Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. John T. Connor

418 F.2d 1142, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 306, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12108
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 1969
Docket22140
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 418 F.2d 1142 (Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. John T. Connor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. John T. Connor, 418 F.2d 1142, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 306, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12108 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinion

TAMM, Circuit Judge:

Since approximately seventy percent of the world’s surface is covered by water and since possibly more than seventy percent of this country’s foreign trade is carried, at some time, in the holds or on the decks of water-borne carriers and further, since this country is constantly striving to have the finest fleet of merchant ships, Congress, in 1936, enacted the Merchant Marine Act as the vehicle to provide for a sufficient service in shipping, a back-up force for national defense, an opportunity opened only to United States’ citizen-entrepreneurs and the best, safest and grandest fleet in the world. To implement these ends Congress saw fit to establish the United States Maritime Commission, 46 U.S.C. § 1111 et seq. (1964), as its regulatory arm. That organ worked to make our merchant marine fleet capable of competing with foreign flag vessels by extending government aid, in the form of subsidies, to insure the viability of the more costly American-flag shipping. In 1961, pursuant to Reorganization Plan No. 7, 75 Stat. 840, as amended, the area of economic assistance in this field was thereafter overseen by the Secretary of Commerce, the Maritime Administration and the Maritime Subsidy Board (hereinafter collectively known as the “Secretary”). The Secretary, when acting in this area, must adhere to the pertinent sections of the Merchant Marine Act or find itself out of step with the law. It is the position of the appellant that such imprecision with the law by the Secretary, in violating *1144 certain procedural requirements of notice of application for subsidy, is cause for reversal of the district court’s affirmance of the Secretary’s action. We are in accord with that position and reverse the implicit finding of lawful conformance by the trial court in its grant of summary judgment to the appellee.

In 1962 American Export Isbrandtsen Lines, Inc. (hereinafter “Export”) was granted permission to operate a non-subsidized trade over Route Nos. 5-7-8-9 between the northeastern United States and the western countries of Europe. Under its agreement Export was to utilize two break-bulk type vessels, 1 the S.S. Remsen Heights and the S.S. Sir John Franklin for a maximum total of 18 sailings per year. On February 24, 1964, Export filed with the Secretary an application for an operating-differential subsidy under Subchapter VI of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, as amended, 46 U.S.C. § 1171 et seq. (1964), with regard' to this same route. In that application Export requested “that the Operating-Differential Subsidy 2 Agreement between the United States * * * and Export * * * (Contract No. FMB-87) 3 be amended to include authority to operate the S.S. Sir John Franklin and S.S. Remsen Heights in subsidized service on Trade Routes Nos. 5-7-8-9 * * (Attachment #1, p. 18; emphasis supplied.) The application also requested permission “to interchange the vessels (Remsen Heights and Sir John Franklin) * * * with the other cargo vessels used by it on its Lines [st'c] G and Line H. * * * ” (Attachment #1, p. 19.) Lines G and H were also served by vessels of the break-bulk type (Attachment #1, p. 17). Export further noted that “as to Applicant’s long-range vessel replacement plans * * * [i]t is contemplated that suitable replacement for the SS Sir John Franklin and the SS Remsen Heights, the subject of this Application, will be agreed upon.” (Emphasis supplied, Attachment #1, p. 43.) The application urged the need for additional vessels to operate these routes in the face of an inadequate service by United States’ flag vessels.

On April 1, 1964, this application, pursuant to 46 C.F.R. § 201.72 (1968), was published in the Federal Register inviting “interested parties” to file for leave to intervene in a hearing under section 605(c) of the Act to determine “(1) whether the application is one with respect to vessels to be operated on a service, route or line served by citizens of the United States which would be in addition to the existing service * * * and, if so whether the service already provided by vessels of United States registry * * * is inadequate, and (2) whether in the accomplishment of the purposes and policy of the Act additional vessels should be operated thereon.” (Attachment #8, p. 2.) Section 605(c) of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, as *1145 amended, 46 U.S.C. §1175(c) (1964), requires that

[n]o contract (of subsidy) shall be made * * * with respect to a vessel to be operated on a * * * route * * * served by citizens of the United States which would be in addition to the existing services * * * unless the Federal Maritime Board shall determine after proper hearing of all parties that the service already provided by vessels of United States registry * * * is inadequate, and that in the accomplishment of the purposes * * * of this chapter additional vessels should be operated thereon * * *. (Emphasis supplied.)

The statute goes on to require

no contract shall be made * * * if the Board shall determine the effect of such a contract would be to give undue advantage or be unduly prejudicial, as between citizens of the United States, in the operation of vessels in competitive services * * * unless following public hearing, due notice of which shall be given to each line serving the route, the Board shall find * * * it is necessary to enter into such contract in order to provide adequate service by vessels of United States registry.

Waterman S.S. Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of McLean Industries, Inc. (the parent company of Sea-Land Service), was the only petitioner for intervention for it also served Trade Routes Nos. 5-7-8-9 at the time of the February 24, 1964, application. However, Waterman was thereafter sold to a third party and its intervention dropped.

On May 21, 1964, a prehearing conference was held before the Secretary’s trial examiner and, in the absence of opposition to or petitions for intervention in the grant of subsidy, the application was forwarded to the Secretary for administrative determination. On February 8, 1965, the Office of Government Aid of the Secretary recommended that Export’s application be approved “on an interim subsidized basis pending replacement.” (J.A. 41.) However, action on that recommendation was deferred pending the outcome of a second application hereinafter discussed.

On April 7,1965, Export applied to the Secretary for an establishment of “the first fully containerized steamship service in the foreign commerce of the United States, which service [it] believe [d] [would] offer unprecedented benefits. * * * ” (Attachment #12, p. 1, emphasis supplied.) This application was filed on behalf of a yet to be formed subsidiary of Export to be known as Container Marine Lines, Inc.

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418 F.2d 1142, 135 U.S. App. D.C. 306, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 12108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-land-service-inc-v-john-t-connor-cadc-1969.