Nekoosa Paper, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission

739 F.2d 258
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1984
DocketNo. 83-1069
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 739 F.2d 258 (Nekoosa Paper, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission) 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.

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Nekoosa Paper, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 739 F.2d 258 (7th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

PELL, Circuit Judge.

This case comes to us on a petition for review of an administratively final order of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) which upheld over challenges of unreasonableness the rail rates charged by intervening respondent carriers to transport pulpwood and wood chips to petitioners’ mills in Wisconsin. At issue on appeal is whether the ICC adequately explained its decision when it found the assailed rates reasonable under the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, Pub.L. No. 96-448, 94 Stat. 1898.

I. FACTS

Petitioners in this case are manufacturers of paper and paper products with major manufacturing facilities located in Wisconsin. All purchase substantial quantities of pulpwood and wood chips from which they derive the wood fibers necessary to produce a broad palette of paper products. Petitioners require both hardwood and softwood fibers, the relative mix of these fibers determining the characteristics of the final product. Shifts in consumer demand for certain paper products have resulted in large requirements for softwood fibers, requirements in excess of those which can be satisfied by softwood sources in Wisconsin. Petitioners have been forced to look to neighboring states and beyond for sources of softwood fiber, and they have found such sources in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Michigan. Because of the bulk and relative low value of pulpwood and wood chips, rail transportation is the method of choice for shipping these commodities from source locations to the Wisconsin mills. Petitioners contend that the intervening respondent carriers dominate the rail shipment routes between sources in the near western states and the mills in Wisconsin.

In a complaint filed in February 1981, petitioners requested that the ICC find rail rates for pulpwood and wood chips shipments on intervening respondents’ lines unreasonably high in violation of 49 U.S.C. § 10701a. The assailed rates are those published in Western Trunk Lines and Transcontinental Freight Associates tariff schedules. The schedules have been in effect since prior to 1977 and have been subject to several general and special increases.

In proceedings before an Administrative Law Judge (AU) of the ICC, petitioners presented a cost study, a market impact study, and verified statements of the mills’ employees responsible for wood fiber purchases. The central point of petitioners’ presentation was that the intervening respondent railroads had established rates at high levels resulting in severe anticompetitive effects on the wood fiber industry. According to petitioners’ evidence, the pertinent carriers began in 1974 to raise their western rates at a pace vastly faster than the pace at which lake state carriers had increased their rates. The western rail rates. resulted in a revenue/variable cost ratio for representative rail movements of 198 percent (later revised to 185 percent). A revenue/variable. cost ratio of 170 percent, petitioners maintained, would be reasonable. According to the verified statements of petitioners’ employees, the overall rates charged by the intervening respondents for the transportation of pulpwood and wood chips placed petitioners at a serious competitive disadvantage relative to [260]*260manufacturers located closer to western softwood sources. Petitioners’ employees also maintained that the rapid increase in western rates relative to lake state rates diminished competition between the two groups of suppliers.

Intervening respondents presented a cost study and verified statements of marketing representatives employed by the railroads. This evidence suggested that there was substantial intermodal competition for the transportation of pulpwood and wood chips and that petitioners’ cost studies understated the railroads’ costs. If the cost studies were done correctly, the railroads maintained, the actual revenue/variable cost ratio would be only 143 percent.

In his decision, the AU found each party’s computation of the revenue/variable cost ratio for representative movements to be flawed. The AU nevertheless found convincing petitioners’ evidence concerning the absence of intermodal and geographic competition for the transportation of the wood commodities. On the basis of this evidence, he found “no effective competitive constraints on the abuse of market power by the railroad defendants with regard to the subject traffic.” He therefore concluded that intervening respondents had market dominance and invoked the jurisdiction of the ICC to determine if the assailed rates exceeded a reasonable maximum. See 49 U.S.C. § 10709.

The AU’s discussion of the reasonableness of the rates was terse. On the issue of the anticompetitive effects of the western rail rates, the AU maintained that differential pricing, the practice of setting rates on some lines above fully allocated costs in order to achieve fully allocated costs overall,' is generally sanctioned by the ICC. As to petitioners’ claim that reasonable rates would be those resulting in a revenue/variable cost ratio of 170 percent, the AU stated that petitioners had offered no precedent or explanation for the adoption of. that ratio as the standard of reasonableness. These two points, together with the fact that the parties’ revenue/variable cost data was inclusive, led the AU to reject petitioners’ complaint. On administrative review, the ICC Review Board received recalculated cost evidence submitted by petitioners, but determined that the new evidence did not warrant departure from the conclusions reached by the AU.

II. DISCUSSION

Judicial review of administrative decisions is essential to the legitimacy of the administrative process. See Saylor v. United States Department of Agriculture, 723 F.2d 581, 582 (7th Cir.1983). In particular, review assures that an agency correctly applies to the record before it the decisional rules framed by the political branches of government. Requisite to effective review of administrative decisions, however, is a clear articulation by the agency of the rules it applied to reach the decision it rendered. See City Federal Savings & Loan Association v. Federal Home Loan Bank Board, 600 F.2d 681, 688 (7th Cir.1979). In the instant case, we believe the ICC foreclosed effective judicial review by failing to articulate the standard of reasonableness it applied .when it ruled against petitioners.

Congress passed the Staggers Rail Act of 1980 in response to declining railroad earnings which were already “the lowest of any transportation mode and ... insufficient to generate funds for necessary capital improvements.” H.R.Rep. No. 96-1430, 96th Cong., 2d Sess. 79 (1980) U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1980, pp. 3978, 4111. In order to avoid “further deterioration of the rail system or the need for additional Federal subsidy,” id., Congress sharply limited the power of the ICC to alter rates as set by the carriers themselves. See 49 U.S.C. § 10709(b), (d).

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Nekoosa Paper, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission
739 F.2d 258 (Seventh Circuit, 1984)

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739 F.2d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nekoosa-paper-inc-v-interstate-commerce-commission-ca7-1984.