The Corps of Engineers recommended to Congress a comprehensive
plan for the development of the Roanoke River Basin for flood
control, power, and other purposes, but it did not clearly
recommend that all projects be constructed by the United States.
The Federal Power Commission concurred in this recommendation. In
the Flood Control Act of 1944, Congress approved the plan and
specifically authorized two projects not at Roanoke Rapids.
Subsequently, the Commission ordered issuance of a license to a
private power company to construct a hydroelectric generating plant
at Roanoke Rapids, N.C.
Held:
1. Petitioners, the Secretary of the Interior and an association
of nonprofit rural electric cooperatives, had standing to institute
this proceeding under § 313(b) of the Federal Power Act to set
aside the Commission's order. Pp.
345 U. S.
154-156.
2. Congress has not withdrawn, as to the Roanoke Rapids site,
the jurisdiction of the Federal Power Commission to issue such a
license. Pp.
345 U. S.
156-172.
3. Under § 7(b) of the Federal Power Act, the Commission's
concurrence in the recommendation of the Corps of Engineers did not
preclude the Commission from issuing such a license. Pp.
345 U. S.
172-174.
191 F.2d 796, affirmed.
The Federal Power Commission ordered issuance of a license to a
private power company to construct a hydroelectric generating plant
at Roanoke Rapids, N.C. 87 P.U.R.(N.S.) 469. The Court of Appeals
denied a petition to set aside this order. 191 F.2d 796. This Court
granted certiorari. 343 U.S. 941.
Affirmed, p.
345 U. S.
174.
Page 345 U. S. 154
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In these two cases, the Secretary of the Interior and an
association of nonprofit rural electric cooperatives have
challenged the authority of the Federal Power Commission to grant
to the respondent power company, VEPCO, a license to construct a
hydroelectric generating station at Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina.
They claim that Congress, by approving a comprehensive plan set out
in the Flood Control Act of 1944 for improvement of the Roanoke
River Basin, has withdrawn all eleven sites proposed for
development in the plan, including Roanoke Rapids, from the
licensing jurisdiction of the Commission, and has reserved them for
public construction. The underlying premise, that the plan approved
by Congress presupposed federal development of all sites included
in the plan, also underlies petitioners' other main contention
Page 345 U. S. 155
here, that the Commission's concurrence in the plan constituted
a determination by the Commission that the development of these
water resources should be undertaken by the United States itself.
Such a determination, they say, requires the Commission under §
7(b) of the Federal Power Act, 41 Stat. 1067, as amended, 49 Stat.
842, 16 U.S.C. § 800(b), to make investigations and submit its
findings, together with appropriate recommendations, to Congress,
and, in any event, bars the Commission from approving applications
for private construction of the project. Petitioners unsuccessfully
raised these contentions, along with attacks on the Commission's
findings not pressed here, before the Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit, which denied their petitions to set aside the
Commission's order granting a license to VEPCO.
United States
v. Federal Power Comm'n, 191 F.2d 796. We granted certiorari,
343 U.S. 941. The cases present questions of importance in that
they involve a conflict of view between two agencies of the
Government having duties in relation to the development of national
water resources. Determination of the issues may affect a
substantial number of important potential sites for the development
of hydroelectric power.
Cf. Rules Sup.Ct. 38(5)(b).
Both here and in the court below, petitioners' standing to raise
these issues has been questioned. The Secretary of the Interior
points to his statutory duty to act as sole marketing agent of
power developed at public hydroelectric projects and not required
for the operation of the project; § 5 of the Flood Control Act of
1944 directs him to transmit and dispose of such power in a manner
calculated to "encourage the most widespread use thereof at the
lowest possible rates to consumers consistent with sound business
principles." 58 Stat. 890, 16 U.S.C. § 825s. This provision, it is
said, announces a congressional policy for the guidance of the
Secretary that would
Page 345 U. S. 156
be disturbed by the respondent company's plan; thus, a specific
interest of the Secretary, in addition to his more general duties
relating to the conservation and utilization of the Nation's water
resources, is said to be adversely affected by the Commission's
order. The REA Association, an association of cooperatives, asserts
that, as an organization of consumers entitled, along with "public
bodies," to a preference in sales by the Secretary under § 5, it
has a substantial interest in the development of low cost power at
the Roanoke Rapids site, and consequently in the kind of
instrumentality, public or private, to which power development at
this site is committed. Respondents say, however, that decisions of
policy in the construction of power projects have been entrusted to
the Commission, or, at most, also to the Secretary of the Army,
under whom the Corps of Engineers performs its statutory functions
of making surveys and constructing public works, and that the
interests of petitioners arise only after a public project has been
constructed and the Secretary of the Army has determined that there
is excess power to be distributed and sold.
We hold that petitioners have standing. Differences of view,
however, preclude a single opinion of the Court as to both
petitioners. It would not further clarification of this complicated
specialty of federal jurisdiction, the solution of whose problems
is, in any event, more or less determined by the specific
circumstances of individual situations, to set out the divergent
grounds in support of standing in these cases.
Petitioners' main contention, that Congress has, by a series of
enactments to be construed as part of an evolving assumption by the
Federal Government of comprehensive authority over navigable
waters, reserved the Roanoke Rapids site for public development,
and so has placed it beyond the licensing power of the Federal
Power Commission, requires us to consider with some
particularity
Page 345 U. S. 157
the steps by which plans for the Roanoke Rapids project have
unfolded. Petitioners' contention reduces itself to the claim that
the authority of the agency to which Congress has delegated the
responsibility for safeguarding the public interest in the private
development of power resources has been revoked
pro tanto
by congressional action as to this particular site.
In 1927, the Army Engineers were authorized to make a specific
survey of the Roanoke River by § 1 of the Rivers and Harbors Act,
44 Stat. 1010, 1015, which "adopted and authorized" enumerated
"works of improvement," including "surveys in accordance with"
H.R.Doc.No. 308, 69th Cong., 1st Sess. (1926). That document, a
milestone in the development of integrated federal planning for the
use of the Nation's water resources, had recommended surveys of a
large number of streams throughout the country, including the
Roanoke River,
"either for the preparation of plans for improvement to be
undertaken by the Federal Government alone or in connection with
private enterprise, or to secure adequate data to insure that
waterway developments by private enterprise would fit into a
general plan for the full utilization of the water resources of a
stream."
H.R.Doc.No. 308, 69th Cong., 1st Sess. 4. The detailed survey of
the Roanoke River was transmitted to Congress in 1934; in it, the
Chief of Engineers stated that a comprehensive plan for navigation
and power, flood control, or irrigation "is not economically
justifiable at the present time," H.R.Doc.No. 65, 74th Cong., 1st
Sess. 2 (1935), and concurred in the judgment of the investigating
engineer that "[t]here is no justification for any Federal
expenditures for either flood control or power."
Id. at
53;
cf. id. at 14-15.
In 1936, Congress enacted the Flood Control Act of 1936, 49
Stat. 1570, defining the public interest in flood control as
follows:
"It is hereby recognized that destructive
Page 345 U. S. 158
floods upon the rivers of the United States . . . constitute a
menace to national welfare; that it is the sense of Congress that
flood control on navigable waters or their tributaries is a proper
activity of the Federal Government . . . ; that the Federal
Government should improve or participate in the improvement of
navigable waters or their tributaries, including watersheds
thereof, for flood control purposes if the benefits to whomsoever
they may accrue are in excess of the estimated costs, and if the
lives and social security of people are otherwise adversely
affected."
49 Stat. 1570, 33 U.S.C. § 701a. In the same Act, the Secretary
of War was authorized to continue surveys at a number of
localities, including "Reservoirs in Roanoke and Tar Rivers, North
Carolina." [
Footnote 1] § 7,
Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1596. In § 6 of the Act, Congress provided
that
"the Government shall not be deemed to have entered upon any
project for the improvement of any waterway mentioned in this Act
until the project for the proposed work shall have been adopted by
law."
49 Stat. 1592.
Following a destructive flood on the Roanoke River in 1940, the
House Committee on Flood Control adopted a resolution requesting
reappraisal of the previous reports on the Roanoke River to
determine "whether any improvements in the interests of flood
control and allied purposes are advisable at this time."
See H.R.Doc.No. 650, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 12 (1944). A
similar resolution was adopted later by the House Committee on
Rivers and Harbors,
see ibid., and, as a result, the Corps
of Engineers submitted its recommendations in a report which became
H.R.Doc.No. 650, 78th Cong., 2d Sess.
Page 345 U. S. 159
(1944). This report recommended the comprehensive Roanoke Basin
plan here in issue. The report proposed a system of eleven dams and
reservoirs, eight of them on the Roanoke River, and recommended
authorization of two of those projects, designated Buggs Island and
Philpott, "as the initial step."
Id. at 2.
Petitioners rely most strongly on two features of this report
for their claim that Congress has, by approving the plan outlined
in the report, withdrawn all sites in the plan from the licensing
jurisdiction of the Federal Power Commission. As the report moved
up through the hierarchy of the Corps of Engineers, comments upon
the plan were made by the different responsible officers. The
detailed report of the investigating engineer estimated costs,
including interest, on bases obviously contemplating federal
financing. These figures were accepted in the comments of each
forwarding officer. Further, the Chief of Engineers, in submitting
the report, stated,
"To safeguard the interests of navigation and flood control, the
dams and power facilities should be constructed, operated, and
maintained under the direction of the Secretary of War and the
supervision of the Chief of Engineers."
Ibid. Neither the reports nor the comments of
subordinates had contained any such suggestion or any engineering
or other reasons why such a recommendation might be made, and the
Chief of Engineers gave no reasons for his suggestion. Further, it
is not clear from the context that the statement referred to all
the projects, and not simply to the two dams to be authorized, that
is, the ones with flood control features, or even that the words
"under the direction . . . and the supervision" precluded
construction by a private applicant; indeed, the order here
granting the license specifically requires the licensee to
"operate its project in such a manner as the Chief of Engineers,
Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army, or his authorized
Page 345 U. S. 160
representative may prescribe."
We do not think these disconnected statements would justify us
in saying that the report, as it went to Congress, plainly proposed
that the Government construct all the projects in the plan. There
are contrary indications in the report itself; particularly
pertinent in the light of congressional practice is the strong
emphasis put on the flood control aspects of the two projects
recommended for authorization. In any event, we do not have a
recommendation for public construction that is clearly an integral
part of the plan, and the decisive question is not what this or
that isolated statement in the report or the comments thereon
imply, but how Congress may fairly be said to have received and
read the report in the light of the legislative practice in
relation to such public works.
It deserves mention that the Roanoke Rapids site, although
comprehended in the plan and found to be the most desirable power
site of all eleven units, was to be developed simply for the
production of power. The District Engineer pointed out that the two
projects recommended for early authorization would provide
practically all the flood control benefits to be derived from the
plan; installations at the two sites, Buggs Island and Philpott,
would "eliminate over 90% of the flood losses to the two main flood
damage areas in the Roanoke River Basin."
Id. at 88. At
those two sites were to be built multiple purpose reservoirs for
flood control, water power, and low water regulation, while, at the
other nine sites, with one minor exception, there were simply to be
power projects.
As is customary, the Federal Power Commission was asked to
comment on the proposal; by letter to the Chief of Engineers dated
May 3, 1944, the Commission suggested some technical changes, but
concurred substantially in the recommendations of the Engineers
"that the comprehensive development of the Roanoke River
Basin,
Page 345 U. S. 161
in general accordance with the plans prepared therefor by the
district engineer consisting of 11 dam and reservoir projects with
power, is desirable, and that the Buggs Island and Philpott
projects would constitute a desirable initial step in the
development of the Roanoke River Basin."
Id. at 4.
The report was presented to Congress while the bill that became
the Flood Control Act of 1944 was under consideration; although the
House had already closed its hearings, the Senate Report proposed
amending the bill to include provision for the Roanoke Basin,
recommending
"approval of the comprehensive plan and authorization for
construction of the Buggs Island and Philpott Reservoirs in
accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers."
S.Rep. No. 1030, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 8.
The proposal was accepted, and § 10 of the Act contains a
corresponding provision. It provides that "the following works of
improvement . . . are hereby adopted and authorized." Included in
an omnibus listing of such "works of improvement" is the following:
"The general plan for the comprehensive development" of the Roanoke
Basin recommended in H.R.Doc. No. 650 "is approved," and
construction of Buggs Island and Philpott is
"hereby authorized substantially in accordance with the
recommendations of the Chief of Engineers in that report at an
estimated cost of $36,140,000. [
Footnote 2] "
Page 345 U. S. 162
It is this statutory language that petitioners say withdrew the
Roanoke Rapids site from the licensing jurisdiction of the
Commission. They ask us to read the word "approved" as a
reservation of the site for public construction and, by necessary
implication, a withdrawal of the site from the Commission's
licensing authority. A flat "approval" of a plan clearly
recommending public construction as an indispensable constituent of
the plan might indeed have that effect, but, as indicated above, we
do not find that the plan made any such recommendation.
A separate argument of petitioners is based in part on the
language of a proviso commonly inserted in authorizations for flood
control surveys, [
Footnote 3]
that the Government shall not be deemed to have entered upon a
project until the project is "adopted by law." From this language,
petitioners infer that the Government's entry upon a project so as
to preclude private construction occurs when Congress adopts a
project, and they ask us to say that such adoption occurred here
when Congress "approved"
Page 345 U. S. 163
the plan comprehending the Roanoke Rapids site. We do not think
the word "approval" carries the implication of "adoption" or
"authorization" by its own force. Read together with other
legislative action concerning water resources and with the history
of federal activity in that regard, congressional "approval,"
without more, [
Footnote 4]
cannot be taken, we think, to indicate in this case more than a
legislative finding that the proposed projects, no matter by whom
they may be built, are desirable and consistent with congressional
standards for the ordered development of the Nation's water
resources. Such a finding has meaning in conveying the
congressional purpose and expressing a congressional attitude.
Concretely it means that Congress has adopted a basic policy for
the systematic development of a river basin. Decision is made on
such questions as the locations of projects, the purposes they are
to serve, their approximate size, and the desirable order of
construction; because of the necessary interrelationship of many
technical engineering and economic features of the several dams in
a single river basin, early choice among possible alternatives is
imperative. The policy chosen by Congress when it approves a plan
is, in the first place, directed to Congress
Page 345 U. S. 164
itself in its appropriating function. [
Footnote 5] Approval also tells the Federal Power
Commission -- the executant of congressional policy -- how to
exercise its authority in relation to the authorization of sites in
the Roanoke Basin. The finding had utility in this case in the
guidance it gave the Commission in determining whether a private
applicant would adequately develop all the benefits that should be
derived from the proposed site.
In so interpreting the language Congress has used, we gain some
light from the action Congress has taken to set projects in motion
following enactment of statutes "approving" a comprehensive plan
and "authorizing" certain projects set out in the plan. For the
Roanoke River Basin itself, although Buggs Island and Philpott were
specifically "authorized" in the Flood Control Act of 1944,
separate steps were taken by Congress to complete the
authorization; "planning money" was appropriated,
Page 345 U. S. 165
a "Definite Project Report" was received for Buggs Island, and
then funds for construction of Buggs Island were appropriated.
Equally illuminating is the procedure by which Congress recently
set in motion plans to build a project "approved" exactly as was
the Roanoke Rapids project. At approximately the same time as the
engineering reports on the Roanoke River were submitted, a
comparable report was submitted concerning the Savannah River,
Georgia, and recommending a comprehensive plan much like the
Roanoke River Basin plan. Like Buggs Island and Philpott in the
Roanoke plan, Clark Hill in the Savannah plan was recommended for
immediate authorization "as the initial step."
See
H.R.Doc. No. 657, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 6. As the demand for power
increased, other projects included in the plan were to follow, the
first to be the Hartwell site. The Senate Report accepted this
recommendation, S.Rep. No. 1030, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 9-10, just as
it had the Roanoke Basin recommendation, and called for "approval
of the comprehensive plan and authorization for construction of the
Clark Hill project."
Id. at 10. Section 10 of the Flood
Control Act of 1944 contains a corresponding provision. 58 Stat.
894. Thus, the background as well as the precise terms of the
provisions relating to projects in the Savannah River plan are
closely parallel to those relating to the Roanoke projects.
Recently, when further construction on the Savannah River was
proposed and authorization of Hartwell, the site next in line, was
recommended, neither Congress nor the Engineers treated the earlier
"approval" of the comprehensive plan as a final step making
unnecessary other than automatic appropriations for Hartwell.
Rather, hearings were held,
see Hearings before House
Committee on Public Works on H.R. 5472 (Title II), 81st Cong., 1st
Sess. 37-85 (May 16, 1949), and a separate authorization for
construction was
Page 345 U. S. 166
included in the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1950, 64 Stat. 171.
[
Footnote 6]
Respondents further point out that, at the same time hearings
were held on the Hartwell project, there were also hearings on
further construction in the Roanoke Basin, and the Corps of
Engineers proposed the authorization of Smith Mountain, a project
with minor flood control benefits, but not next in line under the
plan as approved in the Flood Control Act of 1944. That plan had
put the Roanoke Rapids site here involved and the Gaston site ahead
of Smith Mountain. The reason given by the Engineers for changing
the order of construction was that private applications, including
the application here, had been made or contemplated for the Roanoke
Rapids and Gaston sites. While we do not attach weight to
subsequent statements by the Engineers that the Flood Control Act
of 1944 did not preclude private construction of some projects in
the plan, it is pertinent to note that a Committee of Congress
responsible for water resources legislation was informed that an
application was pending for private construction. Whether or not
the Committee agreed that the Flood Control Act of 1944 allowed
private construction of projects comprehended in plans there
approved, in fact no action was taken by it to prevent the
Commission from proceeding to hear the
Page 345 U. S. 167
VEPCO application, although the Committee learned that the
application was pending over a year and a half before the order was
handed down by the Commission.
Whatever light these subsequent proceedings in Congress afford,
both as to the Roanoke Basin and as to the comparable Hartwell site
in the Savannah River plan, we find no solid ground for concluding
that Congress has taken over the entire river basin for public
development with such definiteness and finality so as to warrant us
in holding that Congress has withdrawn as to this whole river basin
its general grant of continuing authority to the Federal Power
Commission to act as the responsible agent in exercising the
licensing power of Congress. Extensive review of the need for
integration of federal activities affecting waterways,
see,
e.g., Report of Secretary of War Stimson, H.R.Doc. No. 929,
62d Cong., 3d Sess. 32-35 (1912), and of the breadth of authority
granted to the Commission by Congress in response to that need is
hardly necessary to establish the role of the Commission in
hydroelectric power development.
See, e.g., First Iowa
Hydro-Elec. Co-op. v. Federal Power Comm'n, 328 U.
S. 152,
328 U. S.
180-181, and cases cited. From the time that the
importance of power sites was brought to public and congressional
consciousness during the administration of President Theodore
Roosevelt, the significant development has been the devising of a
general power policy, instead of
ad hoc action by
Congress, with all the difficulties and dangers of local pressures
and logrolling to which such action gave rise.
See the
Veto Messages of Presidents Roosevelt and Taft,
e.g., 36
Cong.Rec. 3071 (Muscle Shoals, Ala. 1903); 42 Cong.Rec. 4698 (Rainy
River, 1908); H.R.Doc. No. 1350, 60th Cong., 2d Sess. (James River,
1909); H.R.Doc. No. 899, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. (White River, 1912);
S.Doc. No. 949, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. (Coosa River, 1912). It soon
became clear that indispensable to a wise national policy
Page 345 U. S. 168
was the creation of a commission with functions and powers
comparable to those of the Interstate Commerce Commission in the
field of transportation. It took the usual time for such a
commission to come into being, and the process was step-by-step.
Originally, Congress entrusted its policy to a commission composed
of three Cabinet officers. 41 Stat. 1063. An agency so burdened
with other duties was naturally found inadequate as the instrument
of these important water power policies. And so, in 1930, the
Commission was reorganized as an expert body of five full-time
commissioners. 46 Stat. 797, 16 U.S.C. § 792. These enactments
expressed general policies and granted board administrative and
investigative power, making the Commission the permanent
disinterested expert agency of Congress to carry out these
policies.
Cf. 41 Stat. 1065, as amended, 49 Stat. 839, 16
U.S.C. § 797; 3 Report of the President's Water Resources Policy
Comm'n 501 (1950).
A principal responsibility of the Commission has always been
that of determining whether private construction is consistent with
the public interest.
See, e.g., S.Rep. No. 180, 66th
Cong., 1st Sess. 3. Express provision is made to charge the
Commission with the task of deciding whether construction ought to
be undertaken by the United States itself. 41 Stat. 1067, as
amended, 49 Stat. 842, 16 U.S.C. § 800(b). Further, even if private
construction is to be allowed, approval of private applications
requires a determination that the proposed project is "best adapted
to a comprehensive plan" for water resources development. 41 Stat.
1068, as amended, 49 Stat. 842, 16 U.S.C. § 803(a). Thus,
congressional approval of a comprehensive plan can be read, as we
think it should in this case, simply as saying that a plan such as
that here, recommended by the Corps of Engineers for the fullest
realization of the potential benefits in the river basin, should be
accepted by the
Page 345 U. S. 169
Commission as the comprehensive plan to be used in the
application of these statutory provisions. That "approval," as
such, does not reserve all projects in the plan for public
construction is perhaps further indicated by the fact that, when
Congress has wished to reserve particular sites for public
construction, it has chosen to say so.
See 41 Stat. 1353,
45 Stat. 1012, 45 Stat. 1062.
Of course, it is not for us to intimate a preference between
private or public construction at this site. Nor are we even asked
to review the propriety of the Commission's determination in this
case that private construction is "in harmony with" the
comprehensive plan for the Roanoke basin.
Re Virginia Electric
& Power Co., 87 P.U.R. (N.S.) 469, 483. We are simply
asked to decide whether Congress has withdrawn the power to decide
this question from the Commission. To conclude that Congress has
done so by approving a general plan for development that may be,
and in this case was, a plan for long-term development, would be to
contract, by a tenuous chain of inferences, the broad standing
powers of the Commission. Particularly relevant in this regard is
the estimate that public development at this site would not, in the
normal course, be undertaken for many years.
See
Examiner's Decision of March 17, 1950, R., I, 109. Congress was, of
course, aware that, by granting a license to private enterprise,
the Federal Power Commission would not commit the site permanently
to private development and preclude all further congressional
action. The Commission would, as it did here, simply express its
judgment that, at the time, private development of the site was
consistent with the general conception of the way in which the
Roanoke River Basin should be developed. For at any time short of
the fifty years in which a site automatically becomes available to
the Government without compensation, the Government may determine
that the public interest makes it more desirable that the
Page 345 U. S. 170
project be operated publicly, and has the right then, by
appropriate steps, to take over the project. 41 Stat. 1071, as
amended, 49 Stat. 844, 16 U.S.C. § 807. The purpose of Congress
would have to be much more clearly manifested to justify us in
inferring that Congress revoked the Commission's power to decide
whether a private license consonant with the general scheme of
development for this river basin ought now to be granted in the
public interest.
Our conclusion is in accord with the implications of the
manifest reluctance of Congress to enter upon power projects having
no flood control or navigational benefits. It cannot be said that
as unclear a term as "approval" was to have settled, for this
entire river basin, a major controversy that has arisen again and
again in connection with legislation authorizing public
construction of hydroelectric projects. The declaration of policy
in the Flood Control Act of 1936,
supra, 345
U. S. 157,
345 U. S. 158,
puts strong emphasis on the flood control aspects of plans for
sites that would also produce power; no change in this policy can
be read into § 10 of the Flood Control Act of 1944.
Cf.,
e.g., 90 Cong.Rec. 4126;
id. at 4127. And the sponsor
in the House of the Flood Control Act of 1944 stated in answer to a
question:
". . . we have repeatedly stated during the debate that no
project, reservoir, or dam, or other improvement is embraced in
this bill unless it is primarily for flood control. If power can be
developed as an incident, or if reclamation can be provided, they
are cared for in the bill."
90 Cong.Rec. 4199;
cf. id. at 4202. In the light of
this history and these specific declarations, it strains belief
that "approval" of the comprehensive plan for the Roanoke Basin
reserves all projects named in the plan for federal construction
when the two projects that provided the chief flood control
features of the plan were the only ones specifically
authorized.
Page 345 U. S. 171
Subordinate arguments are made, bearing partly on the power of
the Commission to issue any license for private development and
partly on the Commission's exercise of its power in granting this
license. The arguments involve technical engineering and economic
details which it would serve no useful purpose to canvass here.
Once recognizing, as we do, that the Commission was not deprived of
its power to entertain this application for a license, we cannot
say, within the limited scope of review open to us, that the
Commission's findings were not warranted. Judgment upon these
conflicting engineering and economic issues is precisely that which
the Commission exists to determine, so long as it cannot be said,
as it cannot, that the judgment which it exercised had no basis in
evidence and so was devoid of reason.
At the heart of these arguments is the fact that the Roanoke
Rapids site is, under present estimates, the most desirable site
for power in the Roanoke Basin. For that reason, as petitioners
argue, removal of the Roanoke Rapids site from a government
operated system would result in loss to the Federal Government of
the potential benefits of that site and a decrease, but only by the
amount of the Roanoke Rapids profits, in the potential profits of
the system as a whole. But it has never been suggested that such is
the criterion under which the Commission is to determine whether a
project ought to be undertaken by the United States, let alone that
such considerations could demonstrate that Congress withdrew the
Roanoke Rapids site from the licensing jurisdiction of the
Commission. If it could be shown that the plan could not be
executed successfully without the Roanoke Rapids site, it would be
arguable that congressional approval of the plan presupposed that
all units of the plan be centrally administered. The findings are
to the contrary. The Commission has found that the proposed
private
Page 345 U. S. 172
project is consistent with the plan contained in the Flood
Control Act of 1944,
Re Virginia Electric & Power Co.,
supra, at 483; that there is no reason to believe that the
"interest of the public at large will not be fully protected and
promoted" by the issuance of this license,
id. at 472, and
that there was no showing that the Roanoke Rapids site would "at
any time" be developed by the United States.
Id. at 483.
Further, there is express recognition of the possibility that the
site may be benefited by government projects in operation and
consequently of the fact that VEPCO may be required to compensate
the Government for any such "headwater benefits" conferred.
[
Footnote 7]
Id. at
477-478.
Finally, we do not find merit in the contention that the
Commission was required by § 7(b) of the Federal Power Act to
recommend public construction of the project. [
Footnote 8] As the report of the Corps of
Engineers does not
Page 345 U. S. 173
clearly recommend that all projects be constructed by the United
States, the Commission's concurrence in that report cannot provide
a basis for invoking the provisions of § 7(b). Section 7(b) is a
direction to the Commission not to approve a private application
for a project "affecting" any development of water resources which,
in the judgment of the Commission, should be undertaken by the
United States itself. Petitioners in effect ask us to tell the
Commission what it thought -- to say to the Commission that it was
its judgment that Roanoke Rapids, as well as all the other seven
projects in the Roanoke plan not yet under consideration, should be
built by the Government. It is not clear that the Commission's
concurrence in the general plan would have been much more than
simple approval of the location of the dams, the purposes they
would serve, and the engineering characteristics of the projects,
even if the report had clearly recommended public construction.
Primary responsibility for the enforcement of the provisions of §
7(b) must remain with the Commission; we cannot infer a judgment of
the Commission that it never expressed and now specifically
disavows.
For these reasons, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the
Commission's order must stand. In the bits and pieces of
legislative history which we have set out, we find no justification
for inferring that Congress withdrew the Commission's authority
regarding the Roanoke River Basin from the general authority given
the Commission to grant licenses for private construction of
hydroelectric projects with appropriate safeguards of the public
interest. Whatever the merits of the controversy
Page 345 U. S. 174
as to which agency -- the Government or a private party --
should construct this project, that question is not within our
province.
Affirmed.
* Together with No. 29,
Virginia REA Association et al. v.
Federal Power Commission et al., also on certiorari to the
same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 6 of the Flood Control Act of 1938 authorized the
Secretary of War to make surveys "for flood control" of the Smith
River, a tributary of the Roanoke on which two of the eleven
projects in the comprehensive Roanoke Basin plan are located. 52
Stat. 1223.
[
Footnote 2]
The full text of the provisions, so far as they are relevant, is
as follows:
"SEC. 10. That the following works of improvement for the
benefit of navigation and the control of destructive flood waters
and other purposes are hereby adopted and authorized in the
interest of the national security and with a view toward providing
an adequate reservoir of useful and worthy public works for the
post-war construction program, to be prosecuted under the direction
of the Secretary of War and supervision of the Chief of Engineers
in accordance with the plans in the respective reports hereinafter
designated and subject to the conditions set forth therein:
[Provisos omitted]."
"
* * * *"
"
ROANOKE RIVER BASIN"
"The general plan for the comprehensive development of the
Roanoke River Basin for flood control and other purposes
recommended by the Chief of Engineers in House Document Numbered
650, Seventy-eighth Congress, second session, is approved, and the
construction of the Buggs Island Reservoir on the Roanoke River in
Virginia and North Carolina, and the Philpott Reservoir on the
Smith River in Virginia are hereby authorized substantially in
accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers in
that report at an estimated cost of $36,140,000."
58 Stat. 891-892, 894.
[
Footnote 3]
See e.g., § 6 of the Flood Control Act of 1936, quoted
p.
345 U. S. 158,
supra.
[
Footnote 4]
There is little force in the argument that the words "adopted
and authorized" in § 10,
see note 2 supra, apply to the Roanoke Rapids site.
Not only is the specific provision as to the Roanoke Basin to
control over the general, but that which is adopted and authorized
is not "the following plans," but "the following works of
improvement," which patently refers to such projects as Buggs
Island and Philpott, rather than to all sites named in a
comprehensive plan. This answers that part of petitioners' argument
which relies on the language of § 10 speaking of prosecution of the
projects "under the direction of the Secretary of War" when
"budgetary requirements" permit. As a matter of language, apart
from all other considerations, the "works of improvement" to which
such language refers is better read as the projects authorized,
rather than as all projects named in plans that were approved.
[
Footnote 5]
The Rules of both the Senate and the House in 1944, as now,
called for previous choice of policy through authorization by law
before any item of appropriations might be included in a general
appropriations bill. Rule XVI, Senate Manual, S.Doc. No. 239, 77th
Cong., 2d Sess. 20; Rule XXI, Rules of the House of
Representatives, H.R.Doc. No. 812, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 384. The
importance of this distinction in the context of authorization of
power projects is brought out in the following colloquy between a
representative of the Corps of Engineers and Chairman Whittington
of the House Committee on Public Works:
"THE CHAIRMAN: . . . Is not the word 'approved' an authorization
for the plan but without appropriation, or without an authorization
for the appropriation?"
"What is the difference between approving and authorizing a
plan?"
"COLONEL GEE: We have never construed the approval of the plan
to carry with it the authorization to construct the elements of
that plan."
"THE CHAIRMAN: Nor do we."
Hearings before the House Committee on Public Works on H.R. 5472
(Title II), 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 42.
[
Footnote 6]
The general enacting provision, § 204, 64 Stat. 170, is
substantially the same as § 10 of the Flood Control Act of 1944,
supra, note 2 The
specific provision as to the Savannah River is as follows:
"
SAVANNAH RIVER BASIN"
"There is hereby authorized to be appropriated the sum of
$50,000,000 for the construction of the Hartwell project in the
general plan for the comprehensive development of the Savannah
River Basin, approved in the Act of December 22, 1944, in addition
to the authorization for project construction in the Act of
December 22, 1944."
64 Stat. 171.
[
Footnote 7]
Thus, whatever benefits may be conferred by such government
projects as Buggs Island on the Roanoke Rapids site will not be
lost to the United States. The Commission is required by § 10(f) of
the Federal Power Act, 41 Stat. 1070, as amended, 49 Stat. 843, 16
U.S.C. § 803(f), to determine the charges to be paid by the
licensee. The parties are in dispute over the value of the
benefits, but, as the Commission said,
"[t]he amount of the payments for headwater benefits due under
the Federal Power Act cannot be estimated with any degree of
accuracy until after the project has been placed in operation for
such time as necessary to demonstrate what actual benefits are
being conferred."
Re Virginia Electric & Power Co., supra, at 478. We
do not consider the correct basis for ascertaining the amount due
to the United States, because, as the Commission's statement
indicates, the question is not before us in this case.
[
Footnote 8]
Section 7(b) of the Federal Power Act provides:
"Whenever, in the judgment of the Commission, the development of
any water resources for public purposes should be undertaken by the
United States itself, the Commission shall not approve any
application for any project affecting such development, but shall
cause to be made such examinations, surveys, reports, plans, and
estimates of the cost of the proposed development as it may find
necessary, and shall submit its findings to Congress with such
recommendations as it may find appropriate concerning such
development."
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, concurring.
I agree with the majority that the sole question before us is
whether Congress has withdrawn the Roanoke Rapids site from the
licensing jurisdiction of the Commission, and that the answer is in
the negative. But, in reaching this result, weight should be given
the administrative interpretation of the 1944 Flood Control Act
both by the Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Power
Commission. Taken together with the fact that Congress was fully
advised of the Commission's action and the Corps' agreement with it
as early as May, 1949, and failed to express any disagreement
during the period of more than two years when the application was
under consideration, this administrative interpretation seems to me
decisive.
We are cited to three cases in which the Commission, with the
full approval of the Corps of Engineers, has licensed private
developments despite prior congressional action adopting and
authorizing public construction as part of river basin improvement
plans. [
Footnote 2/1] While the
plans included in those projects may not have
Page 345 U. S. 175
been as comprehensive as The Roanoke River Basin Plan, each had
been approved by Acts of Congress using language similar to that,
in § 10 of the Flood Control Act of 1944. With this as background,
a colloquy between Colonel Gee of the Corps of Engineers and the
House Flood Control Committee on May 16, 1949, gains significance.
Colonel Gee mentioned VEPCO's then pending application, and stated
that the Corps has not regarded the 1944 approval as precluding
such private licensing. [
Footnote
2/2] I would affirm on the basis of this administrative
interpretation by two agencies charged by Congress with direct
flood control and power licensing responsibilities.
[
Footnote 2/1]
License issued to County of Placer, California, August 8, 1951.
Project No. 2021, for power plant at debris storage dam on North
Fork, American River, constructed pursuant to authorization in
River and Harbor Act of August 30, 1935, 49 Stat. 1028, 1038, as
recommended in House Rivers and Harbors Committee Document No. 50,
74th Congress. License issued to St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co.,
August 31, 1951, Project No. 2056, to use water from United States
navigation dam at St. Anthony Falls, Minnesota, authorized in the
River and Harbor Act of 1937, 50 Stat. 844, 848, as recommended in
House Rivers and Harbors Committee Document No. 34, 75th Congress.
Two licenses issued in 1934 and 1936 to Kanawha Valley Power Co.,
Projects Nos. 1175 and 1290, for three power plants at navigation
dams on Kanawha River, West Virginia, authorized in River and
Harbor Act of 1930, 46 Stat. 918, 928, as recommended in H.R.Doc.
No.190, 70th Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 2/2]
"MR. ANGELL. Is the Federal Government at the present time
planning to develop any of those dams on the lower part of the
river which are devoted exclusively to power production?"
"COLONEL GEE. No, sir. They have the same status in this basin
plan as the eight remaining projects. They are part of the approved
plan. Their being in that plan certainly is no bar to a private
utility company'S coming in and seeking to develop one of these
projects."
"MR. ANGELL. And that is what is being done now."
"COLONEL GEE. That is being done now at Roanoke Rapids,
sir."
Hearings before the Committee on Public Works, H.R. 5472, Tit.
II, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 144.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom the CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
BLACK concur, dissenting.
Roanoke Rapids is a power site belonging to the Federal
Government and now surrendered to private power interests under
circumstances that demand a dissent.
Roanoke Rapids is a part of the
public domain.
Page 345 U. S. 176
(1) The Roanoke is a navigable stream over which Congress has
complete control for purposes of navigation, flood control,
watershed development, and the generation of electric power.
United States v. Appalachian Power Co., 311 U.
S. 377,
311 U. S. 426;
Oklahoma v. Guy F. Atkinson Co., 313 U.
S. 508,
313 U. S.
525.
(2) The water power inherent in the flow of a navigable stream
belongs to the Federal Government.
United States v. Appalachian
Power Co., supra, at
311 U. S. 424.
243.
(3) The dam sites on this navigable stream are public property.
The technical title to the bed of the stream may be in private
hands. But those private interests have no compensable interest as
against the control of the Federal Government.
United States v.
Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R. Co., 312 U.
S. 592,
312 U. S.
596-597;
United States v. Commodore Park,
324 U. S. 386,
324 U. S.
390.
This is familiar law that emphasizes the public nature of the
project which the Court now allows to be used for the
aggrandizement of private power interests. This project is as much
in the public domain as any of our national forests or national
parks. It deals with assets belonging to all the people.
These facts must be kept in mind in reading § 10 of the Flood
Control Act of 1944, 58 Stat. 887, 891. [
Footnote 3/1] From that
Page 345 U. S. 177
starting point, I think it only fair to conclude (1) that, if
Congress undertook to remove this project from the public domain,
it would make its purpose plain, and (2) that, when Congress
approved the project, it meant to reserve it for the public good,
not to make it available to private interests to exploit for their
own profit.
Section 10 "adopted and authorized" the development of the
Roanoke River Basin
"in the interest of the national security and with a view toward
providing an adequate reservoir of useful and worthy public works
for the post-war construction program."
The words "public works" certainly connote
public, not
private, construction.
Section 10 further provided that the projects which are "adopted
and authorized" are "to be prosecuted under
Page 345 U. S. 178
the direction of the Secretary of War and supervision of the
Chief of Engineers." That language also suggests
public
projects, not private, undertakings.
Section 10 also provided that these projects "shall be initiated
as expeditiously and prosecuted as vigorously as may be consistent
with budgetary requirements." Plainly, Congress was concerned with
the "budgetary requirements" of the Federal Government, not with
the budgetary requirements of private power companies. Section 10,
after approving the general plan for the comprehensive development
of the Roanoke River Basin, authorizes the construction of the
Buggs Island Reservoir on the Roanoke River and the Philpott
Reservoir on the Smith River.
This Act, passed before the end of World War II, was designed to
serve a post-war need. It was drawn so as to provide a backlog of
public works projects which would take up the slack of unemployment
expected at the war's end. Congressman Whittington, in charge of
the bill in the House, made the following significant statement
concerning this objective, 90 Cong.Rec. 4122:
"We recall the depression following World War No. 1. We are
apprehensive of another debacle following the present war. It is
difficult to arm. It is more difficult to disarm. Post-war
unemployment will be a major national problem. While we are
defending our freedom and our way of life, we must not fail to take
stock of the problem of unemployment which we must face when the
war is over."
"We must profit by the experience of 1920. We must profit by the
experience of 1930. A reservoir of projects must be adopted.
Backlogs should be provided, and they should be real backlogs. Many
wasteful and extravagant activities to provide employment were
adopted in 1933. Haste and speed
Page 345 U. S. 179
were imperative. There was hunger in the land. Unemployment was
widespread. There must be no repetition of waste and extravagance.
There are Federal activities and there are public works that will
promote the general welfare."
This statement highlights the meaning of "public works" as used
in § 10; it discloses an important reason for lodging the program
with public officials; it emphasizes the occasion for referring to
the budgetary requirements of the Federal Government and the
importance of linking flood control with post-war unemployment
problems.
The argument that, when Congress, by § 10 of the Act, "adopted
and authorized" the "following works of improvement," it "adopted
and authorized" only the Buggs Island and Philpott reservoirs
involves an invented distinction between "works of improvement" and
"general plans for development" -- a distinction without any
rational basis. The "works of improvement" which are "adopted and
authorized" by § 10 are 38 in number. Some of these are described
in the subheadings as "projects" that are "authorized," some as
"plans of improvement" that are "approved" and "authorized," some
as "general plans" for the comprehensive development of river
basins that are "approved" together with the "construction" of
specific projects that are "authorized." This makes plain that
"works of improvement" which are "adopted and authorized" by § 10
include a variety of undertakings, not merely works of construction
which are first steps in general comprehensive plans being adopted
and authorized.
From this it seems almost too plain for argument that Congress,
in approving the plan for the development of the Roanoke River
Basin, was setting it aside for federal development the several
public works projects under the plan to be authorized as, if, and
when conditions warranted
Page 345 U. S. 180
them and budgetary requirements permitted. [
Footnote 3/2] In this setting, "approval" by
Congress meant a dedication of the projects for public development.
[
Footnote 3/3]
If that view is not taken, then why did Congress call these
projects "public works"? If these projects were destined for
development by private power interests, why did Congress place
their construction under the Secretary of War and the Chief of
Engineers? If Congress left this part of the public domain for
exploitation by private power groups, why did it gear them to the
employment requirements of the post-war period and the budget
requirements of the Federal Government? Approval of the projects by
Congress under these various terms and conditions can only mean one
thing -- that Congress gave its sanction to their development as
public projects.
To be sure, Congress, in the Federal Power Act, left part of the
public domain to be exploited by private interests if the Federal
Power Commission so orders. But the action relative to the Roanoke
River Basin was action by Congress without reference to the Federal
Power Commission.
Page 345 U. S. 181
Its action was not made dependent on the approval of the Federal
Power Commission. The Act in no way links the Roanoke River Basin
program to the Commission. To the contrary, the Congress undertook
to authorize specific projects under the plan, plainly suggesting
that these were public projects whose authorization was in no way
dependent on Commission action.
The true character of this raid on the public domain is seen
when Roanoke Rapids is viewed in relation to the other projects in
the comprehensive plan. Roanoke Rapids is the farthest downstream
of the 11 units in the plan. Upstream from Roanoke Rapids is Buggs
Island (now under construction with federal funds) with an ultimate
installed capacity of 204,000 kw. and a controlled reservoir
capacity of over 2,500,000 acre-feet. Roanoke Rapids is indeed the
powerhouse of the Buggs Island Reservoir. That reservoir increases
the dependable capacity of Roanoke Rapids from 4 hours during the
peak month of December to 288 hours in the same peak month. Buggs
Island contributes 70,000,000 kw.-hr. to the Roanoke Rapids
project. This is on-peak energy, firm energy made dependable by the
storage in the Buggs Island Reservoir. There is evidence that this
energy will have a value in excess of $700,000 a year. [
Footnote 3/4]
That $700,000 of value is created by the taxpayers of this
country. Though it derives from the investment of federal funds, it
will now be appropriated by private power groups for their own
benefit. The master plan now becomes clear: the Federal Government
will put up the auxiliary units -- the unprofitable ones, and the
private power interests will take the plums -- the choice ones.
Page 345 U. S. 182
There is not a word in the Act which allows such an
unconscionable appropriation of the public domain by private
interests. To infer that Congress sanctioned such a scheme is to
assume it was utterly reckless with the public domain. I would
assume that Congress was a faithful trustee, that what is approved
as "public works" projects it dedicated to the good of all the
people.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Section 10 of the Flood Control Act of 1944 reads in pertinent
part as follows:
"That the following works of improvement for the benefit of
navigation and the control of destructive flood waters and other
purposes are hereby adopted and authorized in the interest of the
national security and with a view toward providing an adequate
reservoir of useful and worthy public works for the post-war
construction program, to be prosecuted under the direction of the
Secretary of War and supervision of the Chief of Engineers in
accordance with the plans in the respective reports hereinafter
designated and subject to the conditions set forth therein:
Provided, That the necessary plans, specifications, and
preliminary work may be prosecuted on any project authorized in
this Act to be constructed by the War Department during the war,
with funds from appropriations heretofore or hereafter made for
flood control, so as to be ready for rapid inauguration of a
post-war program of construction:
Provided further, That,
when the existing critical situation with respect to materials,
equipment, and manpower no longer exists, and in any event not
later than immediately following the cessation of hostilities in
the present war, the projects herein shall be initiated as
expeditiously and prosecuted as vigorously as may be consistent
with budgetary requirements:
And provided further, That
penstocks and other similar facilities adapted to possible future
use in the development of hydroelectric power shall be installed in
any dam authorized in this Act for construction by the War
Department when approved by the Secretary of War on the
recommendation of the Chief of Engineers and the Federal Power
Commission."
"
* * * *"
"
ROANOKE RIVER BASIN"
"The general plan for the comprehensive development of the
Roanoke River Basin for flood control and other purposes
recommended by the Chief of Engineers in House Document Numbered
650, Seventy-eighth Congress, second session, is approved, and the
construction of the Buggs Island Reservoir on the Roanoke River in
Virginia and North Carolina, and the Philpott Reservoir on the
Smith River in Virginia, are hereby authorized substantially in
accordance with the recommendations of the Chief of Engineers in
that report at an estimated cost of $36,140,000."
[
Footnote 3/2]
Congressman Curtis, one of the House conferees, explained the
same language in § 9 of the Act whereby Congress "approved"
comprehensive plans for the development of the Missouri River Basin
(90 Cong.Rec. 9284):
"It means that Congress has approved the general plans of the
engineers, and it means that these plans are authorized by law and
are, therefore, eligible for future appropriations. Without such an
authorization, no appropriation can be had."
[
Footnote 3/3]
The interpretation placed on the Act by the Army Corps of
Engineers are entitled to no weight. The Corps of Engineers is not
an administrative agency charged with the responsibility of
deciding issues of policy. Its powers are limited to the making of
investigations and the preparation and submission of
recommendations and reports based on engineering considerations.
See, for example, § 1(a) of the Act of December 22, 1944,
58 Stat. 887, adopting and authorizing the Roanoke River Basin
plan, 33 U.S.C. § 701-1(a). Congress alone makes policy decisions
affecting the public domain.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Even the evidence submitted by the private power company
applicant belies the Commission's figure of $250,000 (
see
87 P.U.R. (N.S.) 469, 477-478) and places the value in excess of
$700,000. The Commission's figure of $250,000 is indubitably a
plain error.