SCRAP, a student environmental association, secured from a
three-judge District Court an injunction against the authorization
by the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) of a temporary 2.5%
freight surcharge to be imposed across the board by most of the
Nation's railroads. The ground for the injunction was that by
adding the surcharge to the cost of transporting recyclable goods,
fewer such goods would be transported, the need would be met by
increased use of natural resources, and there would therefore be an
adverse impact on the environment; hence the National Environmental
Policy Act required that the ICC prepare an "impact statement" on
the surcharge. The District Court considered the applications for
stay of the injunction pending appeal but, concluding that danger
to the environment outweighed the loss of income and consequent
financial threat to the railroads, the court denied the
application.
Held: Since it cannot be said that the District Court's
factual evaluation of the necessity for a stay constituted an abuse
of discretion, the applications for stay must be denied.
See: 346 F.
Supp. 189.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, Circuit Justice.
These applications request me, as Circuit Justice for the
District of Columbia Circuit, to stay a preliminary injunction
entered by a three-judge United States District Court for the
District of Columbia. The applicants are the Interstate Commerce
Commission and a long list of railroad companies composing most of
the rail transport in the Nation. Opposing the applications are the
plaintiffs below, Students Challenging Regulatory
Page 409 U. S. 1208
Agency Procedures, who describe themselves as "SCRAP," [
Footnote 1] and a coalition of
organizations dedicated to the protection of environmental
resources. The applicants say that they intend to seek prompt
review in this Court on the merits of the preliminary injunction
entered below.
(1)
The Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. § 1
et
seq., permits increases in railroad freight rates to become
effective without prior approval of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. A carrier may file a proposed tariff and, after 30 days
unless the Commission shortens the period, the new rate becomes
effective as a carrier-made rate. 49 U.S.C. § 6(3). The
Commission may, however, choose to suspend the effectiveness of
newly filed rates for as much as seven months, in order to
investigate the lawfulness of the rates. 49 U.S.C. § 15(7). At
the end of seven months, the carrier-proposed rates go into effect
by operation of law unless the Commission has completed its
investigation and affirmatively disapproved the new rates.
Ibid. Prior decisions of this Court confirm the
Commission's broad discretion in the exercise of its power of
suspension; judicial review of suspension action or inaction is
most severely limited, if not foreclosed.
Arrow Transportation
Co. v. Southern R. Co., 372 U. S. 658
(1963);
Board of Railroad Comm'rs v. Great Northern R.
Co., 281 U. S. 412,
281 U. S. 429
(1930).
Against this legal background and prodded by an increasingly
precarious financial condition, the railroads, on December 13,
1971, asked the Commission for leave to file on short notice a 2.5%
surcharge on nearly
Page 409 U. S. 1209
all freight rates. The railroads asked that the surcharge be
effective as of January 1, 1972. The surcharge was conceived as an
interim emergency mens of increasing railroad revenues by some $246
million per year, a sum the railroads describe as slightly less
than one-sixth of the increased expenses incurred annually since
the last general ratemaking proceedings. Selective increases on a
more permanent basis would follow.
By order dated December 21, 1971, the Commission denied the
railroads' request to make the 2.5% surcharge effective as of
January 1, 1972. The Commission stated that it was aware of the
carriers' need for additional revenues, but concluded that
publication of the interim surcharge on short notice "would
preclude the public from effective participation" in proceedings to
evaluate the surcharge. 340 I.C.C. 358, 361. The Commission did,
however, rule that the railroads might refile their proposed
surcharge on January 5, 1972, to be effective no earlier than
February 5, 1972.
On January 5, 1972, the railroads filed tariffs to put the 2.5%
surcharge into effect on February 5. SCRAP and other environmental
groups asked the Commission to suspend the surcharge for the
statutory seven-month period. They opposed the across-the-board
surcharge on the ground that the present railroad rate structure
discourages the movement of "recyclable" [
Footnote 2] goods in commerce, and that every
across-the-board increase would
Page 409 U. S. 1210
further increase disincentives to recycling. The environmental
groups contended that added disincentives to recycling would result
in the increased degradation of the natural environment by
discarded, unrecycled goods and in the increased exploitation of
scarce natural resources. At a minimum, SCRAP objected to the
Commission's failure to issue an "impact statement" evaluating the
effect of the 2.5% surcharge on the shipment and use of recyclable
materials. SCRAP contended that such a statement was required by
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C.
§ 4321
et seq. Section 102(2)(C) of NEPA, 83 Stat.
853, requires an impact statement
"in every recommendation or report on proposals for legislation
and other major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality
of the human environment. . . ."
42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). [
Footnote 3]
Page 409 U. S. 1211
The railroads took the position that interim application of the
across-the-board surcharge would not "significantly affect the
quality of the human environment" within the meaning of NEPA. The
railroads pointed out that the 2.5% surcharge would apply equally
to all products; that past experience indicated little likelihood
of reduced shipments of recyclable materials as a result of the
across-the-board rate revision; that the increase was small
relative to the normal increase approved in general freight rate
revision cases; and that the increase would be short-lived.
By order dated February 1, 1972, the Commission announced that
it would not suspend the 2.5% surcharge. It would, in effect, allow
the surcharge to go into effect on February 5 and terminate on June
5, 1972. The order specifically stated the Commission's view that
the surcharge would
"have no significant adverse effect on the movement of traffic
by railway or on the quality of the human environment within the
meaning of the Environmental Policy Act of 1969."
The Commission's order of February 1 further provided that the
Commission would not resume the investigation begun by its December
21 order until the railroads asked to file the promised selective
4.1% rate increase. After that tariff was filed, on April 24, the
Commission suspended the 4.1% selective increase for the statutory
seven-month period until November 30, 1972. Since the original June
5 expiration date for the surcharge had assumed that selective
increases would become effective
Page 409 U. S. 1212
by that time, the Commission's order suspending the 4.1%
selective increase eliminated the June 5 surcharge expiration date.
The railroads then modified the temporary surcharge tariffs so that
the 2.5% surcharge will expire on November 30, 1972, unless the
4.1% selective increase is approved prior to that time. The
Commission's study of the proposed selective rate increase is still
in progress, and will include an environmental impact
statement.
(2)
SCRAP filed suit on May 12, 1972, in the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia, seeking, among other relief
requested, a preliminary injunction to require the Commission to
prevent the railroads from further collecting the 2.5% surcharge.
[
Footnote 4] Other
environmental groups and the railroads were allowed to intervene as
a matter of right. The primary thrust of SCRAP's suit was that the
Commission's orders, permitting and then extending the 2.5%
surcharge, constituted "major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment." The plaintiffs
argued that the Commission's action was unlawful because the
Commission had not issued an environmental impact statement as
required by NEPA. On July 10, 1972, the District Court issued a
preliminary injunction enjoining the railroads from collecting the
2.5% surcharge on shipments originating after July 15, 1972,
"insofar as that surcharge relates to goods being transported for
purposes of recycling, pending further order of this court." In its
opinion, the District Court rejected the Government's contention
that SCRAP and its fellow plaintiffs lacked standing under this
Court's decision in
Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.
S. 727 (1972).
Page 409 U. S. 1213
The court's opinion noted that the SCRAP plaintiffs had
alleged
"that its members use the forests, streams, mountains, and other
resources in the Washington [D.C.] area for camping, hiking,
fishing and sightseeing, and that this use is disturbed by the
adverse environmental impact caused by nonuse of recyclable
goods."
346 F.
Supp. 189, 195 (1972). This allegation, said the District
Court, removed this case from the ambit of
Sierra
Club,
"where the Sierra Club failed to allege 'that its members use
Mineral King for any purpose, much less that they use it in any way
that would be significantly affected by the proposed actions of the
respondents.'"
405 U.S. at
405 U. S.
735.
Having thus dealt with our decision in
Sierra Club, the
District Court focused on
Arrow Transportation, supra, and
related cases [
Footnote 5]
drastically curtailing the jurisdiction of the federal courts to
review the suspension power of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
"The thrust of the doctrine," reasoned the District Court, "seems
to be that judicial review is available only when the rates in
question are Commission-made, rather than carrier-made." 346 F.
Supp. at 196. The District Court noted that the present case was
not one "where the Commission merely stands silently by and allows
carrier-made rates to take effect without suspension."
Ibid. The Commission had found the surcharge rates just
and reasonable, and it had authored a detailed set of conditions on
approval of the rates without suspension. The District Court
concluded that
"[a] suspension decision which
Page 409 U. S. 1214
effectively blackmails the carriers into submitting
agency-authored rates is functionally indistinguishable from an
agency order setting those rates . . . [S]uch orders are, of
course, judicially reviewable."
Id. at 197.
Yet the District Court found it unnecessary to decide the degree
of Commission involvement in effectuating the 2.5% surcharge. The
court held that
"NEPA implicitly confers authority on the federal courts to
enjoin any federal action taken in violation of NEPA's procedural
requirements, even if jurisdiction to review this action is
otherwise lacking."
Ibid. The federal courts would have jurisdiction to
review, and to enjoin,
"even a mere failure to suspend rates which are wholly
carrier-made so long as the review is confined to a determination
as to whether the procedural requisites of NEPA have been
followed."
Id. at 197 n. 11. Recognition of this jurisdiction
would not undermine the
Arrow decision, because
"judicial insistence on compliance with the nondiscretionary
procedural requirements of NEPA in no way interferes with the
Commission's substantive discretion,"
id. at 198, to suspend rates pending investigation and
final action.
Turning to the merits, the court held that the Commission's
decision not to suspend was a "major federal action" within the
meaning of NEPA. An impact statement would be required whenever an
action "
arguably will have an adverse environmental
impact."
Id. at 201. (Emphasis in original.) The
Commission could not escape preparation of a statement by "so
transparent a ruse" as its "single sentence" affirmation that the
2.5% surcharge would have no significant adverse environmental
effect. This finding is "no more than glorified boilerplate,"
id. at 201 n. 17, and the Commission has failed to prove
its truth.
Finally, the District Court concluded that the balance of
equities in this case tipped in favor of preliminary
Page 409 U. S. 1215
relief. Any damage to the environment would likely be
irreparable. But "the damage done the railroads by granting the
injunction, while clearly nonfrivolous, is not overwhelming."
Id. at 201-202. Without opinion, the District Court
declined to stay its preliminary injunction pending appeal.
(3)
It is likely that the questions to be presented by this appeal
"are of such significance and difficulty that there is a
substantial prospect that they will command four votes for review"
when the full Court reconvenes for the October, 1972, Term.
Organized Village of Kake v. Egan, 80 S. Ct. 33, 35, 4 L.
Ed. 2d 34, 37 (1959) (BRENNAN, J., in chambers). The decision below
may present a serious question of standing to sue for the
protection of environmental interests.
Sierra Club. v. Morton,
supra. The decision may be read as undermining our
Arrow decision, and, in that respect, may conflict with
the reasoning of the Second Circuit in
Port of New York
Authority v. United States, 451 F.2d 783 (CA2 1971 ). Most
important, the decision may have the practical effect of requiring
the Commission to file an impact statement whenever it exercises
its statutory suspension powers. This requirement is significant
because it would likely apply to each of the cluster of federal
agencies presently exercising suspension powers comparable to that
of the Interstate Commerce Commission. [
Footnote 6]
Page 409 U. S. 1216
For these reasons, I would not be prepared to conclude that the
Court would dispose summarily of the dispute underlying these stay
applications. I must, therefore, consider whether allowing or
staying the preliminary injunction is most likely to insure fair
treatment for the interests of the parties and the public until the
full Court acts. On the allegations of the parties, some injury
will occur whichever course is taken. Those opposing the stay
naturally point to the large weight to be given to the District
Court's evaluation or "balancing" of the equities.
The harm to the railroads, and to the overall public interest in
maintaining an efficient transportation network, is immediate and
direct. Badly needed revenues will be lost at once, and there is
little likelihood that they can be recouped. The railroads
originally estimated the loss at $500,000 per month, but they have
revised that estimate upwards by several times since advised by
SCRAP that it attaches an unexpectedly broad interpretation to the
District Court's injunction. Unlike the District Court, I find it
difficult to dismiss this certain loss of at least one and perhaps
several millions of dollars simply because it is "not overwhelming"
relative to the total revenues to be derived from the surcharge.
Nor is it sufficient to discount the lost revenues because they
might have to be disgorged if found unreasonable by the Commission
at a later date. The chances of such a ruling are, again, only
speculative. As a general premise for evaluation, the possibility
of rebate suggests equally that shippers would not regard the
surcharge as a significant additional cost.
On the other hand, the District Court was convinced that harm to
the environment might result from allowing the railroads to collect
the 2.5% surcharge on recyclable goods pending disposition of their
appeal in this Court. The District Court concluded that any such
harm would likely be irreparable, since, as the court explained,
"once
Page 409 U. S. 1217
raw materials are unnecessarily extracted from the ground and
used, they cannot be returned from whence they came." [
Footnote 7] 346 F. Supp. at 201. This
eventuality is premised on the following projected chain of
events:
"(a) The railroads will collect the 2.5 percent surcharge on
recyclable, as well as all other materials."
"(b) Because recyclable materials are already discriminated
against in freight rates, the surcharge further increases rate
disparities and, in any event, raises the absolute cost of
transporting recyclable materials, often a high proportion of their
total cost."
"(c) This increase in cost will result in decreased demand for
recyclable materials."
"(d) This decrease in demand will be counterbalanced by an
increased demand for new or unrecycled materials."
"(e) This increased demand for new materials will result in
extraction of natural resources not otherwise planned."
There is evidence in the record arguably supporting this
forecast of the consequences of increasing freight rates on
recyclable goods in common with others.
Our society and its governmental instrumentalities, having been
less than alert to the needs of our environment for generations,
have now taken protective steps. These developments, however
praiseworthy, should not lead courts to exercise equitable powers
loosely or casually whenever a claim of "environmental damage" is
asserted.
Page 409 U. S. 1218
The world must go on, and new environmental legislation must be
carefully meshed with more traditional patterns of federal
regulation. The decisional process for judges is one of balancing,
and it is often a most difficult task.
A District Court of three judges has considered this application
for a stay pending appeal and has concluded that the stay should be
denied. The criteria for granting a stay of the judgment of such a
district court are stringent, at least when the necessity for a
stay turns upon a refined factual evaluation of its effect.
"An order of a court of three judges denying an interlocutory
injunction will not be disturbed on appeal unless plainly the
result of an improvident exercise of judicial discretion."
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Public Service Comm'n,
278 U. S. 322,
278 U. S. 326
(1929);
Railway Express Agency v. United States, 82 S. Ct.
466, 7 L. Ed. 2d 432 (1962) (Harlan, J., in chambers). I cannot say
the District Court's action can be equated with an abuse of
discretion because it decided that there was danger to the
environment outweighing the loss of income and consequent financial
threat to the railroads. Notwithstanding my doubts of the
correctness of the action of the three-judge District Court, as
Circuit Justice, acting alone, I incline toward deferring to their
collective evaluation and balancing of the equities.
Reluctantly, I conclude that the applications for stay pending
appeal should be denied.
* Together with No. A-73,
Interstate Commerce Commission v.
Students Challenging Regulatory Agency Procedures (SCRAP) et
al., also on application for stay.
[
Footnote 1]
SCRAP's complaint alleged that it is
"an unincorporated association formed by five law students from
the [George Washington University] National Law Center . . . in
September, 1971,"
whose "primary purpose is to enhance the quality of the human
environment for its members, and for all citizens. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
At the time of filing these stay applications, there was
disagreement between the parties over the meaning of the term
"recyclable," as it pertains to this lawsuit. The railroads
apparently understood the term "in the sense of processing of goods
to obtain either a product of the same kind or a previous state of
the product." Supplemental Memo of Applicants, filed July 14, 1972,
p. 2. SCRAP's list of recyclable products, the railroads say,
includes products that are
"not recyclable in any sense that the railroads understand that
term, but merely involve the familiar circumstances by which one
usable product is derived from another."
Id. at 3.
See infra at
409 U. S.
1216.
[
Footnote 3]
Section 102 of NEPA provides, in pertinent part:
"The Congress authorizes and directs that, to the fullest extent
possible: (1) the policies, regulations, and public laws of the
United States shall be interpreted and administered in accordance
with the policies set forth in this chapter, and (2) all agencies
of the Federal Government shall --"
"
* * * *"
"(C) include in every recommendation or report on proposals for
legislation and other major Federal actions significantly affecting
the quality of the human environment, a detailed statement by the
responsible official on --"
"(i) the environmental impact of the proposed action,"
"(ii) any adverse environmental effects which cannot be avoided
should the proposal be implemented,"
"(iii) alternatives to the proposed action,"
"(iv) the relationship between local short-term uses of man's
environment and the maintenance and enhancement of long-term
productivity, and"
"(v) any irreversible and irretrievable commitments of resources
which would be involved in the proposed action should it be
implemented."
"Prior to making any detailed statement, the responsible Federal
official shall consult with and obtain the comments of any Federal
agency which has jurisdiction by law or special expertise with
respect to any environmental impact involved. Copies of such
statement and the comments and views of the appropriate Federal,
State, and local agencies, which are authorized to develop and
enforce environmental standards, shall be made available to the
President, the Council on Environmental Quality, and to the public
as provided by section 552 of Title 5, and shall accompany the
proposal through the existing agency review processes. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
A three-judge court was convened to hear the case.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 2325, 2284.
[
Footnote 5]
E.g., Alabama Power Co. v. United
States, 316 F.
Supp. 337 (DC 1969), and
Atlantic City Electric Co. v.
United States, 306 F.
Supp. 338 (SDNY 1969),
both aff'd by an equally divided
court, 400 U. S. 73
(1970);
Electronics Industries Assn. v. United
States, 310 F.
Supp. 1286 (DC 1970),
aff'd, 401 U.S. 967 (1971);
Florida Citrus Comm'n v. United States, 144 F.
Supp. 517 (ND Fla. 1956),
aff'd, 352 U.S. 1021 (1957);
Algoma Coal & Coke Co. v. United
States, 11 F. Supp.
487 (ED Va. 1935).
[
Footnote 6]
Among suspension provisions enacted by Congress since 49 U.S.C.
§ 15(7) are 49 U.S.C. §§ 316(g), 318(c) (Motor
Carrier Act, 1935); 49 U.S.C. §§ 907(g), (i) (Water
Carriers Act); 49 U.S.C. § 1006 (e) (Freight Forwarders Act);
47 U.S.C. § 204 (Federal Communications Act of 1934); 16
U.S.C. § 824d(e) (Federal Power Act); 15 U.S.C. § 717c(e)
(Natural Gas Act); and 49 U.S.C. § 1482(g) (Federal Aviation
Act of 1958).
See Arrow Transportation Co. v. Southern R.
Co., 372 U. S. 658,
372 U. S. 666
n. 13 (1963).
[
Footnote 7]
In evaluating the possibility of irreparable harm to the
environment, the District Court did not mention the danger of
increased disposal of recyclable materials. The District Court had
adverted to this problem earlier in its opinion. Since the lower
court did not premise its action on this possibility, it apparently
concluded that any short-range harm to the environment caused by
increased disposal would not be irreparable.