The Staggers Rail Act of 1980 amendments to the Interstate
Commerce Act (Act) regulate the process by which rail carriers may
abandon unprofitable lines and provide a mechanism for shippers to
obtain continued service by purchasing lines or subsidizing their
operation. Title 49 U.S.C. § 10905 governs the procedures to
be followed when a person seeks to prevent an abandonment by
purchasing the carrier's lines or by subsidizing the carrier's
service. Appellee rail carrier filed an application with the
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) seeking to abandon an
unprofitable 44-mile line between a town in Iowa and a town in
Minnesota. Several shippers in Minnesota opposed the abandonment of
a 19.2-mile segment of the line in Minnesota. After an
Administrative Law Judge ruled that appellee was entitled to
abandon the entire line, the Minnesota shippers offered to
subsidize operation of the 19.2-mile segment. But the shippers were
dissatisfied with the price for subsidizing continued operation of
the segment as determined by the ICC after the parties could not
agree on the terms, and withdrew their offer. The ICC then granted
appellee a certificate of abandonment for the entire line. In the
meantime, appellee had contracted with the State of Iowa and
various Iowa shippers to improve certain trackage in Iowa and, for
this purpose, to use track from the abandoned line. The Minnesota
shippers then formed appellant rail carrier (appellant), planning
to use its authority under a Minnesota statute to condemn the
9.2-mile segment. Appellant thereafter filed suit in a Minnesota
state court and obtained a temporary restraining order preventing
appellee from removing track from that segment. Appellee removed
the suit to Federal District Court and moved to dissolve the
restraining order on the ground that the Staggers Rail Act
amendments to the Act preempted the Minnesota condemnation statute.
The District Court awarded summary judgment to appellee and
dissolved the restraining order, and the Court of Appeals affirmed,
holding that the Minnesota statute was preempted because it
constituted an obstacle to the accomplishment of the congressional
purpose behind the federal abandonment procedure.
Page 467 U. S. 623
Held: Appellant's proposed application of the Minnesota
condemnation statute is not preempted by the Staggers Rail Act
amendments to the Act. Pp.
467 U. S. 627-637.
(a) The underlying rationale of § 10905 represents a
continuation of Congress' efforts to accommodate the conflicting
interests of railroads that desire to unburden themselves quickly
of unprofitable lines and shippers that are dependent upon
continued rail service. Under prior law, carriers could negotiate
with offerors in bad faith while waiting for the then-6-month
negotiating period to elapse, thereby either extracting excessive
prices from desperate shippers or abandoning their lines without
agreeing on a purchase or subsidy. To counteract such bad-faith
negotiating, § 10905 binds a carrier to the purchase or
subsidy price determined by the ICC if the offeror and carrier
cannot themselves come to terms. On the other hand, to reduce the
costly delays associated with shipper opposition to proposed
abandonments, § 10905 reduces the period required for
resolving negotiations over offers from 6 months to 110 days. In
contrast to the complicated structure of the Act, the Minnesota
statute in question is simply a straightforward application of a
State's power of eminent domain. Pp.
467 U. S.
627-631.
(b) Federal regulation of railroad abandonments is not so
pervasive as to make reasonable any inference that Congress left no
room for state action on the subject. Congress has not
"unmistakably ordained" that States may not exercise their
traditional eminent domain power over abandoned railroad property;
nothing in the Act expressly refers to federal preemption with
respect to the disposition of such property. Nor is there any
indication that the subject matter of abandoned railroads is the
sort that "permits no other conclusion" but that it is governed by
federal and not state law. As indicated by the ICC's own
interpretation of its regulatory authority, which interpretation is
entitled to considerable deference, issuing a certificate of
abandonment, as a general proposition, terminates the ICC's
jurisdiction, so that there is no merit to appellee's argument that
the abandoned line in question cannot be properly viewed as
ordinary real property because the line, even after abandonment,
remains under the ICC's jurisdiction. Pp.
467 U. S.
632-634.
(c) The application of the Minnesota condemnation statute in the
circumstances of this case would not obstruct the accomplishment of
§ 10905's purpose of abbreviating the period during which a
carrier is obligated to furnish financially burdensome service it
seeks to escape through abandonment. State condemnation proceedings
do not interfere with that purpose insofar as they follow
abandonment. After the ICC has authorized abandonment, the carrier
is relieved of the obligation to furnish rail service, and nothing
in § 10905 indicates a federal
Page 467 U. S. 624
interest in affording special protection to a carrier after that
point. Nor would allowing appellant to bring condemnation
proceedings after abandonment contravene the Act's overall purpose
of making the railroad industry more efficient and productive.
While the exercise of state condemnation authority would prevent
appellee from removing property from the Minnesota segment in
question and shifting it to higher-value uses elsewhere, and while
the ICC has recognized opportunity costs as one factor to be
considered in deciding whether to authorize abandonment, it does
not follow that state condemnation authority thereby frustrates the
federal abandonment scheme. Section 10905 is expressly designed to
allow an offeror to force a carrier to forgo abandonment in favor
of continued operation through subsidization or purchase,
regardless of the opportunity costs entailed by the inability to
shift its assets to higher-value uses. Alleviating the carrier's
burden does not alter the economic reality that opportunity costs
continue to be incurred; it merely shifts the incidence of those
costs. In light of Congress' imposition of solutions that
subordinate opportunity costs to other considerations, state
condemnation authority is not preempted merely because it may
frustrate the economically optimal use of rail assets. Moreover,
application of the Minnesota law here would not interfere with
§ 10905's valuation procedure by allowing appellant to
relitigate the price the ICC determined for the purchase or subsidy
of appellee's lines. The purpose of the federal valuation scheme
was to prevent carriers from frustrating bona fide subsidy or
purchase offers through bad-faith negotiations, not to impose a
blanket prohibition of all post-abandonment efforts to obtain
abandoned railroad property. Pp.
467 U. S.
634-636.
693 F.2d 819, reversed and remanded.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 467 U. S. 625
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Staggers Rail Act of 1980, which amended the Interstate
Commerce Act, [
Footnote 1]
regulates the process by which rail carriers may abandon
unprofitable lines and provides a mechanism for shippers to obtain
continued service by purchasing lines or subsidizing their
operation. This case poses the question whether the Interstate
Commerce Act, as amended, preempts a Minnesota eminent domain
statute [
Footnote 2] used to
condemn rail property after it has been abandoned pursuant to the
amendments. The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that
the Act, as amended, preempted the state statute. 693 F.2d 819
(1982). We disagree.
I
On January 30, 1981, appellee filed an application with the
Interstate Commerce Commission (Commission) seeking permission to
abandon a 44-mile rail line between Oelwein, Iowa, and Randolph,
Minn. Appellee maintained that operation of the line imposed a
serious financial strain on its resources. Several shippers in
Minnesota (Shippers Group) opposed the abandonment of a 19.2-mile
segment of the line that passed through Hayfield, Minn. (Hayfield
segment). After an Administrative Law Judge ruled that appellee was
entitled to abandon the entire 44-mile line, the Shippers Group,
pursuant
Page 467 U. S. 626
to the Staggers Rail Act amendments, offered to subsidize
operation of the Hayfield segment.
See 49 U.S.C. §
10905(c). [
Footnote 3] When the
parties could not agree on mutually acceptable terms, the
Commission, at the request of the Shippers Group, determined the
appropriate price for subsidizing continued operation of the line.
See 49 U.S.C. § 10905(e). Dissatisfied with the
Commission's determination, the Shippers Group withdrew its offer.
See 49 U.S.C. § 10905(f)(2). Soon thereafter, the
Commission granted a certificate of abandonment to appellee,
ibid., thereby relieving appellee of its federal
obligation to supply rail service. During the period that the
Shippers Group was attempting to prevent the issuance of a
certificate of abandonment, appellee entered into contracts with
the State of Iowa and various Iowa shippers. These contracts
involved improvements of certain trackage in Iowa. Appellee
intended to fulfill these contracts by using the track from the
abandoned line.
On March 31, 1982, members of the Shippers Group formed
appellant Hayfield Northern Railroad Co., Inc. (hereafter
appellant). Appellant planned to use the eminent domain authority
vested in it by Minn.Stat. § 227.27 (1982) to condemn the
Hayfield segment that appellee had abandoned. Appellant filed suit
in state court and obtained a temporary restraining order
preventing appellee from removing track from the Hayfield segment.
Appellee immediately removed the suit to Federal District Court and
moved to dissolve the restraining order on the ground that the Act,
as amended, preempted the Minnesota condemnation statute. At this
point, the State of Minnesota intervened in order to defend
appellant's application of its condemnation law.
Page 467 U. S. 627
The District Court awarded summary judgment to appellee and
dissolved the restraining order. After granting a stay pending
appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed. 693
F.2d 819 (1982). The Court of Appeals held that the Minnesota
condemnation statute was preempted because it constituted an
obstacle to the accomplishment of the congressional purpose behind
the federal abandonment procedure. The Court of Appeals also
dissolved its stay and remanded the case to the District Court for
calculation of the damages incurred by appellee because of the
delay. Following denial of rehearing by the Court of Appeals, we
denied appellant's motion to stay the issuance of the Court of
Appeals' mandate, 460 U.S. 1018 (1983), and subsequently noted
probable jurisdiction, 464 U.S. 812 (1983).
II
Preemption doctrine stems from the Supremacy Clause of the
United States Constitution, [
Footnote 4] and invalidates any state law that contradicts
or interferes with an Act of Congress. Preemption arises in a wide
array of contexts, from circumstances in which federal and state
laws are plainly contradictory to those in which the
incompatibility between state and federal laws is discernible only
through inference. [
Footnote 5]
This case presents no issue of express preemption; nothing on the
face of the Staggers Rail Act amendments explictly indicates
Page 467 U. S. 628
whether Congress intended to preempt state authority over rail
property after the Commission has authorized its abandonment.
Therefore, in order to determine whether preemption is otherwise
indicated, we must inquire more deeply into the intention of
Congress and the scope of the pertinent state legislation. We turn,
then, to the laws in dispute to ascertain their structure and
purpose.
Initially, the Interstate Commerce Act did not subject railroad
abandonments to the jurisdiction of the Commission.
See
Act of Feb. 4, 1887, ch. 104, 24 Stat. 379. Congress ceded
authority over abandonments to the Commission in the Transportation
Act of 1920, ch. 91, § 402(18)-(22), 41 Stat. 477-478.
See
Chicago & N.W. Transportation Co. v. Kalo Brick & Tile
Co., 450 U. S. 311,
450 U. S.
319-320 (1981). The Transportation Act prohibited a
carrier from abandoning any portion of a line without first
obtaining from the Commission a certificate of abandonment
verifying that the future public convenience and necessity
permitted the cessation of the carrier's rail service.
The abandonment procedure proved inadequate, however, because it
lacked a specific timetable for the issuance of an abandonment
certificate. Railroads consequently found themselves enmeshed in
lengthy proceedings before the Commission, unable to unburden
themselves promptly of unprofitable lines.
See Chicago &
N.W. Transportation Co. v. United States, 582 F.2d 1043,
1045-1046 (CA7),
cert. denied, 439 U.S. 1039 (1978);
S.Rep. No. 94-499, p. 3 (1975). Congress enacted new legislation to
provide railroads with a more expeditious abandonment process that
would also be attentive to the interests of shippers and others who
might be dependent upon the continuation of rail service on a
particular line.
See the Railroad Revitalization and
Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (4-R Act), Pub.L. 94-210, § 802,
90 Stat. 127, originally codified at 49 U.S.C. §1a (1976 ed.)
(subsequently recodified without substantive change at 49 U.S.C.
§ 10903
et seq.).
Page 467 U. S. 629
To alleviate the costly delays imposed upon railroads by
protracted proceedings before the Commission, the 4-R Act provided
a schedule to govern the abandonment process.
See 49
U.S.C. §§ 1a(3), (4) (1976 ed.). At the same time, to
afford opponents of an abandonment an opportunity to maintain rail
service, the 4-R Act allowed abandonment to be delayed for up to
six months if a financially responsible person offered to subsidize
or purchase the line. § 1a(6)(a). It soon became clear,
however, that further reforms would be required in order adequately
to address both the need of railroads for an even more abbreviated
method of abandonment and the need of shippers and communities to
avoid the dislocations caused by abandonment. [
Footnote 6] As a consequence, Congress further
amended the Interstate Commerce Act by enacting the Staggers Rail
Act of 1980, Pub.L. 96-448, § 402, 94 Stat.1941-1945, codified
at 49 U.S.C. §§ 10903-10906.
The Staggers Rail Act amendment most pertinent to this case was
the revision of § 10905. Entitled "Offers of financial
assistance to avoid abandonment and discontinuance," § 10905
governs the procedures to be followed when a person seeks to
prevent an abandonment by purchasing the carrier's lines or by
subsidizing the carrier's service. Section 10905 provides that the
Commission shall publish in the Federal Register its findings that
the public convenience and necessity require or permit abandonment
or discontinuance of a particular railroad line and that, "[w]ithin
10 days following the publication, any person may offer to pay the
carrier
Page 467 U. S. 630
a subsidy or offer to purchase the line." 49 US.C. §
10905(c). [
Footnote 7] If the
Commission finds within 15 days that the offeror is "a financially
responsible person (including a government authority)" and that the
offer of assistance meets prescribed standards, it "shall postpone
the issuance of a certificate authorizing abandonment or
discontinuance." § 10905(d). If the offeror and the
carrier
"fail to agree on the amount or terms of the subsidy or
purchase, either party may, within 30 days after the offer is made,
request that the Commission establish the conditions and amount of
compensation . . . within 60 days,"
§ 10905(e), and this decision
"shall be binding on both parties, except that the person who
has offered to subsidize or purchase the line may withdraw his
offer within 10 days of the Commission's decision."
§ 10905(f)(2). If the offer is withdrawn, "the Commission
shall immediately issue a certificate authorizing the abandonment
or discontinuance."
Ibid.
The underlying rationale of § 10905 represents a
continuation of Congress' efforts to accommodate the conflicting
interests of railroads that desire to unburden themselves quickly
of unprofitable lines and shippers that are dependent upon
continued rail service. [
Footnote
8] Under the 4-R Act, carriers could negotiate with offerors in
bad faith while simply waiting for the 6-month negotiating period
to elapse. By pursuing this
Page 467 U. S. 631
course, carriers could either extract excessive prices from
desperate shippers or abandon their lines without reaching an
agreement on purchase or subsidy.
See Chicago & N.W.
Transportation Co. v. United States, 678 F.2d 665, 667 (CA7
1982). To counteract bad-faith negotiating on the part of carriers,
§ 10905(f)(2) binds a carrier to the purchase or subsidy price
determined by the Commission in the event that the offeror and the
carrier cannot themselves come to terms. On the other hand, to
reduce the costly delays associated with shipper opposition to
proposed abandonments, § 10905 further abbreviates the period
required for resolving negotiations over offers. Under the 4-R Act,
the period for resolving such offers was six months; under §
402(c) of the Staggers Rail Act amendments, Congress reduced the
period to 110 days. [
Footnote
9]
In contrast to the complicated structure of the Interstate
Commerce Act, the Minnesota statute at issue is a straightforward
application of a State's familiar power of eminent domain. The
statute, originally enacted in 1879, provides:
"Every foreign and domestic railroad corporation shall have
power to acquire, by purchase or condemnation, all necessary
roadways, spur and side tracks, rights of way, depot grounds,
yards, grounds for gravel pits, machine shops, warehouses,
elevators, depots, station houses, and all other structures
necessary or convenient for the use, operation, or enjoyment of the
road, and may make with any other railroad company, such
arrangements for the use of any portion of its tracks and roadbeds
as it may deem necessary."
Minn.Stat. § 222.27 (1982).
III
The argument that the Staggers Rail Act amendments preempt the
State's power of eminent domain over the abandoned Hayfield segment
rests upon two contentions: first,
Page 467 U. S. 632
that the federal regulation of railroad abandonments is so
pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no
room for state action on this subject; and, second, that
application of the Minnesota statute in the circumstances of this
case would pose an obstacle to the accomplishment of the purposes
of § 10905.
A
The first contention attempts to bring this case within the
narrow ambit of decisions in which this Court has indicated that
congressional legislation so occupied the field of a particular
subject area that state regulation within that field would be
improper no matter how well state law comported with the federal
policies involved.
Cf. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. State
Energy Resources Conservation & Dev. Comm'n, 461 U.
S. 190,
461 U. S.
203-204 (1983). This Court has repeatedly affirmed,
however, that
"federal regulation of a field of commerce should not be deemed
preemptive of state regulatory power in the absence of persuasive
reasons -- either that the nature of the regulated subject matter
permits no other conclusion, or that the Congress has unmistakably
so ordained."
Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul,
373 U. S. 132,
373 U. S. 142
(1963). In this case, Congress has not "unmistakably ordained" that
the States may not exercise their traditional power of eminent
domain over railroad property that has been abandoned; nothing in
the Act expressly refers to federal preemption with respect to the
disposition of abandoned railroad property. Nor is there any
indication that the subject matter at issue here -- abandoned
railroad property -- is of the sort that "permits no other
conclusion" but that it is governed by federal, and not state,
regulation. After all, state law normally governs the condemnation
of ordinary real property.
Appellee insists that the line it abandoned cannot properly be
viewed as ordinary real property, because, even after abandonment
has occurred, the line remains under the jurisdiction of the
Commission. According to appellee, the elaborate
Page 467 U. S. 633
procedural detail of the Act indicates that, in addition to
granting the Commission exclusive and plenary authority to regulate
abandonment, the Act also
"granted the Commission exclusive and plenary authority to
provide for continuation of rail service via forced sale or subsidy
following its authorization of abandonment."
Brief for Appellee 21-22. This claim reflects a misunderstanding
of the Act. With exceptions irrelevant to this case, [
Footnote 10] the provisions of the
Act relate to requirements that must be met before the Commission
will authorize an abandonment. Therefore, unless the Commission
attaches post-abandonment conditions to a certificate of
abandonment, the Commission's authorization of an abandonment
brings its regulatory mission to an end. [
Footnote 11]
The proposition that, as a general matter, issuing a certificate
of abandonment terminates the Commission's jurisdiction is strongly
buttressed by the Commission's own
Page 467 U. S. 634
interpretation of its regulatory authority. According to the
Commission,
"the disposition of rail property after an effective certificate
of abandonment has been exercised is a matter beyond the scope of
the Commission's jurisdiction, and within a State's reserved
jurisdiction. Questions of title to, and disposition of, the
property are the matters subject to State law."
Abandonment of Railroad Lines and Discontinuance of
Service, 365 I.C.C. 249, 261 (1981);
see also Chicago
& N.W. Transportation Co. -- Abandonment -- in Waukesha,
Jefferson and Dane Counties, WI, I.C.C. Docket No. AB-1
(Sub-No. 144) (May 5, 1983) (set forth in App. to Joint
Supplemental Memorandum of Appellant and Appellant-Intervenor A-1,
A-5);
Common Carrier Status of States, State Agencies and
Instrumentalities, and Political Subdivisions, 363 I.C.C. 132,
135 (1980) ("When a rail line has been fully abandoned, it is no
longer [a] rail line, and the transfer of the line is not subject
to our jurisdiction" (footnote omitted)),
aff'd sub nom.
Simmons v. ICC, 225 U.S.App.D.C. 84, 697 F.2d 326 (1982);
Modern Handcraft, Inc. -- Abandonment in Jackson County,
Mo., 363 I.C.C. 969, 972 (1981). The Commission's position, of
course, is entitled to considerable deference, since it represents
the construction of a regulatory statute by the agency charged with
the statute's enforcement.
See, e.g., Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms v. Federal Labor Relations Authority,
464 U. S. 89,
464 U. S. 97
(1983).
B
The second contention in support of a finding of preemption is
that the Minnesota condemnation statute, applied in the manner
which appellant proposes, would obstruct the accomplishment of the
objectives for which Congress enacted § 10905.
Cf. Hines
v. Davidowitz, 312 U. S. 52,
312 U. S. 67
(1941) (preemption arises when state law "stands as an obstacle to
the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and
objectives of Congress"). More specifically, appellee maintains
that, if shippers are allowed to institute potentially
Page 467 U. S. 635
lengthy condemnation proceedings against abandoned rail lines,
the benefits of the 110-day time limit established by § 10905
will be lost. [
Footnote
12]
We are unpersuaded. The expedited process provided by §
10905 was intended to abbreviate the period during which a carrier
is obligated to furnish financially burdensome service it seeks to
escape through abandonment. State condemnation proceedings do not
interfere with that purpose insofar as such proceedings
follow abandonment. After the Commission has authorized a
carrier to abandon its lines, that carrier is relieved of its
obligation to furnish rail service. Nothing in § 10905
indicates a federal interest in affording special protection to a
carrier after the point at which the carrier's federal obligation
ends. [
Footnote 13]
Appellee also maintains that allowing appellant to bring
condemnation proceedings after abandonment would contravene the
overall purpose of the Act: to make the railroad industry more
efficient and productive. It is true that the exercise of state
condemnation authority would prevent appellee from removing
property subject to that authority from the Hayfield segment and
shifting such property to higher-value uses elsewhere. It is also
true that the existence of opportunity costs has been recognized by
the Commission as one factor to be taken into account in deciding
whether to authorize an abandonment.
See, e.g., State of Maine
Dept. of Transportation v. ICC, 587 F.2d 541, 543-544 (CA1
1978). It does not follow however, that state condemnation
authority thereby frustrates the federal abandonment scheme. What
appellee overlooks is that § 10905 is
Page 467 U. S. 636
expressly designed to allow an offeror to force a carrier to
forgo abandonment in favor of continued operation through
subsidization or purchase, regardless of the opportunity costs
entailed by the inability to shift its assets to higher-value uses.
See § 10905(f)(2). Offerors must be willing, of
course, to subsidize or purchase the line so that the costs of
continued operation are lifted from the carrier. § 10905(d).
But alleviating the carrier's burden does not alter the economic
reality that opportunity costs continue to be incurred; it merely
shifts the incidence of those costs. In light of Congress'
imposition of solutions that subordinate opportunity costs to other
considerations, state condemnation authority is not preempted
merely because it may frustrate the economically optimal use of
rail assets.
Finally, appellee maintains that appellant's proposed
application of Minnesota law would interfere with the valuation
procedure established by § 10905 by allowing appellant to
relitigate the price the Commission established for the purchase or
subsidizing of appellee's lines. [
Footnote 14] Although it may seem unfair to allow a
shipper a "second bite at the apple" in state condemnation
proceedings after it has participated in, and then withdrawn from,
negotiations under § 10905, that second opportunity does not
frustrate the purpose of the federal valuation scheme. That purpose
was to prevent carriers from frustrating bona fide offers of
subsidy or purchase through bad-faith negotiations,
see
supra at
467 U. S.
630-631, not to impose a blanket prohibition covering
all post-abandonment efforts to obtain abandoned property.
[
Footnote 15]
Page 467 U. S. 637
IV
We hold that appellant's proposed application of Minnesota
condemnation law is not preempted by the Staggers Act amendments to
the Interstate Commerce Act. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment
of the Court of Appeals and remand the case for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Pub.L. 96-448, § 402, 94 Stat.1941-1945, 49 U.S.C.
§§ 10903-10906.
[
Footnote 2]
Minn.Stat. § 222.27 (1982);
infra, at
467 U. S. 631
(quoting the text of the law). Many States have enacted similar
statutes.
See Brief for Appellants 5, n. 2 (citing
statutes in 33 States).
[
Footnote 3]
At the same time that the Shippers Group offered to subsidize
continued rail service, it also appealed the decision authorizing
abandonment. The Commission denied the appeal, whereupon the
Shippers Group filed a petition for review in the Court of Appeals.
After unsuccessfully seeking a stay of the order permitting
abandonment, the Shippers Group withdrew its petition for review.
See 693 F.2d. 819, 820 (1982).
[
Footnote 4]
See U.S.Const., Art. VI, cl. 2 ("This Constitution, and
the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance
thereof . . . shall be the supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing
in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding");
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1,
22 U. S. 211
(1824).
[
Footnote 5]
Compare McDermott v. Wisconsin, 228 U.
S. 115 (1913) (invalidating state law directly
conflicting with federal regulations),
with Motor Coach
Employees v. Lockridge, 403 U. S. 274
(1971) (holding wrongful discharge action brought in state court
precluded by pervasiveness of federal regulation in the area).
See generally L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law
376-391 (1978).
[
Footnote 6]
See generally Railroad Transportation Policy Act of
1979: Hearings on S.1946 before the Senate Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation, 96th Cong., 1st Sess. (1979); Railroad
Deregulation Act of 1979: Hearings on H.R. 4570 before the
Subcommittee on Transportation and Commerce of the House Committee
on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 96th Cong., 1st Sess (1979);
Railroad Deregulation Act of 1979: Hearings on S. 796 before the
Subcommittee on Surface Transportation of the Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation, 96th Cong., 1st Sess., pts.
1, 3 (1979).
[
Footnote 7]
To enable potential offerors to determine the feasibility of
subsidizing or purchasing a line, the Act mandates that a rail
carrier applying for an abandonment certificate must provide
current financial data, including an estimate of the annual subsidy
and minimum purchase price needed to keep the line in operation. 49
U.S.C. § 10905(b).
[
Footnote 8]
See S.Rep. No. 96-470, pp. 39-41 (1979) ("The
abandonment provisions of this bill are designed to accomplish two
major objectives: significantly reducing the time spent processing
[abandonment] cases at the Commission and improving the process by
which abandoned lines can be subsidized"); H.R.Conf.Rep. No.
96-1430, p. 125 (1980) (§ 10905 as amended will "assist
shippers who are sincerely interested in improving rail service,
while at the same time protecting carriers from protracted legal
proceedings which are calculated merely to tediously extend the
abandonment process").
[
Footnote 9]
Compare 49 U.S.C. § 1a(6)(a) (196 ed.)
with 49 U.S.C. § 10905(c)-(f).
[
Footnote 10]
See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. § 10906:
"If the Commission finds that the rail properties proposed to be
abandoned are suitable for public purposes, the properties may be
sold, leased, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of only under
conditions provided in the order of the Commission. The conditions
may include a prohibition on any such disposal for a period of not
more than 180 days after the effective date of the order, unless
the properties have first been offered, on reasonable terms, for
sale for public purposes."
See also 49 U.S.C. § 10905(f)(4) (no purchaser of
an abandoned line "may transfer or discontinue service on such line
prior to the end of the second year after consummation of the sale,
nor may such purchaser transfer such line, except to the carrier
from whom it was purchased, prior to the end of the fifth year
after consummation of the sale").
[
Footnote 11]
This does not mean that, in the post-abandonment period, States
are free to undo the very purposes for which the Commission
authorized an abandonment. For example, if the Commission
authorized an abandonment on the ground that relocation of the
track was essential to enable the carrier to provide adequate
service elsewhere, preemption would almost certainly invalidate a
subsequent order by a state court barring such a transfer.
Cf.
In re Boston & Maine Corp., 596 F.2d 2, 5-7 (CA1 1979);
Texas & Pac. R. Co. Abandonment between San Martine and
Rock House in Culberson, Texas, 363 I.C.C. 666, 678-679
(1980). This problem is absent from the case at bar.
[
Footnote 12]
According to the Court of Appeals "the benefits of the 110-day
time schedule would be lost, since the state proceedings, once
commenced, could take years." 693 F.2d at 822-823 (citation
omitted).
[
Footnote 13]
As the Conference Report on the Staggers Rail Act explained, one
of the central aims of § 10905 was to "protec[t] carriers from
protracted legal proceedings which are calculated merely to
tediously extend
the abandonment process." H.R.Conf.Rep.
No. 96-1430, p. 125 (1980) (emphasis added).
[
Footnote 14]
The Court of Appeals accepted this argument and concluded that
allowing appellant to use Minnesota law to condemn the Hayfield
segment "would circumvent the Commission's determination of value."
693 F.2d at 823.
[
Footnote 15]
The question whether appellant should be allowed to litigate the
value of appellee's abandoned rail property is an issue more
appropriately analyzed in terms of
res judicata, rather
than preemption. If an offeror participates in a § 10905
proceeding and obtains an unfavorable valuation, the Commission's
administrative determination may well have preclusive effect in
state condemnation proceedings.
See, e.g., United States v.
Utah Constr. & Mining Co., 384 U.
S. 394,
384 U. S. 422
(1966) (administrative determinations usually have
res
judicata effect "[w]hen an administrative agency is acting in
a judicial capacity and resolves disputed issues of fact properly
before it which the parties have had an adequate opportunity to
litigate"). On the other hand, the 60-day limit within which the
Commission must fix a price for purchase or subsidy,
see
49 U.S.C. § 10905(f)(1)(A), may deprive the parties of the
"adequate opportunity to litigate" required for the imposition of
res judicata. We intimate no position on the issue,
inasmuch as it is not now before us.
Similarly, we leave open the issue whether state condemnation
proceedings could, consistent with the purposes of the federal
abandonment scheme, fix a lower valuation upon abandoned property
than the valuation arrived at in prior § 10905
proceedings.