Southwest Airlines Company v. Texas International Airlines, Inc. v. Texas Aeronautics Commission, Intervenor-Appellee

546 F.2d 84
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1977
Docket75-2539
StatusPublished
Cited by285 cases

This text of 546 F.2d 84 (Southwest Airlines Company v. Texas International Airlines, Inc. v. Texas Aeronautics Commission, Intervenor-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwest Airlines Company v. Texas International Airlines, Inc. v. Texas Aeronautics Commission, Intervenor-Appellee, 546 F.2d 84 (5th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

Southwest Airlines Co. has returned to the federal courts for the second time in *87 two years to preserve a 1973 judgment in a federal district court. The recurring litigation concerns Southwest’s right to continue its air passenger services at Love Field in Dallas, Texas, and to avoid a forced move to the new Dallas-Fort Worth Regional Airport. The district court granted Southwest a preliminary injunction against relitigation in state court of the issues decided in 1973. We affirm.

I. FACTS

The complicated procedural history, recounted in three previous opinions, 1 deserves brief repetition. The dispute began with a Civil Aeronautics Board order in 1964, requiring the Cities of Dallas and Fort Worth to designate a single airport for CAB-approved service in their region. The cities agreed to construct a new airport midway between them. To carry out the plan, they adopted the 1968 Regional Airport Concurrent Bond Ordinance. Besides authorizing the issuance of revenue bonds, the ordinance provided for a phase-out of commercial passenger air service at Love Field. 2 In 1970 eight CAB-certified air lines, appellants in this case, executed letter agreements with the Dallas/Fort Worth Regional Airport Board agreeing to “move all of [their] certified Air Carrier Services serving the Dallas-Fort Worth area to the [new] airport ... to the extent required under the terms of the 1968 Regional Airport Concurrent Bond Ordinance.” 3

Southwest Airlines began its intrastate commercial air service from Love Field in 1971 under a certificate issued by the Texas Aeronautics Commission (TAC). 4 The certificate authorized service from any airport in the area. On November 12, 1971, however, the TAC ordered all certified airlines not to change airports without written approval from the Commission. 5 After notifying the Regional Airport Board in 1971 of its intention to remain at Love Field, Southwest petitioned the Board for a waiver of the 1968 ordinance. Instead of determining whether the ordinance phase-out provisions applied to the airline, the Board concluded that the original CAB proceedings deprived the Board of jurisdiction.

The cities and the Airport Board then filed the first federal court suit 6 (Southwest I), requesting a declaratory judgment of their right to exclude Southwest from Love Field. Southwest counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment of its right to re *88 main at the field and for an injunction to enforce that right. The TAC intervened as a party-defendant and adopted Southwest’s position. On both federal and state law grounds, 7 the district court declared that the cities and the Board could “not lawfully exclude the defendant, Southwest Airlines Co., from the use of Love Field, Dallas, Texas, and its airport facilities so long as Love Field remains open as an airport.” City of Dallas v. Southwest Airlines Co., N.D.Tex.1974, 371 F.Supp. 1015, 1035. This Court affirmed the holding, but only on the state law grounds. City of Dallas v. Southwest Airlines Co., 5 Cir. 1974, 494 F.2d 773, 776-77. 8

Dallas responded to the district court’s judgment by passing a criminal ordinance that levied a two-hundred-dollar fine for each takeoff or landing at Love Field by an airplane of a certified airline. Southwest then brought another suit in federal court (Southwest II) to enjoin enforcement of that ordinance. Braniff intervened as party-plaintiff. Southwest II was then consolidated with yet another action brought by Delta and American against Braniff and the cities over violations of the 1970 Letter Agreements. 9 After Southwest moved for summary judgment, however, the district court severed the ordinance dispute from the case and enjoined Dallas from enforcing the ordinance against either Southwest or Braniff. 10 The remaining parties then voluntarily dismissed their respective causes of action and refiled them in the state court case that is the object of this suit (Austin ). 11

The pleadings in Austin raised questions identical with those decided in Southwest I. After recounting Southwest’s refusal to leave Love Field, Texas International expressed its primary concern that Southwest’s continued service at Love Field would put Texas International at a competitive disadvantage. Consequently, the plaintiff alleged:

A justiciable controversy exists as to the meaning and effect of Southwest’s TAC certificate of convenience and necessity and the TAC Minute Order No. 22. The TAC and Southwest contend that under the Texas Aeronautics Act and the Texas Municipal Airports Act (Articles 45c and 45d [sic., 46c and 46d] Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes), the TAC has the statutory authority to adopt orders regulating and controlling the City of Dallas *89 in the operation of Love Field so as to prevent Dallas from closing Love Field to TAC certificated service without the approval of the TAC and that Southwest’s certificate of convenience and necessity and TAC Minute Order No. 22 prohibiting TAC certificated air carriers from changing airports without TAC approval constitute regulatory orders with this effect. The United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, and the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit have upheld this interpretation of the Texas statutes in an action to which none of the signatory airlines is a party. The judgment in the said action is not final, but in any event this interpretation of the Texas statutes is not binding of the courts of Texas. Texas International denies that Southwest’s certificate and TAC Minute Order No. 22 have this meaning or effect, but contends that such regulatory orders are void for lack of statutory authority. Alternatively, Texas International contends that such TAC Minute Order is void for lack of notice and hearing,

An attorney for Continental then argued orally before the state court:

This is [not] an effort to undermine the federal decision. . . . This is a frontal attack on it. The word undermined implies something covert about it. We come in with flags flying. 12

The federal district court has preliminarily enjoined this “frontal attack”, thereby precluding the CAB airlines, the cities, and the airport board:

from relitigating in state court .

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Bluebook (online)
546 F.2d 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-airlines-company-v-texas-international-airlines-inc-v-texas-ca5-1977.