People Of The State Of Illinois v. Interstate Commerce Commission

722 F.2d 1341
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1984
Docket82-2235
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 722 F.2d 1341 (People Of The State Of Illinois 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.

Bluebook
People Of The State Of Illinois v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 722 F.2d 1341 (7th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

722 F.2d 1341

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, et al., Petitioners,
Mt. Pulaski Products, Inc., Intervening Petitioner,
v.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION and United States of America,
Respondents,
Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Company, Intervening Respondent.

No. 82-2235.

United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.

Argued Sept. 23, 1983.
Decided Dec. 5, 1983.
Rehearing Denied Jan. 12, 1984.

Gordon P. MacDougall, Washington, D.C., David Nixon, Asst. Atty. Gen., Chicago, Ill., for petitioners.

Colleen J. Bombardier, I.C.C., Washington, D.C., Richard M. Kamowski, ICG RR Co., Chicago, Ill., for respondents.

Before CUMMINGS, Chief Judge, POSNER, Circuit Judge, and SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge.

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The Staggers Rail Act of 1980 has placed tight time limits on proceedings before the Interstate Commerce Commission to abandon railroad lines; and the most important issue raised by this petition to review an order of the ICC authorizing the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad to abandon a 31-mile line between Clinton and New Holland, Illinois is whether the Commission, in its zeal to expedite the proceeding, denied the opponents of the abandonment (principally shippers) due process of law.

The Act creates three categories of abandonment: the unprotested application, which the Commission must grant within 45 days; the protested application that the Commission decides not to investigate, in which the Commission has 75 days from the filing of the application to decide whether to authorize abandonment; and the protested application that is investigated, in which an initial decision--one subject to review by the full Commission--is due within 165 days. 49 U.S.C. Secs. 10904(b), (c)(1), (2), (3). As the Act allows only 30 days from the date of the application for protests to be filed, and only 15 days after that for the Commission to decide whether to investigate, 49 U.S.C. Sec. 10904(c)(1), there are only 120 days between the deadline for the Commission to order an investigation and the deadline for the initial decision.

As we explained in Illinois v. ICC, 709 F.2d 1186, 1191 (7th Cir.1983), "investigation" is a misnomer in the abandonment context. It just means a somewhat more elaborate evidentiary process. Instead of the Commission's basing its decision on just the application and the protests, as it does when there is no investigation, when it "investigates" it receives affidavits ("verified statements" in ICC parlance) from the applicant and the protestants and bases its decision on those. In this case the Commission used its "modified" investigative procedure, which means it did not hold an oral hearing. See 49 C.F.R. Secs. 1100.43 et seq.; Anderson, ICC: Practice and Procedure 110-11 (1966). Under this procedure the applicant must put in his opening case (i.e., his affidavits) within 15 days after the Commission has ordered an investigation; the protestants must put in their case within 40 days after the Commission's order; the applicant must put in his reply case within 55 days after the order; and the "parties shall not be permitted to file motions to strike all or part of any evidence submitted." 49 C.F.R. Sec. 1152.25(d)(6).

Within the 120-day statutory limit a review board (the initial decision-maker within the Commission) authorized abandonment, and the protestants then appealed to the full Commission, which upheld (formally, denied the appeal from) the review board in a brief order. The review board had found that the railroad's revenues from the line were dropping steadily, with no prospect for a turnaround; by 1981 they were only $25,000, resulting in operating losses that year of almost $250,000. To these losses the board added another $175,000 representing the income that the railroad would obtain by liquidating the line and reinvesting the assets salvaged from the liquidation. The board also noted that if the line were kept in service the railroad would have to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars rehabilitating it. Although acknowledging that the protesting shippers would be hurt by the abandonment, the board noted that they were all located within a few miles of other rail lines and also could use (and on occasion had used) trucks in lieu of rail to move their shipments. The board concluded that abandonment would be consistent with the public convenience and necessity, the statutory criterion. 49 U.S.C. Sec. 10903(a).

Although the facts found by the board may seem to make a compelling case for abandonment, cf. Chicago & N.W. Transport. Co. Abandonment, 366 I.C.C. 373, 380 (1982), the protestants argue that the factual picture painted by the board is incomplete in important respects. The first relates to operations performed at Lincoln, Illinois. Lincoln is not on the Clinton-New Holland line, but the train that services the line (or rather serviced it, the Commission having refused to stay its order authorizing abandonment pending this review proceeding, although the line remains in place in case we decide to reverse the Commission)--the "Lincoln switcher" as it is called--performs services at Lincoln that generate substantial revenues that the railroad refused to attribute to the Clinton-New Holland line. This was a reasonable decision. The Lincoln switcher will continue to perform those services; it just will not run back and forth between Clinton and New Holland. Revenues unaffected by abandonment are not revenues of the abandoned line.

The second factual issue relates to the alleged labor cost savings from the abandonment. The protestants argue that the railroad's labor contracts will prevent it from laying off the crews who serve the line and that therefore the wages of those crews should not be counted as a cost that will be saved if the line is abandoned. Regarding the only workers as to whom the protestants are still making this contention, the firemen, the board found that the railroad would be able to redeploy them elsewhere on its system, bumping less senior employees if necessary. The board seems to have thought that such a finding was all that was necessary to establish that the crews' wages were a prospective savings from abandonment. It is not. Whether when the dust settles the result of all the bumping will be an actual reduction in the railroad's payroll, and if so by the full amount of the wages of the firemen on the abandoned line, are separate questions from whether bumping will occur--questions not discussed by the board. But the amount of alleged savings that are in dispute is slight--less than $40,000 a year, including fringe benefits and payroll taxes--relative to the railroad's annual losses on the Clinton-New Holland line, which are at least $500,000 when the cost of rehabilitating the line, a cost that would have to be incurred if the line were kept in service, is figured in. Thus, even if the review board exaggerated the savings in firemen's wages, the error was not big enough to affect the board's decision; it was harmless. Cf. Illinois v. ICC, 698 F.2d 868, 876 (7th Cir.1983). (More below on harmless error in administrative proceedings.)

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