County Board of Arlington County, Va. v. United States

101 F. Supp. 328, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1951
Docket597
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 101 F. Supp. 328 (County Board of Arlington County, Va. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County Board of Arlington County, Va. v. United States, 101 F. Supp. 328, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020 (E.D. Va. 1951).

Opinion

*329 BRYAN, District Judge.

The County Board of Arlington County, Virginia, its members, and an individual patron seek to suspend and set aside 1 an order entered by the Interstate Commerce Commission finding just and reasonable an increase in the fares of the Alexandria, Bar-croft and Washington Transit Company for transportation of passengers between Washington, D. C. and pointá in the Counties of Arlington and Fairfax and the City of Alexandria, Virginia. Concession was made at the bar, during the pre-trial conference, that the findings of fact of the Commission are supported by the evidence.. Our inquiry, then, is the legal soundness of the conclusions drawn by the Commission and now assailed by the plaintiffs.

To become effective June 4, 1950, AB & W filed with the Commission schedules of proposed interstate fares between Washington and Virginia, but not within the zone that includes certain Government installations. The increase applicable to the territory of the plaintiffs was generally the addition of 5 cents to each one-way fare. Upon objection by the Arlington County Board and of civic associations along the lines of the Company, the schedules were suspended by the Commission until January 3, 1951. In the interim full hearings were granted to all parties in interest and the examiner’s proposed report thereafter filed, followed by the exceptions of the plaintiff Board. On November 10, 1950 Division 2 of the Commission made its report, and therein set forth its findings and its conclusions, holding that, with exceptions unimportant here, the new fares were proper. The same day an order was entered by the Commission, Division 2, vacating its previous suspension of the rates and discontinuing the proceeding. Petition of the County Board for reconsideration by the full Commission was denied in April 1951.

We dispose, in limine, of the complaint of the Commission’s procedure. Of certain exceptions filed by the Board to the report of the examiner, Division 2 said, “Requested findings and exceptions, not discussed in this report nor reflected in our findings or conclusions, have been given consideration and found not justified.” Reconsideration of the report of its Division 2, the Commission said, was denied because “the evidence of record adequately supports the findings of Division 2.” Although the reasons for these rulings are thus unequivocally stated, the County Board insists that Division .2, as well as the Commission, failed to comply with section 8, of the Administrative Procedure Act, 2 by not adding findings and conclusions to support its action in refusing requested findings and its actions in overruling .exceptions and refusing reconsideration. The contention is obviously meritless.

Condensed, the plaintiff’s complaint is that the Commission’s conclusion is unbacked by the indispensable jurisdictional finding on fairness and reasonableness, 3 that it was reached without the employment of any approved principle for determining,, or any acceptable standard for measuring, reasonable -rates, that it ignores passenger interest, and that it depends in part upon intrastate operations. We think the Commission’s action securely grounded in fact and in law.

Division 2 definitively found that, A B & W’s “operating revenues are less than its. reasonable expenses” but when increased to the amounts permitted by the order of November 10, 1950, the fares would be just and reasonable for the transportation described. It computed that the increase would establish a ratio of operating costs to operating income, after income taxes, of 95.6 4 Explicitly the report declares “the proposed fáres * * * are just and reasonable” *330 and the “proposed fares * * * do not appear to exceed maximum reasonable fares, and we so conclude.”

In coming to its final conclusion the Commission proceeded logically and lawfully. Compelling the ultimate findings are extensive intermediate ones. The transportation demanded, the service provided, the facilities therefor, as well as the existing investment, the capital expenditures made and to be made, dividends paid, the cost and economies of operation, plus the present and predictable revenues, were all subjects of the report. When a rate-making body has thus given thought to the factors recognized as developing a fair rate for a service, its decision must be accepted as a just figure, even though its conclusion may not be premised upon any theorem of price-fixing. 5

True, operational costs and income predominated .in the determination. This was not a matter of choice for the Commission. It was dictated by the nature of the utility under consideration. In following this natural course the Commission manifested an understanding of the methods and modus operandi of the business. For local transportation by bus the principal, and sometimes the sole, capital investment is mobile units. But so severe is their rate of depreciation that the entire investment, if unreplenished, would rapidly disappear. Too, the units demand close, constant, and costly supervision, repair, and maintenance. The necessity for frequent replacements requires that operating costs be heavily and regularly charged to create and maintain a depreciation reserve. Consequently, operating costs are the thing — -the first and prime consideration in the ascertainment of what must be collected for the service. In this kind of utility the investment of capital in fixed assets seldom approaches the amount invested in that form by those utilities requiring for their purposes such permanent items as land, buildings, plants, rights of way, tunnels, trackage, depots, wires, poles, mains, reservoirs, or similar long lived properties. Careful appraisement in the latter class of utilities of their capital assets, in order to fix a rate base, is imperative, but it is not so dominant an inquiry for a suburban bus company. A B & W is typical; its chief concern is operating expense.

Accentuation of operating costs in a proper case is known as the operating ratio rule. It is the pattern followed by the Commission here and in many other appropriate instances. Actually it is not a departure from the conventional modes. It is simply a label designating the process of evaluating a service in the light of all relevant factors, but with especial emphasis on the element-of operating expense when the nature of the service makes operating costs the foremost consideration,

The Commission’s analysis was painstakingly detailed and comprehensive. It found that in the first quarter of 1950 the revenues fell below those in 1949 for the same period by $110,000, and the expenses in the 1950 quarter were greater by $36,000 than the revenues for that quarter. The quarter was proved to be a safe forecast for the year. The ratio of costs to revenue in the 1950 quarter, before income taxes, was 105, compared with 96.6 for the first quarter of 1949 and 97.3 for the entire year 1949, the last two ratios including provision for income taxes. The losses were also demonstrated through comparative bus-mile expenses and revenues. A loss trend was evident, not to be arrested by the strictest economies — some so

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Bluebook (online)
101 F. Supp. 328, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-board-of-arlington-county-va-v-united-states-vaed-1951.