Old Town Trolley operates buses modeled after tum-of-the-century trolleys. The buses take visitors to and from tourist attractions around the nation’s capital. Double Decker, wanting to do the same with open-air, double decker buses, applied to the Washington Metropolitan Aea Transit Commission for a certificate of authority. Over Old Town’s protest, the Commission granted the certificate for a probationary period and attached conditions. Old Town then filed this petition for judicial review.
The Commission’s first line of defense is that Old Town has no standing to challenge Double Decker’s certificate, for three reasons. One is that Old Town will suffer no “injury in fact.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Increased competition, the Commission tells us, cannot give rise to a cognizable injury because Old Town has no right to be free of competition. In the jargon of standing, Old Town has not suffered “invasion of a legally protected interest” as a result of Dou
The Commission’s remaining reason for opposing Old Town’s standing is procedural. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Regulation Compact, Pub.L. No. 101-505, 104 Stat. 1300 (1990), required Old Town to present for the Commission’s reconsideration any “error” it will “use[] as a ground for judicial review.” Compact, tit. II, art. XIII, § 4(g). The Commission found that Old Town would suffer no harm (other than loss of revenue) from Double Decker’s entry into the market. Old Town never asked the Commission to reconsider this finding. Therefore, the Commission argues, Old Town cannot now maintain that it has standing. This argument confuses the injury needed to establish standing with the harm the Commission addressed in its findings. The Commission said, in effect, that although a partial collapse of the tourist bus industry in the Washington area brought on by Double Decker’s entry would be grounds for denying the application, Old Town had not carried its burden of showing this would happen. The threshold for showing an injury sufficient for the purposes of standing is not so high. Old Town does not have to prove that Double Decker will eventually go out of business, leaving its competitors in such a weakened state that they will be unable to fill the resulting void — does not have to prove, in other words, the “public interest” claim Old Town advanced in the administrative proceedings. Old Town was not obligated to ask the Commission to “reconsider” whether its injury sufficed for standing purposes because the Commission never addressed that question in the first instance. Old Town’s burden was to demonstrate its competitive injury to this court, which it has done through an affidavit the Commission has seen fit not to counter.
We therefore proceed to the merits. A preliminary question presents itself: what standard of review applies? To answer this question, some background is needed. The Commission was established by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Regulation Compact. Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia entered into the Compact in 1960, with the consent of Congress, in order to regulate private transportation service in the metropolitan area.
See
Compact, preamble;
Democratic Cent. Comm. v. WMATC,
Congress consented to the Compact pursuant to its authority under Article I, § 10, clause 3 of the Constitution. Although an early Supreme Court decision
(People v. Central R.R.,
While the Compact may be treated as a federal law, it does not follow that the Commission is a federal agency governed by the Administrative Procedure Act. An “agency,” according to the APA’s definition, “means each authority of the Government of the United States....” 5 U.S.C. § 551(1). The Commission is an authority, not of the federal government, but of Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. As a result there is a gap in need of filling. The amended Compact provides for judicial review of Commission orders here or in the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, but it does not specify any standards of review:
5. (a) Any party to a proceeding under this Act may obtain a review of the Commission’s order in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, by filing within 60 days after Commission determination of an application for reconsideration, a written petition praying that the order of the Commission be modified or set aside.
(b) A copy of the petition shall be delivered to the office of the Commission and the Commission shall certify and file with the court a transcript of the record upon which the Commission order was entered.
(c) The Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction to affirm, modify, remand for reconsideration, or set aside the Commission’s order.
(d) The court’s judgment shall be final, subject to review by the Supreme Court of the United States upon certiorari or certification as provided in Title 28 U.S.C. sections 1254 and 2350.
Compact, tit. II, art. XIII, § 5(a)-(d).
Of one . thing we can be fairly confident— that our review should not be
de novo.
That would deprive the Commission’s judgment of importance and would, in effect, place the court in the position of the licensing authority. Yet the granting of licenses may be a non-judicial function, outside Article III of the Constitution.
See Federal Radio Comm’n v.
General
Elec. Co.,
Of the remaining standard-of-review options, we have decided to adopt by reference the standards contained in 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)-(D), which provide that reviewing courts shall:
(2) hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be—
(A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law;
(B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity;
(C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right;
(D) without observance of procedure required by law ...
We do so because this court had basically been following those standards in reviewing Commission actions under the pre-amended Compact.
See, e.g., Bebchick v. WMATC,
Was it “arbitrary” or “capricious” for the Commission to grant the certificate of authority to Double Decker? There is no disagreement among the parties about essential facts bearing on the application. Old Town’s protest included allegations that New York Apple Tours, Double Decker’s commonly-controlled affiliate, had been the subject of complaints filed with the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs concerning regulatory infractions. This was of potential significance. To issue a certificate of authority, the Commission must find, among other things, that the applicant will “conform to the rules, regulations, and requirements of the Commission,” Compact, tit. II, art. XI, § 7(a)(i). If Double Decker’s affiliate had not been conforming to another jurisdiction’s regulations, one might expect Double Decker to conduct itself in the same manner. Concerned about this prospect, the Commission undertook an investigation. It found that the affiliate — Apple Tours — had indeed been sanctioned in New York City for operating buses without safety certificates. But the Commission also found that the New York authority had only recently begun enforcing the inspection requirement, that Apple Tours had brought itself into compliance, and that it had expended a considerable amount of money in doing so. When Old Town, in its application for reconsideration, provided evidence that the New York department was investigating Apple Tours for other violations, the Commission deferred action and conducted another investigation. Shortly thereafter Apple Tours settled the matter, agreeing to a fine without admitting any wrongdoing.
There is no doubt that the poor record of the New York affiliate raised serious questions regarding Double Decker’s fitness. And there is no doubt that the Commission treated the matter seriously — but not seriously enough by Old Town’s lights. While we do not agree with the Commission’s argument that it would have been arbitrary for it to deny, or on reconsideration, rescind Double Decker’s certificate of authority, neither do we agree with Old Town’s view that it was arbitrary for the Commission to give Double Decker permission to operate. Licensing proceedings such as this involve predictive judgments.
See FCC v. National Citizens Comm. for Broad.,
Old Town’s remaining contentions have been considered and found wanting.
The petition for judicial review is denied.
So ordered.
