Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/316/502/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 20:50:03+00:00

Document:
1. The Act is not inoperative as inconsistent with the bankruptcy power exercised by Congress. P. 316 U. S. 507.
2. The Act does not effect an unconstitutional impairment of the obligation of contracts. P. 316 U. S. 509.
3. The question of the validity of the Act, as applied to secured claims, is not involved, and not decided. P. 316 U. S. 516.
127 N.J.L. 239, 21 A.2d 796, affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment affirming the dismissal, by the Supreme Court of New Jersey, 19 N.J. Misc. 322, 19 A.2d 445, of a suit to recover upon bonds and interest coupons issued by the municipality.
A New Jersey statute, adopted in 1931, authorized state control over insolvent municipalities. By a supplementary law enacted in 1933, a plan for adjustment of the claims of creditors of such an insolvent municipality could be made binding upon all creditors. The question is whether an adjustment so authorized by a state impairs rights in violation of the Constitution of the United States.
The City of Asbury Park is a seashore resort with a resident population of 15,000. It presents a familiar picture of optimistic and extravagant municipal expansion caught in the destructive grip of general economic depression: elaborate beachfront improvements, costs in excess of estimates, deficits not annually met by taxation, declining real estate values, inability to refinance a disproportionately heavy load of short-term obligations, and, inevitably, default. Accordingly, in January, 1935, availing themselves of the New Jersey Municipal Finance Act, creditors applied to the Supreme Court of New Jersey to place the state Municipal Finance Commission in control of the city's finances.
"if the court by its justice determines (1) that the municipality is unable to pay in full according to their terms the claims proposed to be adjusted or composed, and perform its public functions and preserve the value of property subject to taxation, (2) that the adjustment or composition is substantially measured by the capacity of the municipality to pay, (3) that it is in the interest of all the creditors affected thereby, and (4) that it is not detrimental to other creditors of the municipality."
court, and then only to recover and enforce the rights given him by the adjustment or composition. [Footnote 1]"
the proceedings; the plan, as amended, was approved by the court on July 21, 1937; on September 28, 1937, it was duly approved by the Municipal Finance Commission; on April 29, 1938, it was consented to by creditors representing "85 percent in amount of the indebtedness affected" by the plan; and, on June 15, 1938, it was put into operation.
The plan provided for the refunding of $10,750,000 of outstanding bonds; these were to be exchanged by the consenting creditors for new bonds to be issued in accordance with the terms of the plan approved by the court.
The appellants were holders of defaulted bonds and interest coupons issued by the City of Asbury Park in 1929 and 1930 -- prior, therefore, to the legislation which authorized the proceedings resulting in the challenged refunding scheme. The bonds of the appellants were part of the $10,750,000 of refunded bonds which, under the adjustment decreed by the court, could only be converted into new bonds maturing in 1966 and bearing a lower rate of interest than the original bonds. Deeming the arrangement authorized under the New Jersey statute to be violative of the Constitution of the United States, the appellants brought this suit for the face value of the old bonds and coupons. The Supreme Court of New Jersey dismissed the suit, 19 A.2d 445, 19 N.J.Misc. 322; the Court of Errors and Appeals affirmed the dismissal, 127 N.J.L. 239, 21 A.2d 796, and the case is here on appeal under § 237(a) of the Judicial Code, as amended, 28 U.S.C. § 344(a).
more than a year before the enactment of the only relevant federal statute, the Act of August 16, 1937, 50 Stat. 653, amending the Bankruptcy Act to provide for the composition of indebtedness of taxing agencies. Assuming Congress had power to do so, this Act did not profess to terminate a pending state court proceeding like that now in question. It would offend the most settled habits in the relationship between the States and the nation to imply such a retroactive nullification of state authority over its subordinate organs of government.
"carefully drawn so as not to impinge on the sovereignty of the State. The State retains control of its fiscal affairs. The bankruptcy power is exercised . . . only in a case where the action of the taxing agency in carrying out a plan of composition approved by the bankruptcy court is authorized by state law."
to the states, has now been completely absorbed by the federal government -- that a state which, as in the case of New Jersey, has after long study devised elaborate machinery for the autonomous regulation of problems as peculiarly local as the fiscal management of its own household is powerless in this field? We think not.
This brings us to the second and main contention, namely, that the appellants' claims in the form of the bonds and coupons issued by the City of Asbury Park, constituted contracts, the obligation of which is impaired by the denial of their right to recover thereon and by their transmutation, without their consent, into the securities authorized by the plan of adjustment.
The principal asset of a municipality is its taxing power, and that, unlike an asset of a private corporation, cannot be available for distribution. An unsecured municipal security is therefore merely a draft on the good faith of a municipality in exercising its taxing power. The notion that a city has unlimited taxing power is, of course, an illusion. A city cannot be taken over and operated for the benefit of its creditors, nor can its creditors take over the taxing power. Indeed, so far as the federal Constitution is concerned, the taxing power of a municipality is not even within its own control -- it is wholly subordinate to the unrestrained power of the state over political subdivisions of its own creation.
"A municipal corporation . . . is a representative not only of the State, but is a portion of its governmental power. . . . The State may withdraw these local powers of government at pleasure, and may, through its legislature or other appointed channels, govern the local territory as it governs the State at large. It may enlarge or contract its powers or destroy its existence."
United States v. Railroad Company, 17 Wall. 322, 84 U. S. 329. And see Hunter v. Pittsburgh, 207 U. S. 161.
the effectiveness of the city's taxing power. The only remedy for the enforcement of such a claim is a mandamus to compel the levying of authorized taxes. The experience of the two modern periods of municipal defaults, after the depressions of '73 and '93, shows that the right to enforce claims against the city through mandamus is the empty right to litigate. See Hillhouse, Lessons from Previous Eras of Default (chap. IV in Chatters, Municipal Debt Defaults); Report of the Securities and Exchange Commission on the Study and Investigation of the Work, Activities, Personnel and Functions of Protective and Reorganization Committees (1936), Pt. IV: Committees of the Holders of Municipal and Quasi-Municipal Obligations, passim; Dimock, Legal Problems of Financially Embarrassed Municipalities, contained in Summary of Proceedings, American Bar Assn., 1st Annual Meeting (1935), Section of Municipal Law, p. 12 (see also XXII Virginia L.Rev. 39).
How, then, can claims against a financially embarrassed city be enforced? Experience shows that three conditions are essential if the municipality is to be kept going as a political community, and, at the same time, the utmost for the benefit of the creditors is to be realized: impartial, outside control over the finances of the city, concerted action by all the creditors to avoid destructive action by individuals, and ratable distribution. In short, what is needed is a temporary scheme of public receivership over a subdivision of the state. A policy of every man for himself is destructive of the potential resources upon which rests the taxing power which, in actual fact, constitutes the security for unsecured obligations outstanding against a city.
the Constitution of the United States. For there is no remedy when resort is had to "devices and contrivances" to nullify the taxing power which can be carried out only through authorized officials. See Rees v. City of Watertown, 19 Wall. 107, 86 U. S. 124,. And so we have had the spectacle of taxing officials resigning from office in order to frustrate tax levies through mandamus, and officials running on a platform of willingness to go to jail, rather than to enforce a tax levy (see Raymond, State and Municipal Bonds, 342-43), and evasion of service by tax collectors, thus making impotent a court's mandate. Yost v. Dallas County, 236 U. S. 50, 236 U. S. 57. But, if taxes can only be protected by the authority of the state, and the state can withdraw that authority, the authority to levy a tax is imported into an obligation to pay an unsecured municipal claim, and there is also imported the power of the state to modify the means for exercising the taxing power effectively in order to discharge such obligation, in view of conditions not contemplated when the claims arose. Impairment of an obligation means refusal to pay an honest debt; it does not mean contriving ways and means for paying it. The necessity compelled by unexpected financial conditions to modify an original arrangement for discharging a city's debt is implied in every such obligation for the very reason that, thereby, the obligation is discharged, not impaired.
of New Jersey Commission on Municipal Taxation and Finance, particularly Report No. 2 (Municipal and County Debt, 1931). The depression intensified the need for state control, and the establishment of the Municipal Finance Commission with the powers outlined above were designed, as stated by the legislature, to meet "the public emergency arising from a default in the payment of municipal obligations, and the resulting impairment of public credit." But this emergency, as the decisions in this Court during the last ten years amply testify, did not evaporate. Students of the subject have pointed out that, in the depression of 1893, as in that of 1873, "the worst financial difficulties for municipalities came in the fourth year of the depression." See Hillhouse, supra, at 14. History repeated itself, certainly as to New Jersey municipalities. See Report of New Jersey Municipal Finance Commission, 1937, and Second Annual Report of the Local Government Board (to which the functions of the Municipal Finance Commission were transferred in 1939), 1940, p. 11. The whole history of New Jersey legislation leaves no doubt that the state was bent on holding the municipalities to their obligations by utilizing the most widely approved means for making them effective. The intervention of the state in the fiscal affairs of its cities is plainly an exercise of its essential reserve power to protect the vital interests of its people by sustaining the public credit and maintaining local government. The payment of the creditors was the end to be obtained, but it could be maintained only by saving the resources of the municipality -- the goose which lays its golden eggs -- namely, the taxes which alone can meet the outstanding claims.
basis of the recommendations of its expert advisers, the New Jersey legislature was entitled to find that, in order to keep its insolvent municipalities going, and, at the same time, fructify their languishing sources of revenue, and thus avoid repudiation, fair and just arrangements by way of compositions, scrutinized and authorized by a court, might be necessary, and that, to be efficacious, such a composition must bind all, after 85 percent of the creditors assent, in order to prevent unreasonable minority obstruction. As the court below pointed out, in view of the slump of the credit of the City of Asbury Park before the adoption of the plan now assailed, appellants' bonds had little value; the new bonds issued under the plan, however, are not in default, and there is a very substantial market for them. The refunding scheme, as part of a comprehensive plan for salvaging Asbury Park, both governmentally and financially, was so successful that the refunding bonds were selling at around 69 at the time of refunding, while, at about the time the present suit was brought, commanded a market at better than 90. See Second Annual Report of the New Jersey Local Government Board, 1940, p. 39.
From time to time, ever since Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122, 17 U. S. 199, it has been stated that a state insolvency act is limited by the Contract Clause of the Constitution in authorizing composition of preexisting debts. So it is, but it all depends on what is affected by such a composition, and what state power it brings into play. The dictum from Sturges v. Crowninshield is one of those inaccurate generalizations that has gained momentum from uncritical repetition.
of banks and a court, but over the dissent of one-fourth of the depositors (except preferred or secured claimants), Doty v. Love, 295 U. S. 64, a state should certainly not be denied a like power for the maintenance of its political subdivisions and for the protection not only of their credit, but of all the creditors, by an adjustment assented to by at least 85 percent of the creditors, approved by the commission of the state having oversight of its municipalities, and found wise and just after due hearing by a court.
The Constitution is "intended to preserve practical and substantial rights, not to maintain theories." Davis v. Mills,194 U.S. 451, 194 U. S. 457. Particularly in a case like this are we in the realm of actualities, and not of abstractions and paper rights, of what things are worth in dollars and cents, and in what is proposed to realize paper values.
"The question whether the remedy on this contract was impaired materially is affected not only by the precarious character of the plaintiff's right, but by considerations of fact -- of what the remedy amounted to in practice."
the Asbury Park bondholders in 1935 was a precarious character is pure understatement. And we have already seen how empty was the remedy with which to enforce that right.
"In the books, there is much talk about distinctions between changes of the substance of the contract and changes of the remedy. . . . The dividing line is at times obscure."
a most depreciated claim of little value has, by the very scheme complained of, been saved and transmuted into substantial value. To call a law so beneficent in its consequences on behalf of the creditor who, having had so much restored to him, now insists on standing on the paper rights that were merely paper before this resuscitating scheme, an impairment of the obligation of contract is indeed to make of the Constitution a code of lifeless forms, instead of an enduring framework of government for a dynamic society.
We do not go beyond the case before us. Different considerations may come into play in different situations. Thus, we are not here concerned with legislative changes touching secured claims. The New Jersey courts have held that, under this very statute, tax anticipations and revenue notes stand on an entirely different footing from other municipal obligations, and, in relation to them, no claim is affected by the Municipal Finance Commission Act of 1931. State v. Fort Lee, 188 A. 689, 14 N.J.Misc. 895. The differentiation thus made by New Jersey regarding various obligations, in itself, indicates the detailed care with which the legislation of the State proceeded in readjusting outstanding municipal obligations.
"52:27-34. Petition by creditors; plan of adjustment or composition; parties; notice. Upon the verified petition of any creditors of a municipality in which the commission shall function, made on behalf of themselves and all other creditors of the municipality, for the approval of a plan of adjustment or composition of the claims of all creditors or of a class or classes of them similarly situated, which plan shall be submitted with and made a part of the petition, the supreme court by a justice thereof may take jurisdiction of the subject matter and order the filing of the petition in the office of the clerk of the supreme court."
"The municipality and the commission shall be made parties to such proceeding. All creditors of the municipality shall be made parties thereto by notice to be published and given in such manner as the supreme court by its justice may direct. Any creditor of the municipality may appear and assert his rights."
"52:27-35. Allegations in petition. In the petition, the creditors shall allege that the municipality is or will be unable to pay in full according to their terms the claims proposed to be adjusted or composed and perform its public functions and preserve the value of property subject to taxation, that the adjustment or composition proposed in the plan is substantially measured by the capacity of the municipality to pay, is in the interests of all the creditors affected thereby, and is not detrimental to other creditors of the municipality."
"52:27-36. Approval by supreme court justice of plan of adjustment or composition; findings. In any such proceeding, after hearing on the plan proposed or on the plan as modified by order and if such plan as proposed or modified is approved in writing by creditors representing eighty-five percent in amount of the indebtedness affected thereby and by the municipality and the commission, the supreme court by a justice thereof may by order authorize and approve such adjustment or composition if the court by its justice determines (1) that the municipality is unable to pay in full according to their terms the claims proposed to be adjusted or composed, and perform its public functions and preserve the value of property subject to taxation, (2) that the adjustment or composition is substantially measured by the capacity of the municipality to pay, (3) that it is in the interest of all the creditors affected thereby, and (4) that it is not detrimental to other creditors of the municipality."
"52:27-37. Approved plan binding on all creditors; substituted obligations. The plan of adjustment so authorized and approved shall forthwith, and without any further action of any kind, be binding upon all the creditors included in the plan, whether or not they appear in the proceeding. Insofar as said plan provides for the substitution of any new bonds, notes, or other obligations of the municipality in place of any outstanding bonds, notes, or other obligations, or claims then outstanding, such substitution shall be effectual from and after such date as may be fixed in such order."
"52:27-38. Continuance of stay of proceedings against municipality; action by creditor to enforce claim restricted. After the institution of any proceeding provided for by this article and pending the determination thereof, the supreme court, by a justice thereof, may, by order, continue the stay provided by sections 52:27-32.1 and 52:27-33 of this title."
"In the event that a plan shall be authorized and approved pursuant to this article, the court shall retain jurisdiction of such proceeding, and, thereafter, no creditor whose claim is included in such adjustment or composition shall be authorized to bring any action or proceeding of any kind or character for the enforcement of his claim except with the permission of the supreme court, and then only to recover and enforce the rights given him by the adjustment or composition."
"52:27-39. Reduction in principal of outstanding notes or bonds prohibited. Notwithstanding any provisions of this article, the commission shall not approve any adjustment or composition or plan presented pursuant to this article which provides for the reduction in the principal amount of any outstanding notes or bonds of the municipality."
Compare Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Nebraska, 170 U. S. 57, 170 U. S. 72.
"Usually, where a contract, not contrary to public policy, has been entered into between parties competent to contract, it is not within the power of either party to withdraw from its terms, without the consent of the other, and the obligation of such a contract is constitutionally protected from hostile legislation. Where, however, the respective parties are not private persons, dealing with matters and things in which the public has no concern, but are persons or corporations whose rights and powers were created for public purposes, by legislative acts, and where the subject matter of the contract is one which affects the safety and welfare of the public, other principles apply. Contracts of the latter description are held to be within the supervising power and control of the legislature when exercised to protect the public safety, health, and morals, and that clause of the federal constitution which protects contracts from legislative action cannot in every case be successfully invoked. The presumption is that, when such contracts are entered into, it is with the knowledge that parties cannot, by making agreements on subjects involving the rights of the public, withdraw such subjects from the police power of the legislature."

References: § 237
 § 344
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