for their benefit, to require as a condition of such an order that what is due from the earnings to the current debt shall be paid by the court from the future current receipts before anything derived from that source goes to the mortgagees * * *
[I]f it appears in the progress of the cause that bonded interest has been paid, additional equipment provided, or lasting and valuable improvements made out of earnings which ought in equity to have been employed to keep down debts for labor, supplies and the like, it is within the power of the court to use the income of the receivership to discharge obligations which, but for the diversion of funds, would have been paid in the ordinary course of business.”
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“The power rests upon the fact, that in the administration of the affairs of the company the mortgage creditors have got possession of that which in ■ equity belonged to the whole or a part of the general creditors. Whatever is done, therefore, must be with a view to a restoration by the mortgage creditors of that which they have thus inequitably obtained. It follows that if there has been in reality no diversion, there can be no restoration; and that the amount of restoration should be made to depend upon the amount of the diversion.” [Emphasis added.]
99 U.S. at 254, 25 L.Ed. 339. The rationale of the rule as stated in Fosdick v. Schall is an equitable distribution of the railroad’s operating revenues, to which the Court says the mortgagees “impliedly agree”.
Revenues accruing from operations should be paid first to the operations creditors whose materials and services made those revenues possible ; and only after all such operational claims have been paid, should the bal
anee be available for the benefit of the mortgagees. If any operating revenues do improperly get into the hands of the mortgagees, equity requires that those revenues be restored to the operations creditors by the mortgagees yielding them a priority.
The two basic questions raised by the claims presently made are: (1) does the financial history of the New Haven Railroad from January 1, 1961, show that there is presently, in the words of the
Fosdick
case, “a current debt fund” (later referred to as “a current expense fund”) out of which the petitioning six months creditors would be entitled to a priority payment; and (2) from what assets, if any, of the Debtor’s estate may these priority payments be made?
Such a fund may arise out of one or more of the following: (a) current earnings in the sense of surplus earnings during the six months period and during the reorganization itself; (b) unmortgaged assets of the debtor; and (c) income diverted during the six months period or during the reorganization for the benefit of the mortgagees.
Although most of the Supreme Court cases have used the terms “current receipts” or “current earnings” as a source of this fund, several lower federal courts have used the word “income”. See, e. g., Guaranty Trust Co. v. Albia Coal Co., supra. As a result, the New Haven’s mortgagees have argued that the fund is equal to the Railroad’s “income” or “net income” either as determined by ordinary accrual accounting or by accounting procedures prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission for rate-making purposes. The difficulty with this argument is that it fails to take into account the effect of the petition for reorganization. After the petition was filed, many operating expenses which had accrued
during the previous six months were not and will not be paid, although the Trustees have been required to pay some of those expenses, and payments of some taxes have simply been deferred by court order. To the extent that expenses merely accrue but are never paid, revenues available for payment to operations creditors are in fact not reduced.
The current expense fund available from earnings can be defined, therefore, as the sum of all operating revenues which have accrued during the six months period and in the course of reorganization, and which have actually been received or taken over by the Trustees, less depreciation and all operating expenses which have actually been paid or are payable by the Trustees or which constitute administration expenses.
This definition of the fund differs from that in the frequently cited case of Guaranty Trust Co. v. Albia Coal Co., supra, principally because it provides for the deduction from any gross operating income which accrued during the six months period and
which was taken over or collected by the Trustees,
expenses for items of the accounts payable of the Railroad on July 7, 1961 (the date of the filing of the petition) which the Trustees were required to pay. See FitzGibbon, The Present Status of the Six Months Rule, 34 Colum.L.Rev. 230, 245-246 (1934). The
Guaranty
case treated the fund for the six months period which it defined, as just stated, as “gross operating income taken over or collected by the receiver, less taxes accrued ”, separately from the fund for the period of the reorganization which it defined as “net operating income”. This was apparently done because, as also stated above, many operating expenses which accrued during the six months period go unpaid, whereas those accruing during reorganization are paid as administration expenses. The Supreme Court, however, has generally treated both periods in the aggregate, for the purpose of the six months rule, as the continuous operation of the railroad. Burnham v. Bowen, supra.
Many of the claimants argue, in effect, that, for the purpose of the six months creditors rule, accounting terms cannot be given the meaning accorded them under generally accepted principles or systems of accounting or under those prescribed for railroads by the Interstate Commerce Commission because, they assert, no such recognized accounting method is applicable or even relevant to the rule which is an equitable concept developed by the courts which requires an unorthodox juggling of income and expenses, and current assets and liabilities, to carry out its spirit and its purpose, and, at least in this case, assure the claimants a fund out of which they may be paid. They superimpose upon this idea the claim that, if any time even for the shortest conceivable interval in the six months preceding the filing of the petition in reorganization or in the course of the reorganization itself, such a fund can be said to appear, it is forthwith branded with an equitable lien for the six months creditors and thereafter remains a kind of trust fund which can be used for no other purpose and is finally distributed to the claimants.
Neither of these concepts is tenable. The words used must be interpreted in the light of a generally recognized and accepted system of accounting. The rule, of course, requires the elimination as expenses or liabilities of interest or principal payments and any diversions (more fully discussed infra) to the mortgagees. While a rigid and mechanistic application of accounting terms should not be adopted to thwart the equitable consideration which the courts have afforded six months claimants, such terms, recognized and used for more than half a century, should not be so distorted, for the purpose of granting the six months cred
itors a recovery, that the terms no longer relate to the concepts for which they have traditionally stood and are no longer descriptive of the Railroad’s financial operations. The phrase “generally accepted accounting principles” does not mean precisely the same thing in all businesses because allowances must be made as the Interstate Commerce Commission has said, 309 I.C.C. 289, 293 (1959), “for variations among different industries because of special conditions or long-established usage.” As far as this present case is concerned, any difference between the Interstate Commerce Commission’s prescribed system of accounting for railroads and “generally accepted accounting principles” is minor and falls within the tolerance which the generally accepted practice allows for the railroad industry. Whatever accounting theories and practices may have been used by the different railroads in the cases which were before the Supreme Court from Fosdick v. Schall, supra, to and including Gregg v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 197 U.S. 183, 188, 25 S.Ct. 415, 49 L.Ed. 717 (1905), it is apparent that the receipts out of which “the current debt fund” or “the current expense fund” may be created is what is referred to in the
Gregg
ease as “the surplus earnings, if any, in the hands of the receiver * * See also subsequent lower court decisions, Taylor v. Delaware & E. R. Co., 213 F. 622, 624 (2 Cir. 1914); Texas Co. v. International & G. N. Ry. Co., 237 F. 921, 926-927 (5 Cir. 1916); Moore v. Donahoo, 217 F. 177 (9 Cir. 1914). Cutcheon, Recent Developments in Federal Railroad Foreclosure Procedure in Some Legal Phases of Corporate Financing, Reorganization and Regulation 79 (1931) which says, p. 106, that six months claims are “preferred over the lien of a mortgage and the claims of bondholders
as to net income, whether that of the railroad company or that of its receivers.”
[Emphasis added.] This description of the rule was quoted as having “very general acceptance” in In re Third Avenue Transit Corporation, supra, and was cited again in In re Chicago Express, Incorporated, 332 F.2d 276, 278 (2 Cir. 1964). See also FitzGibbon, The Present Status of the Six Months Rule, 34 Colum.L.Rev. 230, 243 (1934); Finletter, Bankruptcy Reorganization 377 (1939).
The claimants’ argument which in effect would impress a temporary showing at some point from January 1, 1961 to the present of net operating profit with an equitable lien which would remain operative through distribution has been rejected by this Circuit. In re Chicago Express, Incorporated, supra, 332 F.2d at 278. The presence or absence of a fund out of which the six months claimants can be paid must be determined as of the time of distribution and not as of some earlier time such as the moment of the filing of the petition for reorganization or the day on which the Trustees show the greatest earnings from operations.
The Trustees assert that the only fair method of computing income as a source of the fund for the purpose of the six months creditor rule is to take the income which is available for fixed charges. Some of the bondholders object that this formula would unduly benefit the six months claimants because it would include miscellaneous income not generated by the supplies or services furnished by the six months creditors.
Perhaps, as they say, net railway operating income
would be a more correct and authoritative well spring for the fund. In any event, it is unnecessary to resolve these conflicting claims here because even if the income available for fixed charges were adopted as the source for the current expense fund, there would, as matters now stand and as they have stood throughout the reorganization proceedings, be no current expense fund.
Moreover, it is highly unlikely that there ever will be one. As there have been no surplus earnings from which a current expense fund could be derived there remains the question whether the priority of the six months claims should be satisfied out of the assets of the Debtor Railroad.
The first source for satisfaction of the priority is the unmortgaged assets of the Railroad. Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. New York City Ry. Co., 216 F. 458, 471 (2 Cir. 1914). But the New Haven Railroad has none and the issue then arises to what extent the priority should displace the mortgage liens. These liens generally cover (1) all of the Railroad’s property, including that acquired after the initial mortgage, and (2)
once default takes place,
all the Railroad’s revenues and certain current assets such as cash and receivables. The former category is universally referred to in the six months cases as the “corpus” of the mortgaged property. The latter category — so-called “springing liens” — directly conflicts with the rationale of the six months rule and the rule effectively displaces these liens to the extent of the claims which come within it.
No case has ever questioned that such current assets may be used to satisfy the operations creditor’s priority. Non-corpus assets, however, are frequently, as is true in the present case, insufficient for a priority fund, and the critical question then becomes to what extent it may be satisfied out of the corpus of the mortgaged property.
On the question of invasion of corpus the Supreme Court has consistently held in every decision on the point that corpus cannot be invaded to satisfy the priority of the operations creditors
except to the extent that the current expense fund has been “diverted” to the benefit of the mortgagees.
See, e. g., Fosdick v. Schall, supra, 99 U.S. at 254, 25 L.Ed. 339 (“[I]f there has been in reality no diversion, there can be no restoration; * * * the amount of restoration should be made to depend upon the amount of the diversion.”); St. Louis, A. & T. H. R. R. Co. v. Cleveland, C., C. & I. R. Co., 125 U.S. 658, 674, 8 S.Ct. 1011, 31 L.Ed. 832 (1888); Gregg v. Metropolitan Trust Co., supra.
This limiting of corpus invasion to the amount of diversion of the fund is entirely consistent wtih the rationale of
the rule. If the current revenues to which operations creditors are entitled, have never benefited or been diverted to the mortgagees, the operations creditors have no right to invade the interests of the mortgagees. The rule states that mortgagees shall not take any of the operating revenues until the operations creditors have been paid; if the mortgagees have never received any such revenues, they are not bound to restore any.
The term “diversion” refers to a benefit to the mortgagees which is paid out of revenues which should have gone into the current expense fund. Such benefits to the mortgagees have been held to include payments of principal or interest, Fosdick v. Schall, supra, 99 U.S. at 253, 25 L.Ed. 339; Southern Railway Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., supra, 176 U.S. at 295, 20 S.Ct. 347, and all increments in the mortgage security, such as capital improvements to mortgaged property, Fosdick v. Schall, supra; Southern Railway Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., supra; Virginia & A. Coal Co. v. Central Railroad & Banking Co., 170 U.S. 355, 369-370; 18 S.Ct. 657, 42 L.Ed. 1068 (1898), new acquisitions of property subject to the mortgage, Gregg v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 124 F. 721, 722 (6 Cir. 1903), aff’d 197 U.S. 183, 25 S.Ct. 415, 49 L.Ed. 717 (1905); In Re Minneapolis & St. Louis RR, (D. Minn. 1926) unreported memorandum at pp. 3408-3421 of Minneapolis & St. Louis RR Receivership Record, and, under circumstances distinguishable from that of the New Haven, payments of equipment trust obligations.
But when these benefits are paid, not out of earnings which qualified for the current expense fund, but out of what are called “free funds”, then they are not diversions. See Gregg v. Metropolitan Trust Co., supra, 124 F. at 725. Such free funds have been held to include additional borrowings by the railroad,
proceeds from sales of mortgaged property,
and non-operating income.
The six months creditors make several claims of diversion of current operating revenues to the mortgagees. They argue that allowances in the income account for depreciation are expenditures for capital assets and are, in effect, diversions from current earnings for the benefit of the mortgagees. Depreciation, however, does not create additions to assets or accessions to assets already held, but is a reflection of the very real economic fact that the assets are being consumed or wasted away in the process of keeping the railroad running and is actually a measure of the contribution of physical properties made by the mortgagees for this purpose. Therefore, to the extent of depreciation, operations creditors have no equitable claim on operating revenue; they have no equitable right to be protected from the phenomenon of depreciation. Contra, Flint v. Danbury & Bethel Street Ry. Co., 101 Conn. 13, 125 A. 194, 40 A.L.R. 1 (1924); also contra but allowing other off-setting liabilities, Guaranty Trust Co. v. Minneapolis & St. Louis R. R. Co., Receivership Record Vol. XIV, p. 8199 (D.Minn.1926). Allowance of depreciation is comparable to expenditures made merely to preserve and not to increase the mortgaged assets and as such are not diversions. Burnham v. Bowen, supra, 111 U.S. at 781-782, 4 S.Ct. 675. Improvements to repair and restore property are not diversions. St. Louis, A. & T. H. R. R. Co. v. Cleveland, C., C. & I. R. Co., supra, 125 U.S. at 667-678, 8 S.Ct. 1011. Diversion is the channelling of operating revenues for the enhancement of the railroad’s mortgaged assets; depreciation is just the opposite — the steady consumption of the mortgagee’s security by the operation of the railroad.
The six months creditors assert there were also diversions during the six months period through the payment of interest on the Harlem River Division mortgage and on the First and Refunding Mortgage. It is clear that these payments were made from the proceeds of Government guaranteed loans and were not made from current operating income. Likewise, payments during the six months period of principal and interest on certain bank loans, emergency loans and Flood and Shop loans, were not made from operating income which otherwise would have gone into a current expense fund, and in any event the payments did not benefit the mortgagees. A reduction in the Harlem River Division mortgage debt was made with the proceeds of the sale of mortgaged assets.
Some claimants have argued that there has been diversion in payment by the New Haven of substantial sums in fulfillment of its equipment trust and conditional sales obligations. However true this might be under normal conditions, in the circumstances under which the new Haven has operated since a time prior to the six months preceding the reorganization, there has been no income available for fixed charges. As the result of this, the interests of the Railroad which have been mortgaged to the bondholders are actually impaired by the payment of these obligations.
Witnesses for the Railroad’s Trustees have testified that the sum of all payments of principal and interest and all improvements to, and new acquisitions of, mortgaged property are substantially less than the sum of all additional borrowings and sales of mortgaged property, and the court so finds. Not a single claimant has challenged the accuracy of this testimony at the hearing or in the briefs filed.
Not only has there been no diversion to the New Haven’s mortgagees, but when one considers the Railroad’s annual depreciation, for example, about $9,000,000 a year on way and equipment, it becomes clear that there has been a steady drain of security away from the mortgagees. Hence the New Haven’s situation is precisely the opposite of the one for which the six months rule was devised. Instead of surplus earnings being applied to the enhancement of mortgaged assets, the expenses of operation have vastly exceeded income and have been paid out of corpus. Because there has been no diversion to the New Haven’s mortgagees, no six months priority can be satisfied out of the corpus of the mortgaged property. And because the New Haven’s current liabilities, which are mostly or completely administrative expenses prior to the mortgage lien,
exceed current assets, there are no assets other than corpus to satisfy such a priority. Therefore, on the facts as they now exist, no priority should be
granted to any six months claimant of the New Haven.
The claimants have urged the righteousness of their cause with considerable fervor and have asked the court to expand the equitable doctrine to permit them to recover. Such action would not be warranted. While no issue has been made in this case of the reliance for payment by the six months creditors (with the exception of the per diem claimants) on the Railroad’s current earnings, rather than on its general credit, an examination by them of the Railroad’s financial condition for the two years preceding the filing of the petition for reorganization would have disclosed to them that, if such a petition were filed, the chances of there being any surplus earnings were slight at best. It is more likely that reliance was in large measure placed upon the great efforts expended by management in late 1960 and early 1961 to keep the Railroad from going into bankruptcy through loans or grants by the Federal and state governments which resulted in substantial aid. Wide publicity was at that time given to these measures and assurance was given that bankruptcy had been avoided.
This is not to say that the six months creditors deserve no equitable consideration at all for contributing to the continued operation of the Railroad in the public interest but they are on notice of the existing and recorded mortgages and there is no reason to stretch the equitable doctrine further. See Kneeland v. American Loan & Trust Co. of Boston, 136 U.S. 89, 97-98, 10 S.Ct. 950, 34 L.Ed. 379 (1890). The New Haven Railroad in the interest of its creditors, its employees and the public should have petitioned in reorganization long before it did. The grave problems which have beset the reorganization would have been much less acute and infinitely more manageable if bankruptcy had not been put off until its cash was almost entirely depleted, credit was practically gone, maintenance was down and in all other respects the bottom was out of the barrel. At the very best, continued extensions of credit by operating suppliers assisted in this damaging delay and was of dubious benefit to either the public or the mortgagees. Compare Comment, Reorganization Under Section 77, 33 Colum.L.Rev. 834, 850 (1933):
“It is likely that the major effect of the six months rule has been to enable an inefficient or dishonest management to remain in control long after it would otherwise have been superseded. It is not unlikely that through the abolition of the six months rule railroads would be compelled to seek reorganization at an earlier date, with corresponding benefits both to security holders and to the public served.”
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“Its origin is shrouded in some mystery, and its present status is a subject for disagreement by the experts. Originally designed to protect the small recent creditors, it now protects the steel companies and suppliers of rail ties. It is a fruitful source of litigation in every railroad receivership and a substantial encumbrance to speedy and just reorganization.”
It is highly unlikely that the financial position of the New Haven will improve. If by some miracle it should develop that non-corpus assets are available, that corpus assets exceed in value the total
secured debt, or that operating revenues are diverted to the mortgagees, or become so large that there are surplus earnings, then the present claimants may, of course, renew their request for a priority.
Accordingly, the petitions seeking preferential treatment, including that of per diem claimants, are each and all denied but without prejudice to renewal upon a change of circumstances as above stated.