St. Louis Airport Authority City of St. Louis v. Civil Aeronautics Board, Northwest Airlines, Inc., Intervenor

561 F.2d 148, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11863
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 1977
Docket76-2068
StatusPublished

This text of 561 F.2d 148 (St. Louis Airport Authority City of St. Louis v. Civil Aeronautics Board, Northwest Airlines, Inc., Intervenor) 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
St. Louis Airport Authority City of St. Louis v. Civil Aeronautics Board, Northwest Airlines, Inc., Intervenor, 561 F.2d 148, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11863 (8th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

MILLER, Judge.

Petitioners seek reversal of Civil Aeronautics Board (“CAB” or “board”) Order 76-10-33, adopted October 7,1976, refusing to expand the scope of its Seattle/Portland — Japan Service Investigation to include consideration of the City of St. Louis as a coterminal point for nonstop service to Japan or for one-stop service via a cotermi-nal already designated; also remand of the *149 case with directions that the board “accord St. Louis the single-plane service opportunity it has given every other interested city in the proceeding.” The petition is "denied.

Background

The investigation' was instituted 1 as a result of a number of applications seeking a new transpacific combination passenger and cargo service, including a petition by St. Louis, Dallas/Fort Worth, Las Vegas, New Orleans, and Seattle for direct air service to Japan and a petition by Portland, Oregon, for direct air service to Japan, Korea, and the People’s Republic of China. The instituting order stated:

In determining the scope of this investigation, we have been persuaded by the fact that the petitions requesting an immediate transpacific proceeding focus primarily upon Seattle, on the one hand, as the U.S. gateway point for transpacific service, and upon Japan, on the other hand. Because of its traffic flow potential and geographic location, Seattle is a logical city for consideration of additional Japan authority. It is ideally situated to garner the traffic necessary to support such service and it can easily serve as a focal point for flowing transpacific traffic generated from interior points.

The order also stated:

We will not consider additional U.S. points for coterminal status since the traffic-generating capability and geographic location of those other cities seeking coterminal status render it unlikely that new nonstop service to Japan would be viable from these points. [Footnote omitted.]

And further:

If a new carrier is authorized to provide Seattle-Japan service, it will be free to tack such authority onto its existing system and provide single-plane [through flight] service opportunities to interior U.S. points. Thus, even though cotermi-nal status for interior U.S. points will not be considered, the issues in this case will allow all interested carrier and civic parties ample opportunity to present evidence demonstrating the need for single-plane service to the Orient from interior U.S. cities by means of tacking a Seattle-Japan route onto the route system of any applicant carrier.

Various petitions for reconsideration were filed, including petitions by St. Louis and Portland. Only Portland’s petition was granted, the CAB saying in Order 76-2-44, adopted February 12, 1976:

Portland’s petition for reconsideration properly points out that the concept of tacking cannot improve Portland’s service to Japan as no traveler is going to proceed to Portland, change flights and continue on to Seattle, and then change again in Seattle when he could have proceeded directly to Seattle in the first place and thus eliminated a stop and/or change of planes. Portland has usually been considered as a traditional cotermi-nal point with Seattle and we have concluded that it should be designated as a coterminal point in this proceeding. 2

In its petition for reconsideration, St. Louis pointed out that the only carrier available to St. Louis for tacking a St. Louis-Seattle route onto a Seattle-Japan route was Eastern Air Lines and that Eastern had no interest in obtaining a Seattle-Japan route. However, Order 76-2-44 did not respond to this point and merely stated that its previous order (Order 75-12-84) *150 pointed out that all interested carrier and civic parties would have “ample opportunity to present evidence demonstrating the need for single-plane service to the Orient from interior U.S. cities by means of tacking a Seattle-Japan route onto the route system of any applicant carrier.” Accordingly, a petition for review was filed with this court. Admitting that it was mistaken over the opportunity of St. Louis to obtain single-plane service in the proceeding, the CAB moved that the case be remanded so that it could explain the criteria it used to determine the scope of the proceeding and assess the materiality of its mistake. The motion was granted, and further proceedings culminated in Order 76-10-33.

OPINION

The dispositive issue is whether the CAB’s refusal to expand the scope of its Seattle/Portland-Japan Service Investigation to include consideration of various St. Louis proposals was an abuse of discretion.

Petitioners argue that their treatment by the board is “so unnecessarily unfair as to amount to arbitrary and capricious agency action under Section 10(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706.” They state the gravamen of their complaint as follows:

The point of this whole matter is that there were six cities who originally requested coterminal status from the Board. No other cities applied then or later. Of these six cities the Board granted coterminal status to two (Seattle and Portland), accorded single-plane beyond service opportunities to three (Dallas/Fort Worth, Las Vegas and New Orleans) and denied any chance for direct service only to one — St. Louis. And when that one city tried in a spirit of compromise to propose a limited, reasonable way to meet its needs and not be left out in the cold, its proposal was first totally ignored and then, on remand, preemptorily [sic] brushed aside.

Notwithstanding this statement, we observe that Order 76-10-33 makes it clear that the single-plane service “opportunities” of Dallas/Fort Worth, Las Vegas, and New Orleans will not necessarily be realized:

It should be noted . . . that even the inclusion of a Seattle-Japan application by a carrier which could tack such authority and offer service to interior U.S. points does not guarantee that a city will in fact receive such service since the decision to tack authority is discretionary with the applicant. Las Vegas, for example, which was denied coterminal status, could receive single-plane service to Japan if new service is authorized and Western is the applicant selected for the route at issue. Western, however, has not proposed to provide Japan-Las Vegas single-plane service.

Although admitting that, during the proceedings on remand, St. Louis had requested the board to consider designating it as a coterminal (as had been done for Portland), petitioners emphasize that “the basic thrust” of their request for relief has been a one-stop service from St. Louis via a coterminal already designated. 3 They complain that the board in its denial of relief under Order 76-10-33 “spoke only in terms of coterminal nonstop service designation” of St. Louis and did not reveal the reasons for rejecting its alternative proposals. 4

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561 F.2d 148, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-airport-authority-city-of-st-louis-v-civil-aeronautics-board-ca8-1977.