Nos. 92-2398, 92-2455.United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.Submitted February 17, 1993.
Decided September 16, 1993.
Page 307
Andrew Goldstein, Washington, DC, argued (John Cutler, Jr., on the brief) for petitioner National Grain and Feed Ass’n.
William W. Binck, Asst. Atty. Gen., Bismarck, ND, argued, for intervenor North Dakota Wheat Com’n.
Samuel M. Sipe, Jr., Washington, DC, argued, for intervenor Burlington Northern R.R.
Louis Mackall, V, I.C.C., Washington, DC, argued, for appellee.
Review of decision from Interstate Commerce Commission.
Before FAGG, Circuit Judge, HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge, and BEAM, Circuit Judge.
HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge.
[1] The National Grain and Feed Association and the North Dakota Grain Dealers Association petition for review of a decision by the Interstate Commerce Commission (“the Commission”) approving the Certificate of Transportation program of the Burlington Northern Railroad Company. We affirm in part and reverse in part, and remand to the Commission for further consideration of the relevant common carrier obligations. I
[2] In June 1988 Burlington Northern Railroad Company began selling guaranteed future rail transportation capacity by public auction. The Burlington Northern auction allows shippers to bid on specified rail transportation up to five months in advance of an approximately two-week shipping period. Shippers participating in the auctions bid on negotiable Certificates of Transportation (“COTs”) that are specific to one of fourteen different “corridors.” A corridor, in turn, is specific to the particular commodity to be shipped as well as to the size and direction of shipment.[1]
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to forty percent of its total covered hopper fleet. The percentage of the fleet actually auctioned in the COT program has been less than forty percent, but as conceded at oral argument, during periods of peak demand in certain corridors, the number of COT cars actually loaded may exceed seventy percent of all loadings.[2] It also is typical that as few as four large shippers control the vast majority of the COT car capacity.
[5] Burlington Northern pays a penalty if it fails timely to supply the contracted rail cars for COT bearing shippers. Shippers who rely on the conventional tariff service, therefore, do not receive priority service, occasionally not receiving cars until after they no longer are needed. This second-rate service for conventional shippers exacerbates what allegedly already was untimely service for some shippers because of Burlington Northern’s practice of providing conventional tariff service on a first-come-first-served basis, rather than allocating cars according to historical demand. The petitioners allege the COT program thus unreasonably increases the time conventional shippers must wait to receive car service — especially during periods of car shortages.II
[6] On 7 March 1988 the petitioners filed a complaint with the Commission challenging the COT program as unlawful under the Interstate Commerce Act. They alleged four grounds on which the program violated the Act: The program does not qualify as a special tariff under 49 U.S.C. § 10734 (1988); the program violates Burlington Northern’s common carrier obligations as described in 49 U.S.C. § 11101(a) and 11121(a)(1) (1988); the program’s practices and procedures constitute one or more unreasonable practices under 49 U.S.C. § 10701 (1988); and COTs are contracts, not tariffs, and must therefore be approved and filed with the Commission as contracts pursuant to 49 U.S.C. § 10713 (1988).
III
[9] Burlington Northern’s COT program, a new approach to the sale of rail transportation, has never before been scrutinized by the Commission or the courts. Because some of the implicated provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act also have evaded judicial scrutiny, we are presented with several issues of first impression. In this context, we emphasize that when reviewing a ruling of an administrative agency, we are constrained to grant considerable weight to the agency’s construction of the statutory scheme it is entrusted to administer. Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 2782-83, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). “If the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute.” Id. at 843, 104 S.Ct. at 2782. Thus, we may not
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substitute our construction of the statutes for a reasonable interpretation made by the Commission. Id. at 844, 104 S.Ct. at 2782-83.
[10] A. Contract versus TariffPage 310
unduly thwarts Burlington Northern from meeting its common carrier obligations is the heart of this case, and highlights the potential difficulty of combining innovation and reliance on market forces with preservation and enforcement of the common carrier obligations.
[17] More precisely, this case presents the question whether Burlington Northern’s COT program violates its common carrier obligations during periods of grain car shortages; for when there is a surplus of available grain cars, there are few undue delays in car service. Shortages, however, appear to arise precipitously and with sufficient frequency as to cause problems for shippers[3] ; indeed, the COT program would have little appeal to shippers if they did not anticipate delays in shipping their grain under the conventional tariff program. Assuming shortages arise sufficiently often to cause adverse consequences to shippers, what is the common carrier obligation that Burlington Northern must meet with regard to its non-COT clients? [18] The statutory common carrier obligations are set forth in two provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act. The first states that common carriers “shall provide . . . transportation or service on reasonable request” and that such service shall be “safe and adequate.” 49 U.S.C. § 11101(a) (1988). The second provision requires that rail carriers furnish “adequate car service and establish, observe, and enforce reasonable rules and practices on car service.” 49 U.S.C. § 11121(a)(1) (1988). Congress did not further elucidate the requisites of the common carrier obligations, leaving to the Commission and the courts the task of clarifying, on a case-by-case basis, a more precise definition of “reasonable request,” “adequate car service,” and “reasonable rules and practices.” [19] The specific restrictions on the use of rail contracts is instructive as to the understanding of Congress concerning the common carrier obligations. The forty percent restriction on the total equipment a carrier may dedicate to contract service provides assurance that a carrier will still have sufficient equipment to meet reasonable requests for conventional service. The restriction on rail car capacity for which certain large shippers might contract provides assurance that limited rail equipment can be equitably distributed among all shippers. The explicit power of the Commission to deny approval to any contract provides assurance that unforeseen infringements on the common carrier obligations might be rectified. Thus, with these restrictions, section 11101(a) also provides that “[a] rail carrier shall not be found to have violated this section because it fulfills its commitments under contracts approved under section 10713 . . . before responding to reasonable requests for service.” There is no similar admonishment regarding carriers who give preference to special tariff shippers over reasonable requests for service. [20] Indeed, the statutory authority allowing carriers to establish special tariffs was enacted with the express legislative understanding that it would not adversely affect a carrier’s ability to fulfill its common carrier obligation. The conference report specifically notes that “the common carrier obligation is not abrogated in any way. This will insure that the shipper is still guaranteed the same level of service that he receives today.” Conference Report, 1980 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 4150. [21] The petitioners argue that Congress thus intended a carrier’s conventional service to remain virtually identical to the service provided before the offering of a special tariff. We disagree. Rail service under a carrier’s conventional tariff program need not be identical to that service before the introduction of special tariffs, but the conventional servicePage 311
must at all times meet the requirements of the common carrier obligations. When presented with such a case as this, therefore, the Commission must determine whether the opportunity for shippers to use conventional rail transport remains reasonable. In the instant case, the Commission failed to make that determination.
[22] The Commission here concluded that the “general common carrier obligation as currently defined” requires only that a carrier “maintain a fleet sufficient to meet average demand.” 8 I.C.C.2d at 427. The Commission further observed that a “requirement for a fleet sufficient to meet peak demand would result in a wasteful surplus of equipment detracting from the carrier’s long term financial health.” Id. We find that the Commission’s ruling regarding fleet size is a permissible construction of the statute. The common carrier obligations, however, involve much more than maintenance of sufficient fleet size. The Commission must also examine how the common carrier allocates the resources of that fleet: Are the procedures for distribution of the fleet reasonable and fair, and is the distribution equitable? Does the carrier provide adequate service on reasonable request? [23] In this case, the Commission failed to resolve these issues. The Commission did acknowledge the question of equitable distribution, but it failed to respond with appropriate findings of fact and legal analysis. Rather, it improperly rejected the claim on an extraneous basis: “We do not think that [petitioner] has shown that the COT program enables or causes [Burlington Northern] to breach its obligation to distribute cars equitably. There is nothing about the COT program that excludes particular classes of shippers.” Id. at 429. Notwithstanding the questionable finding that the COT program does not exclude particular classes of shippers,[4] a finding that non-COT shippers could participate in the COT program still fails to address whether conventional, non-COT shippers receive an equitable distribution of rail cars. [24] The Commission makes the same mistake in its analysis of the common carrier obligation to provide cars on reasonable request:[25] Id. at 430. The Commission errs here in two ways. First, if the COT process so reduces the numbers of cars available during shortages for non-COT shippers that it unduly impairs Burlington Northern’s ability to meet its common carrier obligations, then it does show that the COT program is unlawful. Second, the Commission again suggests that if the quality and reasonableness of non-COT service is a problem, shippers can resolve the problem simply by bidding on the special COT service. [26] Evidence in the record suggests that non-COT shippers endure unreasonable delays in receiving car service during shortages. That these shippers might feasibly switch to the premium tariff COT service is not the relevant inquiry; rather, the Commission must determine if the COT program so affects the service for conventional shippers as to violate Burlington Northern’s common carrier obligation to provide equitable and adequate car service on reasonable request.Nor has [petitioner] shown that [Burlington Northern] has violated its common carrier duty to provide cars on reasonable request. . . . The fact that the COT process reduces the numbers of cars available during shortages for non-COT shippers, again, does not show that the COT program is unlawful. Moreover, shippers dissatisfied with the quality of non-COT service can bid on COTs.
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[27] To be clear, we stress that Congress intended the common carrier obligations to continue to apply to a rail carrier’s conventional tariff service — that is, to its common carriage. Although a rail carrier also may offer other forms of service through contracts or premium tariffs, no shipper must avail itself of these special offerings simply to receive common carriage. Thus, the special service may not so adversely affect the carrier’s conventional tariff service as to prevent or frustrate its ability to meet its common carrier obligations through that conventional tariff service. [28] In concluding that Burlington Northern meets its common carrier obligations because its COT premium tariff program is available to all shippers, the Commission erred. It must rather determine whether Burlington Northern meets its common carrier obligations to shippers who might choose to use only its conventional tariff service. Specifically, the Commission must determine the following: Does the COT program adversely affect Burlington Northern’s conventional tariff rail service? If so, does Burlington Northern fail as a consequence to provide equitable service to any of its conventional tariff shippers? Does it fail to provide adequate service to its conventional tariff shippers? Does it fail to provide service on reasonable request to its conventional tariff shippers? Does the COT program render Burlington Northern’s first-come-first-served allocation scheme unreasonable for conventional tariff shippers? Does Burlington Northern fail in any way to meet its common carrier obligations to its conventional shippers because of its COT program? IV
[29] We reverse the holding of the Commission that Burlington Northern’s COT program does not infringe its common carrier obligations and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We affirm the decision of the Commission in all other respects.
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