Bowling Green-Warren County Airport Board v. Civil Aeronautics Board

479 F.2d 553, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 9638
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1973
Docket72-1870
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 479 F.2d 553 (Bowling Green-Warren County Airport Board v. Civil Aeronautics Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowling Green-Warren County Airport Board v. Civil Aeronautics Board, 479 F.2d 553, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 9638 (6th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

CELEBREZZE, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition for review of the decision and final order No. 72-7-25, rendered by the Civil Aeronautics Board (hereinafter the Board) on July 7, 1972. By this order the Board granted the ap *554 plication of Eastern Air Lines, Inc., for amendment of its certificate of public convenience and necessity for Route 10 so as to delete the point Bowling Green, Kentucky, from that route.

The following facts, as adopted by the Board, appear in the initial decision of the examiner. Bowling Green is the county seat of Warren County, Kentucky, and the trade center for several counties in south-central Kentucky. In recent years Bowling Green and Warren County have experienced a trend of industrialization and relatively rapid growth. Thus Bowling Green’s population has increased from about 18,000 in 1950 to about 38,000 in 1970, and the County’s population increased from about 43,000 to about 55,000 during the same period.

Bowling Green is located approximately 60 miles north of Nashville, Tennessee, and approximately 100 miles south of Louisville, Kentucky, both of which cities are classified by the Federal Aviation Administration as medium air traffic hubs. From the Nashville airport, five trunklines and four local service air carriers provide single-plane service to over 65 cities throughout the United States. From the Louisville airport, four trunklines and three local service air carriers provide single-plane service to over 70 cities across the county. Louisville, Bowling Green, and Nashville are linked by Interstate Highway 65, a major north-south highway, as well as a major bus line providing frequent service between these points and beyond.

Since its certificate was amended in 1947 so as to add Bowling Green as a point on its Nashville-Louisville segments of Route 10, Eastern provided continued daily service to Bowling Green up to September 1969. 1 In fiscal year 1969, the number of origin and destination passengers for Eastern at Bowling Green had reached 11,852 per year or over 32 per day on its two daily schedules (southbound in the mid-morning and northbound in the late afternoon), and traffic had increased at a rate of about 2,000 passengers per year.

On May 1, 1969, Eastern filed an application requesting suspension of its service at Bowling Green and approval of an agreement between Eastern and Air South, Inc., whereunder Air South would be employed by Eastern as an independent contractor to perform replacement service to Bowling Green. Air South was to provide three daily round-trips between Bowling Green and Louisville and two daily roundtrips between Bowling Green and Nashville, and bear its own expenses subject to Eastern’s agreement to underwrite Air South in amounts of no more than $50,000 the first year, $10,000 the second year, and $5,000 the third year. In support of its application, Eastern cited its competition from numerous strong trunklines which are able to devote their full attention to dense and/or long-haul routes upon which Eastern is dependent for economic survival. Eastern noted that it would save $300,000 annually from suspension at Bowling Green and that Bowling Green would benefit from the more frequent service to Nashville and Louisville under the replacement service.

In August 1969, the Board approved Eastern’s application for temporary suspension at Bowling Green and the agreement for replacement service by Air South. The Board’s approval was made subject to the condition that the suspension granted to Eastern would immediately terminate if Air South should cease to satisfactorily provide the specified replacement service.

Air South provided reliable service from September 2, 1969 through March 31, 1970, when it terminated its replacement service due to a lack of financial resources and support. Notwithstanding Air South’s morning, afternoon, and *555 evening service from Bowling Green to Louisville and Nashville, the number of origin and destination passengers at Bowling Green dropped to an average of 21.9 per day during this seven month period — a decline of about one-third from the traffic Eastern had carried just prior to its replacement by Air South.

Faced with the legal obligation of providing air service to Bowling Green when Air South terminated its replacement service, Eastern on March 30, 1970, applied to the Board for continuation of its temporary suspension at Bowling Green and for approval of a one-year agreement between Eastern and Northern Airlines, Inc., which was then providing scheduled air service between Louisville, Bowling Green, and Nashville. Under the agreement Eastern would underwrite Northern in the amounts of $8,000 per month for the first three months of operation and no more than $4,000 per month thereafter for the latter’s replacement service at Bowling Green.

Pending the Board’s consideration of the above application, Northern’s service was admittedly unreliable and unsatisfactory, and Northern in fact terminated service at Bowling Green on or about May 8, 1970. Bowling Green was thus without reliable and satisfactory air service from April 1, 1970, until May 25, 1970, and with no service at all during the last 17 days of this period.

On May 25, 1970, Eastern entered into a third contractual agreement for replacement service to Bowling Green, this time with Wright Air Lines, Inc. Whereas Air South and Northern in essence had been employed as independent contractors, retaining all revenues and bearing all expenses subject to underwriting payments by Eastern, Wright was essentially employed to provide substitute air service on a cost-plus-10 percent basis, subject to an initial ceiling of $28,000 per month. Under the agreement, Wright was to provide Bowling Green with at least three daily round-trips to Louisville and at least two daily roundtrips to Nashville.

On September 24, 1970, the Board approved Eastern’s application for continued temporary suspension at Bowling Green, subject to Wright’s performance of the specified replacement service, and the agreement between Eastern and Wright for such replacement service. In so approving Eastern’s application, the Board acknowledged that replacement service at Bowling Green had not been satisfactory. The Board was nonetheless of the belief that Wright’s replacement service, sponsored and sustained by Eastern, would be superior to prior replacement service and superior to the service which would be provided directly by Eastern were the suspension denied.

On December 31, 1970, Eastern filed the present application for deletion of Bowling Green from its certificate for Route 10.

In his initial decision rendered after a public hearing, Examiner Sornson apparently recognized that there is no reasonable prospect that reinstitution of direct service at Bowling Green by Eastern would be economically feasible. The Examiner nonetheless concluded that Bowling Green should not be deleted from Eastern’s certificate, but rather that Eastern should continue to be responsible for the community’s air service needs through support of air taxi replacement service. The Examiner found Eastern’s request for total relief by way of deletion of Bowling Green to be unwarranted in that “Eastern (had) not shown that a substitute service arrangement at Bowling Green cannot be successful. . . .

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479 F.2d 553, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 9638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowling-green-warren-county-airport-board-v-civil-aeronautics-board-ca6-1973.