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The FCC v. Powers of the Bankruptcy Courts A Closer Look at NextWave and the Other C-Block Cases

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With billions of dollars at stake, recent bankruptcy court opinions involving the
Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) C-Block radio spectrum licenses for
personal communications services continue to spiral up through the courts of appeal.
The FCC has largely emerged as the winner so far in cases that pit the FCC's
regulatory powers against the Bankruptcy Code's automatic stay and fraudulent transfer
provisions. The decisions have sparked calls on both sides of the issue for
legislative clarification of the police and regulatory powers exception to the automatic
stay and the treatment of government licenses in bankruptcy cases.

</p><h3>Background</h3>

<p>In 1993, Congress amended the Federal Communications Act (FCA) to add, <i>inter alia,</i> §309(j), which authorizes the FCC to conduct competitive bidding
auctions for radio spectrum licenses. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993,
Pub. L. No. 103-66, §6002(a), 107 Stat. 312, 387
(1993)</a>. The FCA directs the FCC to reserve for lease by qualified
entities, including small businesses, certain blocks of spectrum, and to make available
to such entities deferred payment plans with favorable terms. Pursuant to §309(j),
the FCC reserved a block of licenses known as the C-Block licenses for use by
qualified entities providing a then-emerging form of wireless communications technology
now widely known as "personal communications services."

</p><p>In 1996, the FCC concluded two sets of C-Block auctions awarding exclusive
license application rights to the successful bidders. Several of the winning bidders
qualified under §309(j) as "small businesses" and were required to pay only 10
percent of their winning bids in cash with the remaining 90 percent to be paid in
installments over a 10-year period at below-market interest rates. In the ensuing
three years, the largest companies holding C-Block licenses filed for bankruptcy after
failing to make the prescribed installment payments. By 1999, two such companies
had filed fraudulent transfer adversary proceedings against the FCC seeking to retain
their licenses at a fraction of the bid prices. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re NextWave Pers.
Communications Inc. v. FCC,</i> 235 B.R. 263 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.
1998)</a>, <i>rev'd.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… F.3d 43 (2d Cir. 2000)</a>; <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re United
States v. GW I PCS 1 Inc.,</i> 245 B.R. 59 (N.D. Tex. 1999)</a>,

<i>aff'd.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… F.3d 788 (5th Cir. 2000)</a>. In two other recent
C-Block cases, the FCC sought to reclaim C-Block licenses from bankrupt
licensees who had defaulted on their installment payments. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re Kansas Pers.
Communications Servs. Ltd.,</i> 252 B.R. 179 (Bankr. D. Kan. 2000),
<i>rev'd., U.S. v. Kansas Pers. Communications Servs. Ltd.,</i> 256 B.R. 807
(D. Kan. 2000)</a>; <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re Pers. Communications Network Inc.,</i> 249 B.R.
233 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 2000)</a>. Several bankruptcy court orders arising from
these four bankruptcy cases have generated multiple opinions by courts of appeals and
district courts in the Second, Fifth and Tenth Circuits. The most publicized of
these cases is <i>NextWave,</i> which was decided in the Second Circuit.

</p><h3>The <i>NextWave</i> Case</h3>

<p>NextWave Personal Communications Inc. (NextWave P.C.), the largest C-Block
license holder, was the winning bidder of 63 licenses for a total bid price of
$4.74 billion. Qualifying as a "small business" under §309(j), NextWave P.C.
paid the required $474 million down payment and arranged to pay the remaining
$4.26 billion in installment payments. After conducting the statutorily required
application process, the FCC approved the company's license applications and formally
awarded the licenses to NextWave P.C. in January 1997, four months after the
auction. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; 200 F.3d at 46-49</a>.

</p><p>Prior to and after the C-Block auctions, the FCC had conducted A-, B-,
D-, E- and F-Block auctions that had resulted in sharply lower bid prices than
those for the C-Block auction when measured in dollars per MHZ-Pop, a generally
accepted industry measurement standard. Because the C-Block licensees had paid
significantly more for their licenses than other radio spectrum licensees, most,
including NextWave P.C., had difficulty securing the financing necessary to meet their
installment payment obligations. The C-Block licensees petitioned the FCC for help.
After several rounds of administrative hearings, the FCC issued a restructuring order
that provided three mutually exclusive options, ranging from the return of the licenses
in exchange for forgiveness of debt obligations to a plan that allowed bidders to keep
as many of their licenses as they could afford by converting a portion of their down
payment into a pre-payment of the full bid price for a smaller number of licenses.
The restructuring order did not, however, allow any bidder to keep a license for less
than the original bid price because, the FCC reasoned, the auction regulations were
designed to ensure that licenses were allocated to users who could demonstrate, through
their ability to pay the highest price, that they possessed the most highly valued
use for the licenses. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 47</a>.

</p><p>After exhausting its administrative remedies to reverse the FCC Restructuring Order
and losing on appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, NextWave P.C. filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the Southern
District of New York and instituted an adversary proceeding against the FCC seeking
to avoid the company's license installment payment obligations. NextWave P.C. argued
that the acquisition of the licenses was a fraudulent conveyance that could be avoided
under §544 of the Bankruptcy Code based on, <i>inter alia,</i> NextWave P.C.'s failure
to receive reasonably equivalent value for the debt incurred. Rejecting the FCC's
argument that the bankruptcy court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over actions brought
against the FCC in its regulatory capacity, which exclusive jurisdiction, the FCC
argued, lies with the federal courts of appeals pursuant to federal statute, the
bankruptcy court allowed NextWave P.C.'s claims to proceed to trial. The bankruptcy
court concluded that the issues before it concerned the creditor-debtor relationship
between the FCC and NextWave P.C., and did not implicate the FCC's regulatory
authority. As such, the bankruptcy court determined that it had jurisdiction. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…;

at 49</a>.

</p><p>In analyzing a fraudulent conveyance claim under §544(b) of the Code, the
courts determine whether a debtor was insolvent at the time of the transfer and, if
so, whether the debtor received reasonably equivalent value for the transfer on the
effective date of the transfer (<i>e.g.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; 200 F.3d at 49</a>). At
trial, the FCC argued that under its regulations the entire obligation for the bid
amount became due at the close of the auction, and that the effective date of the
transfer was, therefore, the date of the close of the auction. As such, the
$4.74 billion bid amount was the market value of the licenses transferred on the
effective date of the transfer. The bankruptcy court concluded, however, that the
effective date of the transfer was when the FCC finally granted the licenses in
return for the executed notes, which was several months after the auction. By that
time the licenses were deemed to have a market value of only $1.023 billion,
and so all obligations to the FCC above that amount were constructively fraudulent
and avoidable. Amazingly, the avoidance remedy would allow NextWave P.C. to keep
the licenses it had acquired at auction by outbidding its opponents, while requiring
it to pay less than a quarter of its bid amount. The FCC appealed to the district
court, which affirmed the bankruptcy court's decision on substantially the same basis.

</p><p>The Second Circuit, however, reversed and remanded. First and foremost, the
Second Circuit concluded that the lower courts did indeed lack jurisdiction to decide
the question of whether NextWave P.C. had satisfied the regulatory conditions placed
by the FCC upon its retention of the licenses. The court determined that the
FCC's auction rules under §309(j) "have primarily a regulatory purpose: to ensure
that spectrum licenses end up in the hands of those most likely to further
congressionally defined objectives." <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 54</a>. Further, the court held that by
allowing NextWave P.C. to retain the licenses for a fraction of the bid price, the
lower courts had impaired the FCC's method for selecting licensees and had effectively
exercised the FCC's radio licensing function without any power whatsoever to do so.
<a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 55</a>. Lastly, the court found that the transfer date, for purposes of the
fraudulent conveyance analysis, was the auction close date, based both on general
auction law principles and on the FCC's interpretation of its own regulations, which
interpretation had been issued during the pendency of the NextWave P.C. bankruptcy
dispute. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 58-59</a>. Accordingly, the court determined, there was no
constructive fraud since NextWave P.C. had received equivalent value for its debt
obligation—the licenses valued at the $4.74 billion winning bid amount. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at
57</a>.

</p><p>Shortly after the Second Circuit's Dec. 22, 1999, ruling, in a move to
retain the licenses, NextWave P.C. agreed to pay the full balance due the FCC.
Through public notice, however, the FCC announced that NextWave P.C.'s licenses
had cancelled automatically on NextWave P.C.'s default under the payment terms of the
licenses, and scheduled the licenses for re-auction. The bankruptcy court granted
NextWave P.C.'s motion to declare the public notice null and void based largely on
its finding that, because the licenses constituted property of the estate, their
revocation violated the automatic stay. To that end, the bankruptcy court determined
that the exception under §362(b)(4) to the automatic stay<small><sup><a href="#2" name="2a">2</a></sup></small> did not apply because
the FCC's actions were "nothing other than a direct attempt to enforce its pecuniary
interests."<small><sup><a href="#3" name="3a">3</a></sup></small> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re FCC,</i> 217 F.3d 125, 132 (2d Cir. 2000)</a>.

</p><p>On writ of mandamus by the FCC to the Second Circuit, the court granted
mandamus and directed the bankruptcy court to vacate its order voiding the FCC's
license cancellations and notice of re-auction. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 141</a>. The court loudly and
repeatedly pronounced that the bankruptcy court's order had violated the Second Circuit's
mandate from the previous opinion to refrain from impinging upon the FCC's regulatory
authority. The court rejected the bankruptcy court's couching of the FCC's decision
to re-auction the licenses due to NextWave P.C.'s failure to make timely payments
as a creditor/debtor issue rather than one implicating the FCC's regulatory function.
The timing of NextWave P.C.'s payment obligation—like the amount of it—was a
regulatory condition established by the FCC, the court concluded. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 138</a>.
Further, even if the regulatory condition were arbitrary, the bankruptcy court lacked
jurisdiction to determine that issue. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at 137</a>.

</p><p>NextWave P.C. has appealed the FCC's cancellation of its licenses to the
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, and this appeal remains pending at this
writing.

</p><h3>Cases Following <i>NextWave</i></h3>

<p>While it might have taken two opinions to do so, the Second Circuit's mandate in
<i>NextWave</i> has been made clear, at least in that circuit. The bankruptcy court for the
Eastern District of New York, citing <i>NextWave,</i> held that it was without power to
review the propriety of the FCC's determination that Personal Communications Network
Inc.'s (another C-Block licensee) licenses had automatically cancelled pre-petition
and were, therefore, not assets of the bankruptcy estate. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re Pers.
Communications Network Inc.,</i> 249 B.R. 233 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y.
2000)</a>.

</p><p>Likewise, the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas reversed a
bankruptcy court's order denying the FCC's motion to amend Kansas Personal
Communications Services Ltd.'s (KPCSI, another C-Block licensee) schedule of
assets to reflect that its three C-Block licenses had automatically cancelled
post-petition. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… States v. Kansas Pers. Communications Servs. Ltd.,</i> 256
B.R. 807 (D. Kan. 2000)</a>. Giving "controlling weight" to the FCC's
own regulatory interpretation that on payment default the licenses cancelled automatically,
the district court concluded that the licenses had cancelled without any "act" by the
FCC. As such, license cancellation did not violate the automatic stay. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…; at
811</a>. Citing <i>NextWave,</i> the district court also determined that §362(b)(4)'s
exception to the automatic stay applied in that the FCC's requirement of timely and
full installment payments or automatic license cancellation on default is part of its
regulatory scheme rather than furtherance of a "primarily pecuniary government interest"
or an "adjudication of private rights." <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=…;

</p><h3>GWI PCS Inc.</h3>

<p>The only FCC defeat not yet reversed among the C-Block battles was handed down
by the Fifth Circuit in <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… re GWI PCS 1 Inc.,</i> 230 F.3d 788 (5th
Cir .2000)</a>. The key procedural difference between <i>GWI PCS</i> and the other
C-Block cases, however, is that the district court below had ruled that the
debtor's plan of reorganization had been substantially consummated and, accordingly,
dismissed the FCC's appeal of the bankruptcy court's confirmation order and avoidance
judgment as equitably moot.<small><sup><a href="#4" name="4a">4</a></sup></small>

</p><p>GWI PCS Inc. (GWI) was the winning bidder of 14 C-Block licenses at
a total bid price of $1.06 billion. Sharing the fate of other C-Block
licensees, GWI took its parent company and 14 wholly owned subsidiaries (all
GWI-related entities collectively—GWI PCS) into chapter 11 and brought a
preference action against the FCC seeking to avoid more than $900 million of the
bid amount still due. The bankruptcy court issued an avoidance judgment in favor of
GWI PCS and reduced the amount due the FCC to $60 million. Over the FCC's
objections, the bankruptcy court then confirmed the debtors' reorganization plan, which
incorporated the bankruptcy court's prior ruling in the avoidance action. The FCC
appealed the confirmation order and avoidance judgment to the district court.

</p><p>Nearly 10 months after the filing of the appeal, and only after the debtors
petitioned the Fifth Circuit for mandamus directing the district court to issue a
ruling, the district court dismissed the FCC's appeal as equitably moot. Appeal
of that ruling was taken by the FCC to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.
The court affirmed the confirmation order, finding that the reorganization plan had been
substantially consummated by Oct. 27, 1998, 37 days after entry of the
confirmation order. Interestingly, the court noted that while the FCC had been
granted one stay by the district court for 20 days and another stay by the Fifth
Circuit Court for an additional seven days, the FCC's failure to secure additional
or lengthier stays was the equivalent, for purposes of the equitable mootness analysis,
of not seeking a stay at all—that is, both lead equally to the implementation of the
reorganization plan. It is unclear from the opinion why the FCC was unable to
obtain stays from the very courts that would, thereafter, determine that failure to
obtain the stays, in large part, rendered the appeal of the confirmation order
equitably moot.

</p><p>Also of interest, the appeals court noted in dicta that while the bankruptcy court
might well have erred in permitting avoidance and enjoining license cancellation,
"thereby taking onto itself a quasi-regulatory function held by the FCC," the
FCC's challenge to the bankruptcy court's actions was barred by equitable mootness.
The court distinguished <i>NextWave</i> by pointing out that the courts in <i>NextWave</i> had granted
the FCC stays such that a reorganization plan there could not have been substantially
consummated. The distinction, of course, would ring truer if the Fifth Circuit court
itself had not lifted the stay that then allowed the debtors to proceed with the
plan.

</p><p>The court in <i>GWI PCS</i> also upheld the bankruptcy court's avoidance judgment that
allowed the debtors to avoid $894 million of the obligation owed to the FCC,
and permitted the debtors to retain the C-Block licenses. The court found
unpersuasive the Second Circuit's deference in <i>NextWave</i> to the FCC's own regulatory
interpretation of when the licenses had transferred to the debtor. The court concluded
instead that the transfer date of the licenses was not at the close of the auction,
but rather when the license application was finally approved by the FCC and the
notes were executed by the debtors. The timing of the transfer, you will recall,
was key to valuation of the licenses for purposes of determining whether the debtors
received reasonably equivalent value for the debt they incurred.

</p><h3>Commentary</h3>

<p>The C-Block spectrum cases reviewed above demonstrate the complexity of competing
interests and the approaches courts have taken in dealing with the interplay between
government regulatory powers and the powers of the bankruptcy court to promote equitable
distribution among creditors. The Second Circuit's "hands off" mandate to the bankruptcy
court in <i>NextWave</i> is arguably justified by the public policy it seeks to advance. It
is not difficult to see that a different result might easily undermine the integrity
of the government's license auctions altogether. Why worry about how much you bid,
so long as you are the highest bidder? The bankruptcy courts, after all, would
otherwise allow you to keep the prize for a fraction of the amounts of the losing
bid. It is difficult, however, to justify wholesale removal of the FCC from the
bankruptcy courts' jurisdiction with regard to all aspects of license payment terms and
pre- and post-petition license cancellation, as suggested by precedence in <i>NextWave.</i>

</p><p>The FCC has urged codification of the decisions reached by the Second Circuit
in <i>NextWave</i> in opposition to proposed legislative changes to the Code to clarify
treatment of government-issued licenses as property of the estate and of the government
agency as creditor when it holds the notes of one of its licensees.

</p><hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>

<p><sup><small><a name="1">1</a></small></sup> Mr. Montoya is a commercial litigation and bankruptcy attorney with the law firm of Jackson Walker L.L.P. in Austin, Texas. <a href="#1a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><sup><small><a name="2">2</a></small></sup> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… U.S.C. §362(b)(4)</a> provides an exception under paragraphs (1), (2), (3) and (6) of §362's automatic
stay provisions for:
</p><blockquote>
the commencement or continuation of an action or proceeding by a governmental unit...to enforce such governmental unit's police and
regulatory power... <a href="#2a">Return to article</a>
</blockquote>

<p><sup><small><a name="3">3</a></small></sup> Two tests have evolved from the courts, the "pecuniary purpose" test and the "public policy" test, to determine whether agency action fits
the §362(b)(4) exception. <i>See, e.g.,</i> <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… v. United States Dep't. of Labor,</i> 923 F.2d 782, 790 (10th
Cir.1991)</a>. <a href="#3a">Return to article</a>

</p><p><sup><small><a name="4">4</a></small></sup> The test for determining whether an appeal of a reorganization plan is moot in the Fifth Circuit is whether (1) a stay has been
obtained, (2) the plan has been substantially consummated, and (3) the relief requested would affect either the rights of parties not
before the court or the success of the plan. <a href="http://www.westlaw.com/find/default.asp?rs=CLWP2.1&amp;vr=1.0&amp;cite=… PCS,</i> 230 F.3d at 800</a>. <a href="#4a">Return to article</a>

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