The City of South Bend and the Brothers of the Holy Cross petition for review of orders of the Surface Transportation Board (1) denying their application for adverse abandonment of two railroad lines in South Bend, Indiana, and (2) refusing to reopen the proceeding. The petitioners
I. Background
The Congress has delegated to the Board exclusive jurisdiction to regulate “transportation by rail carriers” and “the construction, acquisition, operation, abandonment, or discontinuance” of rail facilities,
see
49 U.S.C. § 10501(b), with the instruction that the agency “ensure the development and continuation of a sound rail transportation system,”
id.
§ 10101(4). A rail carrier may abandon a line upon its own petition or that of a third party with a “proper interest,”
Modern Handcraft, Inc.,
In 2006 the petitioners applied for adverse abandonment of two interconnected short branch rail lines that together run for 3.7 miles through South Bend. The current owner, Norfolk Southern Railway Company (NS), has neither maintained nor used either line. One line serves a coal-fired power plant on the campus of the University of Notre Dame, but the University stopped receiving coal by rail in the mid-1990s. Notre Dame now receives 3,500 truck loads of coal per year from a transloading facility six miles from campus. According to the petitioners, there is no evidence Notre Dame or anyone else is or will be interested in renewed rail service. Thus, they argued before the Board, the public interest favors abandonment so the City can construct a sewer system and a recreational trail through the right-of-way and the Brothers and the Sisters of the Holy Cross can exercise their reversionary interests in order to expand their campuses.
The Chicago, Lake Shore and South Bend Railway Company (CLS), a start-up short branch railroad, opposed the application. CLS hopes to buy the lines from NS and persuade Notre Dame to resume accepting coal by rail. NS took no position on the application but explained that, if the lines are not abandoned, rehabilitating them would be feasible.
The Board denied the petitioners’ application on the ground that there is “a reasonable potential for future” use of the lines.
Norfolk S. Ry. Co.,
No. AB-290 (Sub-No. 286),
Some weeks later the petitioners asked the Board to reopen the proceeding in light of a letter the Board had received from Affleck-Graves. The Board, with one member in dissent, denied the petition, concluding the letter presented no new information and the petitioners could have solicited a similar letter earlier.
See Norfolk S. Ry. Co.,
No. AB-290 (Sub-No. 286),
II. Analysis
We review the Board’s denial of the petitioners’ application under the highly deferential arbitrary-and-capricious standard of the APA.
See
5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A);
Cross Harbor,
The gravamen of the petition for review is that the record does not support the Board’s finding “that there is a potential for renewed rail operations,”
NS I,
slip op. at 4, because both Notre Dame’s public statement and NS’s submission indicate the University has no present interest in receiving coal by rail. The petitioners point to the statement of Affleck-Graves, as quoted in the
South Bend Tribune,
that “[n]ow and in the foreseeable future, we’ll have our coal delivered by truck.” It is the Board’s undisputed judgment, however, that “[cjoal can generally be moved more efficiently by rail than by truck.”
Id.
at 4 n. 13. Notre Dame’s historical practice of receiving coal by rail made economic sense, therefore. By implication, the University’s current practice- — receiving, on average, about 14 truck loads of coal every weekday — is not economically rational and will be even more inefficient when the University’s annual demand goes from its current level of 80,000 tons to the 100,000 tons CLS projects, without contradiction, will be needed “in the near future.”
In the light of this evidence, the Board reasonably found Notre Dame “might be interested in again receiving coal shipments by rail directly to its power plant” if, as implied by the statement of AffleckGraves recounted in the
South Bend Tribune,
political and social pressures diminish in the future
****
Id.
at 5 & n. 14. The same article thus presented a plausible explanation- — unchallenged by the petitioners — why the University has yet to resume an economically rational practice. In sum, the finding of the Board rests upon “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”
Consolo v. FMC,
The petitioners also argue the Board’s assessment of the evidence contravenes its precedent, which they imply forecloses finding substantial evidence of demand if no shipper has opposed the abandonment. Upon inspection, however, we see the Board’s precedent requires it to treat shipper opposition
vel non
as but one factor in its decision.
Cf. Cross Harbor,
Lastly in this regard, the petitioners argue the Board should have deferred to NS’s “business judgment,”
see Salt Lake City Corp.,
On the other side of the balance, the petitioners argue the Board underestimated the public interest in abandonment. In light of the Board’s well-reasoned assessment of the potential for renewed service, however, we have no cause to disturb the
In sum, by denying the petitioners’ application and giving CLS a “reasonable period of time” to acquire the lines, invest in rehabilitating them, address local concerns, and pursue shippers such as Notre Dame or its supplier of coal,
NS I,
slip op. at 7, the Board acted reasonably in furtherance of its “statutory duty to preserve and promote continued rail service,”
Cross Harbor,
The petitioners also challenge as arbitrary and capricious the Board’s order denying their petition, based upon new evidence, to reopen the proceeding pursuant to 49 C.F.R. § 1115.4.
See ICC v. Bhd. of Locomotive Eng’rs,
The petitioners argue the Board should have reversed its position in light of the letter, which they claim shows Notre Dame has a firm intention not to resume receiving coal by rail. As the Board explained, however, the letter merely stated more emphatically what the article in the South Bend Tribune had quoted AffleckGraves as saying: Notre Dame has no present plan to use the lines. See NS II, slip op. at 3-4. The Board reasonably concluded, therefore, the letter did not require it to reverse its determination that there is a reasonable likelihood Notre Dame’s plans will change. Id. at 4.*****
III. Conclusion
Based upon the foregoing, the petitions for review are
Denied.
I join the opinion of the Court and write separately to add two points.
I
First, the premise of the Court’s opinion is that the relevant statute permits third parties such as the City of South Bend to file adverse abandonment petitions. But as the owner of this railroad line has suggested, that premise may be inaccurate. To be sure, the Surface Transportation Board or its predecessor, the Interstate Commerce Commission, has exercised adverse abandonment authority since 1981. It appears, however, that the statute as amended by the ICC Termination Act of
II
Second, assuming that third parties may file adverse abandonment petitions, the Board’s decision to deny the City of South Bend’s petition in this case barely passes muster — and does so only because of the significant deference we owe the Board under the arbitrary and capricious test. Our deference in applying the arbitrary and capricious standard has limits, however, and the Board’s action in this case is bumping up against them. This dormant railroad track has been a useless eyesore in South Bend for well over a decade. Measured against the relevant adverse abandonment precedents, the Board’s authority to continue denying South Bend’s plea is nearly at an end. In my judgment, if sale of this inactive line does not occur by the end of 2010, the “reasonable period of time” allotted by the Board likely will have expired.
Norfolk S. Ry. Co.,
STB No. AB-290 (Sub-No. 286), slip op. at 7,
***** We have considered and found unavailing the petitioners’ remaining arguments, which are sufficiently lacking in merit as not to warrant consideration in a published opinion.
Notes
In a simultaneously issued order not here under review, the Board lifted a stay of CLS’s notice of acquisition exemption, thereby freeing CLS to acquire the lines if NS decides to sell them. See 49 C.F.R. § 1150.31.
In supplemental briefing requested by the Court, CLS argued the Congress abrogated the Board's authority to require adverse abandonment when it revised the statute in 1995, but we can and do deny the petition for review without reaching that question.
See Mitchell v. Christopher,
The petitioners argue the affidavit of CLS’s president, in which this evidence appeared, is unworthy of consideration because the information was not confirmed by Notre Dame’s supplier. The sworn statement was sufficiently reliable, however — especially in the absence of contradictory evidence — for the Board to take it into account in determining whether there was substantial evidence of "a potential for renewed rail operations.”
See EchoStar Commc’ns Corp. v. FCC,
The petitioners suggest the paraphrased statement cited by the agency was unreliable hearsay, but it was they who put the article into the record as evidence of Notre Dame’s current position. Their change of position, which smacks of an attempt to "sandbag” the agency, will not be countenanced by the court. Cf. USAir, Inc. v. DOT, 969 F.2d 1256, 1260 (D.C.Cir.1992).
. The language of section 10903(a)(1) of Title 49 seems to indicate that abandonment can occur only when the railroad files for it. The provision reads:
A rail carrier providing transportation subject to the jurisdiction of the Board under this part who intends to—
(A) abandon any part of its railroad lines; or
(B) discontinue the operation of all rail transportation over any part of its railroad lines,
must file an application relating thereto with the Board. An abandonment or discontinuance may be carried out only as authorized under this chapter.
