United Transportation Union, Local Lodge 693-E & Local Lodge 77 v. Burlington Northern, Inc.

319 F. Supp. 451, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2069, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9917
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedOctober 9, 1970
DocketNo. 5-70 Civ. 19
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 319 F. Supp. 451 (United Transportation Union, Local Lodge 693-E & Local Lodge 77 v. Burlington Northern, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Transportation Union, Local Lodge 693-E & Local Lodge 77 v. Burlington Northern, Inc., 319 F. Supp. 451, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2069, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9917 (mnd 1970).

Opinion

NEVILLE, District Judge.

Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary or temporary injunction presents first the question as to whether three railroads, without objection from the fourth, may effect certain switching and operating [452]*452changes in the Duluth, Minnesota-Superior, Wisconsin area without prior application to and approval by or obtaining a certificate from the Interstate Commerce Commission under 49 U.S.C. §§ 1(18) and 5(2) (a) (ii) and, second, the question as to whether the giving of a notice under Section 6 of the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C. § 156 permits or requires this court to issue a temporary injunction to maintain status quo pending the conducting of mediation proceedings.

Plaintiffs are two local lodges of the United Transportation Union and assert that as a result of what they claim to be illegal action on the part of the defendant railroads some 25 to 30 union members who are long-time employees of the Lake Superior Terminal and Transfer Railway Corporation (LST & T) have become unemployed and are more than likely so to remain. The defendants are (1) the Burlington Northern, Inc. (BN) successor by merger effected on March 2, 1970 to the former Great Northern Railway Company (GN) and the Northern Pacific Railway (NP) and which now owns and operates over the track-age of the former NP the Duluth-Superior area; (2) Duluth, Winnipeg and Pacific Railway Company (DW & P) whose tracks extend from approximately their termination at West 44th Street in Duluth, Minnesota, where they connect with the BN tracks, northerly to International Falls, Minnesota with connections beyond and into Canada; (3) Chicago and North Western Railway Company (C & NW) whose subsidiary Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway Company (Omaha) owns track-age and operates in the Duluth-Superior area; (4) Lake Superior Terminal and Transfer Railway Corp. (LST & T) which is owned two-thirds by BN, one-sixth by C & NW and one-sixth by the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad Company (Soo Line — not a party in this action); LST & T owns and operates a transfer railroad with a yard in Superior, Wisconsin and is engaged in switching and transferring of cars delivered to it by one carrier and in due course transmitted by it to another carrier.

Since 1912, DW & P has had, under a written agreement, limited trackage rights over some few miles of what are now BN tracks from 44th Avenue West to near 16th Avenue West in Duluth so as to effect a connection with, and to permit transshipment of cars to and from C & NW at its Fifth Avenue yard at Duluth. A written agreement of April 13, 1912 with the then NP permitted use of the latter’s above stretch of trackage but limited the use of such to passenger, lakebound or local freight with a total of six revenue trains per day and subject to certain other restrictions. In accordance with these restrictions, all “through” cars, that is those not to be terminated or unloaded in the Duluth-Superior area, travelled over a route, across “grassy point” or the St. Louis Bay bridge either to or from the yards of LST & T and there by LST & T crews switched or interchanged to C & NW or to DW & P as the case might be. Over the years there were several exceptions to this practice: (a) a period of a week in 1961 until NP apparently objected; (b) occasionally when either carrier by using LST & T would miss a connection; (c) lake cars, i. e., those whose contents were to be unloaded onto lake boats; (d) purely local freight not destined beyond the Duluth-Superior area; (e) passenger traffic, now virtually if not completely non-existent.

March 2, 1970 the long pending merger between GN and NP became final. One of the conditions thereof reads as follows:

“30. [BN] shall (1) grant such trackage rights at Duluth, Minn., to Duluth, Winnipeg & Pacific ^Railway, upon terms mutually agreeable, as will permit the latter to handle through traffic between the present connection of that railroad and Northern Pacific in Duluth to the connection of the North Western and Northern [453]*453Pacific in Duluth, and (2) grant such trackage rights to North Western at Head of the Lakes, upon terms mutually agreeable as will permit the latter to handle such traffic over St. Louis Bay Bridge and related facilities.”

Neither C & NW nor DW & P are of course parties to the BN merger agreement, though the court deduces from statements at the oral argument that one of the considerations for the withdrawal of objections by one or both of these carriers to the merger agreement was the commitment or requirement that BN remove the restrictions of the 1912 agreement and permit more direct interchange than through the LST & T.

Since on or about March 13, 1970, no, or very little, traffic “through” or otherwise, has been routed to or handled in the LST & T yards or by its personnel when being transferred between C & NW and DW & P or vice versa. Apparently a modification of the 1912 written agreement has been effected and the more direct route from DW & P over BN tracks to the C & NW Duluth yards for “through” cars has been used thereby avoiding the LST & T yard. The total traffic is alleged to be as high as 200 cars per day actually switched at the C & NW Fifth Avenue Duluth yards. It is this rerouting of traffic which is claimed to have caused the lay-off of between 25 to 30 LST & T employees, thus engendering this lawsuit.

Plaintiffs claim first that the change effected between the two aforesaid roads and BN, whose tracks are used in part, cannot be made without approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission under either 49 U.S.C. § 1(18) or 49 U.S.C. § 5(2) (a) (ii). The former requires under certain circumstances and conditions an Interstate Commerce Commission certificate of convenience and necessity for an extension or an abandonment of railroad lines, which plaintiffs claim are both involved here. The latter statute requires Interstate Commerce Commission approval before a carrier may acquire trackage rights over another railroad line, which plaintiffs also claim is involved in this case.

Defendants claim that the change effected is not such as requires a certificate of convenience and necessity for there is no new acquisition but merely a removal of restrictions on use and no abandonment of any trackage; that the situation is not similar to a spur track since it is over the main line of the BN that cars travel to get to and from the LST & T yards; and that in any event, the imposition of condition 30' in the merger decision above quoted is the equivalent of or will stand in lieu of such a certificate and approval since it uses the word “shall”, as distinguished from condition 21 of the same merger decision, relating to the Soo Line, which specifically requires such I.C.C. approval. DW & P asserts that for many years it has been paying a “tribute” to LST & T by the useless switching in interchange, which is wholly uneconomical, and asserts that it should be relieved of any such requirement.

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Bluebook (online)
319 F. Supp. 451, 77 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2069, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-transportation-union-local-lodge-693-e-local-lodge-77-v-mnd-1970.