TNT Tariff Agents, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission

525 F.2d 1089
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 18, 1975
DocketNo. 203, Docket 75-4052
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 525 F.2d 1089 (TNT Tariff Agents, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TNT Tariff Agents, Inc. v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 525 F.2d 1089 (2d Cir. 1975).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Circuit Judge:

Petitioners TNT Tariff Agents, Inc. (hereinafter “TNT”) and National Car-loading Corporation (hereinafter “National”) seek to set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission entered in two separate, but closely related, administrative proceedings. In I.C.C. Docket No. 35921,1 the Commission found TNT’s “Tariff East” to be unjust and unreasonable. In I.C.C. Docket No. 35921 (Sub-No. I),2 the Commission made the same finding with reference to TNT’s “Tariff West.”

National is a freight forwarder operating pursuant to Part IV of the Interstate Commerce Act. It provides freight transportation service from the point of [1091]*1091receipt of a shipment to the final destination. Freight forwarder rates are set by the forwarders themselves, subject to disapproval by the Commission on the ground that they are unjust or unreasonable, or that they result in unjust discrimination or undue prejudice or preference. By schedules filed to become effective September 10, 1973, TNT published for National Items Nos. 619 and 80040 of TNT Tariff No. 14, ICC-FF No. 15 (“Tariff East”) which amended their prior rates. The relevant part of those Items is reproduced in a footnote.3 The effect of the Items was to reduce the forwarder’s published full service rates by $1.00 per hundred pounds when customers’ shipments were not picked up by the forwarder but were delivered directly to the forwarder’s terminal. Apparently because TNT failed to properly symbolize the tariff change, neither of the intervenors here noticed the change in rate, and the tariff, not having been protested, went into effect unchallenged on September 10, 1972. Subsequently, however, when Intervenor Eastern Central Motor Carriers Association, Inc. (hereinafter “Eastern”) discovered the Items, properly symbolized, in an identical tariff published by Lifsehultz Fast Freight, Inc., Eastern requested the Commission to suspend the Lifsehultz tariff and to investigate the TNT tariff.

The Commission responded to Eastern’s protest by initiating on October 24, 1973 an investigation of the lawfulness of the TNT Items.4 It was ordered that this investigation should be handled under the Commission’s modified procedure rules, 49 C.F.R. § 1100.45, et seq., whereby all evidence is introduced in the form of affidavits, and cross-examination of witnesses is permitted only to resolve material factual disputes. TNT as respondent filed an opening statement of facts and arguments on November 9, 1973, in which it sought to characterize the $1.00 reduction when shipments were dock-delivered as a “dock rate” rather than an “allowance”; to show that the publication of dock rates is an established form of rate-making; and to demonstrate by a series of letters that numerous shippers favored TNT’s tariff. While TNT presented no evidence of the actual cost to itself or shippers of performing the pickup service dock-delivery would do away with, it did assert that freight forwarder costs were “skyrocketing” and that the newly published tariff was necessary to maintain the freight forwarder’s competitive position.

Eastern’s opening statement countered TNT’s assertions with evidence that the cost in Eastern territory of performing pickup was less than $1.00 per hundred pounds on shipments of 500 pounds and heavier. Since the discount dock rate, or allowance, was not commensurate with the considerably smaller cost to the shipper of rendering the service of delivering his goods to the forwarder, Eastern argued that the tariff contravened the [1092]*1092statutory mandate of Section 415 of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. § 10155 and would exert a disruptive impact on the existing rate structure. TNT made a reply statement, but offered no additional evidence in its own behalf. Rather, it sought to discount the weight of Eastern’s cost evidence on the ground that the evidence pertained only to motor common carriers’ pickup costs and therefore was not probative of the reasonableness of freight forwarder’s rates.

The initial decision of Administrative Law Judge Margulies, served on March 22, 1974, held that Eastern had established a prima facie case that Tariff East was unjust and unreasonable, that TNT had failed to rebut that case, and that the tariff must therefore be can-celled. On April 18, 1974, TNT filed exceptions to the decision, to which Eastern replied. By order served July 23, 1974, the Commission’s Review Board No. 4 upheld the Judge’s initial decision. On October 21, 1974, TNT filed a petition for a reconsideration of the case on the existing record, and also for a reopening of the proceeding for the purpose of receiving additional evidence. As part of its petition TNT tendered by way of an offer of proof a verified statement addressed to the motor carrier cost of picking up freight forwarder shipments and delivering them to freight forwarder docks. Eastern opposed the petition, in part on the ground that the new evidence was not timely offered. By order served January 31, 1975, TNT’s petition was denied by the Commission, Division 2, acting as an Appellate Division.

Proceedings in No. 35921 (Sub-No. 1) regarding TNT’s “Tariff West” followed a similar administrative route. TNT had filed Tariff West simultaneously with Tariff East as Item No. 52000 of Tariff No. 14, iCC-FF No. 15, to become effective on the same date. Except that it applies on the West coast, the wording and effect of Tariff West is identical to that of its eastern counterpart. Before the Commission, the Tariff West proceeding paralleled the Tariff East proceeding, except that it began and ended two months later than the latter, and the initial challenge to its fairness was made by the Rocky Mountain Motor Tariff Bureau, Inc. (hereinafter “RMB”), rather than by Eastern. Administrative Law Judge Luttrell’s initial decision of May 29, 1974, reached the same conclusion with reference to Tariff West as Judge Margulies had reached with reference to Tariff East. The holding that the tariffs in question were unjust and unreasonable was subsequently affirmed by Review Board No. 4, and ultimately, on March 6, 1975, by Division 2 of the-Commission acting as an Appellate Division.

When TNT filed an amended petition for judicial review of the Commission’s order regarding Tariff East, RMB moved to intervene in the Tariff East proceeding. The order was granted on May 20, 1975. The orders regarding Tariff East and Tariff West were voluntarily stayed by the Commission pending judicial review.

In support of its position that the Commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and that the orders rendered in both Tariff East and Tariff West were without substantial evidence to support them, TNT advances three major arguments. First, it contends that the Commission improperly allocated the burden [1093]*1093of proof. Second, it asserts that the Commission’s decision reflects a failure to distinguish between reduced dock rates and allowances to customers for the delivery of shipments to a forwarder’s dock. Finally, it argues that the Commission erred in relying on the cost evidence proffered by Eastern and RMB as the basis for the Commission’s finding that the tariffs are unjust and unreasonable. We find no merit in these contentions.

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