By order of April 6, 1966, the ICC permitted the merger of the
Pennsylvania and the New York Central railroads, the largest and
third largest railroads in the Northeast, pursuant to § 5(2) of the
Interstate Commerce Act. The ICC found that the merger might divert
substantial traffic from the Erie-Lackawanna, Delaware and Hudson,
and Boston and Maine railroads, three smaller carriers designated
as "protected railroads." These protected lines had filed
applications for inclusion not only in the Penn-Central merger, but
also in the Norfolk & Western-Nickel Plate merger, which the
ICC had previously approved. In the latter case, the ICC retained
jurisdiction to consider inclusion of the three lines upon
equitable terms if "found consistent with the public interest," and
it provided that consummation of the merger would constitute
"irrevocable assent" by Norfolk & Western to such inclusion.
The applications for inclusion in the Penn-Central system have been
held in abeyance pending decision on inclusion in Norfolk &
Western-Nickel Plate, presently under consideration by the ICC. On
the merits of the Penn-Central merger, the ICC found that the
protected railroads rendered essential service which required
preservation, and concluded that immediate consummation of the
merger would be consistent with the public interest if "conditions
are imposed to obviate impairment or serious weakening" of the
three lines. Without such conditions or the inclusion of the
protected roads in one of the major rail systems, the ICC found
that it was doubtful if the
"three carriers could withstand the competition of the
applicants merged, and, unless they are protected during the period
necessary to determine their future, we would not authorize
consummation at this time,
Page 386 U. S. 373
even though approving the merger."
The ICC,
sua sponte, specified in Appendix G certain
conditions to the immediate consummation of the merger "to prevent
any loss of revenue over the three [protected] railroads." These
conditions concerned traffic practices and indemnification for loss
of income. On September 16, 1966, the ICC modified its order,
apparently on the objection of most of the parties, and, though
retaining the traffic practices condition, it lifted the revenue
indemnification condition until further order. Erie-Lackawanna and
other railroads filed suit seeking an interlocutory injunction
restraining the consummation of the merger. A three-judge court
declined to grant the injunction.
Held: In the light of its findings as to the necessity
for interim protection for the three "protected railroads," the ICC
erred in withdrawing all of the protective conditions of Appendix G
save the traffic ones, and permitting immediate consummation of the
Penn-Central merger without determining the ultimate fate of the
three protected roads. P.
386 U. S.
378-392.
259 F.
Supp. 964, reversed and remanded.
Page 386 U. S. 374
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
These six appeals involve the validity of an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission permitting the merger of the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the
Page 386 U. S. 375
New York Central Railroad Company (Penn-Central) pursuant to §
5(2) of the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended, 41 Stat. 481, 49
U.S.C. § 5(2). In its original order of April 6, 1966, the
Commission found that the merger might divert a substantial amount
of traffic from the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad Company (E-L), the
Delaware and Hudson Railroad Company (D & H) and the Boston and
Maine Corporation (B & M), three smaller competing carriers
designated as the "protected railroads" by the Commission. These
protected railroads had filed under § 5(2)(d) of the Act
applications for inclusion in both this merger and in
Norfolk
& W. Ry. Co. and New York, C. & St. L.R. Co. --
Merger, 324 I.C.C. 1. In the latter case, inclusion of E-L and
D & H has been recommended, and, together with B & M, is
pending before the Commission. The applications of the protected
roads in the
Penn-Central proceeding have been held in
abeyance pending decision in the
Norfolk proceeding.
On the merits of the Penn-Central merger, the Commission found
that the service the protected railroads "render their shippers is
essential, and the public interest dictates that [such service] be
preserved." The Commission concluded
"that immediate consummation of the proposed merger would be
consistent with the public interest if conditions are imposed to
obviate impairment or serious weakening"
of the three lines. Without such conditions or the inclusion of
the protected roads in a major system, the Commission further
found, it would be doubtful if the
"three carriers could withstand the competition of the
applicants merged, and, unless they are protected during the period
necessary to determine their future, we would not authorize
consummation at this time, even though approving the merger."
327 I.C.C. 475, 532. It therefore applied,
sua sponte,
certain conditions to the immediate consummation of the merger
which were
"designed to prevent any loss of revenue over the
Page 386 U. S. 376
three railroads [the protected railroads] as a direct result of
immediate consummation of this merger."
Its "approval of the merger for undelayed consummation" was made
"subject . . . to the conditions specifically described in appendix
G,"
ibid., which was attached as an appendix to the April
6, 1966, order, and which we likewise attach as an
386
U.S. 372app|>Appendix here. The Commission, apparently
because of the necessity for the conditions and the urgency of the
merger, required compliance with Appendix G even though it had
neither the benefit of a report from a Hearing Examiner thereon nor
the advantage of a hearing before the Commission itself. These
conditions detailed the protection which must be given the
protected railroads, and made them a prerequisite to the
consummation of the merger.
The Commission, therefore, not only found that protection of the
three railroads was necessary, but fixed the terms thereof and
required compliance prior to permitting the merger. There was
nothing tentative about Appendix G. The conditions were divided
into two general categories, and provided that: (1) On traffic for
which the protected railroads are "competitive factors" [
Footnote 1] the merged company shall
not, pending final determination of the inclusion proceedings,
provide any new or changed routing practice, freight rates, or
service which would divert or tend to divert traffic from routes in
which the protected railroads, or any of them, participate or
participated at the time of the merger. And (2) the protected
railroads would be indemnified by the merged company against
revenue losses by reason of the merger. Appendix G to the order
detailed the manner in which
Page 386 U. S. 377
such indemnity would be calculated and provided for the
accelerated processing of complaints as to new or changed routes,
practices, rates, or services. Section 7 of Appendix G provided
that, if the merged company did not accede to all of the
conditions, the merger would be deferred for two years or "such
time as the Commission may determine to be necessary to protect the
interests of D & H, B & M and E-L." And § 8 provided that
the conditions
"shall be construed, administered and enforced with the view to
protecting the E-L, D & H and B & M and the shipping public
which depends upon them for transportation, against the effects of
the merger for the period and purposes set forth above."
Thereafter, and without a hearing, but apparently on the
objection of most of the parties, the Commission, on September 16,
1966, modified its April 6 order and reopened the hearing. 328
I.C.C. 304. The objectors, among other things, pointed to the fact
that the conditions of Appendix G were made without any notice or
hearing, and would create irreconcilable conflicts between the
protected carriers and others adversely affected by the merger. In
reopening the hearing, the Commission limited it to the conditions
imposed in Appendix G, the prevention of possible manipulation of
such conditions, and the enlargement of the indemnity provision to
include capital loss. In the reopening order of September 16, 1966,
the Commission left intact its order of April 6, 1966, as to the
undelayed consummation of the merger, continued in effect the ban
on new or changed routes, practices, and rates as to traffic in
which any of the protected railroads participated, but lifted the
indemnification condition until further order, at which time any
such provision found necessary could be made retroactive to the
date of the merger. None of the previous findings, as to the
necessity for the immediate imposition of the conditions included
in the original order, were
Page 386 U. S. 378
amended or withdrawn. The traffic conditions alone were left in
effect.
This suit was filed on September 7, 1966, and arose upon the
complaint of E-L and other railroads seeking an interlocutory
injunction to restrain the consummation of the merger. A
three-judge court was convened, 28 U.S.C. § 2284, and thereafter it
declined, by a divided vote, to grant the interlocutory injunction.
Erie-Lackawanna Railroad Co. v. United
States, 259 F.
Supp. 964. The appellants sought a stay from MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, who referred the application to the Court, and it was
granted on October 18, 1966. At the same time, we expedited the
case for consideration.
385 U. S. 914. The
sole question before us is whether, in light of the findings as to
the necessity for interim protection for the so-called protected
railroads, the Commission erred in permitting the consummation of
the merger prior to, and without awaiting determination of, the
inclusion proceedings. We believe that the Commission erred in
approving the immediate consummation of the merger without
determining the ultimate fate of the protected roads. We therefore
reverse the judgment and remand the case to the District Court with
instructions to remand the matter to the Commission for further
proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
I
Questions not here decided.
At the outset, we make it clear that we do not pass on the
validity of the merger, the special conditions of Appendix G, the
modified order of the Commission, or the peripheral points posed by
the various parties. We hold only that, under the uncontradicted
findings of the Commission, it was necessary for it to conclude the
inclusion proceedings, as to the protected railroads, prior to
permitting consummation of the merger.
Page 386 U. S. 379
II
The merger, its background, its participants and relative
position.
The Penn-Central merger has been under study and discussion by
the Commission for some 10 years. After the initial study was
completed in 1959, Central withdrew from the plan and began
negotiations for a merger with the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway
Company (C & O) for joint control of the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad Company (B & O). However, when, at a later date, C
& O had contracted for the purchase of some 61% of B & O
stock, Central gave up its plan and renewed negotiations with Penn.
The two roads signed an agreement of merger in 1962. The New York,
New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company (NH) approached Penn and
Central for inclusion in the plan, but was given a deaf ear. The
merger agreement provided that all properties, franchises, etc.
(permitted by respective state law), would be transferred to the
merged company, and appropriate stock exchange, debt arrangements,
etc., effected.
As the Commission found, the merger would
"create an hour-glass shaped system flared on the east from
Montreal, Canada, through Boston, Mass. to Norfolk, Va., and, on
the west, from Mackinaw City, Mich. through Chicago, Ill., to St.
Louis, Mo."
327 I.C.C. at 489. It would operate some 19,600 miles of road in
14 States between the Great Lakes, with a splash in Canada on the
north and the Ohio and Potomac Rivers on the south. After the two
systems are connected as planned and new and expanded yards are
provided, the merger will consolidate trains now moving separately
between the same points. The combined systems will have a
substantial amount of parallel trackage and routes, with 160 common
points or junctions. Terminals will be consolidated, present
interchanges between
Page 386 U. S. 380
the two systems will be eliminated, and only the most efficient
yards and facilities of the respective systems will be utilized.
The merger plan calls for 98 projects that will intermesh their
long-haul traffic at key points, creating a nonstop service between
the principal cities, with "locals" covering the multiple-stop
routes and branch lines. It is estimated that enormous savings in
transit time can be effected. Certain chosen yards -- such as
Selkirk -- will be remodeled and modernized into electronically
operated yards with capacities of from 5,000 to 10,000 cars per
day. The through trains to the West will be formed at Selkirk, and
those from the West broken up for dispatch to terminals or
consignees in New England, New York, and northern New Jersey. The
plan calls for some New York City traffic to be routed over
Central's Hudson River East Shore line to lessen cost. By
consolidating traffic on fast through lines, filling out trains,
re-routing over the most efficient routes, eliminating some
interchanges, and effecting other improvements, the merged company
will reduce by 6,000,000 the number of train miles operated. A
single-line service will be operated between more points, with less
circuity and less switching. The plan also calls for 31 daily
trains to be withdrawn from the Pennsylvania, with seven new ones
added, leaving a total of 319 trains daily.
The Pennsylvania is the largest, and Central the third largest,
railroad in the Northeastern Region. Together, the operating
revenue of the two roads was over $1,500,000,000 in 1965. Their net
income in 1964 totaled almost $57,000,000, and, in 1965, ran in
excess of $75,000,000. In 1963, the total net was barely
$16,000,000. The cost of operation of the two systems runs
$90,000,000 a month, and their working capital was some $72,000,000
in 1965. As of December 31, 1963, their combined investments were
$1,242,000,000. The Pennsylvania and Central systems are each made
up of underlying corporations.
Page 386 U. S. 381
As of the date of the Examiners' Report, the merged company
would have ownership interest in 182 corporations, and 10 railroads
under lease. Thirty-six of the corporations are rail carriers, in
six of which the merged company would have a voting control. All
six are Class I railroads. It would likewise control six Class II
railroads, five switching and terminal railroads, a holding
company, five car leasing companies, four common carriers and 34
noncarrier corporations.
The NH [
Footnote 2] is the
sixth largest railroad in the Northeastern Region, and the largest
in New England. On a national basis, it ranks fourth among
passenger-carrying railroads, and is one of the largest
non-trunkline freight roads. It has some 1,500 miles of railroad in
four States -- Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and part
of New York. NH has been in reorganization under § 77 of the
Bankruptcy Act, 47 Stat. 1474, as amended, 11 U.S.C. § 205, since
1961. [
Footnote 3] While its
gross revenues have run in excess of $120,000,000, it has run
deficits since 1958. During the trusteeship, its deficits have run
from $12,700,000 in 1962 to $15,100,000 in 1965.
III
.
The protesting parties, their setting in the Northeastern
Region, and their position on the merger.
Altogether some 200 parties participated in the proceedings
before the Commission, some in support of and others in opposition
to the merger. None of the appellant railroads challenges the
merits of the merger; however, appellants Milton J. Shapp and the
City of Scranton both attack the merger on its merits. Aside from
Penn
Page 386 U. S. 382
Central and NH, there are 10 other carriers involved in this
proceeding.
Three of these are the protected carriers -- B & M, D &
H and E-L. B & M operates a freight and passenger service in
Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts and New York over some
1,500 miles of road. It has suffered consecutive deficits in net
income for some years, and has not appealed from the decision of
the District Court. D & H operates about 750 miles of road,
with some 600 in New York, less than 50 in Vermont, and the balance
in Pennsylvania. Its net income in 1965 was $5,000,000, its highest
year since 1960. E-L operates some 3,000 miles of railroad located
in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
Its net income was over $3,000,000 in 1965, but it suffered heavy
deficits in the seven preceding years. As we have previously noted,
these three railroads have filed applications for inclusion in both
this case and in
Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. and New York, C.
& S. L.R. Co. -- Merger, 324 I.C.C. 1. [
Footnote 4] The Commission has withheld
action on the inclusion of E-L, B & M and D & H, in
Penn-Central until there is a final determination of their
inclusion proceeding with Norfolk and Western (N & W). In the
latter proceeding, Commissioner Webb filed his report on December
22, 1966, recommending the inclusion of E-L and D & H in the N
& W system, but was unable to prescribe terms for inclusion of
B & M -- this was left to private negotiation between the
railroads. On argument here, the Commission has indicated that it
anticipated
Page 386 U. S. 383
entering a final order in the matter by July or August, 1967. If
this is favorable, these three roads would be included in the N
& W system, which has indicated its acquiescence in such a
plan.
Six additional railroads involved here are the C & O, B
& O, the Central of New Jersey (CNJ), the Reading Company, the
Norfolk and Western, and the Western Maryland Company (WM). The C
& O-B & O system is the result of a control proceeding in
1962.
See Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. -- Control -- Baltimore
& O. R. Co., 317 I.C.C. 261,
sustained, sub nom.
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees v. United
States, 221 F.
Supp. 19,
aff'd per curiam, 375 U.
S. 216 (1963). Together, these two roads operate some
10,000 miles of railroad. Their lines extend from Michigan through
Ohio and West Virginia to Virginia, and from Chicago, Ill., and St.
Louis, Mo., to Rochester, N.Y. and Washington, D.C. Their net
operating income in 1965 totaled over $80,000,000. In addition, B
& O owns 38% voting control of Reading, which, in turn,
controls CNJ. Reading has 1,200 miles of railroad in eastern
Pennsylvania, with net operating revenue of some $8,000,000 in
1965. CNJ has 514 miles of railroad extending from Scranton, Pa. to
Jersey City. N.J. In 1965 it had a net operating deficit in excess
of $3,000,000. C & O-B & O also own jointly 65% of the
voting stock of WM. The latter has 741 miles of railroad extending
from Connellsville, Pa., and Webster Springs, W.Va., to Baltimore,
Md. In 1965, its net operating income was nearly $8,500,000.
N & W has 7,000 miles of railroad extending in a double
prong from Des Moines, Iowa, and Kansas City, Mo., on the west to
Buffalo, N.Y. and Pittsburgh, Pa., on the east, and from
Cincinnati, Ohio, and Bristol, Va., on the west to Hagerstown, Md.,
and Norfolk, Va., on the east. Its net operating income for 1965
was approximately $118,000,000. As we have noted, an inclusion
proceeding
Page 386 U. S. 384
is now pending under which B & M, D & H and E-L seek
inclusion in the N & W system.
On October 11, 1965, C & O-B &.0 and N & W filed an
application with the Commission asking approval of their merger
into a single system and offering to include B & M, D & H,
E-L, the Reading, and CNJ therein, subject to various conditions.
If this were effected and the Penn-Central-NH merger were effected,
the Northeastern Region would then have two giant systems,
i.e., Penn-Central and C & O-B & O-N & W.
Only one additional railroad remains a party here, the Chicago
and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company (C & E I). It has
approximately 750 miles of railroad operating between Chicago,
Ill., St. Louis, Mo., and Evansville, Ind., with a net operating
income of nearly $3,500,000 in 1965. The Missouri Pacific Railroad
Company has already been authorized by the Commission to make C
& E I a part of its system. The fear of C & E I here was
that the Penn and Central merged would be a more formidable
competitor than the Central alone, and it, accordingly, sought the
imposition here of special routing and traffic conditions.
The only other appellants are the City of Scranton, Pa., and
Milton J. Shapp. Scranton is served by E-L, D & H and CNJ. It
fears that the merger will have adverse effects upon the city, and
therefore opposes the merger. Shapp sues as a citizen and
stockholder of Penn, and is likewise in opposition to the
merger.
The United States has filed a memorandum in which it does not
"quarrel with the merits of the Penn-Central merger proposal
itself." The agencies of the Executive Branch, the Solicitor
General reports, "believe that the merger is in the public
interest, and that its consummation should be promptly effected."
This view, however, is based on the assumption
"that a place in the emerging pattern of consolidation in the
Northeast can be found
Page 386 U. S. 385
for the lesser roads of the region."
It is the Commission's approval of the immediate consummation of
the merger prior to the completion of the proceedings to determine
the place of the lesser roads to which the United States objects.
It contends that, since the very survival of the three protected
railroads is threatened by the Penn-Central merger, the Commission
must first provide protection for them until their absorption by "a
major system like Norfolk and Western." To this end, the United
States suggests that we hold the case to enable the Commission to
conclude the related proceedings which it now has under
consideration. The United States concludes that:
"Only if the Commission is unable to promptly resolve the
problems resulting from the merger would we deem it appropriate to
urge this Court to reach the merits of the appeals and reverse the
judgment below."
The appellant railroads take varying positions, all short of
attacking the merits of the merger. The three protected railroads
contend that the merger should not be consummated prior to the
final determination of their inclusion in some major system or the
enforcement of effective protective conditions in the interim.
Judicial review, they say, of the protective conditions would
otherwise be illusory. The C & O-B & O group and the N
& W system maintain that the conditions of the April 6, 1966,
order give the protected railroads a vested interest in the
Penn-Central merger which would result in the protected railroads
diverting traffic to Penn-Central which would normally have gone to
them. They say, as does the United States, that the conditions were
drawn without the benefit of notice and hearing, are deficient, and
enforcement thereof would be to their detriment. C & E I points
to what it calls inconsistent findings as to the benefits it will
have "of intensified competitive efforts" by its connecting
carriers on routes in competition with
Page 386 U. S. 386
Penn-Central. It contends that the indemnity conditions would
"compound the economic injury" which would befall the C & E I
as a result of the merger and which prompted it to request
protective measures.
IV
The national transportation policy and practices of the
Commission thereunder.
This Court has often pointed out that the national
transportation policy "is the product of a long history of trial
and error by Congress. . . ."
McLean Trucking Co. v. United
States, 321 U. S. 67,
321 U. S. 80
(1944). In that case, it found that the Transportation Act of 1920
"marked a sharp change in the policies and objectives embodied in
those efforts."
Ibid. In that Act, the Congress directed
the Commission to adopt a plan for consolidation of the railroads
of the United States into "a limited number of systems." 41 Stat.
481 (1920). Consolidation would be approved by the Commission upon
a finding that the transaction was in harmony with and in
furtherance of the complete plan of consolidation, and that the
public interest would be promoted. But the Commission was warned
that "competition shall be preserved as fully as possible."
Ibid. The initiation of this unification, however, the
Congress left wholly with the carriers. The Commission was given no
power to compel mergers. This pattern was carried forward in the
Transportation Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 898; however, § 5 of the
former Act was amended to authorize the Commission to approve
carrier-initiated proposals which it found to be consistent with
the public interest and upon just and reasonable conditions. Under
§ 5(2)(d), additional power was given the Commission to condition
its approval of a merger upon the inclusion, upon request, of other
railroads operating in the territory involved. As we said in
County of Marin v. United
States, 356 U.S.
Page 386 U. S. 387
412 (1958),
"the result of the [1940] Act was a change in the
means, while the
end remained the same. The very
language of the amended 'unification section' expresses clearly the
desire of the Congress that the industry proceed toward an
integrated national transportation system through substantial
corporate simplification."
Id. at
356 U. S.
417-418. The Commission has, therefore, not proceeded by
or under "a master plan" for consolidation in the various regions.
Following this procedure, the Commission has refused to consolidate
the Northeastern Region railroad merger or control proceedings into
one case.
See Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. -- Control --
Baltimore & O. R. Co., supra, at 265-266, and
Norfolk
& W. Ry. Co. and New York, C. & St. L.R. Co. -- Merger,
supra, at 18. Also
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way
Employees v. United States, 221 F.
Supp. 19, at 29-31;
aff'd per curiam, 375 U.
S. 216 (1963).
It is contended that the order here is fatally defective for
failure to comply with § 5(2)(b) of the Act, which requires the
Commission to
"enter an order approving and authorizing such transaction, upon
the terms and conditions, and with the modifications, so found to
be just and reasonable."
The claim is that, by leaving the indemnity provisions open for
future determination, the Commission did not meet the requirements
of the section. Once a valid order is entered by the Commission,
it, of course, has the power to retain jurisdiction for the purpose
of making modifications that it finds necessary in the light of
subsequent circumstances or to assist in compliance with prior
conditions previously required, or, of course, to correct any
errors. The Commission also has power under § 5(9) of the Act to
make certain supplemental orders and under § 17(3) may correct
clerical errors in certificates. We do not find it necessary to
pass upon the question of naked power in the Commission to
Page 386 U. S. 388
do what has been done here. Even assuming that it does have that
power, we find that its order approving immediate consummation of
the merger is insupportable on its findings.
V
Conclusions
The Commission found in its April 6, 1966, order that the
protected railroads would be adversely affected to a "serious
degree" by the Penn-Central merger; that they would be "severely
handicapped" in providing required transportation to the highly
industrialized areas that they serve, which service is "essential"
and "the public service dictates that it be preserved." It then
held that immediate consummation of the merger would be consistent
with the public interest only if the conditions of Appendix G were
immediately imposed. And, significantly, it concluded that, even
though it approved the merger, consummation of it would not be
permitted unless the protected railroads "are protected during the
period necessary to determine their future. . . ." 327 I.C.C. at
529, 532. But after this suit was brought and strong opposition to
Appendix G was voiced, the Commission, on September 16, 1966,
withdrew all of the conditions of Appendix G save the traffic ones.
This left the protected railroads without sufficient protection
according to the Commission's own findings. This was done
apparently because of the vehement objections of the appellant
railroads that Appendix G would cause havoc, rather than give
shelter. We cannot say, as did the District Court, that the
September 16, 1966, order meant nothing more than that the traffic
conditions left imposed by it were, in themselves, sufficient to
protect the three protected railroads during the interim between
the merger and the decision as to their future in one of the major
railroad systems. This interpretation runs in the face of not only
the prior findings enumerated above, but the specific terms and
conditions of Appendix G found
Page 386 U. S. 389
to be necessary to prevent "impairment or serious weakening" of
the three carriers.
Id. at 532. Indeed, rather than being
tentative, the requirements of Appendix G were rigidly fixed and
established for the entire period preceding inclusion of the
protected roads in some major system. The finding of consistency
with the public interest was predicated entirely upon the
unqualified acceptance of Appendix G by Penn-Central. Otherwise,
the merger would be put off for two years. In its effort to
expedite the merger, the Commission failed to provide the very
protection that it at the same time declared indispensable to the
three roads. This leaves the ultimate conclusion -- that prompt
consummation of the Penn-Central merger clearly would be in the
public interest -- without support, and it falls under the
Commission's own findings.
In view of these facts, and since none of the findings of the
Commission was disturbed, attacked, or amended, we believe it was
error to permit the merger to be effected. And we also note that,
even in the ultimate order of approval dated September 16, 1966,
the Commission pointed out that its
"finding [as to the merger's being consistent with the public
interest] was that, if the immediate consummation were to be
authorized, E-L, D & H and B & M would require special
protection during the pendency of their petitions for inclusion in
a major system."
Nevertheless, in spite of this confirmation of its finding, the
Commission ordered the merger immediately consummated without the
"special protection" afforded by Appendix G. Having found that the
finding of consistency with the public interest could only be
sustained by the imposition of the Appendix G "special protection,"
the Commission failed to meet its statutory obligation when it
arbitrarily removed the special conditions of Appendix G while
leaving the prior finding standing.
Page 386 U. S. 390
In view of the patent invalidity of the order permitting
immediate consummation of the merger, and in light of the present
status of the proceeding before the Commission, we can only
conclude that it is necessary that the decision as to the future of
the protected railroads and their inclusion in a major system be
decided prior to consummation of the Penn-Central merger. This is
especially true since the findings and recommendations of
Commissioner Webb as to the inclusion of the three protected
railroads are now under submission to the full Commission. and a
decision should be reached thereon by July or August, 1967, we are
advised by counsel. This short time would have little effect upon
the ultimate consummation of the merger -- which has been in the
making for some 10 years now -- and if it resulted in the future of
the protected railroads being finally decided, serious losses to
them would be obviated. Furthermore, there would be no occasion for
the conditions of Appendix G to be imposed, and hearing and
decision on this highly controversial matter would not be necessary
insofar as the three protected railroads are concerned. Finally,
such action would provide the solution to the problem of the
necessary and indispensable protection to the three railroads that
the Commission found prerequisite to the merger.
Furthermore, the serious charge that the conditions of Appendix
G were imposed without notice and hearing would, in a large part,
be dissipated by this course of action. As to the three protected
roads, it would be entirely obviated if and when their fate is
determined. As to the other railroads affected, the Commission
could more quickly conclude its present hearing and make a decision
as to the effect of the merger upon them and the protection, if
any, required. [
Footnote 5]
Page 386 U. S. 391
This disposition is also buttressed by the fact that, should the
immediate consummation of the merger be permitted, and, at a later
date, neither the interim conditions nor the inclusion proceedings
be disposed of favorably to the continued existence of the merger,
the only remedy remaining would be to set it aside and unscramble
the consolidation. It is said that this does not follow, since only
the indemnity terms are at issue, and they involve only money. This
is blinking at reality. The fact is that traffic, trackage,
terminals, etc., as well as financial and corporate structures, can
and will, beyond doubt, be quickly combined, changed, abandoned, or
consolidated. The only condition now imposed for the maintenance of
the
status quo is the provision against any change of
routes, traffic, rates, etc., as to business in which the three
protected roads participate. They are comparatively small lines,
located for the most part in northeastern coastal States, and
would, percentage-wise, be a small part of the total routes,
traffic, rates, etc., of the whole Penn-Central system. There would
be no restriction as to other routes, traffic, rates, etc., as well
as all other operations of the merged company, including terminals,
warehouses, etc., financial and corporate structures. The plan that
the Penn-Central proposes to follow, as we have briefly sketched
it, indicates not only
Page 386 U. S. 392
major changes, but quick action. Our experience with other
mergers, and common sense as well, indicate that the "scrambling"
goes fast, but the unscrambling is interminable, and seldom
effectively accomplished.
The Penn-Central merger has been studied for a decade. Indeed,
the parties to the merger agreed to it over five years ago, and it
has been under Commission consideration ever since that time. This
is, of course, the more reason for expedition. We note and give
weight to the estimates of the Commission that the inclusion
proceedings of the three roads in the N & W should be concluded
in "a relatively short time." Our remand should, therefore, entail
only a very short delay before the Commission. If its order is
attacked in court, the hearing there can be expedited, as was this
one, and an early determination made. We do not believe that this
is too high a price to pay to make, as certain as human ingenuity
can devise, a just and reasonable disposition of this matter for
all of the parties. After all, it is the largest railroad merger in
our history, and, if not handled properly, could seriously disrupt
and irreparably injure the entire railroad system in the
northeastern section of the country -- to the great detriment not
only of the parties here, but to the public convenience and
necessity of the entire Nation.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the cause is
remanded with instructions that it be remanded to the Commission
for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
|
386
U.S. 372app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
APPENDIX G*
Provisions for the Protection of E-L, D & H, and B &
M.
1. Pending final determination of the petitions for inclusion
filed by E-L, D & H, and B & M in this proceeding
Page 386 U. S. 393
and in Finance Docket No. 21510
et al., or such other
period of time as the Commission may prescribe, hereinafter called
the protective period, and on traffic for which E-L, D & H and
B & M are competitive factors, the merged company shall not
publish or provide for any new or changed routing practice and/or
freight rates or services, either locally or jointly with other
carriers, which would divert or tend to divert traffic from routes
in which E-L, D & H or B & M, now participates, or
participated at the time this merger application was filed, or take
any action or engage in any practice or conduct contrary to the
purpose and general objectives of this condition as explained in
this report.
For the purpose of illustrating -- but in no way limiting -- the
application of this condition, the following specific provisions
are prescribed:
A. During the protective period, and as to the described
traffic, the railroads which shall make up the merged system will
be considered separate railroads, as they now are, for the purposes
of establishing new routes or rates or privileges and changes in
present routes, rates or privileges.
B. When any of the described freight traffic is delivered to
carriers of the merged system, it shall be allocated among the
routes of the system in accordance with practices employed by the
system's railroads at the time this merger application was
filed.
C. Where through routes and joint rates are now in existence via
any component railroad of the merged system and E-L, D & H or B
& M, the participation therein of such components shall be
maintained during the protective period with the same vigor as such
components have heretofore exercised in competition with each other
and other carriers, to the end of preventing noticeable diversion
from such routes to any other route in which the merged company
participates.
Page 386 U. S. 394
D. The merged company for the protective period shall agree to
joint rates and divisions thereof on its freight traffic interlined
with E-L, D & H or B & M under terms no less advantageous
to E-L, D & H and B & M than are the terms which those
three carriers now have with the component carriers of the merged
system, and, in the event of any changes in such joint rates, the
divisions shall not be changed in any manner which will result in
E-L, D & H or B & M receiving proportionally less than they
now receive on joint rates with such component carriers.
E. In conjunction with E-L, D & H and B & M, the merged
company shall, during the protective period, keep open all routes
now in force for the transportation of freight over the lines of
the three companies and the component carriers of the merged
system; shall maintain thereon service equal to or better than that
being given on the date this merger application was filed; shall
improve such service, to the extent within its power, at least as
necessary to make the said through routes fully competitive with
other routes in which the merged company participates; and, where
joint rates are now in effect or were in effect when this merger
application was filed, it shall maintain such rates, and where
change in those rates becomes appropriate, changes shall conform to
the requirement of provision D above.
2. The term "competitive factor" shall be construed to mean
that, at the date of this order or at the time this merger
application was filed, E-L, D & H or B & M was both
participating in the particular route, rate or service and was
handling traffic thereon.
3. E-L, D & H and B & M shall be indemnified by the
merged company under the circumstances and according to the plan
specified in the report,
supra.
4. This appendix constitutes a plan for protection against the
effects of the applicants' merger, and does not
Page 386 U. S. 395
apply to loss caused by: (a) hostile or warlike action by (1)
any government or sovereign power (
de jure or
de
facto) or (2) military, naval or air forces; (b) insurrection,
rebellion, civil war,
et cetera; (c) national disaster;
(d) economic depression; (e) strikes; (f) act of God; or (g) other
similar state of affairs.
5. The interpretation, application and enforcement of the
conditions in this appendix shall he governed exclusively by the
following provisions:
A. All controversies arising under this appendix shall be
determined with finality by the Interstate Commerce Commission in
the manner indicated below.
B. (1) Except as to section 3,
supra, whenever E-L, D
& H or B & M considers that these protective conditions are
being violated, or that a violation will result from the
effectuation of a tariff publication in which the merged company
participates, they may (individually or collectively) file a
complaint with the Commission, Board of Suspension, and with the
merged company, specifying the rate, route, practice, privilege, or
such matters constituting the alleged violation and setting forth
in a statement verified by an appropriate official of the
complainant all the data giving rise to the complaint.
(2) In the event the Board of Suspension shall determine that,
as to the matter complained of, E-L, D & H or B & M is a
competitive factor (as defined in these conditions), it shall in
the case of a tariff publication not yet effective, suspend the
tariff forthwith for the protective period (as defined in these
conditions), and shall conduct an investigation into the matter
complained of, and if the alleged violation is found not to exist,
the Board shall thereupon order the suspension removed; and, in all
matters not involving a tariff not yet in effect, the Board shall
investigate the matters complained of; and, if in any
investigation, it finds that these protective
Page 386 U. S. 396
conditions are being violated, it shall order the cancellation
of the violative tariff provisions or, where a tariff is not
involved, the termination of the violative conduct. Orders of the
Board shall have force and effect as orders of this Commission and
shall be enforced as such.
C. All controversies arising under section 3 above, shall be
determined by the Commission, Finance Board No. 2. Complaints,
verified by an appropriate officer of the complainant, shall be
addressed to such Board and the merged company, specifying both the
basis of the complaint and the relief sought.
D. (1) All determinations as to whether E-L, D & H or B
& M is a competitive factor shall be made within 10 days after
a complaint is filed, and final decisions as to issues raised by a
complaint shall be rendered within 90 days after the complaint is
filed.
(2) Appeal shall lie to the Commission, division 2, from orders
of the Board of Suspension, and to the Commission, division 3, from
orders of Finance Board No. 2.
(3) Special rules for proceeding before the Boards and appealing
therefrom shall be promulgated by this Commission at a future
time.
6. Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5,
an agreement pertaining to the interests of E-L, D & H and/or B
& M may be hereinafter entered by the merged company and the
protected carriers, or any of them, which shall supersede the
protection provided by such sections to the extent the agreement
does not violate the provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act or
the Commission's rules and regulations thereunder.
7. In the event applicants fail to accede to the above-named
conditions, consummation of the proposed merger will be deferred
for 2 years or such time as the Commission may determine to be
necessary to protect the interests of D & H, B & M and
E-L.
Page 386 U. S. 397
8. These conditions shall be construed, administered and
enforced with the view to protecting the E-L, D & H and B &
M and the shipping public which depends upon them for
transportation, against the effects of the merger for the period
and purposes set forth above.
9. These conditions are to be applied in addition to the
standard conditions set out in Appendix I hereof.
* Together with No. 680,
Delaware & Hudson Railroad
Corp. v. United States, et al., No. 691,
Erie-Lackawanna
Railroad Co. v. United States, et al., No. 813,
City of
Scranton, et al. v. United States, et al., No. 814,
Shapp
v. United States, et al., and No. 815,
Chicago &
Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. v. United States, et al., also
on appeal from the same court.
* 327 I.C.C. 475, 561.
[
Footnote 1]
"Competitive factor" was defined as any particular route, rate,
or service on which any of the "protected railroads" were handling
traffic at the time the merger application was filed or at the date
of the order.
[
Footnote 2]
We include it in this discussion since the Commission intends to
include it in the Penn-Central system as soon as terms and
conditions are agreed to or fixed.
[
Footnote 3]
In the matter of the New York, New Haven, and Hartford
Railroad Company -- Debtor, No. 30226, U.S.D.C.Conn.
[
Footnote 4]
This proceeding involved the merger of the Nickel Plate. E-L
sought inclusion in this proceeding, along with B & M and D
& H. After E-L had withdrawn its application the Commission
found that the merger "should have no harmful effects" on B & M
and N & H. The Commission retained jurisdiction for five years
to permit E-L, B & M and D & H to again petition for
inclusion.
See 324 I.C.C. 1, 19-31. Each of the roads so
petitioned, and it is this inclusion proceeding that is now before
the Commission.
[
Footnote 5]
Among these, CNJ claims it has been deprived of a hearing on the
effect on it of the inclusion of the NH in the Penn-Central merger.
As the Commission points out, however, the terms and conditions of
the NH's inclusion are subject to further proceedings, and the
Commission has specifically given to CNJ leave "to seek protection
for [its] traffic and gateways," at that time. 327 I.C.C. at 527.
Moreover, CNJ also says, it has not been afforded a hearing on its
claim that the merger will also deprive it of important overhead
coal traffic now delivered by CNJ to D & H at Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
This might be lost, it alleges, because of the direct connection
between D & H and N & W which will be available over the
trackage rights that Penn-Central is being required to grant D
& H. We know nothing of the merits of these claims, and, of
course, indicate no decision thereon. However, we assume that the
Commission will in each instance afford the CNJ an opportunity to
be heard concerning them.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion. In its determination whether the
merger is consistent with the public interest, the ICC did not
discharge its statutory duty to consider the effect upon that
interest of the inclusion, or failure to include, the E-L, D &
H and B & M. The ICC order authorizing immediate consummation
of the merger as consistent with the public interest must therefore
be set aside.
I
The ICC's approval of the Penn-Central merger is the last of
three authorizations for consolidation of major eastern roads. In
the first, the C & O was allowed to control the B & O.
[
Footnote 2/1] In the second, the N
& W was permitted to merge with the Nickel Plate. [
Footnote 2/2] The ICC has been confronted
with the problem of what to do with the E-L, D & H and B &
M since they petitioned for inclusion in the proposed N &
W-Nickel Plate system as a condition of approval. E-L's precarious
financial condition led to that carrier's withdrawal of its
petition in favor of inclusion by negotiation, 324 I.C.C. 1, 21,
and, as a consequence, of the denial of the D & H and
Page 386 U. S. 398
B & M petitions, 324 I.C.C. at 31-32. In the meantime, the
Penn-Central proposal had come before the Commission, and D &
H, fearful that the Penn-Central merger might be approved and
consummated before its inclusion in a major system was assured,
argued that approval of Penn-Central be held up by consolidating
the two proceedings, or that immediate consummation of N &
W-Nickel Plate should be made contingent on inclusion upon
equitable terms of the three roads in the event Penn-Central is
later approved. 324 I.C.C. at 30-31. The ICC denied these requests,
but recognizing there was substance to D & H's fears, it
retained jurisdiction for five years to permit the roads to file
petitions for inclusion in the N & W system. Inclusion was to
be required upon equitable terms if "found consistent with the
public interest," and consummation of the merger would constitute
"irrevocable assent" by N & W to the condition. 324 I.C.C. at
148.
Before N & W-Nickel Plate was approved, the Penn-Central
proposal had been filed. The three roads, appreciating the danger
Penn-Central would pose to their survival, sought inclusion,
conditioned upon denial of their inclusion in N & W. Soon
after, negotiations between E-L and N & W for voluntary
inclusion apparently broke down because, at approximately the same
time, the three roads filed petitions for inclusion in N & W,
and N & W and C & O filed applications to merge with each
other, stating that only such a merger could support the inclusion
of the three roads in N & W on equitable terms and consistently
with the public interest. The three roads urged in their
applications both for inclusion in Penn-Central and for inclusion
in N & W, that Penn-Central be delayed until their inclusion in
one of the systems was assured. This was tantamount to a request
that the two proceedings be consolidated for decision, and the
Department of Justice supported their position.
Page 386 U. S. 399
The ICC found, as the three roads alleged, (1) the service
rendered by the three roads "is essential, and the public interest
dictates that it be preserved," and (2) it is "doubtful that,
without inclusion in a major system, these three carriers could
withstand the competition of the applicants merged. . . ." 327
I.C.C. 475, 529, 532. All the parties concerned recognized,
however, that inclusion of the roads in N & W would be
preferable to inclusion in Penn-Central, and that it would be some
time before the N & W inclusion proceeding was completed.
Rather than delay consummation of Penn-Central, which the ICC found
would result in substantial savings and improved service, the ICC
ordered immediate consummation. It pointed out that the three roads
had petitions for inclusion in N & W pending, and provided
that, in the event inclusion in N & W was denied, the three
roads could petition the ICC for one year following the judgment of
denial to allow or require inclusion of the roads in Penn-Central,
on equitable terms, if found to be in the public interest. 327
I.C.C. at 553. Meanwhile, in addition to usual conditions for
preserving existing routes and gateways, the ICC prescribed
"unprecedented" conditions of two kinds: (1) traffic conditions
requiring Penn-Central to continue existing practices and route
patterns with respect to traffic competed for by the three roads;
(2) conditions guaranteeing the three roads an indemnity computed
on the basis of a fixed share of the combined total of the revenues
realized by them and Penn-Central; this was to compensate the roads
for income lost from diversion of their traffic to Penn-Central.
327 I.C.C. at 532. These conditions were acceptable to Penn and
Central, but not to the three roads or to N & W and C & O-B
& O.
Proceedings to set aside the ICC order were brought in the
District Court, and petitions for reconsideration were also filed
with the ICC. Some of the latter attacked
Page 386 U. S. 400
the validity of the conditions on the ground that they were
imposed without hearing. E-L and D & H, however, renewed their
complaint against the approval before assurance of their inclusion
in a major system, and alternatively attacked the conditions as
indefinite and inadequate, demanding in addition to be indemnified
for capital loss. C & O-B & O and their family lines for
the first time introduced evidence that the merger would adversely
affect them, and argued that the indemnification condition of the
original order would create a community of interest between the
protected roads and Penn-Central. The Department of Justice urged
postponement to consider the questions raised concerning the
conditions and the evidence of adverse effect offered by C &
O-B & O. [
Footnote 2/3]
Page 386 U. S. 401
The ICC rescinded the indemnity conditions pending a hearing on
whether they should be modified and whether a capital loss
indemnification condition should be added, but refused on the
ground of laches to hear the evidence offered by the C & O. 328
I.C.C. 304, 318. The ICC reaffirmed its approval of the merger
subject to Penn-Central's acceptance of the conditions as finally
formulated, although not foreclosing Penn-Central from seeking
judicial review of any provision for capital loss indemnification.
328 I.C.C. at 329. The District Court denied interlocutory relief
enjoining Penn and Central from going forward with the merger.
[
Footnote 2/4]
II
The statutory duty of the ICC is clear. Section 5(2)(b) of the
Interstate Commerce Act, as amended by the Transportation Act of
1940, authorizes the agency to approve only those consolidations it
finds "will be consistent with the public interest. . . ." 54 Stat.
906, 49 U.S.C. § 5(2)(b). The statute creates no presumption that
mergers generally are either consistent or inconsistent with that
interest; rather, it requires that each proposal be examined in
depth to determine its effects upon the national transportation
system. Thus, the ICC is explicitly directed to consider
"(1) The effect of the proposed transaction upon adequate
transportation service to the public; (2) the effect upon the
public interest of the inclusion, or failure to include, other
railroads in the territory involved in the proposed transaction;
(3) the total fixed charges resulting from the proposed
transaction, and (4) the interest of the carrier employees
Page 386 U. S. 402
affected."
49 U.S.C. § 5(2)(c). The National Transportation Policy is the
controlling guide,
McLean Trucking Co. v. United States,
321 U. S. 67,
321 U. S. 82,
and that policy requires the Commission
"to promote safe, adequate, economical, and efficient service
and foster sound economic conditions in transportation and among
the several carriers . . . to the end of developing, coordinating,
and preserving a national transportation system by water, highway,
and rail, as well as other means, adequate to meet the needs of the
commerce of the United States, of the Postal Service, and of the
national defense."
49 U.S.C. note preceding § 1. These provisions call for the
application of discerning judgment to a wide range of factors, and
preclude the position that the purpose of the 1940 Act is simply to
promote railroad consolidation. [
Footnote 2/5] The ICC has recognized that inquiry into a
proposed transaction does not end with the possibilities for
increased economics, but extends to "the effect of the transaction
upon adequate transportation service to all parts of the public
which would be so affected," [
Footnote
2/6] which encompasses
Page 386 U. S. 403
the
"duty, as an administrative matter, to consider the effect of
the merger on competitors and on the general competitive situation
in the industry in the light of the objectives of the national
transportation policy."
McLean Trucking Co. v. United States, supra, at
321 U. S. 87.
"The public interest is the prime consideration, and, in making
that determination, we must have regard for all relevant factors."
Toledo, P. & W. R. Co. -- Control, 295 I.C.C. 523,
547.
A critical factor, not, in my view, properly applied in this
case, is
"the effect upon the public interest of the inclusion, or
failure to include, other railroads in the territory involved in
the proposed transaction. . . . [
Footnote 2/7]"
The Commission is authorized,
"as a prerequisite to its approval of the proposed transaction,
to require, upon equitable terms, the inclusion of another railroad
or other railroads in the territory involved, upon petition by such
railroad or railroads requesting such inclusion, and upon a finding
that such inclusion is consistent with the public interest."
49 U.S.C. § 5(2)(d). The ICC recognizes that it is required to
consider the issue of inclusion even when no petition is filed,
[
Footnote 2/8] because, if a
proposed transaction
Page 386 U. S. 404
"would endanger or impair the operations of other carriers
contrary to the public interest,"
Chicago, B. Q. R. Co. --
Control, supra, 271 I.C.C. at 157, inclusion of the affected
carriers is
required by, and not merely consistent with,
the public interest.
In this case, the ICC, although determining that the three roads
perform an essential service and that their inclusion in some major
system is required by the public interest, takes the position that
its duty as to inclusion is sufficiently discharged when it
provides for the possibility of inclusion in either N & W or
Penn-Central, and meanwhile promises to impose protective
conditions. My disagreement is not with the proposition that the
Act vests wide discretion in the agency to allow a merger to go
forward while conditions as to inclusion are worked out. The
Commission has broad authority to approve transactions "subject to
such terms and conditions and such modifications as it shall find
to be just and reasonable . . . ," § 5(2)(b), and
"may from time to time, for good cause shown, make such orders,
supplemental to any order made under paragraph (1), (2), or (7), of
this section, as it may deem necessary or appropriate,"
§ 5(9). It has, in fact, occasionally reserved jurisdiction (1)
to work out equitable terms for an inclusion it has already
determined is required by the public interest,
New York Central
Unification, 154 I.C.C. 489, 493-494; [
Footnote 2/9] and even (2) to determine after
consummation whether inclusion will be consistent with or required
by the public interest,
Union Pac. R. Co. Unification, 189
I.C.C. 357, 363. [
Footnote 2/10]
But
Page 386 U. S. 405
decisions of this sort proceed upon the assumption that
inclusion will later be possible, and that, therefore, the finding
that the proposed consolidation is in the public interest will not
be undermined. This assumption is not always warranted. An
inclusion may turn out to be impossible, either because of
inability to work out equitable terms, a circumstance upon which
inclusion orders have invariably been conditioned, or because upon
full consideration the effects of the contemplated inclusion might
be regarded as so detrimental that the proposed merger which made
necessary the inclusion would be against the public interest.
The Commission must decide, in the first instance, whether the
risk of such ultimate developments is acute enough to counsel
against approval of a consolidation subject to the working out of
the terms of an inclusion or to the working out of both the terms
and the inclusion.
See Jaffe, Judicial Control of
Administrative Action 565-567 (1965). But resort to the practice of
deferring the accomplishment of inclusions or other ends required
by the public interest must be carefully weighed and reviewed.
Where there is little or no danger that inclusion consistent with
the public interest and upon equitable terms might turn out to be
impossible, it is sufficiently likely, despite deferral, that the
Commission will have fulfilled its basic statutory duty. Where
there is a significant possibility, however, that a deferred
inclusion upon which a finding of public interest is premised will
be unattainable or attainable only by setting into motion new
forces which have not been weighed in evaluating the basic
proposal, then the Commission's statutory duty to consider all the
relevant factors has
Page 386 U. S. 406
not been properly discharged. And ICC action of this sort
generally creates dangers far greater than those which normally
accrue when an agency or court fails to apply the governing
standard to all the relevant facts, since the decision to allow
consummation is often irreversible, as it concededly is in this
case, or reversible only at enormous expense.
Prior authorizations deferring decision on inclusions held to be
required by the public interest entailed no significant risk that
the ICC had approved a consolidation without fulfilling its
statutory duty. When, in
New York Central Unification,
supra, the Commission authorized immediate consummation but
retained jurisdiction to assure that terms would be worked out for
the purchase of lines whose purchase it had required because their
preservation was found to be essential to the public interest,
there was no doubt that equitable terms could be arranged. The
roads to be included were short lines, complementary to the New
York Central system, so consummation of the proposed unification
created no reason to expect a detrimental effect. Moreover, the
roads were required to submit the issue of value to arbitration in
the event they failed to agree. 154 I.C.C. at 493. When, in
Union Pac. R. Co., supra, the Commission deferred until
after consummation both the question whether the public interest
required inclusion and the matter of working out terms, there was
no indication that inclusion might be impossible because of its
effects without rendering the proposed transaction against the
public interest, or that equitable terms for inclusion might be
unattainable, or that the short lines involved would be subjected
to danger from traffic diversion or otherwise during the period
between consummation and inclusion. The transaction authorized only
accounting changes; no change in
Page 386 U. S. 407
operation was either contemplated or possible. 189 I.C.C. at
363. [
Footnote 2/11]
This case is in striking contrast. Allegations are made by the
Department of Justice and numerous other parties that inclusion of
the protected roads in either of the major systems contemplated by
the Commission might not be possible consistent with the public
interest or upon equitable terms. These arguments demonstrate that,
because of possible difficulties involved in the inclusion
proceeding and in establishing acceptable interim conditions, the
"opportunities for the ultimate inclusion of E-L, D & H and B
& M in a major rail system . . ." which the Commission has
endeavored to preserve create serious uncertainties.
The first and more obviously uncertain alternative is inclusion
in Penn-Central itself. The Commission
Page 386 U. S. 408
retained jurisdiction to allow the three carriers to seek
inclusion in Penn-Central within one year after final denial of any
of their petitions for inclusion in N & W. All concerned
recognize that inclusion in N & W is the preferable solution,
since inclusion of the roads in Penn-Central would create a virtual
monopoly of all rail traffic in most of New England and New York.
[
Footnote 2/12] (
See
Appendix A [omitted] for a map depicting this result.) It is true
that Commissioner Webb said in the N & W inclusion proceeding
that
"the Penn-Central reports indicate that the merger would be
consistent with the public interest notwithstanding any lessening
of intramodal competition resulting from inclusion of EL, D &
H, and B & M,"
Norfolk & W. R. Co. -- Merger, F.D. No. 21510, p.
27, but this statement is refuted by the Penn-Central reports
themselves. Both the Examiners and the Commission expressly
reserved for a later time the question whether inclusion of the
roads in Penn-Central would be consistent with the public interest,
[
Footnote 2/13] and, rather than
implying that the merger would be in the public interest despite
inclusion of the protected roads, the Examiners' Report and the
Commission's opinions indicate that the merger
Page 386 U. S. 409
was approved under the assumption that the protected roads would
be included in N & W. [
Footnote
2/14]
The "opportunity" for inclusion in the N & V hardly presents
a less risky alternative. The N & W proceeding has gone to
hearing, and Commissioner Webb, acting as Presiding Officer, has
issued a report recommending inclusion in N & W of of E-L and D
& H, and authorizing inclusion of B & M if the parties are
able to agree to terms. There has as yet been no action by the ICC
on the report, and, based upon its contents and the objections
raised in this Court, there is a significant possibility, given the
present state of circumstances, that inclusion in N & W might
be unattainable, or attainable only at the price of
Page 386 U. S. 410
rendering the Penn-Central merger against the public interest,
and that, even if inclusion could be accomplished consistent with
the public interest, it might be impossible to work out equitable
terms. Appellees make much of the fact that N & W, by
consummating its merger with Nickel-Plate,
"irrevocably agreed to include these three petitioners in their
system upon terms agreed upon among themselves or, if necessary,
prescribed by [the ICC], provided such inclusion is found to be
consistent with the public interest."
327 I.C.C. at 529. But this condition expressly assumes a
favorable resolution of both of the questions in dispute. As
Commissioner Webb said in the N & W inclusion report:
"the only obligation expressly imposed on N & W . . . was to
include the petitioners if the Commission found such inclusion to
be consistent with the public interest and if the Commission also
found that the inclusion could be effected on terms 'equitable to
all parties involved,' both findings to be subject to full judicial
review."
N & W Inclusion Report at 16.
Commissioner Webb's recommended disposition reveals clearly that
the dangers stemming from deferral exist even as to inclusion in N
& W. He rejected an argument of C & O that its plan for
absorption of the three roads into a merged C & O-N & W
system was mutually exclusive with inclusion of the roads into an
independent N & W, and the contentions of C & O and others
that they would be adversely affected by the inclusion. He found
inclusion of all three roads consistent with the public interest,
pointing out that the roads would be able to survive in N & W
despite significant losses to Penn-Central, and that greater
intramodal and intermodal competition and better services would
become possible. N & W Inclusion Report at 31-32. However, he
found substance to arguments relating to each of the three
roads
Page 386 U. S. 411
that their required inclusion would be against the public
interest. Since authorization of the Penn-Central merger is
premised on a finding that the roads must be included in a major
system, these arguments are of great relevance here, and I address
myself to them.
As to E-L, N & W argued inclusion would be too great a
burden in light of its financial condition, for, although E-L
showed a modest profit in 1965 for the first time in years, N &
W contended it was too soon to draw any optimistic conclusion, and
that it was no more able now to absorb E-L than it had been a few
years before, when the Commission refused to require E-L's
inclusion in N & W because of E-L's "precarious financial
plight" and "the burden another railroad would assume if it
absorbed the Erie-Lackawanna now. . . ." 324 I.C.C. at 25.
Commissioner Webb recognized that this argument had some merit, and
characterized E-L's growth as "erratic." N & W Inclusion Report
at 17, 10. So enormous is E-L's debt, in fact, that the parties
themselves agreed it "precludes a merger of N&W and E-L now or
at any time in the near future."
Id. at 84. As a
consequence, the Commissioner recommended that only control of E-L
by N & W be required, looking to eventual merger with
assumption of liabilities when circumstances would permit. D &
H has no financial problem which would interfere with immediate
merger, but Commissioner Webb found that the only sufficient
connection between D & H and N & W was E-L, and therefore
recommended that an order requiring inclusion of D & H in N
& W be conditioned on inclusion of E-L,
id. at 139,
which consequently makes the arguments relating to E-L applicable
to D & H as well. With respect to B & M, Commissioner Webb
agreed with N & W, and refused to recommend that its inclusion
in any form be required, because of B & M's poor financial
condition and limited prospects for recovery. He recommended only
that inclusion be
Page 386 U. S. 412
authorized in the unlikely event N & W saw fit to agree to
pay, within five years of the inclusion, a minimum rate for B &
M shares equal to almost twice their value under Commissioner
Webb's own appraisal.
Id. at 153, 156.
It is not entirely clear, therefore, that E-L and D & H will
be ordered included in N & W, and the likelihood that B & M
will not be included under present circumstances is great.
Therefore, it is reasonably possible that the premise upon which
the Commission has proceeded in authorizing consummation of
Penn-Central -- that all three must be included in a major system
-- may be unattainable through inclusion in N & W, because the
required inclusion of at least one and possibly all three may not
be consistent with the public interest. Neither is it a sufficient
answer to this uncertainty that B & M could be included in
Penn-Central, since its value to that system because of the
monopoly it would make possible in large areas of New England would
make inclusion economically feasible at equitable terms. As we have
seen, whether Penn-Central would be worth the price despite this
result is a matter of some dispute, which the ICC has never
considered.
The Commission's duty to consider all the relevant effects of a
consolidation before authorizing it extends, moreover, not only to
whether an inclusion necessary to make the proposed transaction
consistent with the public interest is in fact attainable, but also
to whether such an inclusion, even though attainable, might set in
motion events which could put the basic transaction proposed in a
less favorable light. Thus, even if it is assumed that inclusion of
E-L and D & H in N & W will occur, and that leaving B &
M temporarily independent would not undermine the consistency of
the Penn-Central merger with the public interest, it is incumbent
upon the ICC to consider the potential effects on the public
interest of
Page 386 U. S. 413
such an outcome before authorizing consummation. Clearly, the
ICC has not done so, and, on this record, there is a substantial
likelihood that effects of enormous significance to the public
interest might result.
Commissioner Webb refused to consider N & W and C & O's
plan for merger with inclusion of the smaller roads, because he
concluded the issue of inclusion could be settled without regard to
the plan. It is clear, however, from the Commissioner's
recommendations, that adoption of the N & W-C & O plan may
well be a consequence of the Penn-Central merger both through its
effect on the smaller roads and its effect directly upon N & W
and C & O. The uncertainties with respect to inclusion of the
roads in N & W will be highly probative evidence when the
Commission gets around to considering the N & W-C & O
proposal. E-L's large debt, for example, which now prevents its
outright merger in N & W, would be less of an obstacle if N
& W and C & O were combined, and thereby strengthened. Even
more significant is the fact that B & M's inclusion, presently
regarded as impossible in N & W, would probably be possible if
N & W were combined with C & O-B & O. [
Footnote 2/15]
Page 386 U. S. 414
There is no doubt, moreover, that C & O and N & W will,
in addition to offering a solution to the inclusion problem, allege
that they stand to be seriously hurt by the Penn-Central system
unless they are allowed to combine. Although Commissioner Webb
refused to hear evidence offered by C & O to prove such
allegations, and although the Commission also refused, on the
ground of laches, to grant C & O's petition to reopen
Penn-Central to introduce evidence of traffic diversion, the ICC
agreed to modify the finding of the Examiners in this case,
Penn-Central Report at 305, that the net effect of Penn-Central
will not be detrimental to C & O, CNJ, and other carriers, or
to their ability to provide general transportation service.
Instead, the Commission substituted the finding that a detrimental
effect "has not been shown of record . . . ," 328 I.C.C. at 318,
and thereby left it open to C & O to allege and prove at some
later time that its merger with N & W is in the public interest
at least in part because of traffic diversion caused by
Penn-Central. With respect to N & W, some evidence of adverse
effect from Penn-Central seems probable in light of Commissioner
Webb's refusal to deduct from the value of the three roads the
losses anticipated through diversion of traffic to Penn-Central,
because
"N & W has resisted corresponding adjustments in its own
earnings despite its admissions that it would suffer serious losses
of traffic to Penn-Central. . . ."
N & W Inclusion Report at 44. The refusal to deduct any of
the anticipated losses meant, in effect, that Commissioner Webb
proceeded upon the assumption that N & W would lose the same
proportion of traffic to Penn-Central as E-L expected to lose.
[
Footnote 2/16]
It therefore appears that Penn-Central will increase the
likelihood of, and may actually cause, an affiliation
Page 386 U. S. 415
of N & W and C & O. The ICC has given no thought to
whether such an affiliation would be in the public interest. It
would create a virtual rail monopoly in some southeastern States
(
see Appendix B [omitted] for a map depicting this
result), which includes important traffic in coal between the
border States and the Norfolk port area, from where it is exported
abroad, and it is strongly opposed by both Penn and Central. Had
the ICC faced the problem of inclusion, it might have been led to
consider the possibility that Penn-Central could cause or increase
the likelihood of an N & W-C & O affiliation. Only by
considering this possibility could the ICC fulfill its obligation
to consider all the relevant factors before approving the
merger.
The "opportunity" reserved by the ICC for inclusion of the roads
in N & W is, therefore, like the "opportunity" reserved for
inclusion in Penn-Central, shrouded in doubt as to whether
inclusion could be required consistent with the public interest.
Concededly, there is far more reason to believe that voluntary
inclusion in N & W could at least be accomplished consistent
with the public interest than could inclusion in Penn-Central. But,
on the other hand, while equitable terms could probably be arranged
for inclusion in Penn-Central, it is open to serious controversy
whether equitable terms will be attainable for inclusion of the
roads in N & W. Commissioner Webb has found, of course, that
equitable terms for B & M's inclusion in N & W cannot be
worked out, and a possible consequence of this will be to create
pressure in favor of the N & W-C & O plan, or compel
inclusion of B & M in Penn-Central. But even as to E-L and D
& H (because its inclusion will probably be dependent on
E-L's), the present controversy surrounding the conditions designed
for interim protection makes considerably uncertain whether
equitable terms will be possible once Penn-Central is
consummated.
Page 386 U. S. 416
The purpose of the traffic and indemnity conditions originally
imposed but now being reconsidered is to maintain the
pre-consummation
status quo between Penn-Central and the
three roads. One obvious end inferred from this purpose is to
prevent irreparable harm to the three roads. But inherent in the
finding that the public interest requires eventual inclusion of the
roads in a major system, and in the fact that the protective
conditions are interim only, is the purpose of keeping the roads
intact so their inclusion on equitable terms will be possible.
There is substantial controversy, however, over the validity and
effectiveness of each of the proposed conditions. The Commission
has, in fact, reopened the Penn-Central proceeding for hearings to
determine in what respects the conditions originally imposed should
be modified, and whether or not a capital loss indemnity should be
imposed. 328 I.C.C. at 328. Modifications are to be applied
retroactively, and Penn-Central is to have judicial review only on
the capital indemnity issue. But, despite these assurances, the
three carriers and other nonprotected carriers attack the
conditions on several grounds, at least some of which cannot
lightly be dismissed.
There are three types of conditions involved: (1) traffic
conditions; (2) indemnity for loss of revenue, and (3) indemnity
for capital loss. The traffic conditions are expressly devised to
prevent Penn-Central from increasing its competition with the
protected roads. In brief, they restrain Penn-Central from taking
any action or engaging in any practice "which would divert or tend
to divert traffic . . . ," either directly or indirectly, from the
protected roads. 327 I.C.C. at 561. While the ICC's authority to
impose this restriction is unquestioned, great controversy exists
concerning its intended scope. The three roads, relying upon the
ICC's expressed intention to prevent "any" loss of revenue "as a
direct result" of consummation,
Page 386 U. S. 417
327 I.C.C. at 532, claim that Penn-Central may take no step to
improve service on routes in which they participate, even if the
improvement is designed, for example, to meet truck competition.
They also claim that the conditions should be applied retroactively
to April 27, 1966, when the ICC released its original decision, in
order to eliminate the possibility that Penn and Central could
defeat the purpose of the conditions by continuing competitive
practices begun between April 27 and consummation, or by
instituting changes during the intervening period. Penn and
Central, on the other hand, take a far more limited view of the
conditions' scope, despite their assurances before the District
Court that the conditions prevent even solicitation of shippers.
[
Footnote 2/17] Their position at
the reopened proceeding, based upon the Commission's reference to
maintaining the pre-consummation "
status quo," 327 I.C.C.
at 532, is that they should be free to offer any amount or quality
of service after merger which they could perform individually or
jointly before merger. This interpretation apparently would leave
Penn-Central free, for example, to reduce rates on any route which
was formerly all-Central or all-Penn, or on any presently existing
joint route of Penn and Central, or to pool their cars for better
flexibility, even though these actions might result in diversion of
traffic from a protected line.
See generally Brief for the
United States on Appendix G Conditions, F.D. Nos. 21989 and 21990,
Jan. 16, 1967, pp. 8-12. Whether the traffic conditions will
succeed in preventing the deterioration of the three roads to the
point at which equitable terms may be unattainable is a question of
some difficulty.
Page 386 U. S. 418
Traffic conditions are limited in their usefulness because they
cannot eliminate entirely the more general benefits often
obtainable through consolidation (such as unified management,
better schedules, simplified tracing of cars, less switching and
inspection of cars, and greater advertising resources), and because
they cannot be operative upon the shipper. Since the ICC deemed the
traffic conditions imposed essential to protect the roads, and
since even the most rigid traffic conditions are of limited value,
the question whether the view of the three roads or that of Penn
and Central should be adopted is as important as it is difficult,
and its unsettled state contributes to the doubt as to
inclusion.
The indemnity for loss of revenue, now being reconsidered by the
ICC, is to be payable to any of the three threatened lines in the
event that it fails to realize, during the indemnity period, gross
revenues in the same proportion to the combined gross revenues of
Penn-Central and the protected line as the indemnity formula fixes
for the protected line in the base period. The indemnity is
obviously designed to make up for losses of traffic to Penn-Central
despite the traffic conditions. The three roads have argued that
the indemnity should be modified to increase payments, but take the
position that, even as modified, the conditions would be
inadequate. The nonprotected roads claim the indemnity condition is
unlawful. Quite clearly, the indemnity would provide a financial
interest to the protected lines to divert to Penn-Central traffic
they would normally handle in connection with other carriers, such
as N & W and C & O, in order to increase Penn-Central's
proportion of their combined revenues and thereby to increase their
own indemnities. Correspondingly it would provide an interest to
Penn-Central to divert traffic to the protected lines to increase
their proportion of combined revenues and thereby to reduce or
avoid indemnity payments.
Page 386 U. S. 419
Whether this community of interest is unlawful or would
otherwise be against the public interest has not definitively been
settled, since the ICC is still in the process of reconsidering its
position. It is relevant here, however, simply to note that the
indemnity, viewed by the ICC as essential to interim protection, is
meaningfully challenged both as unlawful and as inadequate, and
therefore that it too cannot be relied upon to eliminate the doubt
concerning whether the protected roads may be damaged during the
interim to an extent that would make equitable terms
unattainable.
The indemnity for capital loss is advanced by the three roads as
essential if the merger is to be consummated prior to inclusion. It
is directly related to the problem of assuring that equitable terms
for inclusion in N & W can later be reached. Commissioner
Webb's definition makes clear the proposed condition's purpose:
"The term 'capital loss,' as used by N & W, E-L, D & H
and B & M in their petitions for reconsideration in the
Penn-Central case, refers to losses of E-L, D & H, and B &
M traffic to Penn-Central to the extent not offset by traffic gains
attributable to their inclusion in the N & W system, with the
net annual loss of income, if any, capitalized at an appropriate
rate."
N & W Inclusion Report at 25, n. 21. In effect, this
condition would guarantee the three roads the difference between
what they would lose to Penn-Central and what they would gain by
inclusion in N & W. Unquestionably, its adoption would
facilitate inclusion, but the fact is that it has not been adopted,
and its adoption in any form would be subject to judicial review at
the request of Penn and Central. Moreover the usefulness of the
capital indemnity approach has been vigorously challenged by C
& O and N & W. They assert that the indemnity will not
succeed in keeping the three
Page 386 U. S. 420
roads in viable condition, since traffic, once diverted, is
likely to stay diverted. The ICC should not, they claim, rely upon
an indemnity provision which fails to accomplish the continuation
of service it has found to be so essential. C & O-B & O
Brief on Capital Loss Indemnification, F.D. No. 21989, November 28,
1966. In this connection, they raise once again the specter of an N
& W-C & O merger, arguing that their proposal is the only
acceptable solution to the inclusion problem.
There appears to be some merit in the arguments that some sort
of capital indemnity is necessary to assure the attainability of
equitable terms for inclusion. While Commissioner Webb left to the
ICC in the Penn-Central case the issue whether capital loss
indemnification should be paid, he did conclude that inclusion of
the three roads
"in the system chosen by the Commission in the furtherance of
national transportation objectives should not be on terms which
reflect any diminution of capital value attributable to the traffic
diversion impact of the other system. In other words, the
petitioners should not be penalized for anticipating the
Commission's desire to preserve rail competition in the territory
they serve."
N & W Inclusion Report at 28. His valuation of the smaller
roads, therefore, did not reflect the diminution of value
anticipated to be caused by Penn-Central, and his apparent
conviction was that equitable terms could not be worked out on any
other basis unless a capital indemnity were granted.
See
id. at 43. [
Footnote 2/18]
In light of these conclusions, it can
Page 386 U. S. 421
readily be seen that the unresolved issue of capital indemnity
is important, and therefore that the objections to it create
uncertainty on this score, as well as over whether equitable terms
are possible.
What the ICC has done here by deferring inclusion of the three
roads is to defer confronting numerous difficult and important
issues which cast substantial doubt upon whether the roads can be
included in any major system contemplated for the purpose
consistent with the public interest and on equitable terms. In the
process, it has approved an irreversible consolidation which it
found to be in the public interest only upon the premise that the
affected roads would be included in a major system. By proceeding
in this manner, the ICC has, in my view, failed to fulfill its
fundamental duty to determine whether consolidations are in the
public interest on the basis of all the relevant facts. The
problems created by a required inclusion obviously are relevant to
the question whether the proposal which makes their inclusion
necessary is in the public interest. And where, as here, the many
problems created are serious and far-reaching, the Commission must
consider them before arriving at and implementing with finality its
ultimate conclusion.
While I consider it the ICC's responsibility to weigh the
feasibility and effects of an inclusion it deems required by the
public interest, I recognize the importance of leaving great
flexibility with the agency to deal with emergency situations in
order to avoid serious damage to the national transportation
system. But it is clear there is no pressing need here which could
justify the ICC's action. Commission counsel represent in this
Court that the ICC has found
"that the merger would
Page 386 U. S. 422
result in substantially improved service for the shipping public
and in annual savings of at least $80 million for the merged
company. . . ."
Brief of the I.C.C., p. 52. Improved service and economics are
commonly the claimed results of rail consolidations, and
proportionately the improvements and savings anticipated in this
case are no more substantial than in many other mergers. Moreover,
the anticipated $80,000,000 annual saving is to be reached about
eight years after consummation, 327 I.C.C. at 501, and even this
estimate does not take into account the sharp curtailment that
would result from the interim protective conditions which were
formulated with the avowed intention of maintaining the
pre-consummation
status quo, see 327 I.C.C. at 532.
[
Footnote 2/19] The ICC stressed
the financial condition of Penn and Central, including their
"persistently low rates of return" and their need for improved
equipment, as a ground for authorizing immediate consummation, 327
I.C.C. at 501-502, but, once again, this is a stock reason for
merger, usually alleged by at least one party. The fact that a
merger will provide financial assistance militates in favor of
approval, but it is only one of the many important factors which
must be considered, and, in the case of Penn and Central, this
point has lost much of its force, since both have had substantial
and consistent increases in their earnings in recent years.
See Brief of the I.C.C., p. 55. While this does not
necessarily lessen the long-term
Page 386 U. S. 423
need for consolidation, it does show there is little need for
immediate consummation on this ground.
The argument that the survival of the New Haven depends upon
undelayed consummation is not pressed here with the same intensity
with which it was embraced at the agency level.
See 328
I.C.C. at 312. Judge Friendly's opinion put this matter in proper
perspective by pointing out that it is
"unrealistic to suppose that inclusion of NH in the
Transportation Company can be accomplished before conclusion of the
Commission's reconsideration in this case. . . ."
259 F. Supp. at 973. The tenable argument here is that the
longer consummation is delayed, the more difficult will become the
task of NH's Trustees in reorganizing the company and the more
possible it becomes, due to some unanticipated change of
circumstance, that the merger may fall through entirely. While
every effort consistent with the public interest should be made to
protect the invaluable services the NH performs, the difficulties
anticipated are largely speculative. If this merger is to benefit
its proponents as greatly as they contend, it is no fragile
package. And although no unnecessary risks should be taken even
with a plan so enthusiastically supported and elaborately designed,
a proper concern for the public interest and for the protection of
the roads threatened by this merger should have led the ICC to
delay consummation.
The projected effects of Penn-Central on E-L, D & H and B
& M are anything but speculative. Those roads unquestionably
will be destroyed unless included in a major system, and the fact
that inclusion somewhere is implicitly assured us may be further
cause for concern, in light of the contemplated alternatives and of
the difficulty and consequences involved in the adoption of either
of them. If the ICC should ever be allowed to depart from its
statutory duty to consider all the relevant factors before
determining the public interest, it certainly should
Page 386 U. S. 424
not be upon the mere recitation of factors favorable to the
plan's adoption and of speculative dangers and the inconveniences
of private parties. The reason Congress has ordered that all
factors, including the effects of inclusion or failure to include,
be considered is to avoid danger to the public interest caused by
precipitate action, and there is more than ample evidence of danger
to the public interest in this case to warrant unhesitating
enforcement of Congress' directive.
III
The ICC argues that to delay the merger until the three roads
are assured inclusion would amount to a consolidation of the
proceedings in Penn-Central with the N & W inclusion
proceeding, at least for decisional purposes, and that this would
constitute a return to the "master plan" approach for railroad
unification
"unsuccessfully tried under the Transportation Act of 1920, and
would probably preclude the consummation of any major rail
unification, regardless of its merits."
Brief of the ICC, pp. 43-44. The Commission points out that it
"consistently has refused to consolidate the Eastern railroad
merger or control proceedings,"
id. at 48, and that the
Government's position here is the same as its unsuccessful
contentions for consolidation in the C & O-B & O and N
& W-Nickel Plate proceedings.
It is difficult to understand exactly what the ICC is arguing.
Certainly no one contends that the Commission is required, as it
was by the Act of 1920, to
"prepare and adopt a plan for the consolidation of the railway
properties of the continental United States into a limited number
of systems."
41 Stat. 481. Nor is it argued that the ICC is required to draw
up regional plans for consolidation.
On the other hand, it can hardly be said that the ICC is
powerless to consolidate proceedings, or for that matter,
Page 386 U. S. 425
to plan or to take any other reasonable step to enable itself to
perform its statutory obligation as custodian for the development
in the public interest of a national transportation system; that
the ICC is no longer told to plan does not mean it is unable to do
so when planning is necessary to fulfill its duties. The ICC is
told in the 1940 Act to
"conduct its proceedings under any provision of law in such
manner as will best conduce to the proper dispatch of business and
to the ends of justice,"
49 U.S.C. § 17(3), and it has, in fact, recognized that it
possesses
"the power in appropriate circumstances either to consolidate
proceedings in which the issues are similar or closely related, or
to postpone a particular decision when so required by the public
interest."
C & O -- Control, supra, 317 I.C.C. at 266. But,
apart from this explicit power, it is clear from a close appraisal
of the 1920 and 1940 Acts that the ICC's responsibilities are far
broader now, and, therefore, that it would be anomalous to find in
a comparison of these two pieces of legislation a basis for the
sweeping contention that the Commission can no longer plan.
The 1920 and 1940 Acts are similar in several respects. Under
both, applications for consolidation are initiated by the parties
and approved if found to be in the public interest, and under
neither may a consolidation be compelled. The salient difference is
that, under the 1920 Act, the ICC was required to draw up a plan
for all the Nation's railroad properties, and was called upon to
judge the proposals for railroad consolidation filed with it by
private parties in terms of the master plan it had created.
Proposals that advanced the plan's fulfillment stood a far greater
chance of approval than those that did not, and only in this sense
could it be said that parties were unable to initiate plans of
their own choice. While the planning function is broad
procedurally, however, it was designed to serve only limited ends.
Congress'
Page 386 U. S. 426
concern was "largely with financial problems," its chief aim
being to overcome the problem which arose from the fact that
"rates which would provide reasonable returns for strong systems
would not permit weak lines to survive, and, if rates were raised
to take care of the weak roads, the more prosperous roads would
enjoy excessive returns."
Leonard, Railroad Consolidation Under the Transportation Act of
1920, at 57, 59 (1946). The decision to encourage consolidation
into a limited number of systems was, of course, designed to
establish a stronger railroad industry, but it
"was not grounded on the premise that economics from operation
and the avoidance of competitive wastes would be the principal
means of insuring an efficient and economic railway system . . . ,
but, rather, on the conclusion that the financial prosperity of
rail carriers would be promoted and effectuated if the weak and the
strong railroads which exist side by side in the same territory
were to be consolidated into balanced railroad systems with respect
to earning power."
S.Rep. No. 445, Report on the National Transportation Policy by
the Special Study Group of the Committee on Commerce, 87th Cong.,
1st Sess., p. 234 (1961). In fact, the Act specifically directed
the ICC, in drawing up the plan, to preserve competition as fully
as possible and to maintain existing routes and channels of trade
wherever practicable. In other words, although the ICC was directed
to draw up a national plan against which it was to judge whether
applications for consolidation were in the public interest, the
judgment was to be made rather mechanically, and the plan itself
was to be designed to achieve limited, primarily financial
goals.
In contrast, as we have seen, the purposes sought through
consolidation under the 1940 Act are wide-ranging, and the public
interest includes consideration of all factors relating to the
National Transportation
Page 386 U. S. 427
Policy. Financial manipulation was deemed inadequate, and the
ICC was ordered to weigh numerous, often conflicting,
considerations. In light of this "enlarging of the factors or
values which an agency must take into consideration," Reich, The
Law of the Planned Society, 75 Yale L.J. 1227, 1248 (1966), it
seems incongruous to assert that the change from the 1920 Act
approach to that of the 1940 Act signifies a change from planning
to strictly
ad hoc adjudication.
It should be clear, in fact, from a full consideration of the
ICC's powers, and of the consequences of failing to use those
powers, that consolidation and the use of other procedural
techniques is not only within the agency's authority, but is often
essential if it is to fulfill its function as guardian of the
public interest. Section 17(3), referred to above, appears
sufficient to authorize the Commission to adopt procedures
calculated to develop complete records with respect to the public
interest in particular merger proceedings, and to coordinate
separate merger proceedings when necessary to secure the best
possible results. Tucker & O'Brien, The Public Interest in
Railroad Mergers, 42 B.U.L.Rev. 160, 184 (1962). Within the context
of a case-by-case approach, the Commission is authorized under §
16(11) to
"employ such attorneys as it finds necessary . . . for proper
representation of the public interests in investigations made by it
or cases or proceedings pending before it, whether at the
commission's own instance or upon complaint . . . ,"
and it has done so. [
Footnote
2/20] It may and often has called upon its staff to develop
information in pending cases. In the N & W-Nickel Plate
proceeding, for example, it called upon its Bureau of Inquiry and
Compliance to study
Page 386 U. S. 428
and report on which railroads would be affected by the merger.
It possesses, with appropriate safeguards, broad powers of official
notice, [
Footnote 2/21] and, in
recent merger cases, it has frequently referred to facts and
arguments in other, related merger cases. Moreover, like most other
agencies assigned similar functions, it has broad investigative
power, which may be used in the context of adjudication or simply
to provide background. Section 13(2) confers
"full authority and power at any time to institute an inquiry,
on its own motion, in any case and as to any matter or thing . . .
concerning which any question may arise under any of the provisions
of this chapter, or relating to the enforcement of any of the
provisions of this chapter,"
which includes § 5. The ICC has resorted to various forms of
investigations and studies to enable itself to perform its
obligations.
See generally S.Doc. No. 10, Monograph of the
Attorney General's Committee on Administrative Procedure, Part 11:
Interstate Commerce Commission, 77th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 93-96
(1941). Particularly noteworthy is the Staff Study on Railroad
Consolidations and the Public Interest, by the Commission's Bureau
of Transport Economics and Statistics, which contains an analysis
of the Commission's decisions in railroad consolidation cases.
Reprinted as Exhibit 11, Hearings before the Subcommittee on
Antitrust and Monopoly on S. 3097, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 2
(1962).
Finally, although the ICC does not promulgate general plans for
consolidation, it has the power under § 5(2)(b) to approve
consolidations "subject to such terms and conditions and such
modifications as it shall find to be just and reasonable. . . ."
This authority encompasses the power under § 5(2)(d) to make
inclusion of a railroad a prerequisite to approval of a merger, and
it does
Page 386 U. S. 429
not depend upon the request of any private party involved. It
has been broadly construed to enable the ICC to implement
previously found conditions and to cope with changed circumstances,
e.g., United States v. Rock Island Motor Transit Co.,
340 U. S. 419;
American Trucking Assns. v. United States, 355 U.
S. 141;
American Trucking Assns. v. Frisco Co.,
358 U. S. 133, and
the Commission has applied this power, when it has seen fit to do
so, with great liberality. It has even gone to the point of
conditioning its approval of applications to consolidate upon
actions to be taken by railroads not even party to the proceeding.
[
Footnote 2/22] In sum, the
Commission's practice certainly is not consistent with its
assertion here that its "only
planning' power" under the 1940
Act is to include railroads in the region. Brief of the ICC, p.
46.
The ICC is preeminently an agency
"directly and immediately concerned with the outcome of
virtually all proceedings conducted before it. It is not intended
to be a passive arbiter, but the 'guardian of the general public
interest,' with a duty to see that this interest is at all times
effectively protected."
H.R.Doc. No 678, Practices and Procedures of Governmental
Control of Transportation, 78th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 53 (1944);
see Southern Class Rate Investigation, 100 I.C.C. 513,
603. It is empowered to investigate and gather evidence beyond that
presented by the parties where exercise of that power will advance
the determination of what best
Page 386 U. S. 430
serves the public interest. [
Footnote 2/23] To the same end, the agency has wide
latitude in fashioning procedures, and a broad power to condition
its approval of proposals. In other words, the ICC is not the
prisoner of the parties' submissions. [
Footnote 2/24] Rather, the agency's duty is to weigh
alternatives and make its choice according to its judgment how best
to achieve and advance the goals of the National Transportation
Policy. [
Footnote 2/25]
Page 386 U. S. 431
I am therefore not reassured by the ICC's representation that it
has "consistently" refused to consolidate the eastern railroad
merger proceedings for any purpose or to any degree. The ICC's
prior refusals to consolidate are entirely distinguishable, since
none of them entailed the risk under the Commission's own findings
that a railroad performing essential public service could be
destroyed. [
Footnote 2/26] But,
more generally, while consolidated consideration provides no simple
answer to the ICC's problems,
see generally Shapiro, The
Choice of Rulemaking or Adjudication in the Development of
Administrative Policy, 78 Harv.L.Rev. 921 (1965), the very
complexity of its task suggests that consolidated consideration may
be a useful procedural device, short of an investigation or
prearranged plan, for offsetting at least in part the disadvantages
inherent in the isolated case-by-case approach, both in formulating
and applying policy.
Although a case-by-case adjudication may offer advantages in
flexibility and continual exposure to concrete situations, "the
disadvantages of developing policy through a sequence of limited
cases are both numerous and impressive." H.R.Doc. No. 678,
supra, p. 81. A significant disadvantage is that
individual proceedings "seldom if ever produce sufficiently
comprehensive records for the adequate solution of questions of
major importance."
Id. at 82. Obviously, without all the
relevant facts, the chance of a satisfactory disposition is
diminished. Although the ICC has tools to assemble complete factual
records, it employed virtually none of them in these highly
interrelated proceedings, [
Footnote
2/27] including the
Page 386 U. S. 432
power to consolidate the proceedings on common issues. Rather,
the cases have been rigidly segregated, leading the ICC to resort
to extraordinary interim conditions instead of resolving
definitively the fate of the three threatened roads. This has had
the undesirable effect of enabling each of the major carriers to
control the basis for judgment by deciding what evidence to offer
or withhold, depending on which course best served its own
interest. Evidence of competitive impact has been withheld in one
proceeding only to appear at later proceedings
Page 386 U. S. 433
in the form of evidence that the company affected must be
permitted to merge with another company to protect itself, or that
the anticompetitive impact of the later merger will be limited in
light of the increased strength and ability to compete of the
companies already allowed to merge. [
Footnote 2/28] The carriers have been well aware of the
opportunity the Commission's practice provides them, as is
illustrated by the statement of the Chairman of the Board of
Pennsylvania that,
"if the C. & O.-B. & O. is approved, that is going to
help the Nickel-Plate case, and if that is approved, it is going to
help our case, going to go right around the circle."
Hearings,
supra, n. 24, at 397
Page 386 U. S. 434
It is not that the ICC has been unaware of what has been going
on. Commissioner Tucker, in the first of the recent trilogy,
pointed out that the
"failure of the large eastern railroads to present evidence
against consolidation is . . . a natural consequence of their own
self-interest, which dictates a reciprocity of silence."
C & O -- Control, supra, 317 I.C.C. at 326. The
fact is that, despite some lip service to the contrary, [
Footnote 2/29] the Commission has
proceeded under the assumption that competitive impact is to be
evaluated with the position of the railroads affected very much in
mind. Thus, the Examiners in this case, when called upon by the
Justice Department to weigh the possibly serious adverse effect of
Penn-Central upon N & W, C & O-B & O and others,
pointed out that the roads allegedly affected had introduced no
evidence of adverse effect. They added, realistically and
revealingly:
"We are fully cognizant of the fact that, in the evolving merger
picture in the northeast section of the nation, the carriers
involved may well have refrained from participation in these
proceedings or influenced their subsidiaries not to participate on
the grounds that they did not desire to upset their own merger
program. Such action, however, infers a managerial decision by each
that the anticipated benefits from its individual merger program
will
Page 386 U. S. 435
outweigh any injury or harm which may result from other merger
plans."
Penn-Central Report at 304. [
Footnote 2/30]
The approach which this statement and many of the Commission's
rulings and practices reveal is based upon a series of unacceptable
assumptions. It is simply unrealistic, for example, to believe that
all the railroads will always be correct in their estimate even of
their own best interests. When a railroad has incorrectly estimated
its self-interest, moreover, its reaction may well upset the
private agreements or understandings upon which the Commission has
in effect allowed its findings to rest. Thus, when E-L realized
that Penn-Central might be approved before it had secured voluntary
inclusion in N & W, it abandoned its agreement with N & W,
upon which the Commission relied, and petitioned for inclusion in
Penn-Central, thereby setting into motion the controversy in this
case.
See 324 I.C.C. at 61-62 (representation of counsel
quoted in dissenting opinion). Most recently, C & O-B & O,
and their family lines, sought to reopen
Penn-Central to
introduce evidence of traffic diversion. The Commission observed,
in refusing to hear the evidence, that the Examiners' findings that
the net
Page 386 U. S. 436
effect of the merger would not be detrimental to these carriers
or to their ability to provide adequate service
"are as much based on a failure of the several petitioners to
come forward with assertions or proof of injurious traffic
diversion as on any affirmative showing of no effect."
328 I.C.C. at 317. For the first time revealing indignation
toward a practice long condoned, the ICC stated that the "measured
and deliberate silence" of the railroads at the hearing
supports
"the inference that they saw more to be gained thereby in their
own system-building aspirations than would result from forceful
opposition likely to arouse counter opposition. Now, with the N
& W-Nickel Plate merger and the C & O-B & O control
transactions safely beyond challenge, . . . petitioners have
nothing to lose, and perhaps much to gain, by breaking their
silence."
Ibid.
Ultimately, however, the reason reliance upon the estimates of
railroads of their own best interests is objectionable is simply
that the best interests of the railroads are not necessarily
consistent with the public interest, and it is the latter which the
Commission is directed to advance. It may be, as Commissioner
Tucker stated early in this "gigantic game of dominoes" the
Commission has been playing, 327 I.C.C. at 550,
"that each carrier has the unalienable private right to abdicate
its prerogatives to oppose any consolidation. It is the primary
responsibility of the Commission, however, to preserve the
development of a sound transportation system in the public
interest, and, where an application may offer the possibilities of
public injury, the Commission must strive to obtain a record which
comprehensively covers public considerations."
C & O -- Control, 317 I.C.C. at 326.
See
generally The Railroad Merger Problem, Report of the
Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate
Page 386 U. S. 437
Judiciary Committee, 88th Cong., 1st Sess. (Comm.Print 1963).
The commendable industrial statesmanship demonstrated by the
railroads on many occasions in these recent proceedings only
serves, because of the cohesion this demonstrates,
see
Jaffe,
op. cit. supra, p. 405. at 11-13, to aggravate the
danger that "grows out of the tendency of these giant corporations
to compromise their own differences at the expense of the
unorganized public," 2 Davis,
op. cit. supra, 386
U.S. 372fn2/21|>n. 21, at 378. The regulatory agency must be
the bulwark against such compromise. It is "a requisite for
administrative viability," [
Footnote
2/31] that "[t]he outlook of the Commission and its powers must
be greater than the interest of the railroads or of that which may
affect those interests."
I.C.C. v. Chicago, R.I. & P. R.
Co., 218 U. S. 88,
218 U. S. 103.
See Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference v. F.P.C., 354
F.2d 608 (C.A.2d Cir.),
cert. denied, 384 U.S. 941.
This merger may well be in the public interest, as well as in
the interests of the railroads involved. But the Commission has
failed to go about deciding this question in a manner designed to
accomplish its statutory responsibility. "Deference to
administrative decisionmaking assumes procedures which assure a
fair hearing to the affected interests. . . ." Jaffe,
op. cit.
supra at 566.
"As soon as the search for the public interest, even seemingly,
becomes a secondary consideration in cases involving more than the
adjudication of private rights, no matter how conclusive the
exigencies of the situation
Page 386 U. S. 438
appear, the independent Commission is doomed to impotency as an
instrument of government."
C & O -- Control, 317 I.C.C. at 297 (dissenting
opinion). [
Footnote 2/32]
[Appendices A and B follow this page. (Omitted)]
[
Footnote 2/1]
Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co. -- Control -- Baltimore & O.
R. Co., 317 I.C.C. 261,
sustained sub nom. Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employees v. United States, 221 F. Supp.
19 (D.C.E.D. Mich.),
aff'd per curiam, 375 U.
S. 216.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. and New York, C. & St. L.R. Co.
-- Merger, 324 I.C.C. 1.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Pennsylvania and Central claim we should not pass upon the
Department of Justice's contention that the Commission should have
delayed consummation until inclusion of the smaller roads in a
major system was assured. The issue is, however, presented by the
ICC itself, in its statement of Questions Presented, where it
recites that whether the District Court erred in refusing to enjoin
consummation pending assurance of inclusion is a question embraced
within the general question presented on these appeals. Brief of
the ICC, p. 4. A number of the railroad appellants, moreover, claim
they have properly presented the question of delay pending
inclusion. These representations amply fulfill the requirement of
this Court's Rule 15(1)(c)(1), and the point has, in fact, been
fully briefed and argued.
Neither is there merit to the claim that this issue, clearly
raised before the ICC, 327 I.C.C. at 528, was not raised before the
District Court. Counsel for D & H complained that the
Commission found
"the only way the D & H could be protected is through
inclusion in some system, but they have not yet made a finding . .
. as to whether our inclusion in any system is consistent with the
public interest,"
Transcript, p. 58, and counsel for C & O was unable to
answer meaningfully Judge Friendly's comment that his "position is
really that the merger cannot be consummated until all these other
proceedings are carried to a conclusion . . . ,"
id. at
80. The District Court explicitly rejected "the claims that
consummation of the merger should be deferred until conclusion of
all pending rail merger proceedings. . . .
259 F.
Supp. 964, 972.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Although this case arises as an appeal from the District Court's
denial of motions for interlocutory injunction, the parties
recognize that the lawfulness of the ICC's order permitting
immediate consummation of the merger is in issue before this
Court.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The ICC's most recent pronouncement on the issue is in
Great
N. P. & B. L.R. Co. -- Merger, F.D. No. 21478, p. ___,
decided March 31, 1966, reconsideration granted January 4,
1967:
"The legislative history of section 5 clearly shows that the
Congress did not adopt a policy fostering or encouraging railroad
unifications. It was the Transportation Act of 1920, not the
Transportation Act of 1940, that embodied a policy favoring
railroad consolidations. . . . No such policy is expressed in
section 5. To interpret section 5 as implying such a policy is a
perversion of legislative history and intent. The public interest
scale is balanced. It is not to be tipped by the slightest
presumption for or against merger."
It is meaningless, of course, to contend that the Act favors
unifications that are otherwise consistent with the public
interest; it also disfavors unifications inconsistent with the
public interest.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. -- Control, 271 I.C.C. 63,
146.
See also Detroit, T. & I. R. Co. -- Control, 275
I.C.C. 455, 489,
sustained sub nom. New York, C. & St.L. R.
Co. v. United States, 95 F. Supp. 811 (D.C.N.D. Ohio).
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Staff Study by the Commission's Bureau of Transport
Economics and Statistics on "Railroad Consolidations and the Public
Interest" (p. 46), accurately labels this factor "a highly
important criterion, since it involves the basic problem of
competition among railroads." Reprinted as Exhibit 11, Hearings
before the Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly on S. 3097, 87th
Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 2, p. 859 (1962).
[
Footnote 2/8]
When E-L, for example, withdrew its petition for inclusion in N
& W, the Commission expressly stated that the Transportation
Act of 1940
"does not limit our participation in carrier-initiated
consolidations to passing upon a proposal on a 'take it or leave
it' basis. We are specifically enjoined to consider, among other
things, the effect . . . upon the public interest of the inclusion,
or failure to include, other railroads in the territory involved in
the proposed transactions."
324 I.C.C. at 26.
Accord, N.Y. Central Securities Corp. v.
United States, 287 U. S. 12,
287 U. S. 28;
Toledo, P. & W. R. Co. -- Control, supra, 295 I.C.C.
at 529.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Accord, Alton R. Co. -- Acquisition, 175 I.C.C. 301,
313, where the Commission later concluded, 189 I.C.C. 271, 285,
that the public convenience and necessity did not require
acquisition of the short lines involved. This is also the course
followed by the ICC with respect to the New Haven in the
Penn-Central proceeding.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Accord, New York, C. & St. L.R. Co. -- Control, 224
I.C.C. 259, 269, where the Commission, in approving a control
application, imposed a condition requiring the applicant to abide
by its findings concerning whether the applicant should acquire
certain affected short lines.
[
Footnote 2/11]
In
New York, C. & St. L.R. Co. -- Control, supra,
one of the two short lines seeking inclusion introduced no evidence
at all, while the other made an inadequate showing that the public
interest required its preservation and no showing whatever that the
proposed control transaction would result in diversion of its
traffic. 224 I.C.C. at 266-268. Going out of its way "to the end
that the intents and purposes of section 5 may be accomplished . .
. ," the ICC left open the door to the short lines' inclusion if
they could demonstrate its necessity or desirability. 224 I.C.C. at
269. Other examples of deferral of agency action cited by appellees
are inapposite. The ICC has deferred employee protection, reserving
jurisdiction to impose necessary terms and conditions.
A.C.
Allyn & Co. -- Control, 50 M.C.C. 305, 310-311. The
likelihood that this sort of problem will have unexpected
consequences is very slight. In
Atlantic Rfg. Co. v. Public
Serv. Comm'n, 360 U. S. 378,
360 U. S. 392,
the Court ruled the FPC could issue a certificate without making a
final determination of the vital matter of price, so long as the
certificate was conditioned so "that the consuming public may be
protected while the justness and reasonableness of the price fixed
by the parties is being determined" in subsequent hearings. No
injury was contemplated, and the ultimate issue was not likely to
be prejudged.
[
Footnote 2/12]
The Examiners found it "highly likely that the public interest"
lies in the direction of inclusion in N & W. Penn-Central
Report, F.D. No. 21989, Feb. 26, 1965, at 415. The Commission had
indicated in the N & W-Nickel Plate proceeding its
receptiveness to inclusion in N & W, and it postponed
consideration of inclusion in Penn-Central pending the outcome of
the N & W inclusion proceeding.
[
Footnote 2/13]
The Examiners stated:
"No consideration has been given to the effect of the proposed
inclusion here of the D & H, B & M and/or E-L upon
competition, and no effort has been made to assess or accommodate
the antitrust laws in light of such action. We believe resolution
of such issues would be premature."
Penn-Central Report at 418. The Commission adopted these
findings, 327 I.C.C. at 481-482, and explicitly reserved, until
after inclusion in N & W was denied, the question
"whether inclusion of any one or all of E-L, B & M and D
& H in the Transportation Company's system would be consistent
with the public interest . . . ,"
327 I.C.C. at 531.
[
Footnote 2/14]
An elimination of competition in New England and New York was
not among even the possible anticompetitive effects of the merger
contemplated and weighed. To the contrary, the Examiners drew up a
chart (Appendix T-2 of their Report) which incorporated the three
roads in the N & W system and which they used to measure
competitive impact. Moreover, the Examiners recommended as a
condition of approval that Penn agree to grant trackage rights to N
& W between Hagerstown, Maryland, N & W's northernmost
terminus in the East, and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, the
southwestern terminus of D & H operations, thereby connecting
the roads and enabling them to compete with Penn-Central for
traffic between northern New York-New England and the
South-southwest. Penn-Central Report at 429-430. The Commission
found it unnecessary to uphold the Examiners' action, since the
parties had voluntarily entered into an agreement effectuating the
Examiners' views, and since an application for Commission approval
of the agreement had not yet been filed. 327 I.C.C. at 528.
Finally, in appraising the effect of the merger upon service to New
York City, the Examiners anticipated that E-L and N & W
together would provide one line of competition. Penn-Central Report
at 433. The Commission likewise assumed in appraising
anticompetitive effect that E-L would continue to compete with the
applicants in the New York port area, and specifically cited as an
example of continuing lines of competition that
"N & W can join with E-L, LV [the Lehigh Valley], D & H
and B & M, among others, in handling transcontinental traffic
to and from the Port of N.Y. and New England. . . ."
327 I.C.C. at 517, 514.
[
Footnote 2/15]
In refusing to recommend requiring B & M's inclusion,
Commissioner Webb pointed out that such a course would expose N
& W to serious risk,
"and would foreclose B & M from seeking inclusion in the
Penn-Central system or in the proposed N & W-C & O system
on terms which, by reason of its strategic value or improved
earnings, are more favorable than those justified by the record
herein."
N & W Inclusion Report at 154. An N & W-C & O system
would, as the Commissioner recognized, be far more able financially
to absorb the risk of including B & M, and would be willing to
offer more than B & M's actual value, possibly out of the
savings contemplated in the N & W-C & O merger. In fact,
under the plan offered by N & W-C & O for merger and
inclusion, B & M shareholders would receive almost twice the
actual value of their holdings, and, significantly, Commissioner
Webb settled on this same amount as the minimum rate which N &
W must pay if it decides to absorb B & M.
Id. at
156.
[
Footnote 2/16]
N & W Inclusion Report at 43.
See 386
U.S. 372fn2/18|>note 18,
infra for further
explanation.
[
Footnote 2/17]
Counsel for Penn and Central represented in the District Court
that he construed the traffic conditions to prevent Penn-Central
from using its solicitation force to get traffic normally moving on
the lines of the three roads routed to the lines of Penn-Central.
Transcript, p. 132.
[
Footnote 2/18]
In working out the value of E-L's stock for the purpose of an
exchange with N & W, Commissioner Webb, applying the principle
of reciprocal adjustments, refused to deduct from E-L's value the
estimated impact of Penn-Central without also deducting from N
& W's value the estimated impact of Penn-Central. Since N &
W submitted no evidence, he proceeded upon the assumption that the
impact upon N & W would be proportionate with the estimated
impact upon E-L. The result of this was to enable him to discount
completely E-L's capital loss. If this method of valuation were
approved, he noted, "the question of capital loss indemnification .
. . [in Penn-Central] will become moot."
Id. at 47.
[
Footnote 2/19]
In fact, the more effective are the protective conditions, the
greater will be their interference with achievement of the planned
economics and improvements. Penn Vice-President Large recently
testified at the reopened hearings that "the first two million
dollars we save as a result of merger is a good five y ears away."
Transcript of Hearing of December 15, 1966, F.D. 21989, p. 22343.
Qualified by the statement that he had made no studies on the
matter, he testified that he saw "no chance of any substantial
savings in the next two years."
Id. at 22344.
[
Footnote 2/20]
Under this power, the Commission called upon Mr. Louis D.
Brandeis, later Mr. Justice Brandeis, to represent the public in a
general rate increase case.
The Five Per Cent Case, 31
I.C.C. 351.
[
Footnote 2/21]
See generally 2 Davis, Administrative Law §§
15.01-15.14 (1958).
[
Footnote 2/22]
In the Penn-Central case, the Examiners recommended, as a
condition to approval of the merger, that Penn be required to sell
the Lehigh Valley to C & O-B & O, if such sale were later
found to be in the public interest, in order to assure New York
City an additional competitive line. Penn-Central Report, at
434-435. The Commission felt it did not have to pass upon this
recommendation, since Penn agreed after the Examiners' Report was
issued to sell LV to C & O-B & O. 327 I.C.C. at 517.
[
Footnote 2/23]
"A regulatory body such as the Interstate Commerce Commission
cannot properly discharge its duty if it remains ignorant of
relevant facts simply because they were not introduced in evidence.
The Commission should itself supply deficiencies in the record. It
should bring to light material which the parties have either
overlooked or have willfully failed to call to its attention. It
should aid those parties who, through lack of resources, are unable
adequately to present their cases. It should make full use of the
expert knowledge of commissioners and staff, and of the mass of
transportation information that it has accumulated through the
years."
H.R.Doc. No. 678,
supra, p. 70.
See Eastern-Central
Motor Carriers Assn. v. United States, 321 U.
S. 194,
321 U. S.
208-210,
321 U. S. 212,
321 U. S.
216-217.
[
Footnote 2/24]
It was the position of the Chairman of the Board of Pennsylvania
before Congress that the ICC should leave the fate of the smaller
roads to be worked out after the principal mergers had been
approved. Hearings on S. 3097 before the Subcommittee on Antitrust
and Monopoly of the Senate Judiciary Committee, 87th Cong., 2d
Sess., p. 385 (1962). He testified that, if an attempt was made to
stop the three main proceedings, the entire process "would stop,
there is no doubt about it,"
id. at 384, and responded to
the query whether the ICC "has no alternative but to buy the
package or nothing at all," that "It is the fact . . . ,"
id. at 397.
[
Footnote 2/25]
There are indications that the ICC has planned all along for
three systems. The most striking of these is the use by the
Penn-Central Examiners of a chart to evaluate the merger's
anticompetitive effect which accounts for all the smaller roads.
Penn-Central Report, Appendix T-2. It need hardly be said that the
ICC would be proceeding unlawfully if it had determined, without
notice or hearing, that a three-system structure was essential, and
had then gone through the motions of adjudication.
[
Footnote 2/26]
The ICC made no finding that either C & O-B & O or N
& W-Nickel Plate would lead to the destruction of any other
road.
See 317 I.C.C. at 265-266, 282; 324 I.C.C. at
27-31.
[
Footnote 2/27]
There is abundant evidence that the three recent proceedings are
highly interrelated. Central petitioned for a general Commission
investigation during the
C & O-B & O proceeding,
alleging that the ICC should not upset the existing competitive
balance before evaluating all the facts and determining the part
each proposal should play in the solution of the eastern railroad
problem. Numerous other parties in that case also petitioned for
consolidation of the proceedings, either for hearing or decision,
with N & W-Nickel Plate and later with Penn-Central.
In the
N & W case, the Justice Department argued
that the record was inadequate to determine competitive impact, and
stated
"that only through consolidation can a clear picture be obtained
of the effects of the Norfolk & Western-Nickel Plate and
Pennsylvania-Central mergers on the Erie-Lackawanna, the Delaware
& Hudson, and the New England lines."
The relationship between the N & W-Nickel Plate and
Penn-Central proceedings was palpable not only on the ground that
Nickel Plate competed with Central, but also because of the facts
that (1) Penn controlled N & W, and had taken the position that
it would divest only when it knew how it stood with respect to its
application to merge with Central, and (2) it was only through
Penn's acquiescence that N & W managed to contract for the
purchase of the 108-mile Sandusky line, which enabled it to link
its main line with Nickel Plate's main line, 324 I.C.C. at 74.
Commissioner Webb felt that neither the N & W inclusion
proceeding
"nor the Penn-Central case can be full understood if
consideration of one is divorced from the other. Unfortunately, the
Commission's action in deciding the cases separately has tended to
blur vital issues common to both proceedings."
N & W Inclusion Report at 23.
[
Footnote 2/28]
The best possible example is what happened in this case.
Evidence which Central might have presented earlier in the form of
an appraisal of the effects of C & O-B & O and N &
W-Nickel Plate upon its ability to operate took the form in the
Penn-Central proceeding of the contention that, without a
Penn-Central merger, both Penn and Central would be at a
competitive disadvantage, since neither
"separately would compare with C & O-B & O or N &
W-Nickel Plate in any element of strength, whether tested by
traffic volume, financial results, or the means for improving
service."
Brief of Applicants, F.D. Nos. 21989-21990, dated June 1, 1964,
p. 141. And in appraising the anticompetitive effects of a
Penn-Central merger, the Examiners in this case stated that,
"[a]lthough in certain . . . categories, the increases [to be
brought about by the merger] are significant, the degree of
relative dominance by P.R.R. in comparison with the other roads has
been decreased significantly as a result of the consummation of the
N & W and C & O-B & O transactions by reason of the
fact that these latter two systems have also increased their
relative share."
Penn-Central Report at 424. The Commission, too, indicated its
conviction that Penn-Central became more justifiable now that the
other systems were authorized, by citing "the growing strength of
the N & W and C & O-B & O systems" as a check against
possible abuse of economic power by Penn-Central, and by pointing
out "that applicants will face increasing competition from those
two greatly strengthened rail systems." 327 I.C.C. at 514, 519.
[
Footnote 2/29]
The Commission said, for example, in the C & O-B & O
case:
"Notwithstanding Central's withdrawal from these proceedings,
the effect of the proposed transaction on the operations and
traffic of Central and other carriers is an issue to be
considered."
317 I.C.C. at 280. It took insignificant steps, however, to
resolve the conflicts of evidence concerning competitive impact
upon Central, and failed entirely to weigh the combined effects on
Central of both C & 0-B & O and the pending N &
W-Nickel Plate merger.
See 317 I.C.C. at 319.
[
Footnote 2/30]
The District Court, in the
C & 0-B & O case,
took basically the same position when, in rejecting the Justice
Department's contention that the proceeding ought to be
consolidated with others, it considered "significant" the fact that
no railroad had joined the Department in its request, and stated
that self-interest would have required them to do so if the adverse
impact was actually serious. 221 F. Supp. at 31. The Penn-Central
Examiners were more accurate in their appraisal, since they
impliedly recognized that the decision not to appear meant only
that the road had decided the benefits from its own merger plans
outweighed the disadvantages to it of another merger, and not that
the railroad, in fact, contemplated no serious adverse impact upon
itself.
[
Footnote 2/31]
Huntington, The Marasmus of the ICC: The Commission, the
Railroads, and the Public Interest, 61 Yale L.J. 467, 509 (1952).
Compare Morgan, A Critique of "The Marasmus of the ICC:
The Commission, the Railroads, and the Public Interest," 62 Yale
L.J. 171 (1953).
[
Footnote 2/32]
I find it surprising that my Brother FORTAS refers to today's
decision as "a reversion to the days of judicial negation of
governmental action in the economic sphere." In those days, the
Court took a restricted view of the power of Congress and its
agencies to regulate our economy. That view "has long since been
discarded."
Ferguson v. Skrupa, 372 U.
S. 726,
372 U. S. 730.
Our position today, shared by the Solicitor General and the
Department of Justice, is not one of judicial negation, but of
insistence that the ICC fulfill Congress' directive to supervise in
the public interest the destiny of this Nation's transportation
system.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting in part.
While I agree with the Court that the terms of the conditions
which the Commission proposes to attach to this merger should be
known before we approve it, and while I join the opinion of the
Court, I would go much further. There are underlying issues brought
to us by a few of the parties which we should face. Those issues
present not the merits of the merger, but the adequacy of the
Commission's findings. It is, of course, not for us to determine
whether the merger is desirable or undesirable. We do not sit as a
planning agency. Nor are we entrusted with the task of making the
large policy decisions that underlie approval or disapproval of
this new concentration of transportation power and wealth. Our task
is one of review within the narrow confines of § 5(2)(c) of the Act
by which Congress has provided standards for the Commission. Our
sole task is to determine whether the Commission has satisfied, by
its findings, the standards provided by Congress. I do not think it
has.
A word should be said as to the background of this irresponsible
ICC decision. The Commission early indicated
Page 386 U. S. 439
its preference for a consolidation of most eastern rail carriers
into three systems: (1) C & O-B & O; (2) N & W-Nickel
Plate; (3) Penn-Central. The initiative was left to the carriers.
The Commission never sought, proposed, or examined into a master
plan. On June 27, 1960, it indeed denied a petition of New York
Central requesting the Commission
"to embark upon a general investigation of the unification,
consolidations, and mergers of the rail carriers within Central
Freight and Trunk Line Association territories"
with a view to formulating "principles by which both [the
Commission] and the carriers shall be governed in Section 5 cases
in the future." [
Footnote 3/1] The
making of mergers was based upon "attainable" alliances, rather
than upon "any truly balanced competitive basis." [
Footnote 3/2] Today's predicament was prophetically
forecast only a few years ago: [
Footnote 3/3]
"Although superior lineups may exist, it is suggested that it is
better to have 'attainable mergers' (approved by the big financial
interests), rather than none at all. However, the helter-skelter
method by which these mergers have become 'attainable' for decision
has developed into a complicated problem
Page 386 U. S. 440
for the Commission, particularly in the East. The eastern story
begins with the Commission's approval of the merger between the
Norfolk & Western and the Virginian in 1958, two successful and
competitive coal roads. By that merger, the New York Central lost
its access to the Pocahontas coal territory and it lost a friendly
connection which more or less had always been considered a Central
road. Thus, the Virginian, apparently not 'attainable' by the
Central was now placed in a position to enhance the competitive
power of the Pennsylvania (which controlled the Norfolk &
Western). This merger, plus the announced intention of the
Chesapeake & Ohio to acquire control of the Baltimore &
Ohio, sharpened the Central's interest in its competitive survival
against the massive Pennsylvania system, which was well entrenched
in the rich Pocahontas coal fields and in the Tidewater ports. The
Central tried to outpoint the C & O in getting control of the B
& O, but it lost out, largely because it couldn't convince
Swiss bankers of any financial advantage in the merger. Then the
Central negotiated with the C & O for a three-way merger
between the respective companies, which the Central's president
Perlman believed would provide a balanced, competitive system with
the Pennsylvania. At the same time, Mr. Perlman was stating that a
B & O-C & O union would seriously hurt the Central. In the
meantime, the Norfolk & Western had filed for merger with the
Nickel Plate, for a leasing of the Wabash, and for the purchase of
the Pennsylvania's Sandusky line. This was apparently the last
straw for the Central. It had been outmaneuvered, and thus did the
only thing left it could do -- agree to merge with the
Pennsylvania. That merger was 'attainable,' and is now the crucial
determinant of most rail reorganizations. "
Page 386 U. S. 441
The Commission denied requests to consolidate the eastern
consolidation proceedings for decision.
See Chesapeake &
Ohio R. Co. -- Control -- Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 317
I.C.C. 261, 266;
Norfolk & Western R. Co. and New York,
Chicago & St. Louis R. Co. -- Merger, 324 I.C.C. 1,
19.
The Commission's piecemeal, hands-off approach to the merger
problem is, however, not commanded by the Transportation Act of
1940. There is no evidence that Congress intended to remove
entirely the planning and policy function of the Commission with
respect to rail consolidations. Indeed, such a position ignores the
mandate of the preamble to the Act of 1940, which provides that its
provisions shall be administered with a view to
"promote . . . adequate, economical, and efficient service and
foster sound economic conditions in transportation and among the
several carriers, . . . all to the end of developing, coordinating,
and preserving a national transportation system."
As my Brother BRENNAN notes, the 1940 Act significantly
broadened the Commission's responsibility; it would be
"incongruous to assert that the change from the 1920 Act
approach to that of the 1940 Act signifies a change from planning
to strictly
ad hoc adjudication."
Ante, p.
386 U. S. 427.
The Commission has ample authority to insure a coordinated approach
to railroad consolidations; it is not straitjacketed by a
disjointed case-by-case approach. Yet the contrary attitude of the
Commission is evident in this case. The Department of Justice
argued that the eastern district should be served by four systems:
Penn, Central, C & O-B & O, and N & W, into which E-L
should be merged. If it was shown that the traffic could not
support four systems, the Department proposed that Penn should be
consolidated with N & W and Central with C & O-B & O.
The Commission's answer to this was that it could not compel the
alignments suggested by the Department of Justice,
Page 386 U. S. 442
and was limited to alignments suggested by the carriers. This
suggests, as my Brother BRENNAN indicates, a subservience of the
Commission to the railroads' estimates, the railroads' proposals,
the railroads' evaluations, the railroads' prophecies of the
future.
The C & O-B & O merger was approved, 317 I.C.C. 261,
sustained, 221 F.Supp. lg,
aff'd per curiam,
375 U. S. 216. The
N & W-Nickel Plate merger was approved, 324 I.C.C. l; but its
legality was not litigated. This is the first time the question of
legality has been presented to this Court after full argument.
Now, the "panic button" is being pushed here, and we, in turn,
are being asked to act hurriedly and become the final instrument
for foisting this new cartel on the country. Some cases generate
great pressures on the Court. Mr. Justice Holmes once remarked that
those cases make "bad law."
Northern Securities Co. v. United
States, 193 U. S. 197,
193 U. S.
400.
"For great cases are called great . . . because of some accident
of immediate overwhelming interest which appeals to the feelings
and distorts the judgment. These immediate interests exercise a
kind of hydraulic pressure which makes what previously was clear
seem doubtful, and before which even well settled principles of law
will bend."
Id. at
193 U. S.
400-401. We should, I submit, decline the present
invitation.
We are here concerned with § 5(2)(c) of the Act, which governs
railroad mergers and provides:
"In passing upon any proposed transaction under the provisions
of this paragraph, the Commission shall give weight to the
following considerations, among others: (1) The effect of the
proposed transaction upon adequate transportation service to the
public; (2) the effect upon the public interest of the inclusion,
or failure to include, other railroads in the territory involved in
the proposed transaction; (3) the total fixed charges resulting
from the proposed
Page 386 U. S. 443
transaction, and (4) the interest of the carrier employees
affected."
The four items listed are not exclusive, but only exemplary, for
they are only "considerations, among others."
The Commission's decision omits findings on many critical
questions, all of which are, I think, relevant if the statutory
ingredients of the public interest are to be evaluated under §
5(2)(c).
Mr. Justice Brandeis, writing for the Court in
United States
v. B. & O. R. Co., 293 U. S. 454,
293 U. S. 464,
emphasized that basic findings cannot be "left entirely to
inference." Mr. Justice Cardozo emphasized the point again in
United States v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R. Co.,
294 U. S. 499,
294 U. S. 511,
saying, "We must know what a decision means before the duty becomes
ours to say whether it is right or wrong." More recently, we
emphasized the necessity of findings to responsible judicial
review:
"Congress has also provided for Judicial review as an additional
assurance that its policies be executed. That review certainly
entails an inquiry as to whether the Commission has employed those
statutory standards. If that inquiry is halted at the threshold by
reason of the fact that it is impossible to say whether or not
those standards have been applied, then that review has indeed
become a perfunctory process. If, as seems likely here, an
erroneous statutory construction lies hidden in vague findings,
then statutory rights will be whittled away. An insistence upon the
findings which Congress has made basic and essential to the
Commission's action is no intrusion into the administrative domain.
It is no more and no less than an insistence upon the observance of
those standards which Congress has made 'prerequisite to the
operation of its statutory command.'
Opp Cotton Mills, Inc.
v. Administrator, 312 U.S.
Page 386 U. S. 444
126,
312 U. S. 144. Hence, that
requirement is not a mere formal one. Only when the statutory
standards have been applied can the question be reached as to
whether the findings are supported by evidence."
United States v. Carolina Carriers Corp., 315 U.
S. 475,
315 U. S.
489.
Many crucial issues, necessary for evaluation by the Commission,
are not even exposed in this record, let alone appraised. The
absence of these findings makes judicial review impossible.
What is the nature of this cartel? What financial interests
control it? Only one of the largest stockholders in the applicants
is known. The remaining largest stockholders are brokerage houses
and Swiss banks holding nominal title for their customers. The
beneficial owners are unknown, and apparently of no concern to the
Commission. The Commission was specifically requested to determine
who are the beneficial owners of the stock and who would control
the merged company. The Commission refused to accede to the
request. Nor did the Commission consider it relevant that, through
interlocking directorates, the proposed directors of the merged
company are directors of and interested in corporations which deal
with the railroads or that the control of railroads is steadily
being concentrated in the hands of banks, insurance companies, and
other large financial interests.
What effect on other roads within the area served by these
carriers will result from the merger? What effect on rail
competition outside the area will result? What will be the effect
on the towns served by the two roads? Will some dry up? Will the
community dislocations be offset by tangible gains?
None of these questions is answered by the Commission. Yet §
5(2)(c) of the Act, which governs railroad
Page 386 U. S. 445
mergers, demands findings on the various ingredients of the
public interest.
Concededly, community dislocations are relevant to the public
interest. For the Commission considered them crucial in concluding
that this merger would not be approved unless the New Haven were
included. [
Footnote 3/4] What is
the need of the New Haven? Its need is mirrored in the economic
wellbeing of the New England States. With a rundown carrier, how
can they attract new factories? Without new factories, how can
their employment needs be met?
If these basic community needs are relevant in the case of the
New Haven, why are they not relevant when we turn to the needs of
the communities served by the other roads which are about to be
merged? We are told that the three mergers mentioned, including the
present one, will result in many communities being reduced "from
main line to secondary line status" -- a condition
"particularly true with respect to the merger between the
Pennsylvania and New York Central, when most of the New York to
western gateway traffic will be routed over the Central's northern
route. [
Footnote 3/5]"
The healthy small towns stretched along these railroads may be
more important in terms of the "public interest" than the profit
and loss statements of the carriers, or the market prices of their
securities, or the power of the small oligarchy that will sit at
the head of this behemoth that will be turned loose. Rail mergers
are only one form of regional planning. And whatever the attitude
of the Commission may have been, it cannot, in light of § 5(2)(c),
delegate that duty to the carriers, or become
Page 386 U. S. 446
their rubber stamp or fail to relate to the standard of the
"public interest" the impact of the merger on the various
communities served by these lines.
The Commission, in its report, gave practically its entire
consideration to two aspects of the merger. The first dealt with
the financial needs of the two carriers, and, on this, the
Commission concluded that the new company would have the financial
strength and power and resources to deal with all the difficult
contingencies in the years ahead. The second main consideration
related to the problem of competition within the region served by
the two roads. The Commission indicated that, although there will
be less competition, the improved transportation service was a
justified price to pay for that loss. [
Footnote 3/6]
Page 386 U. S. 447
Yet one who reads the report and reflects on these two
considerations and their treatment by the Commission, cannot help
but wonder why they would not justify any conceivable merger -- all
the southern roads and eastern roads -- all the eastern roads and
the western roads -- or the western and southern and southwestern
roads, so that we would end up with one or two rail transportation
systems. I put the matter that way because the arguments of the
Commission are so generalized and so obviously mere
rationalizations that they could easily apply to any merger; for
the theory of all promoters of mergers, as Mr. Justice Brandeis
exposed many years ago, [
Footnote
3/7] is to justify mergers by increased financial power and
improved service.
The size and power of the new company will be awesome, and, some
say, excessive. It has been estimated that the new company will
account for 51% of the assets, 50% of the trackage, 52% of the
operating revenues, 75% of the revenue passenger miles, and almost
53% of the railroad employees in the eastern area. The combine will
be almost twice as large as the next system, and three times as
large as the third system. Some experts have concluded that the new
company will have a dominant position with respect to the
negotiation of rates and its relations with the public and
government, to the detriment of other railroads and other modes of
competition. It will have a vast amount of power over the decisions
of the Association of American Railroads with respect to rail
transportation policy. Its power will extend well beyond the
eastern district. The Railroad Merger Problem, Report of the
Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate
Page 386 U. S. 448
Judiciary Committee, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 8-9 (Comm.Print
1963).
The routes of the applicants parallel each other through their
respective systems, and have many common points. They serve many
communities and areas in common, and, in several, one or the other
is the sole road; in others, the applicants alone compete. The
Commission realizes that the merger will eliminate the existing
choice for many shippers and communities. It downgrades the
severity of the impairment of competition. And the Examiners'
Report frankly takes the position that inter-railroad competition
is not very important, because the industry is characterized by
oligopoly, rendering price competition nonexistent and service
competition unimportant. [
Footnote
3/8] The Commission thinks that intermodal competition will
prevent the new company from misusing its tremendous size and
power, [
Footnote 3/9] even though
it recognizes that the railroads
Page 386 U. S. 449
have an inherent advantage in transportation of bulk and
long-haul traffic. The Examiners' Report and the Commission's
opinion suggest that competition among railroads, rather than being
the norm, is to be avoided, because it is "inefficient." Comparing
the Commission's handling of the competitive effects of this merger
with its treatment of the competitive effects of the proposed Great
Northern Railway Company-Northern Pacific Railway merger gives one
the impression that the cases were decided by different regulatory
bodies, rather than the same commission. In the Great Northern
case, the Commission was sensitive to the anticompetitive effects
of the merger, and recognized that competition is necessary to
protect the public interest. The Commission also noted that
intermodal competition is not enough to furnish the impetus for
lower prices and increased service, especially with respect to
low-rated bulk shipments and long-haul traffic.
See Great
Northern Pacific & Burlington Lines, Inc. -- Merger -- Great
Northern R. Co., ___ I.C.C. ___.
These problems apparently bother the Commission, because, in
spite of its findings concerning the improved financial position of
these two carriers and the improved transportation system even with
the loss of competition, it nonetheless refused to approve the
merger
unless the New Haven road, which is in a notoriously
desperate condition, is included. So what the Commission, in
effect, is saying is that the increased financial prowess of the
new company and the improved transportation service are themselves
not enough to satisfy § 5(2)(c) of the Act. What satisfies §
5(2)(c) of the Act apparently is the opportunity to salvage the New
Haven situation. This, I admit, is a relevant consideration if
there is to be a merger. But if salvaging the New Haven so as to
maintain the economy of New England is relevant, [
Footnote 3/10]
Page 386 U. S. 450
then what about the economy of the cities and counties stretched
along the lines of these two roads which will be merged? What
degree of obsolescence will they suffer?
Railroads are critical factors in the production and
distribution of goods and in the supply of materials. They are
still the basic transporters of low-cost, bulk goods and long-haul
merchandise. Their rates and efficiency of service affect
industrial competition. Adequate railroad transportation, at
reasonable costs, is essential to the economic development of any
region or area. The
Page 386 U. S. 451
curtailment of rail transportation is bound to have an adverse
effect on the areas and communities which rely on railroads to
service industry upon which their economic health is dependent.
Many communities along the lines are dependent upon the employment
furnished by railroads. What will the effect of this merger be on
these communities? Will industry locate elsewhere because of
inadequate rail transportation? Will the firms located in the
region cease to expand or move to other areas? Will decreased
employment opportunities mean that the residents of these towns
must move elsewhere, thus creating more of the ghost towns which we
already see along many of the trunklines? None of these questions
is even considered by the Commission. After a very generalized
discussion, the Commission concluded that the merger would not
seriously impair Pennsylvania's economic health. But this "finding"
is foreshadowed by the Commission's expressed view that railroads
have little, if any, responsibility in furthering the economic
development of an area, and by the Examiners' position that the
Commission need not consider the employment, tax, and developmental
effects of the merger. And what about the other States and
communities so vitally interested in the effects of this
combination? The Commission's opinion is totally unenlightening.
The Examiners' Report is no better. It contains a long list of
interesting statistics, on a state-by-state basis, but makes no
attempt to evaluate the effects of the combination. [
Footnote 3/11]
Compare
Stanford
Page 386 U. S. 452
Research Institute, Selected Impacts of Railroad Mergers
(1965).
This merger, like the ones preceding it, apparently is a
manipulation by financiers, and not a part of regional planning
which is the ultimate function of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. Yet, if the imprimatur of the Commission is to be put
on the plans of the financiers, much more should be known about
them. What interests will control the new company? How powerful
will those interests be? Are the interests which will control the
new company antagonistic to the basic interests of the region being
served? Is the Commission putting its imprimatur on a new form of
banker-management of rail carriers that was so disastrous to the
New Haven and that Mr. Justice Brandeis exposed in Other People's
Money 129-136 (1933)?
The New Haven Railroad is indeed an excellent example of
manipulation at the hands of financial interests, rather than
management by railroad operators. Mr. Justice Brandeis said:
"The rise of the New Haven monopoly presents another striking
example of combination as a developer of financial concentration,
and it illustrates also the use to which 'large security issues'
are put."
"In 1892, when Mr. Morgan entered the New Haven directorate, it
was a very prosperous little railroad with capital liabilities of
$25,000,000, paying 10 percent dividends, and operating 508 miles
of line. By 1899, the capitalization had grown to $80,477,600, but
the aggregate mileage had also grown (mainly through merger or
leases of other lines) to 2017. Fourteen years later, in 1913, when
Mr. Morgan died
Page 386 U. S. 453
and Mr. Mellen resigned, the mileage was 1997, just 20 miles
less than in 1899; but the capital liabilities had increased to
$425,935,000. . . . [A]dditional issues were needed, also because
the company paid out in dividends more than it earned. . . . [O]f
the capital increase, over $200,000,000 was expended in the
acquisition of the stock or other securities of some 121 other
railroads, steamships, street railway, electric light, gas and
water companies. It was these outside properties which made
necessary the much discussed $67,000,000 six percent bond issue, as
well as other large and expensive security issues. For in these
fourteen years, the improvements on the railroad including new
equipment, have cost, on the average, only $10,000,000 a year."
Id. at 121-122.
"[T]he most grievous fault of this banker-managed railroad has
been its financial recklessness -- a fault that has already brought
heavy losses to many thousands of small investors throughout New
England for whom bankers are supposed to be natural guardians. In a
community where its railroad stocks have for generations been
deemed absolutely safe investments, the passing of the New Haven .
. . dividends, after an unbroken dividend record of generations,
comes as a disaster."
"This disaster is due mainly to enterprises outside the
legitimate operation of these railroads, for no railroad has
equaled the New Haven in the quantity and extravagance of its
outside enterprises. . . ."
"Close scrutiny of the transactions discloses no justification.
On the contrary, scrutiny serves only to make more clear the
gravity of the errors committed. Not merely were recklessly
extravagant acquisitions made in mad pursuit of monopoly, but the
financial judgment, the financiering itself, was conspicuously
bad."
Id. at 130-131.
Page 386 U. S. 454
The years passed, the New Haven emerged from bankruptcy
reorganization, and, in 1954, Patrick B. McGinnis won a proxy fight
for control of the road and became president. His group owned very
little preferred stock, but, in order to pay dividends on the
common, in which he was heavily interested, he first had to pay
cash dividends on the preferred. These cash dividends were paid out
in very large amounts, the record showing the following:
1954. . . . . . . . . . $3,440,180
1955. . . . . . . . . . 2,457,700
At the same time, maintenance outlays were severely cut. Total
outlays for maintenance of ways and structures dropped from
$27,641,046 in 1953 to $19,647,313 in 1954 to $18,338,714 in 1955.
Total maintenance of equipment decreased from $24,306,984 in 1953
to $22,794,715 in 1954 to $21,933,318 in 1955.
It is estimated that this cabal of financial interests lost
$7,000,000 of the railroad's money in 20 months. Cash reserves
dwindled, current liabilities mounted, as did long-term debt. "It's
a stock speculation venture, instead of a railroad business" said
one director. Time, January 30, 1956, p. 76.
Is the new Penn-Central Company also to be milked by predatory
finance?
Alternatively, if a regime as big and as powerful as this is to
be turned loose, should it stay in private hands? How big can an
enterprise of this character get without stepping over into the
public domain?
"How far should the consolidations be allowed to go before they
cross the threshold of private enterprise and enter the domain of
private government? [
Footnote 3/12]"
Is the power and the control so
Page 386 U. S. 455
great that we should think in terms of public ownership,
[
Footnote 3/13] rather than
private ownership?
These considerations go to the very vitals of § 5(2)(c) of the
Act, and none of them is answered. They are emphasized by the
apparent worry in the mind of the Commission that, in spite of all
the arguments for the merger that it could advance, it decided not
to approve it unless the New Haven was bailed out. Bailing out the
New Haven may be very important in the public interest, as I have
said. But, in the context of these modern mergers, there is the
terrible spectre that the Federal Government may be creating new
Frankensteins who will be running the country in a way that people
can ill afford.
The alarm is increased by the Commission's default as respects
the other eastern rail carriers. There are three so-called
"protected" roads -- Erie-Lackawanna, Delaware & Hudson, and
Boston & Maine. The Commission found that this merger would
destroy those three as independent railroads, and proposed the
imposition of protective conditions. What those protective
conditions will be, we do not know. If they include a capital
indemnity, the "protected" lines will, in substance, disappear from
the competitive scheme. Should competition be bought off in that
manner?
Should the three "protected" carriers go into this Penn-Central
merger and create a monopoly of rail
Page 386 U. S. 456
transportation east of Buffalo and north of New York City? The
Commission has never made any effort even to consider whether such
an inclusion in Penn-Central would be in the public interest.
There are suggestions that perhaps the three "protected" lines
belong in the N & W-Nickel Plate system. In that merger, it was
recognized that E-L was a logical addition, but that inclusion on
equitable terms was not possible, because of E-L's poor financial
condition. 324 I.C.C. 1, 22. The Commission therefore reserved
jurisdiction to give E-L five years to improve its financial
position to become eligible for inclusion in N & W on equitable
terms. 324 I.C.C. at 229. [
Footnote
3/14] The Penn-Central merger has frustrated this purpose by
threatening the very survival of E-L, D & H and B & M as
independent roads. If they are not to become members of the
Penn-Central system, their only alternative seems to be inclusion
in N & W. The failure of the Commission to consolidate these
cases raises the distinct possibility that the three "protected"
carriers may not be included in any system, and, being unable to
withstand the pressure of the Penn-Central, will be destroyed. As
my Brother BRENNAN points out, the inclusion of these roads in the
N & W system is no less risky than their inclusion in the
Penn-Central system.
The question whether the Penn-Central merger is in the "public
interest" therefore cannot be resolved until the fate of these
three protected roads is determined.
Page 386 U. S. 457
They, too, have stockholders and bondholders. They, too, service
shippers, consumers, and communities. They, too, are an important
part of the competitive system in the East. The truth is that,
before the Commission can exercise an informed judgment on the
Penn-Central merger, it must deal with the serious impact which
this merger will have on the three "protected" carriers.
There are also seven unprotected eastern rail carriers whose
future is in doubt. Their fate is emphasized anew by a new merger
application now pending before the Commission. As I have said, the
Commission has promoted three systems in the East -- the C & O,
the N & W, and Penn-Central. Now, the C & O and N & W
have applied for approval to merge. This proposal would include the
three "protected" roads I have mentioned. It would also include
Central of New Jersey and Reading. Hearings on that merger will
commence April 17, 1967. If that merger is approved, we will have
two huge eastern rail cartels, rather than three.
Was the creation of the new Penn-Central behemoth the reason for
the desire to create this second one?
What will happen to both the three "protected" lines and the
seven unprotected ones under a regime of two eastern cartels? Where
will they best fit to maintain as much of a competitive system as
possible?
No one at present can say, because the entire merger problem of
the East is nowhere near solution. Until the total plan is known,
an informed decision is impossible. The Commission does not even
know what effect the inclusion of NH will have on Central of New
Jersey, which claims that the inclusion of NH should not be
authorized unless CNJ is at least included in one of the new large
systems. Under § 5(2)(c) the Commission is required to consider
"the effect upon the public interest of the inclusion, or failure
to include, other railroads in the territory involved in the
proposed transaction." In
Page 386 U. S. 458
McLean Trucking Co. v. United States, 321 U. S.
67,
321 U. S. 87, we
stated that the Commission has the duty "to consider the effect of
the merger on competitors and on the general competitive situation
in the industry."
Its default in that regard is conspicuous here. Those required
findings cannot be made until a master plan or plans for the East
are designed and the place of each rail carrier in the new system
is finally rationalized and determined.
The Commission has now approved three privately planned mergers
embracing over 85% of the railway operating revenues in the entire
eastern railroad market. The unresolved but crucial question is
whether the remaining roads can survive as presently constituted,
or, if they cannot, how they can best be restructured to promote
competition against one or more of the new merger systems.
The case must be remanded to the Commission so that the
competitive regime of the East under two or three or four or five
rail cartels can be determined. The impact on the communities of
the region must be determined. The competitive balance of the
several combines must be appraised. The position of each rail
carrier in the new picture must be established. And the financial
hierarchy of the new cartels must be exposed, so that the centers
of control will be known. Only when all these facts are known can
the Commission make the required findings under § 5(2)(c). Only
then will judicial review of a responsible kind be possible. It is
only when the required findings are made that we will be able to
know what the Commission's opinion really means, and to determine
whether the statutory standards have been met.
See United
States v. Carolina Carriers Corp., 315 U.S. at
315 U. S.
480-489.
We should say here what we said in
Securities and Exchange
Commission v. Chenery Corp., 318 U. S. 80,
318 U. S.
94:
Page 386 U. S. 459
"The Commission's action cannot be upheld merely because
findings might have been made and considerations disclosed which
would justify its order as an appropriate safeguard for the
interests protected by the Act. There must be such a responsible
finding. . . . There is no such finding here."
I would reverse the lower court and remand the cases to the
Commission not only to spell out the terms and conditions specified
by the Court, but also to make the necessary findings on the reach
and merits of the merger as required by § 5(2)(c) of the Act.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Petition of the New York Central R. Co., Docket No. 33475. Prior
to the Transportation Act of 1940, it was the duty of the
Commission under § 5 to prepare "a plan for the consolidation" of
the railway systems "into a limited number of systems." The 1940
Act relieved the Commission of that duty. H.R.Rep. No. 1217, 76th
Cong., 1st Sess., 6.
See Schwabacher v. United States,
334 U. S. 182,
334 U. S. 192;
County of Marin v. United States, 356 U.
S. 412,
356 U. S. 417.
But there is no indication that Congress deprived the Commission of
the power to propose one, though its power to enforce one proposed
by it in a § 77 reorganization was denied by
St. Joe Paper Co.
v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 347 U.
S. 298, by a narrow four-to-three vote.
[
Footnote 3/2]
The Railroad Merger Problem, Report of the Subcommittee on
Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate Judiciary Committee, 88th
Cong., 1st Sess., 31 (Comm.Print 1963).
[
Footnote 3/3]
Id. at 31-32.
[
Footnote 3/4]
". . . [W]e find that this merger, without complete inclusion of
NH, would not be consistent with the public interest, and,
accordingly, we will require all the New Haven railroad to be
included in the applicants' transaction."
327 I.C.C. 475, 524.
[
Footnote 3/5]
Report,
supra, 386
U.S. 372fn3/2|>n. 2, at 14, n. 52.
[
Footnote 3/6]
The reasons usually advanced in support of railroad mergers are:
(1) consolidations will improve the ailing financial condition of
the constituents; (2) consolidations will result in a reduction of
cost of operations; (3) consolidations will improve service
capability. The premises underlying these justifications have been
seriously questioned. It has been suggested that the financial
condition of the industry is not as poor as merger applicants
suggest.
See, e.g., Keyserling, The Move Toward Railroad
Mergers 72-74 (1962); The Railroad Merger Problem, Report of
Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 49-54 (Comm.Print 1963). Some
have maintained that the wave of railroad mergers, and the
resulting contraction of physical plant, will impair, rather than
improve, the roads' financial condition, and dampen the Nation s
economic development.
See, e.g., Keyserling,
supra, at 75-78. Others have noted that the present
condition of the industry is due to a multitude of causes, and that
solutions must strike at the roots of the problem, rather than
accept the temporary palliative of merger.
See, e.g.,
Nelson, Railroad Transportation and Public Policy 327-435 (1959);
Meyer, Peck, Stenason & Zwick, The Economics of Competition in
the Transportation Industries 242-273 (1959); National
Transportation Policy, S.Rep. No. 445, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 67-71
(1961). It has been suggested that massive alignments may result in
serious diseconomics, not in the savings predicted by their
proponents.
See, e.g., Healy, The Effects of Scale in the
Railroad Industry (1961). The Commission does not address itself to
these problems.
[
Footnote 3/7]
See Brandeis, The Curse of Bigness 185
et seq.
(1935).
[
Footnote 3/8]
Cf. Conant, Railroad Mergers and Abandonments 25-40
(1964); Conant, Railroad Consolidations and the Antitrust Laws, 14
Stan.L.Rev. 489, 490-495 (1962).
[
Footnote 3/9]
It is argued that intermodal competition is not sufficient to
protect the public interest, that intramodal competition is
necessary to insure progress, efficiency, and lower prices. Only
the firms in the same industry have the same cost structures and
products. Thus, no firm has a sheltered market due to inherent
advantages over other firms, a condition which obtains when
competition is only intermodal. Meyer, Peck, Stenason & Zwick,
The Economics of Competition in the Transportation Industries
240-241 (1959). Further, the position that intermodal competition
is sufficient to protect the public interest ignores the fact that
the number of regulated trucking lines on important routes is
rapidly decreasing due to entry control and mergers in the motor
carrier industry. If the present trend continues, we may soon see a
very limited number of firms -- perhaps one from each mode --
serving any given route. If that happens, the possibilities of
oligopolistic lessening of competition without explicit rate and
market agreements is likely.
See Chamberlin, Theory of
Monopolistic Competition 46-53 (1956).
[
Footnote 3/10]
The facts are detailed in the Examiners' Report. The plight of
Rhode Island is typical:
"N.H. is the only Class I railroad serving the State of Rhode
Island. Over 50 percent of the population in Rhode Island are
employed in the manufacturing industry, and such industry is
greatly dependent upon rail service provided by N.H., particularly
for the inbound movement of raw materials from points outside of
New England. In 1962, 35,000 cars were consigned to or shipped by
industries located in Rhode Island via N.H. from which the latter
derived $5,000,000 in revenue. Three important naval stations in
Rhode Island are located at Newport, Quonset Point and Davisville,
and, in the Narragansett Bay area, the naval installations employ
over 10,000 civilians. In addition to freight service, the N.H.
provides an important passenger service in the State, and estimates
indicate that approximately 1,200,000 passengers utilizing rail
service originate or terminate within the confines of this State
annually. Providence, a city with a population of 200,000 and
Metropolitan Area of 1,000,000, has water facilities to receive
shipments of bulk commodities, but, since World War II, general
freight service by water to and from Providence has been
discontinued."
"The Governor of Rhode Island evidenced his concern at the
hearing that the failure to include the N.H. in the proposed merger
may result in a loss of service provided by N.H. in the State. It
was his belief that, without such service, the State would have
little chance of attracting new industry; that existing industries
might relocate their plants, and that, without rail service, the
Federal Government may well determine to reduce or terminate
existing defense installations. . . ."
Report at 278.
[
Footnote 3/11]
The Commission's own Bureau of Transport Economics and
Statistics has recognized the importance of community dislocations
in evaluating the "public interest" aspects of a proposed
merger.
"[T]he Commission should consider the local and regional impact
of consolidations, economically and socially, as a separate
criterion or sub-criterion in its decisions. . . . Separate
consideration of local effects would have the merit of affording
opportunity for the Commission to distinguish and determine the
relative importance of such factors."
Railroad Consolidations and the Public Interest Staff Report of
Bureau of Transport Economics and Statistics 72 (1962).
[
Footnote 3/12]
Report,
supra, 386
U.S. 372fn3/2|>n. 2, at 80.
[
Footnote 3/13]
Some experts have suggested that the trend toward railroad
consolidations, which may result in the Nation's dependence upon
mammoth combines with excessive power, may be a prelude to
nationalization of the industry.
See, e.g., Meyer, Peck,
Stenason Zwick, The Economics of Competition in the Transportation
Industries 260 (1959); Rail Merger Legislation, Hearings before the
Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., 15 (1962) (testimony of Professor
Kent T. Healy).
[
Footnote 3/14]
On December 22, 1966, Commissioner Webb of the ICC recommended
that the Commission direct inclusion of the E-L and D & H, and
authorize inclusion of the B & M in the N & W. The
Commissioner perceptively noted that,
"Unfortunately, the Commission's action in deciding the
(Penn-Central and N & W-Nickel Plate) cases separately has
tended to blur vital issues common to both proceedings."
Norfolk and Western R. Co. and New York, C. & St. L.R.
Co., Merger, Finance Docket No. 21510, p. 23.
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE
STEWART and MR. JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
For more than 45 years, it has been the national policy,
reflected in congressional legislation, that the railroads of this
country should be combined into a limited number of systems. The
policy gained acceptance in 1919, when, following World War I, the
Government was planning to return the railroads to private
ownership and the frail condition of many of the smaller roads
became apparent. The Transportation Act of 1920 directed the
Commission to formulate a national master plan of consolidation
pursuant to which, it was hoped, the railroads would submit
voluntary plans for consolidation. The Commission did so, but the
opposition to the program was overwhelming, and the goal could not
be achieved. In 1925, the Commission asked to be relieved of the
burden of working out a national plan, but until 1940, its request
did not result in congressional action. In that year, Congress
enacted the Transportation Act of 1940, which remains in effect and
governs the present proceedings. Under that Act, and in all of the
years since 1919 or 1920, the national policy of effecting
consolidations of the railroads into a limited number of systems
has been unchanged.
Page 386 U. S. 460
Because of the failure of the technique authorized by the 1920
Act, Congress, in the 1940 law, abandoned the idea of a formal
national plan, and left the power to initiate mergers and
consolidations in the hands of the carriers. The Commission became
judge, rather than architect.
See generally St. Joe Paper Co.
v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 347 U.
S. 298,
347 U. S.
315-321 (Appendix) (1954).
The 1940 Act expressly provided that two or more carriers could
merge or otherwise combine management, ownership, and operation if
the approval of the ICC were obtained. The key provision, which
basically governs the present case, is § 5(2):
"If the Commission finds that, subject to such terms and
conditions and such modifications as it shall find to be just and
reasonable, the proposed transaction is within the scope of
subdivision (a) of this [section] and will be consistent with the
public interest, it shall enter an order approving and authorizing
such transaction, upon the terms and conditions, and with the
modifications, so found to be just and reasonable. . . ."
§ 5(2)(b). Among the considerations to which the Commission is
to give weight are:
"(1) The effect of the proposed transaction upon adequate
transportation service to the public; (2) the effect upon the
public interest of the inclusion, or failure to include, other
railroads in the territory involved in the proposed transaction;
(3) the total fixed charges resulting from the proposed
transaction, and (4) the interest of the carrier employees
affected."
§ 5(2)(c). Jurisdiction "to enforce, enjoin, set aside, annul or
suspend, in whole or in any part, any order" of the ICC is vested
in the district courts by 28 U.S.C. § 1336. It is clear beyond
argument -- one would confidently assert prior to today's decision
-- that whether particular railroad mergers serve the public
interest, including the antitrust ingredient, is to be judged by
the standards of the Transportation
Page 386 U. S. 461
Act of 1940 as applied initially by the ICC, and not by this
Court.
Under the 1940 Act, the Commission's judgment is not to be
governed by the antitrust laws. As this Court said in
McLean
Trucking Co. v. United States, 321 U. S.
67, at
321 U. S. 84-85
(1944), there is "little doubt that the Commission is not to
measure proposals for all-rail . . . consolidations by the
standards of the antitrust laws." In the last Term of Court, a
decision of a three-judge district court setting aside ICC approval
of a merger was reversed by this Court in a per curiam decision,
quoting the above statement from
McLean Trucking, because
the District Court applied antitrust standards to overturn the ICC
decision.
Seaboard Air Line R. Co. v. United States,
382 U. S. 154
(1965). In that case, the Court said:
"It matters not that the merger might otherwise violate the
antitrust laws; the Commission has been authorized by the Congress
to approve the merger of railroads if it makes adequate findings in
accordance with the criteria quoted above that such a merger would
be 'consistent with the public interest.'"
382 U.S. at
382 U. S.
156-157.
Until recently, despite the provisions of the 1940 Act, little
was accomplished to effectuate the national policy of combining
roads into a few major systems. The conflicts and rivalries, the
overlaps of conflicting needs and ambitions, are so great that the
task is formidable and, from time to time, has appeared hopeless.
Finally, in 1962, the ICC approved the C & O's acquisition of
control of the B & O. [
Footnote
4/1] In 1964, it approved the combination of the N & W and
the Nickel Plate. [
Footnote 4/2]
And, after more than 10 years of elaborate corporate maneuvering
and
Page 386 U. S. 462
negotiating, in 1962, the Pennsylvania and the New York Central
Railroads filed with the ICC their proposal to merge. Lengthy
administrative proceedings followed, and it was not until April of
1966 that the ICC rendered its final decision, approving the merger
subject to conditions.
Pennsylvania R. Co. -- Merger -- New
York Central R. Co., 327 I.C.C. 475. It modified those
conditions on September 16, 1966. 328 I.C.C. 304. If the
Penn-Central merger becomes effective, the result will be three
large systems, each operating in various and sometimes overlapping
parts of the Northeast, middle Atlantic and midwestern States. The
Commission's opinions in the three cases indicate its view that the
consequences, at long last, will be a substantial measure of
progress towards the goal successively announced in the
transportation laws of 1920 and 1940.
The Penn-Central merger, as approved by the ICC, was attacked by
various parties, and a temporary injunction was sought in the
Southern District of New York. The complainants included a number
of railroads, several affected communities, and one Milton Shapp.
As the matter comes to this Court, [
Footnote 4/3] the only plaintiffs who complain about the
merger itself are Shapp and the City of Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Shapp, whose rather shaky standing to participate in these appeals
is predicated upon his participation before the Commission and the
bare circumstance that he is a shareholder in the Pennsylvania
Railroad and a citizen of Pennsylvania, asserts here, as he did in
the District Court, that, in calculating the necessity for the
merger and the benefits to be derived therefrom, the ICC relied
upon an unwarrantedly pessimistic forecast as to railroad
prospects, and that, as a result, it
Page 386 U. S. 463
has approved a transaction which will have serious
anticompetitive effects in the East and will inflict economic harm
upon the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. A single community in
Pennsylvania, the City of Scranton, concurs with Shapp's analysis
and argues in addition that the merger and expected inclusion of
the E-L, D & H and CNJ in one or another system will reduce the
quantity of rail service now available to Scranton, which is
presently served by those three smaller roads. The United States,
which questions the correctness of the procedure used by the
Commission in protecting the E-L, D & H and B & M, does not
challenge the merger itself. Indeed, the Solicitor General has
represented to the Court that
"the agencies of the Executive Branch that have substantive
responsibilities for the formulation of economic and transportation
policy believe that the merger is in the public interest, and that
its consummation should be promptly effected. [
Footnote 4/4]"
None of the railroads objects to the merger itself as unlawful
or unfair. None of the affected States objects. The Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, which had at one point opposed the merger, withdrew
its opposition, and now urges approval of the ICC order. Vigorous
attack, however, was and is launched upon the ICC's order by
various of the railroads because of provisions in the order
addressed to the complications arising from the situation of three
smaller roads, the E-L, the D & H, and the B & M.
The three-judge District Court, in an opinion by Circuit Judge
Friendly for himself and District Judge Levet, declined to issue a
temporary injunction to enjoin the merger, Judge Weinfeld
dissenting.
259 F.
Supp. 964. This Court granted a stay and expedited the case for
consideration. The Court today sets aside the ICC's order.
Page 386 U. S. 464
It expressly reserves any ruling upon the issue of the merits of
the merger. It bases its decision entirely upon the alleged failure
of the Commission to make adequate provision for the three smaller
roads prior to authorizing consummation. In a separate opinion, MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs, but concludes that he would also hold the
merger itself illegal, and the Commission's approval unlawful, for
this reason. I respectfully dissent. I believe we should affirm the
order of the District Court upholding the Commission's action.
Certainly there is no tolerable basis for our attacking the
merger on its merits. To do so would be to substitute our judgment
for that of the Commission on grounds which, to say the least, are
speculative, and based upon the claimed superiority of competing
economic considerations. We are not at liberty to do this, and, if
we were free to do so, it would require a high degree of
intrepidity on such a basis to overturn a result which, even if we
assume its imperfections, generally incorporates a significant step
in a direction which national policy has sought for several
generations. This is Congress' responsibility, and the task not of
the courts, but of Congress' designated instrumentality, the ICC.
The national need to refurbish and revitalize rail communications
is urgent -- some say of desperate urgency. The ICC has found that
the merger here will result in economies and efficiencies
aggregating $80,000,000 annually by the eighth year, which it
asserts will enable the roads to effect the badly needed
modernization of their facilities. This may be a step in the wrong
direction, as my Brother DOUGLAS argues; but we have neither the
franchise to say so nor the power to do better.
The problem presented with respect to the three smaller roads
assumes a different form. Here, it is urged that the Commission
specifically failed to carry out its statutory duty, and that the
merger should not be consummated
Page 386 U. S. 465
until its task is complete. The facts are as follows:
1. The three roads, the Commission has found, cannot survive
without inclusion in one of the large, integrated systems. The
Commission has assumed, as I shall describe, that they will be
included in either the N & W or the Penn-Central systems. The
three roads filed applications in both the N & W-Nickel Plate
and the Penn-Central proceedings, for inclusion in the resulting
system. They have indicated their preference for inclusion in the
former. The Commission approved the N & W-Nickel Plate merger,
and its order has become final. It did not, however, pass upon the
application of the three roads for inclusion. On the other hand, it
made effective assurance for the subsequent determination of the
issue and the effectuation of the result. Its order of approval
provided that the ICC would retain jurisdiction for five years to
require the N & W to include the three roads on terms that the
ICC would itself prescribe in the absence of agreement, and it
required the irrevocable consent of N & W to such order as a
condition of consummating the merger. The N & W gave its
consent. On December 22, 1966, pursuant to the reserved
jurisdiction, Commissioner Webb of the ICC recommended authorizing
inclusion of the three roads in the system. [
Footnote 4/5] It is anticipated that a Commission order
will be entered by July 1 or August 1, 1967. When this order
becomes final, if it provides for inclusion of the three roads in
the N & W system, that will settle their ultimate fate, and
will terminate the significance of the conditions to which the
Court herein objects and which have resulted in setting aside the
ICC's order. It
Page 386 U. S. 466
must be remembered, however, that the Commission's order will be
subject to judicial review, and, if the past is a guide to
prediction, the resulting proceedings will be long, complex, and
bitter. In short, no one can say whether the three roads will find
their ultimate home during this calendar year or the next.
[
Footnote 4/6]
2. In the present proceeding, the ICC denied the request of the
three roads for inclusion in the Penn-Central system, but it
provided that, if they were not included in the N & W system,
they might resubmit the matter by supplemental petition. It is
essential to note that no attack is made in this proceeding on
these provisions relating to the ultimate fate of the three
roads.
3. The ICC concluded that the three roads required some interim
protection because,
"when the various consolidations of yards and equipment and the
new through routes contemplated by the applicants are effectuated,
a substantial amount of traffic could be diverted from E-L, D &
H and B & M."
Accordingly, it decided to impose certain conditions, which I
shall describe, and it required of the applicants "their acceptance
of and active cooperation in the implementation of conditions"
pending ultimate decision as to the inclusion of the three roads in
a major system. In this connection, the Commission made the
statement that has provided the basis of attack. It said:
"It is doubtful that, without inclusion in a major system, these
three carriers could withstand the competition of the applicants
merged, and, unless they are protected during the period necessary
to determine their future, we would not authorize consummation at
this time, even though approving the merger."
327 I.C.C. at 531-532.
4. The conditions consisted of measures for (1) traffic
maintenance, by temporary preservation of present practices
Page 386 U. S. 467
and patterns; (2) indemnity payments to cover losses due to
diversion of traffic, if any, and (3) procedures to determine
disputes under these conditions. The Commission specifically
provided, however, that, notwithstanding the above, the applicants
and the three protected carriers could enter into an agreement for
alternate protections "which shall supersede the protection
provided by such sections if not otherwise violative of law. . . ."
327 I.C.C. at 563, App. G.
5. The three protected carriers complained that the conditions
were not adequate for their protection, and they specifically
demanded, in addition to improvement of the traffic and indemnity
provisions, an indemnification against capital impairment. On the
other hand, a number of other roads attacked Appendix G on the
ground that the indemnity provisions would induce manipulation and
diversion of traffic by both Penn-Central and the three roads which
would be harmful to them. All of them complained that there had
been no hearing, and the nonprotected complainants alleged that the
indemnity conditions really amounted to a pooling arrangement which
should have been, but was not, considered under § 5(1) of the
Act.
6. On September 16, after the present suit had been filed, the
Commission granted the various petitions to reconsider Appendix G.
Pending hearing and decision on reconsideration, it rescinded the
indemnity provisions, but left in effect the traffic conditions
subject to whatever modifications might be made. 328 I.C.C. 304.
The Commission said that,
"Since the applicants have indicated willingness to accept
post-merger modification of the protective conditions, they may
proceed with consummation of the merger upon our authorization
thereof becoming effective. Such consummation will constitute
irrevocable assent on the part of the applicants to any
modification resulting from the further consideration
Page 386 U. S. 468
herein described and ordered, and which is found to be just and
reasonable, as well as irrevocable agreement by the applicants to
comply fully with the conditions as modified."
On October 31, pursuant to this ruling, hearings were commenced
on the interim protective conditions.
It is the ruling that the merger may be consummated in these
circumstances that the Court finds objectionable, and on the basis
of which the Court halts this transaction, which is concededly of
major importance to the Nation. The Court reasons that the
Commission's order. as it now stands. fails to implement its
findings with respect to the three smaller roads, and, unless and
until it does so, the merger may not be consummated.
Fundamentally, I submit, this is based upon a misconception of
the ICC's findings. The Commission firmly and clearly held that, as
a condition to consummation of the merger, it was necessary to
assure that the three roads would be protected pending their
inclusion in one of the larger systems. But it is clear that the
Commission did not find that it was necessary to fix the terms of
such protection prior to consummation of the merger. On the
contrary, the Commission prescribed traffic and indemnity
provisions in what must, in all fairness, be regarded as a
tentative setting.
The prescribed conditions were, as the court below noted,
"unprecedented in their severity in the history of railroad
mergers." 259 F. Supp. at 969. They had not been focused or defined
prior to the Commission's report for the apparent reason,
understandable to anyone familiar with the administrative process,
that they must have been crystallized in the post-argument
deliberations of the Commission and its staff. They had not been
included in the Hearing Examiners' report. The conditions are
complex. Interim protection of the three roads against possible
traffic diversion and resulting financial
Page 386 U. S. 469
loss depends upon future events which are unknown, and largely
unknowable. A vast realignment of the sort involved here always has
elements of the unique, and only a doctrinaire approach, separated
by the miles that lie between the quiet of theoretical condemnation
in this Court and the pressures of realistic problems in the
administrative agency, can explain this Court's readiness to insist
that an unknown and unknowable solution be prescribed in advance.
Solutions can be found, prescriptions can be written, to implement
the Commission's determination that adequate interim protection
must be furnished to the three roads. The Commission's insistence
upon such protection is beyond dispute. Its deferral, in part, of
the prescription of specific measures to effect this is at least
understandable in light of the inherent difficulty of the problem.
This is clear: (1) Appendix G, as I have noted, in effect invited
the parties to work out their own agreement in substitution for the
Commission's formula; (2) the Commission further demonstrated its
awareness that only time and experience would perfect the interim
conditions by its admonition to Penn-Central to comply not merely
with the letter, but with the spirit, of the protective mandate;
(3) the Commission, commendably, I suggest, ordered a hearing and
reconsideration of the conditions after litigation commenced and
the need therefor became apparent. The Commission, as I have noted,
left in effect the traffic conditions, subject to modification, and
provided that whatever indemnity provisions might be specified
would be retroactive to the date of consummation of the merger.
With the assurance that Penn-Central would accept whatever might be
ordered in these respects, [
Footnote
4/7] it authorized consummation of the merger.
Page 386 U. S. 470
The Court holds that this order approving immediate consummation
of the merger is "insupportable" not because the Commission lacked
power, but because the Commission deferred full implementation of
its own findings that it was indispensable that interim protection
be provided the three roads. The Court concedes that the Commission
may retain jurisdiction for some purposes. [
Footnote 4/8] It does not "find it necessary to pass
upon the question of naked power in the Commission to do what has
been done here." Its drastic action is induced solely because of
the Commission's decision to effect interim protection of the three
roads -- to which it and Penn-Central are fully committed -- by
prescribing only traffic conditions presently and to proceed with
deliberation to work out the controversial and complex
indemnification provisions. I agree with the Commission that, in
view of the complete consent of the applicants to accept the terms
ultimately fixed, there is no reason to defer the consummation of
the merger until this is done. In any event, the choice of
procedure that the Commission has made is not unreasonable, and
this Court should not upset a decision of the magnitude involved in
this merger except for significant reasons of substance. [
Footnote 4/9]
There is no reason of substance for the Court's action; there is
no substantive value that is impaired or lost by proceeding as the
Commission has ordered.
(1) As the Court found, there has been no objection to the
substance of the traffic conditions which will continue
Page 386 U. S. 471
in effect, except suggestions as to details. Indemnification
provisions will be made retroactive to the date of consummation of
the merger and will therefore be as fully effective as if
originally prescribed.
(2) Effective judicial review of the ultimate conditions will be
available. If they fail in any respect fully and lawfully to
implement the Commission's finding as to the necessity for interim
protection of the three roads, they will presumably be modified. It
is, with all respect, nonsense to say that the only remedy would be
to "unscramble the consolidation." At issue are the indemnity
terms. These are the only ones that have not been prescribed. They
involve only the guaranty of payment of money on whatever formula
the Commission may prescribe in its own motion or after direction
by the courts. An order of the Commission or the courts to make
such payment can be fully and easily implemented by conventional
processes. The traffic conditions are to be effective immediately.
They are not under substantial attack. If they are modified in this
hearing, that is nothing more than an exercise of the power to
modify its order, which the Court concedes to be within the
Commission's power under § 5(9) of the Act.
Cf. United States
v. Rock Island Motor Transit Co., 340 U.
S. 419 (1951).
On the other hand, the Court's order, which I submit is
insupportable as a matter of law and of sound administration of the
principles of judicial review of decisions of administrative
agencies, will have unfortunate consequences. I do not know, and I
submit the Court cannot know, just how long it will take to satisfy
the Court's rigid prescription that the interim protective
provisions must be settled. The Court says that it will entail "a
very short delay"; that the three roads will be included in the N
& W, or that the Commission's interim order
Page 386 U. S. 472
will be perfected with expedition. I view this prediction with
profound skepticism. Too many interests have too much to gain from
obstruction and delay, and the maze of administrative proceeding
and judicial review is not inhospitable to ingenious counsel bent
on delay. The history of ICC proceedings is a source book for
dilatory tactics and a monument to the successful burial of good
projects by over-elaborate procedures manipulated by experts in the
art. Meanwhile, national policy continues unfulfilled; urgent
national needs for improved long-haul and local rail service are
impeded; the desperate erosion of the New Haven continues at a
rapid pace, and the public and communities urgently in need of
improved rail service continue to suffer.
If this result were compelled by law -- if the Court's decision
rested upon fault of substance -- the practical consequence would
have to be suffered with grace. But that is not so. The Commission
insisted that the three smaller roads had to receive interim
protection, and required the applicants to agree to this as a
condition of consummation of the merger. It has not modified this.
It has not failed to implement it. On the contrary, it has -- I
think, commendably -- embarked upon a procedure which,
while
assuring that the protections will be forthcoming, subject to
judicial review, makes possible the careful and deliberate
working-out of its terms, and, at the same, time avoids disrupting
the timetable of the merger. If we were to comment upon it, we
should, I think, be compelled to applaud the unusual flexibility of
method which it demonstrates, and which has not always ornamented
Commission practices. But we should not indulge in this kind of
second-guessing. The plain conclusion is that the Commission's
order does not violate any principle of law. It does not fail to
implement the Commission's findings. It merely provides for the
Page 386 U. S. 473
accomplishment in stages of an objective firmly stated to which
it and the applicants are fully committed. This is well within its
powers, and we should affirm.
"
* * * *"
Addendum:
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's concurring opinion requires these
additional comments. He concedes that "this merger may well be in
the public interest," but he concludes that the Commission's order
approving and authorizing consummation of the merger must be set
aside because the Commission has not completed the job of providing
for the future of the three roads: the E-L, D & H and B &
M. MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN does not contend that, as an abstract
matter, settlement of the ultimate destiny of these roads is a
necessary precondition to approval of the Penn-Central merger. He
recognizes that such a contention would be contrary to statute,
precedent, and practical sense. The Commission clearly has power to
reserve for the future some problems incident to a merger. Faced --
as this Court is not -- with the urgent need of coping with the
realities of life, the Commission must frequently content itself
with less than perfection. Accordingly, MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN agrees
that "the Act vests wide discretion in the agency to allow a merger
to go forward while conditions as to inclusion are worked out." He
argues, however, that, in this specific situation, the failure to
settle, by definitive order, the ultimate fate of the three roads
is error which requires that the order approving the Penn-Central
merger be set aside. In my judgment, his analysis lays bare the
tortuous speculation upon which the Court's nullification of this
merger is based.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's argument, in net effect, is that, when the
Commission really comes to grips with the problem of including the
roads in one of the great systems,
Page 386 U. S. 474
one thing will lead to another, and the eventual result will be
that the Penn-Central merger -- to which he does not otherwise
object -- will become contrary to the public interest. When the
Commission reaches this point, it will either have to refrain from
including the three roads in either the N & W or the
Penn-Central systems, which would be contrary to its findings, or
it will have to grit its teeth and go ahead even though inclusion
of the three roads in one of the systems would make the
Penn-Central merger contrary to the public interest. I agree that
either of these would be most unfortunate. My difficulty stems from
the fact that there is no basis for the forecast of catastrophe.
With all respect, my Brother BRENNAN's journey from the present to
this horrifying future requires a trip through outer space which I
cannot make, and in which I do not believe we should indulge. There
should be more than rocketry to justify our nullification of action
of this national importance which has been authorized by the agency
with the heavy responsibility for repairing our deplorable national
railroad network.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN says that "[a]llegations are made" by the
Department of Justice and numerous other parties that inclusion of
the three roads in either of the major systems "might not be
possible consistent with the public interest or upon equitable
terms." Now the fact that allegations are made is interesting, but
less than dispositive, so MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, after pointing out
that there seems to be general agreement that the three roads
should be included in the N & W, says that
"there is a significant possibility, given the present state of
circumstances, that inclusion in N & W might be unattainable or
attainable only at the price of rendering the Penn-Central merger
against the public interest, and that, even if inclusion could be
accomplished consistent
Page 386 U. S. 475
with the public interest, it might be impossible to work out
equitable terms."
Now a "significant possibility" is not, I think, a conventional
basis for judicial nullification of an administrative order.
See Illinois C. R. Co. v. Norfolk & W. R. Co.,
385 U. S. 57,
385 U. S. 69
(1966), and cases there cited. It is true, as MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN
argues, that there are problems and difficulties about inclusion of
the roads in one of the systems, largely stemming from the poor
financial condition of two of the three roads. These difficulties
themselves argue for prompt inclusion of the roads in one of the
great systems, a result which the three roads' fierce struggle for
the last ounce of flesh may, paradoxically, defeat. [
Footnote 4/10] But judicial pessimism, if
it is to lead to administrative nullification, should have a more
substantial basis than is present here. There is, in fact, no basis
here for assuming that the roads will not be included in the N
& W; or that the terms and conditions will not be equitable; or
that the result will make the Penn-Central merger contrary to the
public interest -- or that, if any of these happened at the
Commission's hands, corrective measures could not be mandated by
the courts.
The N & W, as MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN recognizes, has
"irrevocably agreed to include these three petitioners in their
system upon terms . . . , if necessary, prescribed by [the
Commission], provided such inclusion is found to be consistent with
the public interest."
327 I.C.C. at 529. There is no reason for us to doubt that the
Commission will, in fact, complete the task of working out terms
and conditions of inclusion. If deemed necessary,
Page 386 U. S. 476
we could order that the District Court retain jurisdiction so
that the courts could speedily accomplish the result if the
Commission should fail.
But MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN darkly argues that the pressure of the
problem of including the three roads will result in creating a
"virtual rail monopoly in some southeastern States." He attaches a
map to prove it. This will come about, he says, because, when the
Commission really gets down to the inclusion of these three roads
in the N & W, the financial burdens will irresistibly impel the
Commission to allow the N & W and C & O to affiliate, with
monopolistic effect, in order to bear the weight of the included
roads. The net result, therefore, he argues, is "that Penn-Central
will increase the likelihood of, and may actually cause, an
affiliation of N & W and C & O." He points out that the
Commission did not consider this possibility. That's true. But the
remoteness of the consequence that MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN divulges is
such that neither we nor the Commission can, in all reason, be
required to consider it. I respectfully disagree with my Brother
BRENNAN that "[o]nly by considering this possibility could the ICC
fulfill its obligation to consider all the relevant factors before
approving the merger." I do not believe that we can require of the
Commission the rich and resourceful imagination to foresee the
consequence that the relatively minor problem presented by the
three roads will precipitate a vast monopoly, nor, if the
Commissioners were so gifted as to envisage such a result, could we
expect a response from them as to the problem presented other than
a solemn oath that they will not build a city to house a mouse. In
any event, if they yielded virtue and judgment in response to the
urgencies of these three roads, the courts could always overrule
them. [
Footnote 4/11] That the
courts would
Page 386 U. S. 477
not be timid, reluctant, or deferential to intervene in the
Commission's decision is a proposition which today's decision
establishes beyond dispute.
I repeat: Given the point conceded by my Brother BRENNAN that
the Commission has power to permit the merger to go forward while
the problems incident to inclusion of these three roads in one of
the great systems are being worked out, there is no basis for
repudiating the exercise of that power in this case.
It is not necessary to analyze MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN's detailed
attack upon the Commission's interim protective conditions for the
three roads. These are being reconsidered by the Commission, and
are hardly ripe for judicial review. The underlying question is,
again, whether the Commission may allow the "merger to go forward
while conditions . . . are worked out." MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN
contends that "the Act vests wide discretion in the agency" to do
this, and I confess bafflement as to why this discretion is not
broad enough to require us to tolerate the Commission's action
here.
The basic fact of the matter, I submit, is that this is not a
case in which the Commission has refused, or failed to consider, or
to make findings or provide for effective measures with respect to,
a material aspect of a merger. It gave elaborate, meticulous
consideration to the problem presented by the three roads. It made
findings with respect to their needs which apparently evoked an
enthusiastic response -- perhaps excessively enthusiastic -- in
this Court. It worked out provisions for assuring the interim
protection of the roads and their eventual destiny. It made clear,
effective provision for accomplishing the result found necessary:
that the three roads ultimately be included in one of the major
systems, and that, meanwhile, they receive traffic and financial
protection and benefits. It did this by requiring advance consent
and reserving jurisdiction. The integrity and
Page 386 U. S. 478
adequacy of the process may be subjected to court review. I
cannot escape the conclusion that the dimensions of this merger
have induced a major departure from the established and sound
principles governing judicial review of administrative judgments in
complex economic situations. It is, of course, possible, perhaps
probable, that the parties affected by this merger, including the
three roads, aided by the shock of the Court's action herein, will
find a way to avert the national mischief of aborting the
Penn-Central merger and of avoiding the continuation of the
deplorable condition of two of the three roads which will persist
if the Penn-Central merger is not effectuated. But I think, with
all respect, that the Court's decision in this case is wrong in
principle and unfortunate in consequence. It is a reversion to the
days of judicial negation of governmental action in the economic
sphere. We should be conservative and restrained, I think, where
all we can say is
no. The problems of the administrative
agency deserve more understanding, and its efforts to find
solutions are entitled to more respect than the Court has today
shown. The courts may be the principal guardians of the liberties
of the people. They are not the chief administrators of its
economic destiny.
[
Footnote 4/1]
317 I.C.C. 261,
sustained sub nom. Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employees v. United States, 221 F. Supp.
19 (D.C.E.D. Mich.),
aff'd per curiam, 375 U.
S. 216 (1963).
[
Footnote 4/2]
324 I.C.C. 1.
[
Footnote 4/3]
Other communities aligned themselves with the City of Scranton
in the District Court, but have either declined to seek review or,
as in the case of the Township of Weehawken, have abandoned their
appeal.
[
Footnote 4/4]
Memorandum for the United States in Nos. 642, 680, 691, p.
21.
[
Footnote 4/5]
He recommended that the Commission "authorize and direct"
inclusion of the L and D & H, and "authorize" inclusion of the
B & M.
Norfolk and Western R. Co. and New York, C. &
St. L.R. Co., Merger, Finance Docket No. 21510.
[
Footnote 4/6]
The court below speculated that the ICC should finish its work
on the matter during calendar 1967. 259 F. Supp. at 969, n. 4.
[
Footnote 4/7]
The Commission did not, however, foreclose the applicants from
seeking judicial review of any decision which might be made as to
capital indemnification. 328 I.C.C. at 329.
[
Footnote 4/8]
See, e.g., United States v. Rock Island Motor Transit
Co., 340 U. S. 419
(1951) (to keep motor routes of railroad "auxiliary or
supplemental");
New York Central Unification, 154 I.C.C.
489 (1929) (inclusion of short lines);
Chicago & N.W. Ry.
Co. Merger, 261 I.C.C. 672 (1946) (employee protective
provisions).
[
Footnote 4/9]
"[I]n the absence of a clear legal prescription, a reasonable
procedural decision should withstand judicial interference." Jaffe,
Judicial Control of Administrative Action 567 (1965).
[
Footnote 4/10]
Judge Friendly referred to
"the jockeying of these roads and of the three plaintiffs in the
C & O, B & O, and N & W actions for price and position
in respect of other mergers -- which, despite all the words, is
what we suspect these actions to be mostly about."
259 F. Supp. at 981.
[
Footnote 4/11]
I do not intend to indicate any opinion as to the merits of a
possible N & W-C & O affiliation.