The United Transportation Union (UTU) and the Railway Labor Executives’ Association (RLEA) (together the Unions) petition for review of an order of the Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board)
I.
In 1980 the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) authorized the CSX Corporation (CSX) to merge with the Chessie System Inc. (Chessie) and Seaboard Coast Line Industries, Inc. (SCLI) and thereby acquire control of the railroads that had been Chessie and SCLI subsidiaries. See CSX Corp.— Control — Chessie Sys., Inc. & Seaboard Coast Line Indus., Inc.,
Following CSX Control, additional mergers occurrеd whence CSXT, a subsidiary of CSX, ultimately emerged in 1987 as a single entity controlling the operations of, among others, the former Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company(C&0), the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company (L&N) and the Clinch-field Railroad Company (Clinchfield).
In 1993 CSXT decided to implement a new coordination of train оperations (1993 Proposed Coordination) involving the Coordinated Territory covered by the 1981 Agreement as well as additional track not subject to the 1981 Agreement. Pursuant to article 1, section 4 of the New York Dock conditions, CSXT notified UTU that it wished to negotiate a New York Dock implementing agreement to effect the expansion of the Coordinated Territоry. UTU refused to negotiate on the ground that any modifications to the 1981 Agreement had to be negotiated pursuant to the RLA procedures rather than the New York Dock procedures.
This Agreement shall remain in full force and effect until revisеd or modified in accordance with the Railway Labor Act, as amended.
JA 61. When the parties could not agree on the applicable procedures, they submitted the issue to arbitration. The arbitration panel concluded that, according to the terms of the 1981 Agreement, the RLA provided the applicable procedures for the 1993 Proposed Coordination. CSXT petitioned for review to the ICC. The STB, which by then had replaced the ICC, see supra n. 1, vacated the arbitration panel’s decision and ordered the parties to negotiate — or arbitrate if necessary — an agreement implementing the 1993 Proposed Coordination using New York Dock procedures. CSX Corp. — Control—Chessie Sys., Inc. & Seaboard Coast Line Industries, Inc., Finance Docket No. 28905 (Sub-No. 26),
II.
A. Jurisdiction
The Unions first argue that the STB lacked jurisdiction to enter its order vacating the arbitration panel’s decision. They have, however, waived any jurisdictional argument. First, in its opposition to CSXT’s petition to review the arbitration decision, UTU stated “it is appropriate for ICC to review the award.” JA 228.
The Unions’ argument does not excuse their waiver beсause the question of the interpretation of Article XVIII was presented to the STB. CSXT’s petition for review to the STB manifests that CSXT sought review of the arbitrators’ conclusion that the 1981 Agreement “preclude[d] further coordinations unless the procedures of the Railway Labor Act ... were followеd.” JA 8. Thus CSXT presented not only the issue of whether the parties were authorized to substitute RLA procedures for New York Dock procedures but also whether the 1981 Agreement did in fact work such a substitution.
The Unions also suggest that because their claim involves “subject matter jurisdiction,” Pet’rs Joint Reply Br. at 3, it can be raised at any time, just as a district court’s subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3). Arguments as to agency jurisdiction, however, cannot be raised for the first time on appeal except in the very limited case, not presented here, where the challenge is to “the very composition or ‘constitution’ of an agency.” Mitchell v. Christopher,
B. The Merits
The Unions argue that the STB’s vacatur of the arbitration panel’s decision was arbitrary and capricious. The scope of the STB’s review of arbitration proceedings is set forth in the Board’s Lace Curtain decision. See Chicago & N.W. Transp. Co.— Abandonment,
We disagree that the language of Article XVIII requires the application of RLA procedures to implement the 1993 Proposed Coordination. Article XVIII states:
This Agreement shall remain in full force and effect until revised or modified in accordance with the Railway Labor Act, as amended..
JA 61. Like the STB, we believe that the language is susceptible to alternative interpretations. It can be read, as the Unions contend, to mean that any revision or modification affecting the territory or the employees covered by the 1981 Agreement must be carried out in accordance with the RLA. But the language can also mean, as the STB contends, that the phrase “this Agreement” evidences the parties’ intent to limit the scope of Article XVIII to the subject mattеr of the 1981 Agreement—the implementation of an ICC-approved transaction involving the coordination of a particular geographic area. A coordination involving a different geographic area, whether or not it overlaps with
In view of the ambiguity, we think that the STB’s interpretation of Article XVIII as inapplicable to transactions such as the 1993 Proposed Coordination is neither arbitrary nor capricious. While the ICA protects employee interests through the New York Dock rules, the Act also serves the public interest in ensuring that efficiency-prоmoting consolidations occur in a timely manner. For example, former 49 U.S.C. § 11341(a) (now 49 U.S.C. § 11321(a)) provided that once the ICC had approved a transaction, the parties participating in the approved transaction were “exempt from the antitrust laws and from all other law” to the extent necessary to carry out the transaction. In Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. American Train Dispatchers Ass’n,
Finally, we note that in determining whether an arbitration decision constitutes “egregious error,” the STB may properly consider the adverse impact thе decision can have in light of other arbitration decisions. We take the STB to mean that the arbitrators’ error is egregious not necessarily because of the quality of their reasoning but because of the impact of their decision on the STB’s administration of the Act. For example, а different arbitration panel (in a case involving consolidation of seniority lists) construed collective bargaining agreement language nearly identical to that of Article XVIII and decided the language did not su
For the foregoing reasons, the petition for review is denied.
Notes
. The ICC Termination Act of 1995 (ICCTA), Pub.L. No. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, abolished the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) and established the STB in its stead. Because this case involves events both before and after the enactment of ICCTA, we refer to the ICC or the STB as appropriate.
. Section 204 of the ICCTA provides that matters arising before January 1, 1996 are governed by the pre-ICCTA version of the ICA. The ICA provision applicable here, therefore, is former 49 U.S.C. § 11347, identical in all material respects to currеnt 49 U.S.C. § 11326.
.The C&O was formerly controlled by Chessie. The L&N and the Clinchfield were formerly controlled by SCLI. CSXT also came to control five other former subsidiaries of Chessie and eight other former subsidiaries of SCLI. The Board's decision below sets out the history of the emergence of CSXT in greater detail. CSX Corp.—
. Dispute resolution procedures under the RLA аre less expeditious than those under New York Dock. In the words of the Supreme Court, "The RLA subjects all railway disputes to virtually endless 'negotiation, mediation, voluntary arbitration, and conciliation.’ ” Burlington N. R.R. v. Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes,
. RLEA, an intervenor in the proceedings before the Board, filed its own opposition to CSXT's petition for review. Although RLEA did not expressly acknowledge the Board’s jurisdiction as UTU did, neither did it challenge the Board's jurisdiction. JA 213-19.
. A coordination of services, such as the 1993 Proposed Coordination, is an example of a transaction necessary to carry out a consolidation. Indeed, Dispatchers involved, inter alia, a coordination of services implemented by CSX to carry out the consolidation authorized in CSX Control. See
. This case does not present a genuine Dispatchers issue. That is, because we affirm the STB's determination that Article XVIII by its terms does not require the use of RLA procedures, we need not address whether it would be appropriate under Dispatchers, assuming the рarties intended to make the RLA applicable, to override their intention because "necessary” to complete the transaction. See Dispatchers,
. We recently affirmed the STB. United Transp. Union v. STB,
