In Re Royal Composing Room, Inc.

62 B.R. 403
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 25, 1986
Docket19-35130
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 62 B.R. 403 (In Re Royal Composing Room, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Royal Composing Room, Inc., 62 B.R. 403 (N.Y. 1986).

Opinion

DECISION ON DEBTOR’S MOTION FOR APPROVAL OF REJECTION OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT

PRUDENCE B. ABRAM, Bankruptcy Judge:

A struggle for survival by apparently endangered species is at the core of the disputes raised by this motion by a debtor to reject a collective bargaining agreement. The debtor, Royal Composing Room, Inc. (“Royal”), is one of the last unionized advertising typography shops in New York City. The union, New York Typographical Union No. 6 (“Union”), has seen its membership decline rapidly since 1975, when virtually all advertising typography shops were unionized. The Union’s 1975 multi-employer contract with the Printers League, which includes financial printers in addition to typographers, will expire in September 1989 and prospects for renewal are uncertain. Advertising typography itself is in the midst of radical change. Dramatic technological changes since 1976 have converted an industry that for the previous sixty years had relied on the linotype machine to one that relies today on the latest computer technology. The print advertising industry itself began to change in the 1950’s with the advent of television. Advertising agencies, the prime customers of advertising typographers, are now merging to form mega-agencies and acquiring the equipment to perform typography work themselves.

The Debtor’s Chapter 11 petition was filed on March 14,1986. The seven days of trial on the Debtor’s rejection motion which was filed on March 19, began on May 8 and concluded May 28. Coincidentally, the Third Circuit issued its decision on the appeal from an order permitting rejection of a collective bargaining agreement in the Wheeling-Pittsburg Steel Corporation Chapter 11 case on May 28.

Both sides have appealed to this court’s sense of equity, one seeking to have the application denied, the other seeking to have it granted. Several centuries ago, John Selden wrote:

“Equity is according to the conscience of him that is Chancellor, and as that is larger or narrower, so is equity. ’Tis all one as if they should make the standard for the measure we call a ‘foot’, a Chancellor’s foot; what an uncertain measure *405 this would be! One Chancellor has a long foot, another a short foot, a third an indifferent foot. ’Tis the same thing in the Chancellor’s conscience.”

For the reasons which follow, the court has determined that it should grant the Debt- or’s application for rejection of its collective bargaining agreement. This court is powerless to impose contractual modifications on the parties, even if that were the equitable outcome. It can only permit rejection or not. After rejection, a debtor must still bargain with the union. If the changes this Debtor imposes after rejection are unacceptable, the employees are free to resign or strike.

The tragedy of this case is that despite the. high stakes the Debtor and the Union have been unable to negotiate a solution either before the trial started or thereafter. The Debtor made it clear that it would close its doors if rejection were not permitted because of its inability to obtain necessary modifications from the Union. The Union made it clear that the workers would in all likelihood strike if rejection were permitted, which strike alone could force the Debtor to close permanently. In either case, the jobs of the present 31 Union workers and 40 non-Union workers would be lost, with resulting hardships on themselves and their families 1 and possible losses to creditors, and the shareholders will lose a business to which they have devoted the whole of their working lives. Reasonable people faced with these stakes should have been able to effect a workable compromise.

Code § 1113 provides no mechanism for the court to appoint anyone to assist the parties in their negotiations or to mediate their disputes. Until Congress provides for the appointment of a mediator in the event of a motion for rejection in a Chapter 11, the negotiations remain in the hands of the debtor and the union. 2

The legislative history of Code § 1113 contains repeated references to the necessity for negotiations between the debtor and the union before the court can act to permit rejection.

*406 “In sum, * * * this conference report, consistent with the intent of Congress in the National Labor Relations Act, provides that the company must try to negotiate with employees to work out the changes necessary to prevent the company from failing. The legislation also embodies the principle of the NLRA by requiring the company to bargain in good faith.” Statement of Senator Moynihan at XX-91. 3
“After the proposal is made, and until a hearing on the motion to reject, the parties must bargain in good faith. This provision places the primary focus on the private collective-bargaining process and not in the courts. * * * The amendments also prohibit the trustee from unilaterally altering or terminating the labor agreement prior to compliance with the provisions of the Section. This provision encourages the collective bargaining process, so basic to federal labor policy.” Senator Packwood at XX-83-XX-84. “The phrase ‘without good cause’ in subsection (c)(2) of new Section 1113 * * * is intended to ensure that a continuing process of good faith negotiations will take place before court involvement * * *. In deference to the overall policy of the provision which is to encourage the parties to reach their own agreement through collective bargaining, the court in framing any such relief may not go beyond the proposal made by the trustee pursuant to subsection (b)(1)(A).” Representative Morrison at XX-33-XX-34. “This provision will require negotiations to attempt to save both the labor contract and the business prior to court adjudication to reject the contract. * * * The business must make an offer to its employees’ union representatives that strive to both preserve the collective bargaining agreement and permit a successful reorganization. That offer should make ‘those necessary modifications’ in the contract as ‘are necessary to permit the reorganization of the debtor and assures that all creditors, the debtor and all the affected parties are treated fairly and equitably.’ The intent of this provision is to allow the business to make whatever changes in the collective bargaining agreement are reasonably necessary to ensure the likelihood of a successful reorganization. The provision emphasizes that the inevitable balancing that will go into this attempt to save both the business and the labor contract must reasonably assure the fair and equitable treatment of all those affected by the reorganization effort. This fair and equitable treatment language was intended by the conference to ensure that the type of balancing of all the equities that takes place when the court finally rules on rejection also takes place during these preliminary negotiations.” Senator Hatch at XX-58 and XX-60-61. (Emphasis added).

This court eschews the talismanic nine-step analysis of Bankruptcy Code § 1113 first used in In re American Provision Co., 44 B.R. 907 (Bankr.D.Minn.1984). Instead, this court looks to the three interdependent findings required by Code § 1113(c).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 B.R. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-royal-composing-room-inc-nysb-1986.