BROTHERHOOD OF MAINTENANCE OF WAY EMPLOYEES, et al., Petitioners,
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, et al., Intervening Petitioners,
v.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION and United States of America,
Respondents.
GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD CO. and Detroit, Toledo and
Ironton Railroad Co., Petitioners,
v.
UNITED STATES of America and Interstate Commerce Comm., Respondents,
CSX Corporation, et al., Intervening Respondents.
Nos. 80-2649, 82-1306.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Jan. 19, 1983.
Basil Cole, Jr., Dechert, Price & Rhoads, Washington, D.C., Harold A. Ross, Ross & Kraushaar Co., L.P.A., Cleveland, Ohio, for petitioners.
Lawrence Richmond, I.C.C., Washington, D.C., Roland W. Donnem, Chessie System Railroads Law Dept., Cleveland, Ohio, for respondents.
Before ESCHBACH and COFFEY, Circuit Judges, and DUMBAULD, Senior District Judge.*
DUMBAULD, Senior District Judge.
On September 23, 1980, the Interstate Commerce Commission (I.C.C.), for reasons set forth in an opinion of over 130 pages,1 approved under 49 U.S.C. Sec. 11343 the acquisition of control by CSX Corporation (a new corporation created to carry out the instant merger) of a giant railroad system uniting the Chessie System, Inc. (controlling six rail carriers, including the C. & O. Railway Co., the B. & O. R.R. Co., and Western Maryland Ry. Co.) and Seaboard Coast Line Industries, Inc. (controlling ten rail carriers, including Seaboard Coast Line R.R. Co., Louisville & Nashville R.R. Co., and Clinchfield R.R. Co.). CSX will also acquire control of Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac R.R. The subsidiary rail carriers will remain as separate corporate entities.
In connection with its approval the Commission imposed certain conditions (commonly called the New York Dock conditions) for the protection of railroad labor; but refused to impose the set of conditions (commonly called the D.T. & I. conditions) which had in former years been routinely prescribed for protection of traffic routings for the benefit of competing carriers, but which recently have been repudiated by the Commission as interfering with the natural operation of competitive forces in a market economy.
In No. 80-2649 the labor appellants attack the Commission's failure to impose conditions more beneficial to labor than the New York Dock conditions; and in No. 82-1306 two railroads that will be competing with the CSX system for certain traffic attack the Commission's failure to impose the D.T. & I. conditions. For reasons hereinafter elaborated we affirm.
* The labor protective conditions
In U.S. v. Lowden,
The pertinent legislation was amended in 1976 to add a requirement that the conditions imposed must contain provisions which are "no less protective ... than those ... established pursuant to Section 405 of the Rail Passenger Service Act (45 U.S.C. 565)."4
This addition incorporates the experience resulting from the provisions of the Act of October 30, 1970, 84 Stat. 1327, 45 U.S.C. Sec. 565, establishing Amtrak. The "fair and equitable arrangements" there mandated were to "include, without being limited to, such provisions as may be necessary for" five specified topics. It was further provided that provisions against worsening of the positions of employees "shall in no event provide benefits less than those established pursuant to section 5(2)(f) of the Interstate Commerce Act." 84 Stat. 1337.
In 1971 Secretary of Labor James D. Hodgson certified a set of conditions under the Amtrak statute known as the "Appendix C-1" or the "Amtrak" conditions. These were upheld as being in conformity with (or even in excess of) the requirements of the Amtrak statute and of section 5(2)(b) of the Interstate Commerce Act in Congress of Ry. Unions v. Hodgson,
When the Interstate Commerce Act was codified by the Act of October 17, 1978, 92 Stat. 1337, the familiar Section 5(2)(f) became 49 U.S.C. Sec. 11347 (92 Stat. 1439). It was here ordained that an arrangement is required "at least as protective of the interests of employees ... as the terms imposed under this section before February 5, 1976, and the terms established under section 565 of title 45."
The apparent intention of the somewhat obscure language of 49 U.S.C. Sec. 11347 was to require the continuance of protective provisions as elaborated in the Commission's practice pursuant to Sec. 5(2)(f) prior to its amendment by the 4 R Act in 1976, plus the provisions developed under the Amtrak statute. That statute, it will be remembered, required inclusion of five specified items, namely: (1) preservation of benefits, including pensions, under collective bargaining agreements; (2) continuation of rights to collective bargaining; (3) protection against worsening of positions with respect to employment; (4) priority of reemployment for employees laid off; (5) paid training or retraining programs. Besides these statutory requirements of the Amtrak legislation, Sec. 11347 probably also mandates the substance of the "Appendix C-1" conditions as certified in 1971 by Secretary Hodgson.5
The Commission, in attempting to formulate a standard set of conditions constituting "a fair arrangement suitable for imposition in the usual transactions involving rail carriers for which approval is sought,"6 has elaborated what are called the "New York Dock conditions," from the name of the case7 where they were first formulated.8 Those conditions were sustained in an able and thorough opinion by Judge Waterman in New York Dock Ry. v. U.S.,
We agree with the Second Circuit's construction (
The arguments presented here contending that the New York Dock conditions do not suffice to satisfy the requirements of Sec. 11347 are simply a repetition of contentions repeatedly made to and rejected by the Commission. They do not become more convincing by reiteration. We are satisfied that the conditions imposed by the Commission are adequate and valid.
II
Traffic Protective Conditions
Likewise the attack in the case at bar upon the Commission's refusal to impose the so-called D.T. & I. conditions is a threshing of old straw. For a long time the Commission has clearly enunciated its view that those conditions are undesirable because anticompetitive, and that it will not continue to impose them routinely.10 Indeed, in Rulemaking Concerning Traffic Protection Conditions in Railroad Procedures,
In a thorough and well reasoned opinion the Commission outlined the change in economic conditions in the railroad industry in recent years, the inconsistency of the D.T. & I. conditions with "recent regulatory reform" and emphasized the Commission's powers under other provisions of the regulatory statute to deal effectively with the evils which the D.T. & I. conditions were designed to eliminate. Also noted was the economic policy that "Each carrier must be free to compete both in service and price to establish the price-service combinations that best meet shipper needs."13
The new policy with respect to traffic protective conditions was in accord with the views regarding conditions in general which had been set forth in a previously enunciated general policy statement concerning railroad unification transactions: Railroad Consolidation Procedures, General Policy Statement,
The Commission's repudiation of D.T. & I. conditions has been consistently and uniformly manifested in its consolidation decisions subsequent to the announcement of the new policy in the case where GTW control of D.T. & I. was approved.16
Though the present fad of "deregulation" may be thought to go to extremes which sometimes may ultimately prove unwise,17 it is clear that establishment of the "pro-competitive" policy disfavoring the D.T. & I. conditions falls squarely within the discretion of the Commission in exercising its regulatory expertise. To determine what degree of carrier competition is desirable in the public interest has long been recognized as a task for the Commission. This is true both in consolidation cases18 and cases involving grant of operating authority to institute a new competitive service.19
The Commission's normal discretionary power to determine the degree of competition required to ensure adequate service to the public is intensified, under circumstances such as are involved in the case at bar, by the trend of recent Congressional policy with respect to "deregulation" of transportation. That policy seeks to encourage the operation of competition and the interaction of market forces, rather than the edicts of regulatory agencies, as the means of optimizing the allocation of economic resources in the public interest.
Accordingly, the Commission had authority to reject the D.T. & I. conditions and its determination, based upon careful evaluation of the factors involved, must be sustained.
PETITIONS FOR REVIEW DENIED.
The Hon. Edward Dumbauld, United States Senior District Judge of the Western District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation
Reported at
A similar competing major unification of end-to-end lines connecting the Middle West and the South was approved by the Commission on March 19, 1982, in Norfolk Southern Corporation-Control-Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. and Southern Ry. Co.,
In I.C.C. v. Ry. Labor Assn.,
Act of September 18, 1940, 54 Stat. 898, 906. The legislation went on to establish a period of four years (or the period of prior employment) during which the merger "will not result in employees ... being in a worse position with respect to their employment." That this did not require continuance of employment during the applicable period but merely a compensation allowance was held in Maintenance Employees v. U.S.,
Act of February 5, 1976 (commonly called the 4 R Act), 90 Stat. 31, 62
This is so because Sec. 11347 speaks of "terms established under" 45 U.S.C. Sec. 565 rather than "terms required by" Sec. 565. Similarly, the "terms imposed under this section [i.e., Sec. 5(2)(f) ] before February 5, 1976" would refer to the practice of the Commission under Sec. 5(2)(f) before enactment of the 4 R Act. Ry. Labor Executives' Assn. v. U.S.,
Other than trackage rights and lease proceedings, where different conditions have been developed. New York Dock Railway-Control-Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal,
See note 6, supra
Southern Ry. Co.-Control-Central of Georgia Ry. Co.,
As it had done for thirty years previously. Ironically, the first occasion on which the Commission indicated any distaste for the D.T. & I. conditions was another proceeding involving control of the D.T. & I. The Norfolk & Western and Chessie sought control, each with a 50% interest. The Commission decided that control by Grand Trunk Western would be more beneficial to the public interest. N. & W. Ry. Co. v. U.S.,
The notice of proposed rulemaking dated July 7, 1980, was published in the Federal Register on July 10, 1980
Ibid., 115, 123
Essential services are basically those the deprivation of which would result in inadequate service to the public. See
These cases are reviewed at
See North American Van Lines v. I.C.C.,
McLean Trucking Co. v. U.S.,
Notes
19 U.S. v. Detroit & Cleveland Navigation Co.,
