Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Interstate Commerce Commission, Southrail Corporation, Intervenor

909 F.2d 909, 134 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3057, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 31, 1990
Docket89-3918
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 909 F.2d 909 (Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Interstate Commerce Commission, Southrail Corporation, Intervenor) 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
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Interstate Commerce Commission, Southrail Corporation, Intervenor, 909 F.2d 909, 134 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3057, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12585 (6th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

MILBURN, Circuit Judge.

Petitioners are two unions with members formerly employed by the Gulf and Mississippi Railroad (“GMR”), which intervenor SouthRail Corporation acquired in 1988. Petitioners insisted below that SouthRail was a rail carrier when it acquired GMR, and, therefore, the ICC should have subjected the acquisition to regulation under 49 U.S.C. § 11343, which would have required SouthRail to guarantee job security for former GMR employees. However, the ICC determined that SouthRail was not a carrier, and it exempted the acquisition of GMR from strict regulation (and labor protective conditions) pursuant .to 49 U.S.C. § 10901.

In this appeal, petitioners seek review of the ICC’s refusal to revoke the exemption. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the ICC’s decision and deny the unions’ petitions for review.

I.

A.

Petitioners are the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and the Railway Labor Executives’ Association (“the unions”). Both unions represent former GMR employees who live in this circuit and have direct personal interest in the litigation.

MidSouth Corporation (“MidSouth”) is a holding company.' In the industry nomenclature, MidSouth is a “noncarrier”; i.e., not a rail carrier. MidSouth has three subsidiaries that are rail carriers: the Mid-South Rail Corporation (“MSRC”), the Mid-Louisiana Rail Corporation (“MidLou”) and SouthRail Corporation. MidSouth, MSRC and MidLou are not parties in this litigation, while SouthRail is an intervenor. MidSouth and its subsidiaries share the same chairmán of the board, president, and upper management personnel, all of whom work in the same location. MidSouth and its subsidiaries share the cost of these executives’ salaries.

GMR operated 732 miles of track that stretched from Tennessee to Mobile, Alabama. In mid-1987 it was on the verge of bankruptcy, struggling with annual operating losses, in default on more than $20 million of loans, and with track in such poor shape that it limited trains to a maximum speed of ten miles per hour. Among GMR’s creditors was the General Electric Capital Corporation (“G.E.”), to which GMR owed approximately $17.5 million.

In November 1987, MidSouth and G.E. restructured GMR’s debt into an obligation of approximately $12 million,, of which Mid-South became the primary obligor on $1 million. MidSouth also formed SouthRail’s corporate predecessor, SouthEastern Rail Corporation, which established lines of credit with various banks in Boston and New York City and the Federal Railroad Administration, and arranged the necessary financing for a $9-million rehabilitation program for GMR’s track. SouthEastern Rail Corporation changed its name to the SouthRail Corporation in January 1988.

SouthRail and GMR executed an acquisition agreement on April 14, 1988. South- *911 Rail assumed all of GMR’s assets and liabilities in exchange for $1.2 million of Mid-South common stock and warrants to purchase an additional 80,000 shares of Mid-South common stock in the five years after the deal closed. The purchase agreement provided that SouthRail could terminate the deal if it could not obtain an exemption from the ICC that would allow it to avoid having to guarantee job security for all of GMR’s employees.

B.

Under 49 U.S.C. sections 11343 and 11347, when a rail carrier acquires control over another rail carrier, the ICC must impose “protective labor conditions” upon the buyer. These conditions require the buyer to guarantee that the employees of the purchased carrier will “not be in a worse position related to their employment” for at least four years after the sale. 42 U.S.C. § 11347. Section 11343 also imposes protective labor conditions where the buyer is a noncarrier that already controls other carriers; i.e., a holding company whose subsidiaries are rail carriers.

In this case, the ICC granted SouthRail an exemption that permitted it to avoid protective labor conditions. The exemption evolved in the following manner: The ICC is required under 49 U.S.C. § 10901 to approve and regulate the acquisition of rail carriers by noncarriers. 1 However, after Congress expanded the ICC’s power to exempt various transactions from strict regulation, the Commission designated the acquisition of carriers by noncarriers to be a special class of transactions, and exempted the class from regulation under section 10901, provided that the noncarrier had been formed for a legitimate business purpose and not merely to avoid the obligation of protective labor conditions. 2

To use a section 10901 class exemption a noncarrier must publish a notice in the Federal Register that (1) it plans to acquire a carrier, and (2) the acquisition falls within the class of transactions exempted from section 10901. 3 Parties opposed to the non-carrier’s proposal must petition the ICC to revoke the exemption; otherwise, it goes into effect soon after publication of the notice. 4

On December 4, 1987, SouthRail published its notice of intent to acquire GMR under a section 10901 class exemption. The unions responded by petitioning the ICC to revoke the exemption, insisting that section 11343 applied because SouthRail was a carrier. The parties engaged in seven months of discovery and then filed supplemental petitions and responses.

On August 15, 1989, the ICC issued a Decision and Order in which it denied the unions’ petitions to revoke SouthRail’s class exemption. The ICC found that: Mid-South formed SouthRail to acquire and operate GMR; MidSouth formed SouthRail for the legitimate business purpose of shielding itself and its subsidiaries from the financial risks involved in the acquisition of GMR; MidSouth did not financially guarantee SouthRail’s performance; and SouthRail assumed nearly all of the financial risks involved in the acquisition. The ICC noted that SouthRail planned to publish its own tariffs, hire its own employees, and acquire its own operating material. The ICC concluded that SouthRail was an independent corporate entity entitled to noncarrier status.

In reaching its conclusion, the ICC rejected the unions’ argument that MidSouth created SouthRail to evade the cost of protective labor conditions. The ICC acknowledged that SouthRail’s agreement to buy GMR included provisions that allowed it to terminate the deed if it were denied a class exemption. But the ICC found that

[t]he termination provisions were included in the purchase agreement because *912 labor protection costs were a material . economic consideration to both sides.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
909 F.2d 909, 134 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3057, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 12585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brotherhood-of-locomotive-engineers-v-interstate-commerce-commission-ca6-1990.