ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN RAILROADS, Petitioner
v.
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD and United States of America, Respondents
Western Coal Traffic League, et al., Intervenors
No. 97-1020.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued May 8, 1998.
Decided June 30, 1998.
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Surface Transportation Board.
Arvid E. Roach, II argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the briefs were Louis P. Warchot and Kenneth P. Kolson.
Thomas J. Stilling, Attorney, Surface Transportation Board, argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief were Joel I. Klein, Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, Robert B. Nicholson and John P. Fonte, Attorneys, Henri F. Rush, General Counsel, Surface Transportation Board, and Ellen D. Hanson, Deputy General Counsel.
William A. Slover, C. Michael Loftus, Robert D. Rosenberg, Andrew P. Goldstein, Nicolas J. DiMichael and Fredric L. Wood were on the joint brief for intervenors Western Coal Traffic League, et al.
Before: WALD, WILLIAMS and TATEL, Circuit Judges.
TATEL, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner challenges Surface Transportation Board guidelines for determining the reasonableness of railroad rates in small cases. Finding the challenge unripe, we dismiss the petition.
* For much of the nineteenth century, railroads possessed sufficient market power to set rates that were often unjust and unreasonable. See Western Coal Traffic League v. United States,
Responding to the continuing decline of railroads, Congress again acted, this time significantly deregulating the railroad industry through the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, Pub.L. No. 94-210, 90 Stat. 31 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 45 and 49 U.S.C.), and the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, Pub.L. No. 96-448, 94 Stat. 1895 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 45 and 49 U.S.C.). Recognizing that railroads must often charge rates well above their variable costs to compensate for their very high fixed costs, these two acts prohibited the ICC, now the Surface Transportation Board, from regulating rates unless the railroad has "market dominance," Pub.L. No. 94-210, § 202(b),
The ICC struggled for many years to develop guidelines for assuring the reasonableness of rates charged by railroads with market dominance. After some experimentation, see, e.g., Iowa Pub. Serv. Co. v. ICC,
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Responding to Congress' directive, the STB issued the guidelines challenged in this case. Rate Guidelines--Non-Coal Proceedings, Ex Parte No. 347 (Sub-No. 2),
Id. at * 21.
In issuing these guidelines, the Board rejected petitioner's argument that whenever complaining shippers use the three-ratio approach, railroads should be able to defend by presenting a simplified SAC analysis. Noting that it had already rejected petitioner's computer model for producing a simplified SAC figure--in a test the model had approved a rate with an R/VC exceeding 5,000%, see id. at * 5--the Board concluded that since shippers may only use the three-ratio approach when a SAC analysis would be economically infeasible, see id. at * 25-26 (describing when shippers may use the three ratios), railroads should not then be able to "transform the case into a SAC case," id. at * 28. "In any event," the Board said, "a SAC [
After the Board rejected its petition for rehearing, Rate Guidelines--Non-Coal Proceedings, Ex Parte No. 347 (Sub-No. 2),
II
Before we can consider the merits of the petition, we must determine whether it is justiciable--i.e., whether petitioner has standing and whether its claims are ripe for review. Contrary to the situation we face in most cases, here it is petitioner arguing that the petition may not be reviewable, suggesting not only that it is "unclear" whether it has been "aggrieved" by the guidelines, Brief for Petitioner at 31 (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2344 (1994) (only a "party aggrieved" may obtain review of a Board order)), but also that its claims are "arguably" not ripe for review, see id. at 32. Also unlike the typical case, the Board contends that petitioner has standing and that the petition is ripe, arguing that petitioner has raised a "purely legal question." Brief for Respondents at 22.
The counterintuitive positions of the parties actually make sense. Because parties must petition for review of Board orders within sixty days, see 28 U.S.C. § 2344, and because we generally refuse to allow late petitions even when petitioners argue that their claims were unripe during the original sixty-day period, see Eagle-Picher Indus., Inc. v. U.S. EPA,
Setting aside the question of whether a party acknowledging it may not be aggrieved and introducing no evidence demonstrating actual injury can ever have standing, we limit our analysis to the petitioner's alternate argument that the case is unripe for review. See Ohio Forestry Ass'n, Inc. v. Sierra Club, --- U.S. ----, ----,
Beginning with the first question, we ask whether the court would benefit from an actual application of the challenged agency action. See Ohio Forestry Ass'n, --- U.S. at ----,
Petitioner first argues that by failing to indicate how the three ratios would be employed in any particular case to review a challenged rate, the Board violated Congress' command to establish a method for determining the reasonableness of rates in small cases. Noting that ratemaking is "not a precise science," the Board responds that the guidelines "establish a general framework" which the Board will use to balance the interests of carriers and shippers. Since the Board has not yet applied the guidelines to invalidate any specific rate--it applied the guidelines only once, finding that the challenged rate was reasonable, see South-West R.R. Car Parts Co. v. Missouri Pacific R.R. Co.,
Judicial resolution of petitioner's second claim, that the guidelines may undermine revenue adequacy, would likewise benefit from a concrete case. Relying on Burlington Northern v. ICC,
Petitioner's challenge to the Board's exclusion of SAC evidence is equally unfit for judicial review. Although we are unconvinced by the Board's explanation that a railroad's SAC presentation would be unpersuasive because the railroad "lacks the incentive to seek out the least-cost most-efficient stand alone service," id. at * 28--we rejected just this line of reasoning in Burlington Northern v. ICC,
Finding all three of petitioner's challenges unfit for review, we next consider whether deferring review would cause undue hardship to the parties. See Truckers United for Safety v. FHA,
According to the Board, deferring review will impose a hardship upon the small shippers who will have to defend the Board's guidelines when petitioner or its members challenge them in some concrete future case. The Supreme Court has already foreclosed this argument, noting that "[t]he ripeness doctrine reflects a judgment that the disadvantages of a premature review that may prove too abstract or unnecessary ordinarily outweigh the additional costs of--even repetitive--post-implementation litigation." Id.
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So ordered.
