Alert
Supreme Court Holds Puerto Rico Recovery Act Preempted by
Bankruptcy Code
June 15, 2016
“Puerto Rico’s Recovery Act is barred by § 903(1) … of the Bankruptcy Code,” held the U.S. Supreme
Court on June 13, 2016. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. Franklin California Tax-Free Trust, 2016 WL
3221517, *11 (U.S.
June 13, 2016) (5-2). Affirming the First Circuit, the court reasoned that Code § 903(i)
“preempts state bankruptcy laws [enabling] insolvent municipalities to restructure their debts over the
objections of creditors [and] instead requires municipalities to restructure [their] debts under Chapter 9
of the Code.” Id., at *2. According to the court, “Puerto Rico is a ‘State’ for purposes of this preemption
provision.” Id.
The court also rejected Puerto Rico’s argument that “Chapter 9 no longer applies to it” because of a
1984 Congressional Amendment to Code § 101(52) excluding Puerto Rico “for the purpose of defining
who may be a debtor under Chapter 9.” Id.
In the court’s view, “Puerto Rico remains a ‘State’ for other
purposes related to Chapter 9, including that chapter’s preemption provision,” barring the
Commonwealth “from enacting its own municipal bankruptcy scheme … .” Id.
Relevance
Puerto Rico is a U.S. “territory” that retains some level of self-governance. Its legislature may pass laws
that govern the island without Congressional approval.
To go further, however, it must become a State
or independent nation. Article IV of the U.S. Constitution provides that a “territory” such as Puerto Rico
is subject to the “power [of Congress] to … make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the
Territory … belonging to the United States.” U.S.
Const., Art. IV, Sec. 3.
In a sense, therefore, a territory
such as Puerto Rico is “property” of the federal government. Id.
Puerto Rico’s legislature decided to act on its own two years ago by passing a debt-recovery law that
would provide alternative ways for its local public utilities to restructure their debt so as to allow them
to continue operating. Bondholders of the territory’s electric utility, however, dissatisfied with the new
legislation, sued, arguing that the legislation conflicted directly with a provision of Chapter 9 that limits
how local government agencies can deal with creditors.
Facts
Puerto Rico has more than $20 billion of debt shared by three “government-owned public utility
companies.” Id.
at *3. The Commonwealth’s government-owned bank had provided financing “to enable
utilities to continue operating without defaulting on their debt obligations,” but became unable to
continue funding the more than $800 million of operating losses sustained by the utilities in 2013.
. In addition, Puerto Rico’s “access to capital markets [had] also been severely compromised [when]
ratings agencies downgraded Puerto Rican bonds, including the utilities, to non-investment grade in
2014.” Id.
Puerto Rico “responded to the fiscal crisis by enacting” a so-called “Recovery Act” in 2014, enabling its
“public utilities to implement a recovery or restructuring plan for their debt.” Id. Essentially, “Chapter 3
of the Recovery Act … mirrors Chapters 9 and 11 of the … Code by creating a court-supervised
restructuring process intended to offer the best solution for the broadest group of creditors…. Creditors
holding two-thirds of an affected class of debt must participate in the vote to approve the restructuring
plan, and half of those participants must agree to the plan.” Id. “The debt modification [would thus] bind
… all creditors …” Id.
The Lower Courts
A group of investment funds sued Puerto Rico and various government officials to enjoin enforcement
of the Recovery Act.
They alleged, among other things, “that the … Code prohibited Puerto Rico from
implementing its own municipal bankruptcy scheme.” Id. The district court and First Circuit “concluded
that the preemption provision in [Code § 903(1)] precluded Puerto Rico from implementing the
Recovery Act and enjoined its enforcement.” Id. at *4.
According to the First Circuit, “it was up to
Congress, not Puerto Rico, to decide when the government-owned companies could seek bankruptcy
relief.” Id.
The Supreme Court
The Statutory Text. The court first analyzed three relevant provisions of the Code. The so-called
“gateway” provision, § 109(c) (2), requires a Chapter 9 debtor to be an insolvent municipality that is
“specifically authorized” by a State “to be a debtor.” The applicable preemption provision, § 903(1), bars
States from enacting municipal bankruptcy laws.
Finally, Code § 101(52) defines State, as amended in
1984, to include “… Puerto Rico, except for the purpose of defining who may be a debtor under Chapter
9.” The federal bankruptcy power is based on Act I, § 8, cl. 4 of the U.S. Constitution, which “empowers
Congress to establish ‘uniform laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.’”
Puerto Rico, reasoned the court, “is not a ‘State’ for purposes of the gateway provision, so it cannot
perform the single function of the ‘State[s]’ under that provision: to ‘specifically authorize’
municipalities to seek Chapter 9 relief.” Id.
at *7. Thus, “Puerto Rico’s municipalities cannot satisfy the
requirements of Chapter 9’s gateway provision until Congress intervenes.” Id. The “amended definition
of ‘State’ unequivocally excludes Puerto Rico as a ‘State’ for purposes of the gateway provision.” Id.
at
*8.
But the “exception [in Code § 109(c)] excludes Puerto Rico only for purposes of the gateway provision.”
Id. Indeed, “Puerto Rico is no less a ‘State’ for purposes of the preemption provision than it was before
Congress amended the definition.” Id. Thus, by enacting the preemption provision in § 903(1), Congress
“prohibited States and Territories defined as ‘States’ from enacting their own municipal bankruptcy
schemes … .” Nothing “in the text of the amended definition” of Code § 109(c) suggests otherwise.
Id.
The court rejected Puerto Rico’s argument that it would be essentially excluded from Chapter 9 and
barred from passing its own restructuring law. In other words, Puerto Rico argued that it was in a “no
man’s land,” with its only remaining option to persuade Congress to make Chapter 9 available to it.
The court accepted the plaintiff bondholders’ narrower reading that the Code’s gateway provision only
© 2016 Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
|2
. precludes Puerto Rico from authorizing its municipalities to seek Chapter 9 relief and that the other
provisions of Chapter 9 still apply. “A State’s only role under the gateway provision [§ 109(c)(2)] is to
provide that ‘authoriz[ation]’ to file.” Id., at *9.
The “preemption provision then imposes an additional requirement: The States may not enact their own
municipal bankruptcy schemes. A State that chooses not to authorize its municipalities to seek Chapter 9
relief under the gateway provision is no less bound by that preemption provision.” Id. at *9.
Indeed, “if it
were Congress’ intent to also exclude Puerto Rico as a ‘State’ for purposes of that pre-emption
provision, it would have said so.” Id.
The court rejected the dissent’s “faulty assumption that Puerto Rico is ‘by definition’ excluded from
Chapter 9.” Id. at *10. Although Puerto Rico may not authorize its municipalities to seek Chapter 9 relief,
it is still “a ‘State’ for purposes of § 903’s introductory clause and its proviso,” which “are neither
‘irrelevant nor meaningless,’” as the dissent argued.
Id. In short, the Code may “preclude … Puerto Rico
from authorizing its municipalities to seek relief under Chapter 9,” but “it does not remove Puerto Rico
from the scope of Chapter 9’s preemption provision. Federal law, therefore, preempts the [Puerto Rico]
Recovery Act.” Id.
at *11.
The Dissent
The dissent reasoned that “[b]ecause Puerto Rican municipalities cannot access Chapter 9’s federal
bankruptcy process, … a non-federal bankruptcy solution is not merely a parallel option; it is the only
existing legal option for Puerto Rico to restructure debts that could cripple its citizens.” Id. at *11.
Accordingly, it reasoned that “a preemption provision in Chapter 9 should not apply to Puerto Rico.” Id.
In short, argued the dissent, “Congress excluded Puerto Rico from Chapter 9 for all purposes – it shut
the gate and barred it tight.” Id. at *16.
In the dissent’s view, Code “§ 903 is directed to states that can
approve their municipalities for Chapter 9 bankruptcy.” Id. at *16.
Comment
The court’s majority relied on the Constitution’s “Supremacy Clause,” contained in Article 6, Clause 2 of
the U.S. Constitution, making federal law supreme and preempting state law.
A dominant federal
interest in debt restructuring precludes the enforcement of any state law on the same subject.
Until 1984, Puerto Rico, like the states, could authorize municipalities to obtain federal bankruptcy
relief. In 1984, however, Congress amended § 101(52), defining state to include Puerto Rico, except for
the purpose of defining who may be a debtor under chapter 9. According to the court’s majority in
Franklin, however, the Code’s definitional change was not meant to transform the force of Code
§ 903(1), which expressly preempts the Puerto Rican Recovery Act.
See MSR Exploration, Ltd. v. Meridian
Oil, Inc., 74 F.3d 910, 913 (9th Cir.
1996) (“… adjustment of rights and duties within the bankruptcy
process itself is uniquely and exclusively federal. It is very unlikely that Congress intended to permit the
super-imposition of state remedies on the many activities that might be undertaken in … the
management of the bankruptcy process.” Id. at 914).
See generally National Hockey League v. Moyes,
2015 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 153262, *12-*16 (D. Ariz. 2015) (“to the extent that the [plaintiff] alleges that the
[defendants] aided and abetted a breach of fiduciary duty by causing the debtors to file bankruptcy, the
claim is preempted.” ); In re Astor Holdings, Inc.
v. Roski, 325 F. Supp.
2d 251, 262 (S.D.N.Y. 2003) (when
plaintiff sued defendant for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, alleging that defendant
“induced a third party to file for bankruptcy, harming the plaintiff,” held, any misuse of bankruptcy
process “governed exclusively” by Bankruptcy Code.).
© 2016 Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
|3
. Authored by Michael L. Cook.
If you have any questions concerning this Alert, please contact your attorney at Schulte Roth & Zabel or
the author.
This information has been prepared by Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP (“SRZ”) for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and is
presented without any representation or warranty as to its accuracy, completeness or timeliness. Transmission or receipt of this information does not create an
attorney-client relationship with SRZ.
Electronic mail or other communications with SRZ cannot be guaranteed to be confidential and will not (without SRZ
agreement) create an attorney-client relationship with SRZ. Parties seeking advice should consult with legal counsel familiar with their particular circumstances.
The contents of these materials may constitute attorney advertising under the regulations of various jurisdictions.
© 2016 Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
|4
.