Tarbox v. State, Alaska Transportation Commission

687 P.2d 916, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 339
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1984
DocketNo. 7610
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 687 P.2d 916 (Tarbox v. State, Alaska Transportation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarbox v. State, Alaska Transportation Commission, 687 P.2d 916, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 339 (Ala. 1984).

Opinions

OPINION

Before BURKE, C.J., and RABINO-WITZ, MATTHEWS, COMPTON and MOORE, JJ.

RABINO WITZ, Justice.

I. Procedural History

Wayne and Donna Tarbox, a partnership, doing business as Air Center [hereinafter Center] own and operate a flight training school and aircraft sales business in Juneau, Alaska. In June of 1981, Center filed an application with the Alaska Transportation Commission [hereinafter ATC] to obtain a certificate to operate an air taxi charter service from a base of operations in Juneau. Protest was filed by L.A.B. Flying Service, another flight service, and a hearing was held by the ATC.

Testimony at the hearing revealed the financial structure of Center’s proposed air taxi service. Center anticipated that it would use aircraft which it had sold to various purchasers and then leased back (in all instances to the purchasers’ tax advantage). Three aircraft owner/lessors testified that under these leasebacks they were required to pay for all necessary maintenance and operation expenses of the aircraft such as insurance, taxes, maintenance and repairs, replacement, inspection, overhauls, depreciation, fuel, oil, and lubricants. Under the leasebacks Center’s only obligations were to pay to the lessors an hourly lease rate for aircraft use and to compensate the pilots of the leased aircraft.

Center’s application for an air taxi certificate was denied.1 The ATC found [918]*918that Center’s proposal was not “economically feasible” and was “contrary to the public interest.” Center’s subsequent motions for reconsideration and further hearing were denied by the ATC. Center then appealed to the superior court. The issue before the superior court was whether the ATC had a rational basis for its two-fold decision that Center’s proposed service was not in the public interest and was not economically feasible. The superior court affirmed the ATC’s denial and this appeal followed.2

II. Discussion

The ATC denied Center’s application for an air taxi certificate on the grounds that:

The proposed operation is not shown to be economically feasible within the purview of legislative policy and purposes ... [and]
The proposed operation contravenes the policy and purposes expressed in AS 02.05.010(3) and (4) and is contrary to the public interest.

We cannot ascertain from the ATC’s order whether it characterized these two decisions as “Findings of Fact” or “Conclusions of Law”. However, our examination of the text of the ATC’s order reveals that the primary basis for its determination that Center’s proposal was not economically feasible,3 and contrary to the public interest,4 [919]*919was the fact that Center intended to conduct its air taxi service with aircraft leased at non-compensatory rates from various lessors. In this regard the ATC in its decision stated:

We do not perceive this expressed policy [AS 02.05.010(3) and (4)] as advocating or condoning unbridled competition by an Applicant whose operating costs will, in significant part, be subsidized by other enterprises of the Applicant; or by some other business or individual who leases aircraft to the Applicant at non-compensatory rates to avoid income taxes.
In the instant case, the true costs of the proposed air taxi operation cannot be ascertained from the evidence of record....
The only expense items assigned to the proposed air taxi operation are the pilots’ hourly pay for hours actually flown and an aircraft lease rate paid only for hours the aircraft is actually operated in air commerce. The evidence indicates that this lease rate would be substantially non-compensatory to the aircraft owner for operations conducted solely in air taxi charter services.
These arrangements may suit the purposes of the aircraft Lessors and of the Applicant; but they are not the parameters within which economic feasibility is to be judged in terms of Legislative policy or public interest.

For purposes of selecting an appropriate standard of review, the ATC’s decision is best characterized as a mixed question of law and fact. See Jager v. State, 537 P.2d 1100, 1107 (Alaska 1975). The decision involved statutory construction of AS 02.05.010(3) and (4), an evaluation of the relevant evidence regarding Center’s proposed financial structure, and an evaluation of the potential impact of Center’s proposed operation on the local air carrier industry. The ATC made no effort to separate the legal inquiry from the factual inquiries in its order denying Center’s application, and we will not bifurcate our review to reflect those two interwoven elements of the agency’s decision. Instead, we approach the ATC’s decision as one involving agency expertise as to fundamental policy formulation. See Kelly v. Zamarello, 486 P.2d 906, 916-17 (Alaska 1971). As such, the ATC's decision denying Center’s application is subject to review by this Court under the “reasonable basis” standard.5

Under that standard of review, we limit our inquiry to whether the ATC’s decision has a reasonable basis in law and in fact. See, e.g., Alaska Public Utilities Commission v. Chugach Electric Association, 580 P.2d 687, 694 (Alaska 1978), overruled on other grounds, City & Borough of Juneau v. Thibodeau, 595 P.2d 626 (Alaska 1979). While the reasonable basis standard is more deferential than the substitution of judgment standard, the agency’s decision must still be “supported by the facts” if it is to withstand review. Earth Resources Co. of Alaska v. State, Department of Revenue, 665 P.2d 960, 965 (Alaska 1983). Indeed, in applying the reasonable basis standard of review we have, in some cases, required that the agency’s decision have substantial support in the record. See, e.g., Galt v. Stanton, 591 P.2d 960, 963-65 (Alaska 1979); Weaver Bros., Inc. v. Alaska Transportation Commission, 588 P.2d 819, 823 (Alaska [920]*9201978); Kelly v. Zamarello, 486 P.2d 906, 918 (Alaska 1971).6

We need not decide whether this is an appropriate case in which to require that an agency’s determination of a mixed question of law and fact, involving agency expertise as to fundamental policies, must be supported by substantial evidence in the record. Even were we to require only that the ATC’s decision have a “reasonable basis in fact,” rather than “substantial support in the record,” our conclusion would be the same.

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687 P.2d 916, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarbox-v-state-alaska-transportation-commission-alaska-1984.