In re the Valuation Proceedings Under §§ 303(c) and 306 of the Regional Rail Reorganization Act

425 F. Supp. 266
CourtSpecial Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act
DecidedOctober 18, 1976
DocketMisc. No. 76-1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 425 F. Supp. 266 (In re the Valuation Proceedings Under §§ 303(c) and 306 of the Regional Rail Reorganization Act) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Valuation Proceedings Under §§ 303(c) and 306 of the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 425 F. Supp. 266 (reglrailreorgct 1976).

Opinion

OPINION WITH RESPECT TO ISSUES SET FOR BRIEFING AND ARGUMENT AS SUBJECTS (1) AND (2) OF SCHEDULE ATTACHED TO MEMORANDUM AND ORDER OF JUNE 16, 1976

FRIENDLY, Presiding Judge:

In our Memorandum and Order of June 16, 1976 (hereafter “June 16 Memorandum”), a copy of which is appended to this opinion as an addendum, issued after we had received statements of position from the parties and answers thereto, we sought to identify certain issues of principle early determination of which by this Court would enable us to frame appropriate instructions to the special masters who will take detailed evidence. Opening briefs on various subjects were due by August 23, with answering briefs to be filed on September 21. Oral argument was heard on September 27. In this opinion we deal with most of these subjects, although, as anticipated in the June 16 Memorandum, we find that an attempt at resolution of some would be premature.

I. “Public Interest.

Section 303(c)(1)(A) of the Rail Act directs that after the transfers and conveyances of the properties designated in the FSP, this Court “giving due consideration to the findings contained in the final system plan” shall determine, among other things, whether such transfers or conveyances “are in the public interest”. We raised the question what our responsibilities in making that determination could be since a number of provisions of the Act and materials in the legislative history indicated that we were not to pass generally on the merits of the FSP from a transportation standpoint,1 a task performed initially by USRA and later in some degree by Congress itself, and also because any large scale reconveyance would be impracticable.

Most of the parties, evidently sharing our inability to discern what Congress expected of us, have advanced no suggestions on this. The EL Trustees suggest that the “public interest” clause might require us to consider the viability of ConRail at the time when it becomes necessary to distribute the Series B Preferred Stock and the common stock, whose fair market value is deductible from the base value of the certificates of value, § 306(c).2 We are not greatly impressed by the argument but we need not deal with it at this time since the date of the distribution unhappily is far in the future.

The Trustees of the Reading suggest that the “public interest” requirement compels us to pass on contentions that the designations of certain property do not meet that criterion. They cite as examples the designation of Reading’s 3,000 shares (all the capital stock) of the Washington & Franklin Railway Company, which is leased to the Western Maryland Railroad Company, a Chessie System subsidiary, under a 995-year lease running from July 1, 1901, and Reading’s 500 shares of stock in the Trailer Train Company. The First National Bank of Chicago, as Trustee under the First Mortgage Indenture of The Chicago River and Indiana Railroad Company, raises a somewhat similar question with respect to the Ashland Avenue yard in Chicago.3 Fi[269]*269nally, the North Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the Delaware and Bound Brook Railroad Company, the Philadelphia, Ger-mantown and Norristown Railroad Company, and the Plymouth Railroad Company, question whether two properties — one belonging to the Bound Brook and allegedly without rail use, and the other consisting of various overhead utility wire rental agreements — were properly designated.

Although we are cognizant of the arguments, based particularly on the final sentence of § 208(d)(2), on § 208(d)(3)(C), and on the final sentence of § 209(e)(1), that may be made against such review, we are not disposed to rule out the latter without further briefing. Contentions that particular transfers were not “in the public interest” raise some of the same questions as contentions, raised at an earlier stage of the proceedings before us, that certain designations were not of “rail properties” as defined in § 102(12). It is highly desirable that if any transfers or conveyances are to be annulled as not in the public interest or as unauthorized, this should be determined before time and effort are expended in valuing them. We therefore direct that any claims that transfers or conveyances were not in the public interest or were unauthorized be filed, in the form of complaints in separately numbered actions, not later than December 1, 1976, and order that any claims not so filed will be deemed to have been waived. Notice of this direction will be promptly mailed by the Court’s executive attorney to counsel for all transfer-ors who appeared in the transfer proceedings, Misc. No. 75-3. We, of course, encourage the parties to endeavor promptly to settle any disputes of this sort; an appendix to the answering brief of the Government parties indicates that such efforts are in progress with respect to several of the properties we have mentioned.

Save to the extent here indicated, we shall instruct the special masters not to give further consideration to the “public interest” criterion of § 303(c)(1)(A) insofar as it relates to setting a standard of valuation unless a party makes a specific and supported request to that end, showing that a different result would ensue from application of the criterion, in which event the master shall seek this Court’s further instructions.

II. “Fair and Equitable.

Section 303(c)(1)(A) also requires us to make a finding, subsequent to the transfers and conveyances, that these

are fair and equitable to the estate of each railroad in reorganization in accordance with the standard of fairness and equity applicable to the approval of a plan of reorganization or a step in such a plan under section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C. 205), or fair and equitable to a railroad that is not itself in reorganization but which is leased, operated, or controlled by a railroad in reorganization

In the June 16 Memorandum we expressed doubt whether these words, generally used in corporate reorganization law to deal with the distribution of the securities of a reorganized company among various classes of creditors and stockholders, had any practical application to the valuation of the properties “in view of the facts (a) that if the consideration is ‘fairer and more equitable than is required as a constitutional minimum,’ § 303(c)(3) requires us to eliminate the excess, and (b) that if the consideration were less than the constitutional minimum, it would not be fair and equitable.”

Here again most of the parties share our inability to discern why, under the terms of the Rail Act, the requirement that we find that the consideration is more than, less than, or equal to the “constitutional minimum” does not drain the “fair and equitable” language of all meaning as regards the adequacy of the total consideration to be received by each transferor.4 Accordingly [270]*270we propose to instruct the special masters that in valuing the properties they need not address themselves to the fair and equitable standard as distinguished from the constitutional minimum in the absence of a specific and supported claim that a different result would ensue from application of such a standard, in which event the master shall seek this Court’s further instructions.

III. Reorganization vs. eminent domain statute.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Penn Cent. Corp. v. United States
862 F. Supp. 437 (Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 1994)
Matter of Valuation Proceedings, Etc.
531 F. Supp. 1191 (Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 1982)
Michigan Interstate Railway Co. v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad
459 F. Supp. 1008 (Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 1978)
MATTER OF VALUATION PROCEEDINGS UNDER §§ 303 (C) & 306
439 F. Supp. 1351 (Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 1977)
Matter of Val. Proc., Rail Reorg. Act
425 F. Supp. 266 (Special Court under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
425 F. Supp. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-valuation-proceedings-under-303c-and-306-of-the-regional-reglrailreorgct-1976.