UNITED STATES ET AL. v. CITY OF CHICAGO ET AL.
No. 386
Supreme Court of the United States
October 19, 1970
400 U.S. 8
*Together with No. 387, United States et al. v. Tennessee Public Service Commission et al., No. 396, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Tennessee Public Service Commission et al., and No. 410, Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad et al. v. City of Chicago et al., also on appeal from the same court.
These cases are a sequel to our decision in City of Chicago v. United States, 396 U. S. 162, last Term. The Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad (C&EI) filed a notice under
The L&N also operates thе “Hummingbird” between Cincinnati, Ohio, and New Orleans, Louisiana. The
In City of Chicago v. United States, supra, we held that ICC decisions to discontinue such an investigation were reviewable and remanded the cases back to the District Court. That court then ordered consolidation and remanded back to the ICC for further hearings, holding that the notice served by the C&EI on the Governors of Illinois and Indiana and at every stаtion along the Chicago-Evansville run was inadequate because the people of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia, and the Governors of those States were not notified. The “Hummingbird” discontinuance was also remanded to the ICC because of its close relationship with the “Georgian.” These appeals followed.
We note jurisdiction and reverse.
“A carrier or carriers subject to this part, if their rights with respect to the discontinuance or change . . . of the operation or service of any train . . . are subject to any provision of the constitution or statutes of any State . . . shall mail to the Governor of each State in which such train . . . is operated, and post in every station, depot or other facility served thereby, notice . . . of any such proposed discontinuance or change.”
This section, as we read it, required C&EI to give nоtice in Illinois and Indiana, the only States in
The dissent finds ambiguity in the phrase “such train” in
It is true that the C&EI and the L&N functioned in close harmony. Discontinuance of service on one line might have a substantial effect on the other. But this relationship is not unique in railroading. Congress is not unaware of the mutual interdependence of railroads. It designed a federal regulatory system that displaced a state regulatory system when the state system could defeat a carrier‘s attempt to discontinue a train. Hence we think it distorts
Accordingly, the decisions in Nos. 386 and 410 are reversed. Since Nos. 387 and 396 were remanded to the Commission solely because of their relation to Nos. 386 and 410, those decisions are also reversed. The causes are remanded to the District Court for review of any questions on the merits which may remain unresolved.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK joins, dissenting.
I think these cases do not lend themselves to summary disposition.
The Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. jointly operated
“A carrier or carriers . . . if their rights with respect to the discontinuance or change, in whole or in part, of the operation or service of any train . . . operating from a point in one State to a point in any other State . . . are subject to any provision of the constitution or statutes of any Stаte or any regulation or order of (or are the subject of any proceeding pending before) any court or an administrative or regulatory agency of any State, may, but shall not be required to, file with the Commission, and upon such filing shall mail to the Governor of eаch State in which such train . . . is operated, and post in every station, depot or other facility served thereby, notice at least thirty days in advance of any such proposed discontinuance or change. . . .”
Appellants in Nos. 386 and 410 argue that since
In view of the structural and linguistic ambiguity of the statutory provision, the Court‘s reliance on the absence of an explicit reference to carrier arrangements of this sort would carry weight only if the legislative policy underlying
Apparently, the Court recognizes the inherent ambiguity of the statute. Thus, its opinion finally comes to rest on the principle of deference to the administrative agency‘s сonstruction of the statute. Suffice it to say that I am not persuaded by the deference argument as applied to the agency‘s pro forma finding of adequate notice in this very litigation where the notice issue evidently was not before the agency at the time of its ruling. See 331 I. C. C. 447, 448.
The above considerations are not meant to reflect any conclusions concerning the merits of the statutory construction issue presented in these cases. To the contrary, my point is simply that, without briefs and oral argument by the parties on the merits of the question, I would refrain from choosing between the conflicting constructions of
Notes
The problem of discontinuance of services as put to thе Congress by the Association of American Railroads was described as follows: “[S]uch matters are subject to approval of State regulatory commissions and authority for such discontinuances or abandonments must be obtained within the scope of statutes or procedures under which those State commissions operate.” Problems of the Railroads, Hearings before the Subcommittee on Surface Transportation of the Senate Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 85th Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 1, p. 25 (Jan. 13, 1958).
The legislatiоn was responsive to that need and may not be easily construed to do more than track the jurisdiction of a State over the carrier in question.
