In December 1996, Chicago Rail Link, a small Class III carrier, ie., one doing less than $20 million of business a year, leased 15 tracks in Union Pacific Railroad’s Irondale Yard in Chicago, Illinois. This transaction effectively transferred operation of the Iron-dale Yard to Chicago Rail Link. The purpose of the lease was to enable Chicago Rail Link to perform switching operations and to reach new shippers. The lease and transfer went into effect in January 1997.
Such a transaction normally would require approval by the Surface Transportation Board (the “Board”), the successor to the Interstate Commerce Commission (“ICC”), which was abolished in 1996. Class II and Class III carriers must have Board authorization, involving satisfaction of various regulatory conditions, to enter into transactions to acquire or operate additional rail lines, see 49 U.S.C. § 10902, unless they obtain an exemption. Chicago Rail Link requested an exemption available under recent deregula-tory initiatives which allow the Board to exempt a transaction or a class of transactions from this authorization requirement. See 49 U.S.C. § 10502(a); see also 49 C.F.R. Part 1150, Subpart D, §§ 1150.31-1150.36. Such exemptions are available and effective automatically seven days after filing. See id. § 1150.41 et seq.; see also Class Exemp. for Acq. or Oper. Under 49 U.S.C. § 10902,
The Board’s exemption freed Chicago Rail Link from a number of regulatory conditions it found onerous, including, among other things, certain labor protective conditions covering rail employees whose interests might be harmed by the transaction. Understandably, therefore, the United Transportation Union-Illinois Legislative Board (the “Union”) was interested in the matter. Under 49 U.S.C. § 10502(d), such an exemption may be revoked upon a proper showing that regulation of the track is necessary t8 carry out federal rail transportation policy. Labor interests may be grounds for a revocation. See 49 U.S.C. § 10502(g). The Union filed a petition to revoke the exemption. According to the Union, the transaction should have been governed by one or another of two statutes which impose labor protective conditions on Chicago Rail Link.
We review the determination of the Board regarding the proper characterization of the tracks as rail line or spur under the high level of deference accorded to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of the statutes which the agency administers. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
When exercising Chevron deference in the context of interpreting an ambiguous or unclear statute, the agency acts as a congressional proxy. Congress develops the statutory framework and directs the agency to flesh out the operational details. Bankers Life and Casualty,
Since invocation of Chevron is generally decisive, the Union of course argues that the Board is entitled to little deference about whether something is rail line or spur track. According to the Union, we are to decide whether the spur track exception applies here under a de novo standard of review. The Union has three arguments for this view. First, the Union cites to a good many pre-Chevron cases from several Circuits and the Supreme Court, some going back to the 1930s. To the extent that these cases might support a more rigorous standard of review than Chevron, it is not clear why they are still relevant. We would need a powerful explanation why they have not been superseded by Chevron. The Union gives us no reason to suppose that the older cases have continuing validity today.
Second, the Union cites one post-Chevron case, namely, Illinois Commerce Comm’n v. United States,
Third, the Union seems to argue that the Board is not entitled to any deference whatsoever in passing upon its own jurisdiction. We have indeed held that an administrative agency’s determination about the scope of its own jurisdiction, “ ‘a matter within the peculiar expertise of the courts,’ ” does not receive Chevron deference but is reviewed de novo. Midland Coal Co. v. Director, Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs,
Since Chevron deference applies with regard to whether the disputed tracks may be found to be within the 49 U.S.C. § 10906 exception for spur tracks, and the Union did not argue that the statutory text plainly dictates that these tracks must be found to be within that exception, the remaining issue is whether the Board’s decision is based on a reasonable construction of the statutory language. The Board concluded that it had jurisdiction under § 10902 over the disputed track as rail line, which track therefore fell outside of the § 10906 exception governing spur track. The Board reasoned that which of these sections to apply is to be established with reference to the intended use of the track in question. See Nicholson v. ICC,
If the purpose and effect of the new track-age is to extend substantially the line of a carrier into new territory, the proposed trackage constitutes an extension of the railroad ... although the line be short and although the character of the service contemplated be that commonly rendered to*478 industries by means of spurs or industrial tracks.
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
The Board made the factual determination, not disputed here, that the tenant railroad, Chicago Rail Link, intends to extend its operations to reach new customers and not merely to serve existing customers more efficiently. In view of this coincidence of use, purpose and effect, the Board found that the transaction at issue here contemplates an extended or additional rail line, and that the disputed track was therefore rail line falling within the Board’s § 10902 jurisdiction.
To overcome the great deference given under Chevron to agency interpretations of statutes they administer, the Union must show that the Board’s interpretation set forth above is unreasonable. It has three arguments for this claim. First, the Union argues that the Nicholson case does not support the Board’s conclusion that the use test requires the track in dispute to be classified as rail line, because the ICC, in the decision there under review, had generally found that construction or acquisition of yard track generally did not require ICC approval. See Nicholson v. Missouri Pacific Ry.,
Second, the Union argues that the Board wrongly relied upon Locomotive Eng’rs for its tenant-use test, which directed the Board to Chicago Rail Link’s intended use for the disputed track. That case is inapposite, the Union says, because Chicago Rail Link is not a “tenant” of Union Pacific. Since it is undisputed that Chicago Rail Link leases the Irondale Yards from Union Pacific, this is a puzzling claim, to say the least. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1466 (6th ed.1990) (defining “tenant” as “one renting land” under an “instrument called a lease”). The Union argues that Locomotive Eng’rs addressed a case of joint use by two carriers, but since Union Pacific no longer operates in the Irondale Yard, Chicago Rail Link is the sole user and therefore, the Union concluded, it is not a tenant. But one cannot escape from the application of an appropriate legal category by appeal to an immaterial factual distinction. The Board was reasonable to rely on the normal meaning of “tenant” to encompass “lessee” and the Board’s tenant-use test is reasonably applicable as far as the Union has shown.
Third, the Union argues with somewhat more plausibility that the Board used the wrong test altogether. Rather than the tenant-use test, the Union says, the Board should have used the “invasion” test it alleges was approved by this Circuit. According to that test, whether track is classified as rail line rather than spur track depends on whether the “ ‘purpose and effect of the new trackage is to extend substantially the line of the carrier into new territory.’ ” Illinois Commerce Comm’n,
We need not reach whether the disputed track could be reasonably interpreted to be rail line under the invasion test. In Illinois
The Union argued to the Board, and urges here, that even if the Irondale Yard tracks are not excepted spur tracks under 49 U.S.C. § 10906, it is error to say that they can be excepted from Board approval under 49 U.S.C. § 10902. The Union’s best argument proceeds from the plain language of the statute itself which purportedly precludes the application of § 10902. By appealing to the statutory language, the Union seems to argue that our standard of review for this issue is de novo under the first prong of Chevron, where if “Congress has spoken directly to the precise point at issue,” Chevron,
The direct statutory contention is that the Board wrongly invoked the class exemption from Board approval under 49 U.S.C. § 10902 because that section does not embrace leases between rail carriers. In support of this construction, the Union notes that the caption for § 10902 is “Short line purchases by Class II and Class III rail carriers” (emphasis added), and that the transaction at issue in this case is not a purchase but a lease. The pertinent section, says the Union, is § 11323, which deals expressly with leases. Captions are relevant and helpful aids in statutory interpretation, but they do not control. United States v. Medley,
More important than the caption is the text of the statute itself. See Continental Can Company, Inc. v. Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers and Warehouse Workers Union (Independent) Pension Fund,
There is indeed some tension between the text and the caption. Were there some strong argument from policy, purpose, or
■The Union also argues that the Board errs in interpreting the “acquire or operate” language from its own. regulations, mistakenly treating as applicable to the § 10902 carrier class exemption an interpretation of the § 10901 noncarrier class exemption under which “acquire” and “operate” extend to leases. See Class Exemption-Aqu. & Oper. of R. Lines Under 19 U.S.C. 10901,
The last arrow in the Union’s quiver is an argument from the canon of statutory interpretation which states that different statutory sections are to be interpreted so as to be consistent with one another. The Union claims that the Board’s treatment of § 10902 as covering leases renders that section inconsistent with § 11323, which clearly covers leases. See 49 U.S.C § 11323(a)(2). This would be a powerful argument were it true, but it is not true. The Union claims that it would' be so perverse and unjust to allow the Board to choose under which of these statutes to proceed that Congress could not have intended that result. The Union’s first basis for this claim is that the standards which the Board is to apply under each section differ (“public convenience and necessity” under § 10902 and “competitive consequences and public interest in significant transportation needs” under § 11323). This is the purported inconsistency. But the Union does not explain what is at stake in a choice between these standards that would generate inconsistency, much less perverse injustice.
The Union’s second and real basis is that the employee protective conditions differ under each provision, with the one chosen by the Board disfavoring the Union. It begs the question, however, to, assert that this is a reason that Congress could not have meant to allow the Board to apply a provision to the transaction exempting the railroad from employee protective conditions. If that is indeed perverse and unjust, the remedy is not in the courts but before the Board and, ultimately, with Congress.
The Union’s petition for review of the determination of the Board is therefore Denied.
Notes
. If the Union were right that the tracks in question are spur tracks, the Board would have "exclusive” jurisdiction over them under 49 U.S.C. § 10501(b)(2).
. The Union asserts that the Board does not administer the statute here in dispute, the § 10906 exception, because it says that issues involving that exception arise frequently in local and state courts. This unsupported claim is without merit. See 49 U.S.C. § 11701(b) (repealing a private right of action formerly available under a predecessor to § 10906); see also id. § 10501(b)(2) (preempting state regulation of spur track).
