ABERDEEN & ROCKFISH RAILROAD CO. ET AL. v. STUDENTS CHALLENGING REGULATORY AGENCY PROCEDURES (SCRAP) ET AL.
No. 73-1966
Supreme Court of the United States
June 24, 1975
422 U.S. 289
Argued March 26, 1975
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Nation‘s railroads, the United States, and the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) appeal from the judgment of a three-judge federal court which set aside an ICC order terminating a general revenue proceeding without declaring unlawful certain rate increases filed by the Nation‘s railroads with the ICC. The order directed the ICC to reopen the proceeding, prepare a better environmental impact statement under
The impact statement involved is that required by
I
This lawsuit has a lengthy history, a brief summary of which is necessary to an understanding of the issues presented by this appeal. In December 1971, citing sharply increasing costs and decreasing or negative profits, substantially all of the Nation‘s railroads collectively proposed to file tariffs increasing their freight rates by 2.5% across the board. The “surcharge” was stated to be temporary and was to be followed by a filing for larger, somewhat selective rate increases. Finding that the railroads had a critical and immediate need for revenue, the ICC declined to exercise its power to suspend proposed rate increases under
Thereafter, while the selective rates were suspended but the surcharge was being collected, a group of law students—(SCRAP)—and other environmental groups filed the instant lawsuit alleging that the ICC had made a decision not to suspend the 2.5% surcharge pending its investigation—which decision would have a substantial effect on the environment—without preparing an environmental impact statement or considering environmental issues, as required by the NEPA. Appellees claimed that the pre-existing rate structure discriminated against recyclables and in favor of virgin materials, and that the across-the-board rate surcharge exacerbated this situation with the unfortunate consequence to the environment that use of recyclable materials would be inhibited and use of virgin materials encouraged. The complaint sought to compel the ICC to suspend the rate surcharge and to enjoin the railroads from collecting it.
A three-judge court was therefore convened under
Meanwhile, on October 4, 1972, the ICC issued a final report dated September 27, 1972, declining, in the main,
The report noted that the “principal issue” in a general revenue proceeding is whether the railroads are in need of additional revenue; and concluded that the railroads had demonstrated overwhelmingly that they were. It then stated that there were two possible adverse affects on the environment which might flow from failure to declare the increases unlawful. First, the increase in rail rates might divert traffic to trucks, which are allegedly heavier polluters than trains. Second, the increase in rates for recyclables might discourage their use resulting in increased solid waste—disposal of which creates environmental problems—and an accelerated depletion of the country‘s natural resources. The danger of diversion to truck traffic was considered insubstantial for several reasons, among which were the fact that truck rates had increased due to similar increases in costs and the fact that the rate increases sought by the railroads were permissive and would not be used with respect to commodities which would be diverted to trucks. Moreover, any danger of diversion was plainly outweighed by
With respect to recyclables, the report emphasized that time is of the essence in general revenue proceedings in light of the claim of need by the railroads for immediate revenue and that their entitlement to the overall increase usually follows from a showing of such need. The consideration of other factors is therefore necessarily abbreviated and their further analysis is postponed to specialized proceedings more appropriate for their in-depth consideration, such as proceedings incident to individual complaints filed under
The report indicated that the increases on nonrecyclables would become effective on 15 days’ notice from the railroads and that the increases on recyclables would become effective on 35 days’ notice. The increased period for recyclables was set so that interested parties would have the opportunity to comment on the report. The ICC issued an order to that effect on October 4, 1972.
In response to comments which were filed by several parties, the ICC reopened Ex parte 281 on November 7, 1972, to reconsider the environmental effects of the new rates on recyclables in light of a fuller written consideration of these issues. The new rates on recyclables were suspended with the consent of the railroads for an additional seven months until June 10, 1973.
On March 13, 1973, the ICC served an expanded draft environmental impact statement. Comments were thereafter received from the EPA, the CEQ, the Department of Transportation, all of the appellees herein, and others. On May 1, 1973, the ICC issued a final impact statement covering 150 printed pages, with an additional 21-page bibliography. The main difference between the October 4, 1972, report and the impact statement was that the latter substantially expanded on the discussion of the underlying rate structure and the effect of rate increases on each of the recycling industries. With respect to the underlying rate structure, the conclusion, in the light of
On May 30, 1973, 11 days before the increased rates on recyclables were to become effective, appellees SCRAP and EDF filed a motion—apparently in the context of their earlier filed complaint against the surcharge—for a preliminary injunction restraining the implementation of the freight rate increases with respect to recyclables. On June 7, 1973, the three-judge court entered an order temporarily enjoining the railroads from collecting the rates, declaring, without any explanation whatever, that
Meanwhile, appellees had filed motions for summary judgment before the three-judge court seeking (a) a declaration that the ICC‘s orders declining to declare the rate increases unlawful were themselves unlawful because the environmental impact statement was inadequate, and an order directing the ICC to reconsider its decision in light of a better impact statement; and (b) a permanent injunction restraining collection of the rate increases on recyclables by the railroads. Over a dissent,
The court first rejected the applicability of the line of lower-court cases, beginning with Algoma Coal & Coke Co. v. United States, 11 F. Supp. 487 (ED Va. 1935), holding decisions of the ICC not to declare proposed increased rates unlawful in general revenue proceedings to be unreviewable. The court noted that this Court had divided evenly in 400 U. S. 73 (1970) in affirming Atlantic City Electric Co. v. United States, 306 F. Supp. 338 (SDNY 1969), and Alabama Power Co. v. United States, 316 F. Supp. 337 (DC 1970), and that the rule against reviewability of general revenue proceedings was therefore of questionable vitality—especially where the issue presented for review is not the reasonableness of a particular rate but the general question whether the railroads’ revenue needs justify environmental costs. However, the court rested its holding on the ground that this is a NEPA case. It said that unlike shippers, who may properly be made to exhaust their remedies under
The court then found that the ICC had failed to comply with NEPA in two respects. First, no oral hearing
The court then vacated the orders of the ICC, which had terminated Ex parte 281 without declaring the rate increases unlawful, аnd ordered the ICC to prepare a new impact statement analyzing the underlying rate structure, the elasticity of demand for recyclables, and the probability of encouraging new technology in the use of scrap. It ordered the ICC to hold hearings after circulating the new impact statement and to fully consider anew in light of the new statement and the hearing whether the increased rates should be declared unlawful. The court declined to enjoin the collection of the rates, while claiming that it could have, and probably should have done so, notwithstanding Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Wichita Bd. of Trade, supra.9
The railroads appeal, claiming that the District Court had no jurisdiction over this case, and that the ICC had, in any event, fully complied with NEPA. The ICC and the United States appeal, claiming only that the ICC has fully complied with NEPA. We noted probable jurisdiction in both cases. 419 U. S. 822 (1974).
II
At the outset we face a challenge to our appellate jurisdiction. Under
The question under the statutory language is whether the order being appealed from is an “injunction” within the meaning of that word as used in
It is аlso apparent that the District Court‘s injunction restrained “the enforcement, operation or execution” of the order of the ICC within the meaning of
III
The railroads, but not the United States or the ICC, argue that the District Court had no jurisdiction to review the decision of the ICC, made in a general revenue proceeding, not to declare the increased rates unlawful. The argument is supported by a long line of District Court decisions; see, e. g., Algoma Coal & Coke Co. v. United States, 11 F. Supp. 487 (ED Va. 1935); Koppers Co. v. United States, 132 F. Supp. 159 (WD Pa. 1955); Florida Citrus Comm‘n v. United States, 144 F. Supp. 517 (ND Fla. 1956), aff‘d per curiam, 352 U. S. 1021 (1957); Atlantic City Electric Co. v. United States, 306 F. Supp. 338 (SDNY 1969), and Alabama Power Co. v. United States, 316 F. Supp. 337 (DC 1969), both aff‘d by an equally divided Court, 400 U. S. 73 (1970); Electronic Industries Assn. v. United States, 310 F. Supp. 1286 (DC 1970), aff‘d, 401 U. S. 967 (1971); and its correctness in its application to this case turns in part on an understanding of just what a general revenue proceeding is.
A
Under the Interstate Commerce Act, the initiative in setting rates remains with the railroads. See SCRAP I, 412 U. S., at 672. The ICC has the power, after exercise of this initiative by the railroads, and after an investigation, either upon its own initiative or upon complaint by an interested party, to declare a rate unlawful if it finds that the rate is unjust, unreasonable, preferential, discriminatory, or otherwise in violation of the Act.
“[I]n performing the duty broadly to increase carrier revenue, it is enough if the Commission, in the first instance, makes such inquiry and investigation as would enable it to say that the prescribed increases when applied to members of the group will generally not exceed a reasonable maximum.” Id., at 76-77. (Emphasis added.)
The Court went on to say:
“The extent of this inquiry and the detail of investigation can not be marked by this Court with certainty. The size of the group dealt with, the nature of the traffic, the urgency of the relief demanded, these and other factors should condition the Commission‘s procedure in each case. But with proper procedure, the ultimate finding that the rates as generally applied are reasonable, supported by evidence and accompanied by suitable reservation of the rights of all interested parties to secure modification of any particular rate which, when challenged, is found to be unjust or unreasonable, complies with the statute. The requirement that increase of rates
by Commission action is to be in the exercise of its power to prescribe reasonable rates is thus observed but in conformity to the administrative necessities which the proviso contemplates.” Id., at 77.
Proceedings, such as that described in United States v. Louisiana, in which the ICC has been called upon to decide whether to prevent a substantially across-the-board rate increase, have become known as general revenue proceedings. The ICC‘s inquiry has tended to focus on whether the railroads are really in need of increased revenues and has tended to leave for individual rate or refund proceedings under
“Thus, we do not attempt to determine whether the particular rates which result from the increases are maximum reasonable rates, nor does the order constitute a prescription of rates within the meaning of the decision in Arizona Grocery Co. v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 284 U. S. 370. If individual rates or groups of rates are believed to be unjust and unreasonable, a shipper or other interested persons has [sic] an administrative remedy available in sections 13 and 15 of the Interstate Commerce Act,
49 U. S. C. §§ 13 and15 .” Ex parte No. 281, Increased Frеight Rates and Charges, 1972 (Environmental Matters), 346 I. C. C. 88, 103 (1973).
Of course, the ICC has the power in a general revenue proceeding to declare the new rates unlawful and disapprove the increase. It could also, if it chose, declare some of the rates discriminatory, unreasonable, or otherwise unlawful; and it could itself affirmatively approve
The instant proceeding, in which substantially all of this country‘s railroads sought increases in substantially all of their rates based upon alleged cost increases which placed them in a financial crisis, plainly qualifies as a general revenue proceeding. Environmental issues aside, the ICC, true to form, devoted most of its investigation to the issue of the railroads’ revenue needs, but did inquire to some extent into the reasonableness of the increases as applied to certain broad categories of charges.
In Algoma Coal & Coke Co. v. United States, 11 F. Supp. 487 (ED Va. 1935), shippers of coal sought review in a three-judge court of the decision of the ICC in a general revenue proceeding not to declare the proposed increases unlawful insofar as they applied to coal. The claim was that the increased rates on coal were unjust and unreasonable. The court declined to set aside the rate increases. It pointed out that the ICC‘s order was permissive only—it simply declined to prevent the rate increases.15 It then stated that the ICC had not yet decided whether the increased rates on coal specifically were just and reasonable but had decided only that the railroad‘s revenue needs rendered the general increase reasonable; and that the plaintiffs had a procedure available to them—a complaint under § 13 seeking a
B
The railroads claim that the decision of the court below violates the rule of the cases discussed above that decisions by the ICC in general revenue proceedings are unreviewable. First, the railroads argue that the decision in a general revenue proceeding not to declare rates unlawful is just as much an interim decision—since it does not finally decide the lawfulness of any particular rate—as is a decision not to suspend a particular rate pending investigation. See Algoma Coal & Coke Co. v. United States, supra. Therefore, review of that decision is squarely banned by the Court‘s holding in SCRAP I that the courts have no power to suspend, or to overturn the ICC‘s decision not to suspend, rates pending the ICC‘s final determination of their lawfulness. Second, treating the decision of the court below as though it were a substantive review of the ICC‘s order—addressed to the question whether the record supported the ICC‘s decision not to suspend the rates as to recyclables—the railroads contend that the court below reviewed an issue not yet decided finally by the ICC in violation of settled principles of finality and exhaustion of administrative remedies.17 More generally,
The railroads’ second argument fails because, unlike the issue of the reasonablenеss of a particular rate, and arguably unlike the issue of the reasonableness of a general increase,18 the issue addressed by the court below had
Our holding here is in no way inconsistent with our conclusion in SCRAP I that NEPA does not repeal by implication any other statute. We do not hold that NEPA supplies the courts with otherwise nonexistent power to prevent collection of rates; and we do not hold that NEPA permits review of the question of the justness or reasonableness of rate increases, either general or specific, at any earlier time than would otherwise have been pеrmissible. NEPA does create a discrete procedural obligation on Government agencies to give written consideration of environmental issues in connection with certain major federal actions and a right of action in adversely affected parties to enforce that obligation. When agency or departmental consideration of environmental factors in connection with that “federal action” is complete, notions of finality and exhaustion do not stand in the way of judicial review of the adequacy of such consideration, even though other aspects of the rate increase are not ripe for review.
IV
We agree with appellants that the District Court erred in deciding that the oral hearing which the ICC chose to
NEPA provides that “such statement . . . shall accompany the proposal through the existing agency review processes” (emphasis added). This sentence does not, contrary to the District Court opinion, affect the time when the “statement” must be prepared. It simply says what must be done with the “statеment” once it is prepared—it must accompany the “proposal.” The “statement” referred to is the one required to be included “in every recommendation or report on proposals for . . . major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment” and is apparently the final impact statement, for no other kind of statement is mentioned in the statute. Under this sentence of the statute, the time at which the agency must prepare the final “statement” is the time at which it makes a recommendation or report on a proposal for federal action. Where an agency initiates federal action by publishing a proposal and then holding hearings on the proposal, the statute would appear to require an impact statement to be included in the proposal and to be considered at the hearing. Here, however, until the October 4, 1972, report, the ICC had made no proposal, recommendation, or report. The only proposal was the proposed new rates filed by the railroads.19 Thus, the earliest time at which the statute required a statement was the time
“To the fullest extent possible, all . . . hearings [on proposed agency action] shall includе consideration of the environmental aspects of the proposed action. . . . Agencies should make any draft environmental [impact] statements to be issued available to the public at least fifteen (15) days prior to the time of such hearings.”
40 CFR § 1500.7 (d) . (Emphasis added.)
Such consultation occurred here from the outset; environmental issues pervaded the hearings held—both oral and written; and all draft impact statements in existence were circulated before the hearings. Procedurally, NEPA was thus thoroughly complied with through October 4, 1972.
Assuming that the ICC erred in failing to prepare a separate formal environmental impact statement to accompany its October 4, 1972, report or that the consideration given to environmental factors in that report was inadequate, the ICC need not have “started over again.” To the extent that the District Court‘s conclusion to the contrary is based on its belief that the draft statement of March 1973 had to be considered at a
V
Emphasizing again the nonfinal and limited nature of the decision made by the ICC at a general revenue proceeding, the railroads and the ICC argue that the District Court erred in concluding that the environmental impact statement itself was deficient. They claim that throughout the general revenue proceeding the Commission gave environmental issues the “hard look” which is required by NEPA, Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Morton, 148 U. S. App. D. C. 5, 16, 458 F. 2d 827, 838 (1972), and that appellees and the court below simply disagreed with their decision not to prevent the increase on recyclables. They also emphasize the fact that they were giving continuing and more extensive attention to environmental consequences flowing from the rate structure in another proceeding, Ex parte 270, which was more appropriate to the task. We substantially agree with this position.
In order to decide what kind of an environmental impact statement need be prepared, it is necessary first to describe accurately the “federal action” being taken. The action taken here was a decision entirely nonfinal with respect to particular rates—not to declare unlaw-
Having defined the scope of the “federal action” being taken in Ex parte 281, our decision of this case becomes easy. The lower court held that the environmental impact statement inadequately explored the underlying rate structure and the extent to which the use of recyclables will be affected by the rate structure. Whatever the result would have been if the ICC had been approving the entire rate structure in Ex parte 281,28 given the nature of the action taken by the ICC, the lower court was plainly incorrect.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE POWELL took no part in the consideration or decision of these cases.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting in part.
I agree with Parts I, II, and III of the Court‘s opinion that the cases are properly here and that the District Court had jurisdiction over appellees’ complaint. On the merits, I would, however, affirm.
This litigation presents a history of foot dragging by the ICC, as other parties to proceedings before it, including other federal agencies, have attempted to prod it into compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The “final impact statement” that the Court holds adequate presents a melange of statistics that purport to show that an increase on the transportation rates of recyclable materials will not have a significant adverse impact on the environment. The Commission‘s “analysis” has been thoroughly discredited by the comments of other federal agencies, including not only the Environmental Protection Agency and the Council on Environmental Quality, whose principal concerns are environmental, but also the Department of Commerce and the General Services Administration. The Commission has responded to the adverse comments by papering over the defects they identify, rather than dealing with the substance of the deficiencies.
The environmental effects at stake are described in my opinion when the case was here before. United States v. SCRAP, 412 U. S. 669, 699-714 (1973). Appellees oppose increases on the rates for recyclables because increases in transportation costs will retard the use of recy-
“[S]crap prices are determined by a number of factors operating simultaneously, among them are the aggregate demand for steel, the price and transportation costs of iron ore, the supply of scrap, as well as the transportation cost of scrap and other factors. It would be surprising indeed, if, in light of the number of factors constantly at work in the scrap market, a close and simple relationship existed between scrap price movements and freight rate changes.”
“Nor does data which shows a constantly growing consumption of scrap despite rate increases prove that freight rate decisions are inconsequential. Growth might have been materially higher or lower had . . . rate decisions been different. What is needed in each instance is a multivariate analysis to isolate the effect of transportation costs on scrap prices and the quantity consumed.”1
Yet the Commission persisted in these assertions, and it failed to make the price sensitivity studies the Council
The Court implicitly concedes the shortcomings of the Commission‘s analysis, relying, as the Commission did, on the prospect that the environmental issues would receive further study in Ex parte 270, a proceeding initiated to investigate the entire freight rate structure. But NEPA commands an agency to consider environmental effects before it takes a “major federal action,” not to relegate consideration to further proceedings after action is taken, particularly where there is no assurance that a prompt conclusion will be forthcoming. When the Commission terminated its proceedings in Ex parte 281, Ex parte 270 had been in progress for more than two years. The scope of the investigation had not been fully defined at that time, and the prospect of any
NEPA is more than a technical statute of administrative procedure. It is a commitment to the preservation of our natural environment. The statute‘s language conveys the urgency of that task. The District Court acted responsibly when it refused to accept the Commission‘s representations that a complete treatment of the environmental issues was beyond its capability and therefore should not be required. One purpose of NEPA was to force agencies to acquire expertise in environmental matters, even if attention to parochial matters in the past had not demanded this capability.2 The Court today excuses the Commission‘s performance. The District Court, following the spirit of NEPA, told the Commission to do better. I would affirm its judgment.
