MEMORANDUM & ORDER
By motion filed on April 30, 2001 in this federal question railroad tax discrimination litigation, State Defendants New York State Office of Real Property Services, Thomas G. Griffen, Ifigenia T. Brown, Frank B. Cernese, and John Bacheler move for an Order granting judgment on the pleadings in the first above entitled action pursuant to Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on the grounds that the relief sought in the Complaint is barred by the Eleventh Amendment, and also that the lawsuit as against the individual Defendants must be dismissed because *608 jurisdiction under the doctrine of Ex Parte Young is unavailable in this case. Plaintiff filed Opposition papers on May 11, 2001. State Defendants filed Reply papers on May 22, 2001. This Court heard oral argument on May 30, 2001. Ey Stipulation dated June 25, 2001, this motion was extended to encompass the companion case of Norfolk Southern Railway Company v. Neto York State Office of Real Property Services, et al, 01 Civ. 4752(CLB), filed on June 1, 2001.
This Court concludes that Congress validly abrogated the States’ sovereign immunity when it passed the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act, which is also known as the “4-R Act,” and which is codified at Sections 11501 and following of Title 49, United States Code. Congress did so after compiling a substantial legislative record evidencing the States’ discriminatory taxation of the railroads’ transportation property over many years, which violates the Equal Protection Clause. The Court also concludes that the doctrine of Ex Parte Young is available in this litigation to provide a jurisdictional basis on which to enjoin the individual State Defendants because of their pivotal connection to fixing and enforcing the allegedly unlawful assessments at issue in this case.
Background
The claims of Plaintiffs CSX Transportation, Inc. (“CSXT”) and Norfolk Southern Railway Company in this litigation are virtually identical to those asserted in
Consolidated Rail Corporation v. State Board of Equalization and Assessment of the State of New York, et al.,
93 Civ. 6548(CLB),
aff'd sub nom. Consolidated Rail Corporation v. Town of Hyde Park, et. al.,
In the 1993 litigation, Conrail sought to enjoin the Defendants in that case from imposing allegedly discriminatory taxes on Conrail’s rail transportation real property, now operated by Plaintiffs, for the 1993 tax year, on the ground that to assess those taxes would be in violation of the 4-R Act, which seeks to eliminate discriminatory taxation by States with respect to interstate rail transportation property. Familiarity of the reader with the entirety of that Act is assumed. For the convenience of the reader, in pertinent part, the Act provides:
“(b) The following acts unreasonably burden and discriminate against interstate commerce, and a State, subdivision of a State, or authority acting for a State or subdivision of a State may not do any of them:
1) Assess rail transportation property at a value that has a higher ratio to the true market value of the rail transportation property than the ratio that the assessed value of other commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction has to the true market value of the other commercial and industrial property.
(c) ... Relief may be granted under this subsection only if the ratio of assessed value to true market value of rail transportation property exceeds *609 by at least 5 percent the ratio of assessed value to true market value of other commercial and industrial property in the same assessment jurisdiction.” 49 U.S.C. § 11501.
Conrail filed similar suits complaining of discriminatory taxation for tax years 1994, 1995 and 1996. In 1997, following extensive settlement negotiations, the parties compromised Conrail’s claims for tax years 1993 through 2000, and a settlement in the case was approved by this Court on June 17, 1997. The Conrail Settlement has now expired for most tax jurisdictions, except for the City of Buffalo, which remains subject to that Settlement.
Plaintiffs are now faced with New York State tax assessments or potential assessments for the year 2001 that it alleges are in violation of the 4-R Act.
The State Defendants determine and certify railroad taxation ceilings prior to the annual tax status date for each of more than 400 assessing authorities in New York State which have such interstate railroad property. These ceilings set the maximum valuations at which each locality may assess railroad real property within its boundaries for tax purposes. As of April 30, 2001, the State Board and the Office of Real Property services had determined one final and five tentative railroad ceilings. Finalization of the five tentative railroad ceilings had been suspended by agreement until June 4, 2001, and this Court preserved the status quo by issuing on May 30, 2001 a Temporary Restraining Order in effect until September 6, 2001, on which date the Court will hear Plaintiffs Order to Show Cause why the issuance of the ceilings should not be preliminarily enjoined.
Discussion
In deciding a Rule 12(c) motion for judgment on the pleadings, the Court accepts Plaintiffs’ allegations as true and views the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs.
Rivera v. Heyman,
State Immunity
The motion, on its face, would seem barred implicitly by the decision of our Court of Appeals in the
Conrail
case. However, the State Defendants contend that as a result of recent evolution in the doctrine of
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida,
When presented with this same argument in 1996 in the Conrail case, this Court concluded that Seminole Tribe necessarily was restricted to its peculiar facts and to “the rather outrageous legislative scheme found in the Indian Gaming Act ...,” and, accordingly, declined to find that Seminole Tribe invalidated the 4-R Act. As an alternative ground, upon which this Court now relies, this Court concluded that the 4-R Act was enacted through a valid exercise of Congress’ power to enforce the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and accordingly the Act lawfully abrogates state sovereign immunity. As this Court stated in its prior decision,
“... the official misconduct targeted by the 4-R Act is the excessive and dis *610 criminatory taxation of railroad property, compared with other property which in turn has a deleterious effect on the movement of goods by rail in interstate commerce. Discrimination and the denial of equal protection to the railroad as compared to other taxpayers is well within the scope of the powers granted to Congress by § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment ... The 4-R Act can be upheld within § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, and a failure of Congress to cite this authority while citing mistakenly its Article I power to regulate Commerce is of no significance.” (Emphasis in original)
Consolidated Rail Corporation v. State Board of Equalization and Assessment of the State of New York, 93 Civ. 6548(CLB), Memorandum and Order of November 27, 1996. 1
Since this Court’s 1996 decision, several Courts of Appeal have agreed with the conclusion of this Court, holding that the 4-R Act is a valid exercise of Congressional power pursuant to § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Oregon Short Line Railroad Company v. Dept, of Revenue,
Remedial legislation directed against the States is a valid exercise of Congress’ § 5 authority if there is a legitimate evidentiary basis, supported by express findings in the legislative record, to support the conclusion of Congress that the States engaged in unconstitutional discriminatory conduct, and if there is both “proportionality and congruence between the means adopted and the legitimate end to be achieved.”
City of Boerne v. Flores,
Here, Plaintiff CSXT has cited to the Court, both in its papers and at oral argument, extensive legislative history demonstrating the existence of a pattern of unconstitutional discriminatory taxation by the States in connection with taxation of the real property of railroads that justifies the 4-R Act as a legitimate exercise of Congress’ power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. In 1961, the United States Senate first considered the problem in a comprehensive report entitled, National Transportation Policy: Report of the Committee on Commerce, United States Senate, by its Special Study Group on Transportation Policies in the United States, which later became known as the Doyle Report, attached as Exhibit 1 to Plaintiffs Opposition papers. The Senate concluded at page 487 of the Doyle Report,
“The Association of American Railroad’s research has been sufficiently extensive to establish that relative discrimination, of considerable magnitude, does in fact exist against the railroads in the assessment procedures of State and local governments for ad valorem taxation purposes. Therefore, the Association of American Railroad data is accepted as confirming the judgment of this study group that State and local assessment *611 procedures do discriminate against the railroads.”
The conclusions of the Doyle Report were affirmed again in 1968, when the Senate Committee on Commerce stated at page 4 of its Report on Discriminatory State Taxation of Interstate Carriers, attached as Exhibit 4 of Plaintiffs Opposition papers,
“... States continue to discriminatorily tax railroads by over $71 million per year. Year after year has gone by without any improvement in this situation, except in the rare instances where the railroads have been able to obtain change through court litigation. This committee can find no grounds for optimism that the States can or will correct their outdated practices, but rather, with increasing pressure for increased State and local tax revenues and rising tax rates, the situation may even worsen.”
The 4-R Act was passed in 1968 in order to address these well-developed and well-documented concerns that a pattern of discriminatory conduct was evident in the conduct of the States’ taxation practices with respect to interstate railroad transportation property.
The State Defendants also argue that the 4-R Act fails the “congruence and proportionality test,” imposed by the Supreme Court in
City of Boerne v. Flores,
For the foregoing reasons, this Court again concludes the 4-R Act is constitutional and within the scope of the powers granted to Congress by § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the failure of Congress to cite that power, and its mistaken reliance on the Commerce Clause are not material. Accordingly, the State Defendants’ motion for judgment is denied.
Individual State Defendants
Defendants also argue that the doctrine of
Ex Parte Young
provides only a limited exception to Eleventh Amendment Immunity, which exception is inapplicable to this case, requiring the Complaint to be dismissed as against the individual State Defendants. The landmark case of
Ex Parte Young
created a limited exception to the general principle of sovereign immunity by holding that “a suit challenging the constitutionality of a state official’s actions in enforcing a state law is not one against the State,” and is, therefore, not barred by the Eleventh Amendment where prospective injunctive relief is sought to end a continuing violation of federal law.
Ex Parte Young,
Defendants also contend, assuming that the doctrine of Ex Parte Young remains available to provide prospective injunctive relief for unlawful practices when the individual defendant has a sufficient connection to the unlawful act, that in this case, the role of the individual State Defendants is limited to determining and certifying railroad ceilings, which may then be adopted by localities, allegedly in violation of the 4-R Act. Defendants argue that the individual State Defendants are not involved in the allegedly unlawful act itself, because the local assessors are free to adopt a lower valuation, and a few actually do so, and, therefore, the doctrine of Ex Parte Young jurisdiction does not apply to permit the injunction sought against them here.
In 1995, Our Court of Appeals, in the
Conrail
case affirming the 1994 decision of this Court granting a preliminary injunction and class certification in litigation relating to the same railroad property, held that although as a formal matter each local assessing district makes its own determination of the final assessed value for railroad property in the district, there is such widespread adoption of the railroad ceilings fixed by the State Agency that, realistically, when the State Agency determines the railroad ceiling for the assessing districts, it is making an “assessment” within the meaning of the 4-R Act.
See, Consolidated Bail Corporation v. Town of Hyde Park,
Defendants also contend that because Congress, when it recodified the 4-R Act in 1978, deleted the language authorizing suit against a “governmental entity or person acting on behalf of such State or subdivision,” replacing it with “a State, subdivision of a State, or authority acting for a State or subdivision of a State,” this Court is required to enforce the statute “as written” and may not now permit a lawsuit against a “person.” This argument is without merit, first because as was held in
Burlington Northern Railroad Company v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
Accordingly, the State Defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings as to the individual State Defendants is also denied.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the State Defendants’ motion is denied in all respects.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This decision was not reviewed on appeal, inasmuch as the Conmil case was then set-tied.
. Webster’s Third Int'l Dictionary 146 (3d ed.l993)(defining "authority” as including, *613 "4a: persons in command; specif: government — now usu. used in pi. in the concrete [the local authorities of each state] and sing. in the abstract [the public ~ is responsible for our protection]”).
