Herzog Transit Services, Inc. v. United States Railroad Retirement Board

624 F.3d 467, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 22600, 2010 WL 4137564
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 2010
Docket09-3945
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 624 F.3d 467 (Herzog Transit Services, Inc. v. United States Railroad Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herzog Transit Services, Inc. v. United States Railroad Retirement Board, 624 F.3d 467, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 22600, 2010 WL 4137564 (7th Cir. 2010).

Opinions

RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.

Herzog Transit Services (“Herzog”) operates, under contract with Dallas Area Rapid Transit (“DART”) and Fort Worth Transportation Authority (“the T”), a commuter rail service on a line connecting Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas. Herzog dispatches all train traffic along this line, including interstate freight trains. The Railroad Retirement Board (“RRB” or “Board”) determined that Herzog is a covered employer under the Railroad Retirement Act1 (“RRA”) and the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act2 (which we shall sometimes refer to collectively as “the Acts”), but only with respect to these dispatching operations. Herzog, DART and the T petition for review of this determination. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we deny the petition for review.

I

BACKGROUND

1.

Herzog is a contract operator of commuter railroads. In 1994, the RRB determined that Herzog was not a covered employer under the Acts. At that time, Herzog operated commuter rail services in the Miami, Florida area for the TriCounty Commuter Rail Organization (now known as South Florida Regional Transportation Authority, or SF RTA). Since then, Herzog has engaged in six new operations in five other states: North Carolina, New Jersey, New Mexico, California and Texas. This petition concerns only the operation in Texas.

DART and the T jointly own a line of train track between Dallas and Forth Worth, Texas. On this line, DART and the T provide commuter rail service, known as the Trinity Railway Express (“Trinity” or “TRE”). These commuter trains have been operated by Herzog since 1996. Four interstate freight carriers also operate on the line. The Union Pacific Railroad Company and the BNSF Railway Company, interstate freight carriers, use the entire line. The Dallas, Garland & Northeastern Railroad and the Fort Worth & Western Railroad, also interstate freight carriers, use only part of the line.

Since 2001, Herzog has performed dispatching functions for all train traffic on the line. The operating agreements among the participating lines (DART, the T and the freight carriers) require Herzog to give priority to the Trinity trains, but [469]*469also require it to allow the freight carriers to use the line.

2.

In November 2003, Richard C. Beall, an employee of Herzog, wrote to the RRB and asked the Board to determine that Herzog was a covered employer under the Acts. In February 2006, the Board ordered that a hearing be held on whether there has “been a change in the operations of Herzog Transit Services, Inc., which would affect its status as an employer under the Railroad Retirement and Railroad Unemployment Insurance Acts.” A.R. 1256. A hearing was held on May 16, 2006. The Hearing Examiner issued a report, and the Board rendered a decision. The Board affirmed and adopted that decision upon reconsideration. We shall discuss in detail only the part of the Board’s decision pertinent to this petition, namely, the Board’s discussion of Herzog’s dispatching activities in Texas.3

The Board framed the issue as whether Herzog, a contractor, was a covered employer under the Acts.4 Focusing on the nature of the activity conducted by Herzog, the Board emphasized that “dispatching is as inextricable a part of the actual motion of trains as is the operation of a train’s locomotive controls by the engineer.” A.R. 7. Dispatchers, said the Board, direct and control the movement of trains; no train can move without an order from the dispatcher. Therefore, where “the train dispatching includes trains that operate interstate, the entity dispatching trains operates as a rail carrier” under the Acts. Id. Because Herzog’s principal business is intrastate passenger service, however, the Board found only its dispatching unit to be a covered employer.5

In support of this conclusion, the Board identified five considerations. First, the Board noted that the Federal Railroad Administration (“FRA”) has issued regulations highlighting the control of dispatchers over train movement.6 Second, the Board noted that a common carrier is the insurer of the goods it carries. Third, because dispatching is an indispensable [470]*470component of carrier service and must be delivered with such service, Herzog’s position was analogous to those of contractors and other entities previously found by the Board to be covered employers.7 These previous determinations included a commuter authority that provided dispatching services for interstate freight trains operating on its line. Fourth, the Board noted that, if Trinity (DART and the T) performed the interstate freight service itself, it would be a covered employer; Trinity could not remove an essential aspect of carrier operation from coverage by removing it from the covered interstate freight carriers. In this context, the Board referred to its decision in Employer Status Determination—Railroad Ventures, Inc., B.C.D. 00-47 (served Nov. 7, 2000). Railroad Ventures set forth a test to determine when a rail line owner that contracts out railroad activities nevertheless remains a covered employer. The Board stated that under this test, Trinity (DART and the T) would not have been a covered employer when the interstate freight trains performed their own dispatching. Once it “took back” control over dispatching operations and assigned them to Herzog, however, Herzog became an employer as lessee of the dispatching operations. A.R. 41-42. Fifth, the Board emphasized that its decision would not necessarily have adverse consequences on other similarly situated entities because the Board considers, in each case, the particular facts before it.

The Management Member dissented, but wrote only that he disagreed with “the portion of the majority’s decision that affirms the Board’s initial determination finding dispatchers working for Herzog Transit Services to be covered under the Railroad Retirement Act and the Railroad Unemployment [Ijnsurance Act.” A.R. 9A. Herzog, DART and the T now petition for review.8

II

ANALYSIS

We begin, as we must, with the governing statutory scheme. We first shall describe it generally. We then shall turn to a more precise discussion of the provisions most directly relevant to our analysis.

A.

In the early part of the twentieth century, private railroads administered pension plans. These plans provided small benefits and had strict eligibility requirements. As a result, they provided little incentive for older employees to retire, thereby keeping younger workers out of the industry. But the older workers were dissatisfied as well; as one former Associate General Counsel to the RRB has put it, “[t]he older men complained because these pension plans were like an umbrella that did not open whenever it rained, offered little protection when it did open, and hardly any when the heavy rains came.” David B. Schreiber, The Legislative History of the Railroad Retirement and Railroad Un[471]*471employment Insurance Systems 2 (1978) (hereinafter Schreiber).

The Railroad Retirement Act was directed toward remedying this situation. The first version of the Act was enacted in 1934 and struck down by the Supreme Court. A new Act was passed in 1935 and promptly challenged in court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
624 F.3d 467, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 22600, 2010 WL 4137564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herzog-transit-services-inc-v-united-states-railroad-retirement-board-ca7-2010.