Case Information
*1 United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued September 22, 2014 Decided December 16, 2014
Nо. 13-1313 CSX T RANSPORTATION , I NC ., P ETITIONER v.
S URFACE T RANSPORTATION B OARD AND U NITED S TATES OF
A MERICA , R ESPONDENTS T OTAL P ETROCHEMICALS & R EFINING USA, I NC ., I NTERVENOR On Petition for Review of Orders of the Surface Transportation Board
Paul A. Hemmersbaugh argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the briefs were G. Paul Moates , Matthew J. Warren , Peter J. Shudtz , Paul R. Hitchcock , and John P. Patelli .
Theodore L. Hunt , Attorney, Surface Transportation Board, argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief were William J. Baer , Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, Robert B. Nicholson , Nickolai G. Levin and Daniel E. Haar , Attorneys, Craig M. Keats , General *2 Counsel, Surface Transportation Board, and James A. Read Attorney.
Jeffrey O. Moreno and David E. Benz were on the brief for intervenor Total Petrochemicals & Refining USA, Inc. in support of respondents.
Before: K AVANAUGH , Circuit Judge , E DWARDS , Senior Circuit Judge , and G INSBURG , Senior Circuit Judge .
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge E DWARDS .
E DWARDS , Senior Circuit Judge : The Surface Transportation Board (“STB” or “Board”) has exclusive jurisdiction over interstate rail transportation, including the powеr to review and modify railroad rates to ensure that they are reasonable. 49 U.S.C. §§ 10501, 10701, 10707. However, the Board can only examine the reasonableness of a rail carrier’s rate if it determines that the railroad has “market dominance” over the transportation route to which the rate applies. Id. §§ 10707(b), (d). A railroad has market dominance over a route in the “absence of effective competition from other rail carriers or modes of transportation.” § 10707(a).
On May 3, 2010, Total Petrochemicals & Refining USA, Inc. (“TPI”) filed a rate complaint with the STB, alleging that numerous CSX Transportation (“CSX”) common carrier rates were unreasonable. CSX moved for an expedited procedure with respect to questions related to market dominance. The Board granted the motion and bifurcated the adjudication into two phases – a market dominance phase and a second rate reasonableness phase. On May 31, 2013, the Board issued a decision, concluding that CSX had market dominance over 51 contested rates. On December 19, 2013, the Board rejected *3 requests for reconsideration. CSX immediately sought review by this court of the Board’s interlocutory ruling regarding the 51 rates with respect to which CSX was found to have market dominance.
The Board contеnds that this action should be dismissed because the contested market dominance decision is merely an interlocutory, non-final order. In response, CSX asserts that the Board’s decision is a final order that is subject to review by this court because the decision concludes the agency’s market dominance decisionmaking process. The railroad also argues that the decision is reviewable independеnt of finality because in determining market dominance the Board adopted a new legislative rule without notice and comment. The Board has the better of both arguments.
Under the Hobbs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2342, this court has jurisdiction to review only “final” orders of the Board. “Finality under the Hobbs Act is to be narrowly construed.” Blue Ridge Envtl. Def. League v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n 668 F.3d 747, 753 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). In an administrative adjudication, a final order typically “disposes of all issues аs to all parties.” (citation omitted). There is no final order here because the Board has yet to inquire into the reasonableness of CSX’s rates and has issued no adverse ruling with respect to any rate. That the STB acceded to CSX’s request to bifurcate the adjudication does not change the fact that the decision in question is merely an interlocutory order issued in a matter that is still presently pending before the Board. And there is no exception to the final order rule for petitioners who allege that an agency has adopted a new legislative rule during the course of an adjudication without notice and comment. This is a matter that can be raised by CSX if it elects to appeal the Board’s final decision at the conclusion of the adjudication. This court has *4 no jurisdiction at this stage of the administrative аdjudication to interfere with the Board’s process.
I. B ACKGROUND
On May 3, 2010, TPI filed a rate complaint with the STB.
The complaint challenged the reasonableness of CSX’s rates
for transporting chemicals and plastics along a number of rail
routes. Under the Board’s normal procedure, parties submit
evidence of market dominance and rate reasonableness
simultaneously.
See Expedited Procedures for Proсessing Rail
Rate Reasonableness, Exemption and Revocation Proceedings
1 S.T.B. 754, 760 (1996). However, CSX moved for an
expedited determination of market dominance. The Board
agreed, finding that CSX had raised “considerable doubts as to
the shipper’s ability to satisfy the Board’s market dominance
standard.”
Total Petrochemicals USA, Inc. v. CSX Transp.,
Inc.
, No. NOR 42121,
The Board explained that “this rate case is extraordinarily
complicated. With over 100 separate rates being challenged,
the expected rate reasonableness inquiry will be very complex.
Yet, if the railroad does not have market dominance over a
substantial number of the lanes, the complexity of the rate
reasonableness inquiry can be significantly reduced.”
Id.
at *5.
The Board also noted that if market dominance were resolved
separately, the parties would be “spared the time and expense
of filing rate reasonableness evidence where the carrier
[would] not [be] found market dominant.” at *3.
Accordingly, the STB bifurcated the proceeding into a
preliminary market dominance phase and a second rate
reasonableness phase. Due to the complexity of the case, the
Board decided to employ a streamlined method for evaluating
evidence оf market dominance, first developed in
M&G
*5
Polymers USA, LLC v. CSX Transp., Inc.
, No. NOR 42123,
On May 31, 2013, after the parties had submitted
evidence, the Board issued its interlocutory decision on the
market dominance issue.
Total Petrochemicals & Ref. USA,
Inc. v. CSX Transp., Inc.
, No. NOR 42121,
On December 19, 2013, the Board denied requests for reconsideration. CSX immediately appealed the Board’s market dominance decision to this court. On appeal, the railroad argues that the M&G Polymers framework is a new legislative rule improperly adopted without notice and comment. CSX also argues that the new methodology is arbitrary and capricious and not in accordance with law. The Board has not yet determined whether any of CSX’s rates are unreasonable, and has therefore issued no rulings affecting those rates.
II. A NALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
As noted above, this court has jurisdiction under the
Hobbs Act to review “final orders” issued by the STB.
28 U.S.C. § 2342(5). There are two considerations relevant to
determining finality: “whether the process of administrative
decisionmaking has reached a stage where judicial rеview will
not disrupt the orderly process of adjudication and whether
*6
rights or obligations have been determined or legal
consequences will flow from the agency action.”
Port of Bos.
Marine Terminal Ass'n v. Rederiaktiebolaget Transatlantic
,
A final order in an administrative adjudication is normally
“one that disposes of all issues as to all parties.”
Blue Ridge
CSX presents two arguments why the Board’s interlocutory determination of market dominance should be considered final. First, it claims that the Board’s decision was final because it was the consummation of the agency’s market dominance decisionmaking process. According to CSX, the decision affected its rights and obligations by concluding that the railroad’s rates are within the agency’s jurisdiction. Second, CSX claims that, in following a new method to evaluate the evidence of market dominance, the Board impermissibly adopted a new legislative rule without first engaging in notice and comment rulemaking. According to CSX, this action by the Board, without more, was enough to allow it to seek interlocutory review. Both arguments are simply wrong.
1. The Board’s Interlocutory Ruling on Market
Dominance Was a Nonfinal Interlоcutory Order
The Board’s decision on market dominance was an
interlocutory order that did not “dispose[] of all issues as to all
parties or fix the parties’ rights and obligations.”
Blue Ridge
Nothing in the text of the statute suggests that a ruling on
market dominance would be anything but a normal
interlocutory order issued during an adjudication. Such orders
generally “must await review here until [the] final action is
before us.”
Citizens for a Safe Env't v. Atomic Energy Comm'n
,
CSX argues that the Board’s decision here differs from a
typical interlocutory order because it created immediate
obligations and legal consequences: specifically, it required the
railroad to defend its rates and exposed it to the threat of rate
prescriptions and reparations should it lose in the second phase
of the adjudication. But this is just to say that the railroad faces
an obligation to continue to litigate before the agency. “It is
firmly established that agency action is not final merely
because it has the effect of requiring a party to participate in an
agency proceeding.”
Aluminum Co. of Am. v. United States
790 F.2d 938, 941 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (“
Alcoa
”). Although the
burden of defending oneself in an adjudication “is substantial,
it is different in kind and legal effect from the burdens
attending what heretofore has been considered to be final
agency action.”
Standard Oil
,
This case closely resembles City of Benton v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission , 136 F.3d 824 (D.C. Cir. 1998). In Benton , municipal utilities opposing amendments to a nuclear power plant’s operating license challenged an order issued by a Commission director finding that there had been no changes in the licensees’ activities significant enough to warrant antitrust review. Petitioners had requested a reevaluation of the findings before the agency, but the director reiterated his conclusion in response. at 825. The court held that the director’s order was nonfinal and interlocutory because it did not address the Commission’s safety determination (the other issue in the licensing proceeding), and did not result in the grant or denial of the request to amend the license. Id . Similarly, the market dominance decision in this case did not address the issue of rate reasonableness and did not result in a ruling directly affecting CSX’s rates. The court in Benton dismissed the petition *9 seeking review of the interlocutory order for want of final agency action, and its reasoning compels us to do the same here. The petitioners’ mistake in Benton was in not challenging the Commission’s final order granting the license. Id. at 826. In this case, however, CSX will be free at the conclusion of the adjudication to appeal the Board’s final order concerning its rates (if the railroad does not prevail).
The final order rule is applied pragmatically,
Standard
Oil
,
It would be completely contrary to these purposes for a federal court to insert itself into the middle of an ongoing adjudication under the circumstances of this case. First, we would be conducting piecemeal review that would be rendered unnecessary if CSX wins in the second phase of the adjudication. Second, we would disrupt the Board’s processes аnd penalize it for using its expertise to select the best structure for the adjudication. The Board bifurcated the proceedings in this case at CSX’s request, both in the interest of efficiency, and to allow CSX to avoid spending unnecessary time and money defending rates over which it does not have market dominance. Judicial intervention at this stage of the Board’s proceedings would ensure that a bifurcated adjudiсation would *10 never be an efficient way for the agency to proceed, because it would create an additional round of appeals. The final agency action requirement is designed to prevent this sort of interference.
Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. Surface Transportation
Board
,
The final order rule necessarily operates differently when the рarties choose an alternate venue like arbitration instead of participating in a traditional agency adjudication. The Board’s decision in Union Pacific was not one part of a larger agency decisionmaking process. Instead, it was a single-shot review by the agency of another decisionmaker. Concerns about enabling agencies to apply their expertise and avoiding any disruption to their processes are far less compelling when the agency is not the primary decisionmaker. Furthermore, the Union Pacific court held that the STB’s decision determined rights and obligations and generated legal consequences. at 34. Once the arbitrator found for the plaintiffs on the liability issue, it was essentially a foregone conclusion that the defendants would pay at least some damages to at least one plаintiff. Id. at 35. Here there is no such certainty, for the Board in this case might conclude that CSX’s rates are reasonable even where it has market dominance.
Nor can CSX draw on those cases in which an agency
demands compliance from a regulated entity but has not
actually initiated enforcement proceedings.
See Sackett v. EPA
132 S. Ct. 1367 (2012) (compliance order was final action);
Ciba-Geigy
, 801 F.2d at 431 (challenge to letters requiring
compliance was ripe). The order in
Sackett
marked the
conclusion of the agency’s decisionmaking process on the
petitioners’ case, and petitioners’ request for a hearing was
denied.
Id.
at 1372;
see also Ciba-Geigy
,
Finally, the facts here do not fall into the very narrow line
of cases in which this court has held that an аggrieved party
need not fully exhaust administrative remedies before seeking
judicial review because the agency is pursuing a matter on
which it has no right to act.
See Athlone Indus. v. Consumer
Prod. Safety Comm’n
, 707 F.2d 1485 (D.C. Cir. 1983)
(regulated entity could challenge agency’s authority to assess
civil penalties in administrative proceedings);
Atl. Richfield
Co. v. Dep’t of Energy
,
2. The Board’s Alleged Adoption of a New Legislative Rule During the Course of the Ongoing Adjudication is Not a Final Order Subject to Judicial Review CSX argues that judicial review is appropriate even if we were to hold (as indeed we do) that the market dominance decision is not an appealable final order. CSX reasons that the Board should not have implemented a new methodology for assessing market dominance without first going through notice and comment rulemaking. Thus, according to CSX, “failure to follow notice-and-comment procedures required by the APA constitutes a completed, final injury to the parties that is subject to immediate judicial review.” Pet’r’s Br. at 10. This argument is nothing more than a backhanded attеmpt to circumvent the final order rule.
The principal premise of CSX’s argument is that the new
methodology and rules adopted by the Board to evaluate the
evidence of market dominance “have the force of law, establish
binding norms, and determine rights and obligations.” Pet’r’s
Br. at 27 (citing
CropLife Am. v. EPA
,
CSX’s position is that the mere allegation that an agency has adopted a legislative rule during the course of an ongoing adjudication without notice and comment is sufficient to allow a party to sidestep the final order rule and require the court to rule on the merits of the party’s APA claim. This is not the law. We therefore reject CSX’s position.
C ONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the petition for review is dismissed.
So ordered.
