North Dakota State Wheat Commission v. United States

565 F.2d 621
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 1977
DocketNo. 76-1990
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 565 F.2d 621 (North Dakota State Wheat Commission v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Dakota State Wheat Commission v. United States, 565 F.2d 621 (8th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

HENLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an original proceeding brought by the North Dakota State Wheat Commission and the North Dakota Public Service Commission, hereinafter petitioners, for the purpose of setting aside an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission entered in 1976 approving tariff schedules filed in 1974 by three interstate rail carriers, which schedules substantially modified existing freight rates charged by the carriers for the transportation of wheat and certain other grains from points in the midwest to the Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota area and to the Duluth, Minnesota-Superior, Wisconsin area.1 Petitioners contend that the challenged order is contrary to law and lacks adequate evidentiary support in the record. We have jurisdiction by virtue of 28 U.S.C. §§ 2321(a) and 2342(5).

After the petition was filed, Farmers Union Grain Terminal Association intervened as a petitioner, and the affected carriers, which are the Soo Line Railroad Company, Burlington Northern Inc. and Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company, intervened as respondents.

At risk of some oversimplification, the background facts of the case may be stated substantially as follows:

As indicated, we are concerned with freight rates charged by railroads for the transportation of certain grains from points in the Dakotas, eastern Montana and western Minnesota to the “Twin Cities” and “Twin Ports” areas that have been mentioned.

For many years prior to May, 1960 the grain rates of the intervening respondents, hereinafter referred to at times simply as the carriers, had been fixed by various orders of the Commission, and the prescribed rates were uniform throughout the year. In consideration of the rates paid by them, shippers were entitled to a number of acces-sorial and other services which were provided by the carriers without additional charges.

As of May, 1960 the carriers were suffering severely from the competition of unregulated truckers, and the carriers undertook to meet that competition by reducing rates with offsetting reductions of services. In 1963 the carriers filed rate schedules which established seasonal variations in rates. The prescribed “summer” rates were higher than the “winter” rates. In 1971 there was a further reduction of rates as far as wheat was concerned. The seasonal rates were put into effect not only to meet competition from truckers but also for the purpose of evening out shipments of grain throughout the year by encouraging shipments during the months in which demand for rail transportation of grain was normally at a low ebb. Wheat had rates of its own. The other grains involved here were lumped together for rate purposes. The summer rates charged with respect to those grains are referred to in the record as “Group 3” rates, and the winter rates are referred to as “Group 4” rates.

By early 1974 two significant changes had taken place in the transportation industry as far as transportation of grain was concerned. In the first place, the competitive position of the railroads in relation to truckers had improved. In the second place, seasonal fluctuations in shipments of grain had become less severe than they had been in prior years. This was due largely to improved farm storage facilities which eased the necessity of farmers and elevator operators of moving vast quantities of [624]*624grain immediately prior to and during the harvest season.

In such circumstances the carriers concluded that the reasons for establishing the seasonal variations in rates had disappeared, that elimination of the differentials would increase the revenues of the carriers, and that the differentials should be eliminated by making the summer rates applicable the year round. That decision was incorporated in the rate schedules that are challenged here and that were filed with the Commission in April, 1974. It was proposed that the new schedules would go into effect on May 1, 1974. While the new schedules eliminated the seasonal differentials in rates, they did not provide for the restoration of any services that had been eliminated or curtailed in connection with earlier rate reductions including services that had been eliminated or curtailed in connection with the establishment of the seasonal rates.

The new schedules were strongly opposed by petitioners, by the intervening petitioner, and by other protestants including the United States Department of Agriculture. Acting as then authorized by § 15(7), the Commission suspended the schedules for a period of seven months which expired on November 30, 1974. After that date the schedules went into effect and have remained in effect since that time.

On May 21, 1974 the Commission entered an order requiring the carriers to submit to the Commission and to the protestants such cost studies as the carriers intended to introduce in evidence and to make certain underlying documents available to the Commission and to the protestants. Since the carriers did not propose to justify the proposed schedules by reference to costs of service, they did not comply with that order.

The Commission referred the controversy to an administrative law judge, who held an evidentiary hearing in July, 1974. Since the new schedules had been filed pursuant to § 15(7), and since the schedules had been challenged in the interest of shippers, the burden was upon the carriers to establish that the rates incorporated in the new schedules were just and reasonable.2

At the hearing before the administrative law judge, the carriers did not introduce any cost evidence. In order to show that the proposed rates were reasonable, the carriers relied primarily on the fact that the proposed rates were lower than the original “full service” rates that the Commission had approved in the 1930’s plus various increases in those rates,3 and on the general need of the railroads for more money. The carriers urged that since the proposed rates were lower than the “No. 17,-000” rates, they were within the zone of reasonableness, and that the selection of particular rates within that zone was a matter of managerial discretion.4

On October 15, 1974 the administrative law judge filed a detailed opinion. He held that the burden was on the carriers to establish the reasonableness of the proposed rates, and he concluded that the carriers had failed to discharge their burden. The [625]*625judge rejected the “managerial discretion” argument of the carriers; he also held that the proposed rates on wheat and other grains could not be justified by reference to the general need of the railroads for more revenues. And, he felt that the proposed rates could not be justified by comparing them with the old “No. 17,000” rates.

Perhaps more basically, the judge was of the opinion that in its order of May 21,1974 the Commission had determined that the carriers must establish the reasonableness of the proposed rates by cost evidence, and that they had made no effort to do so. The judge refused to approve the proposed rates and ordered them cancelled.

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565 F.2d 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-dakota-state-wheat-commission-v-united-states-ca8-1977.