Puerto Rico Maritime v. Federal Maritime Com ( 1996 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion









    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit

    ____________________


    No. 95-1643

    PUERTO RICO MARITIME SHIPPING AUTHORITY,

    Petitioner,

    v.

    FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
    and
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

    Respondents.

    ____________________


    STANLEY HECHT

    Intervenor.

    ____________________


    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION

    ____________________

    Before

    Lynch, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Watson,* Senior Judge. ____________

    ____________________

    Amy Loeserman Klein, with whom Jenkens & Gilchrist was on ____________________ ____________________
    brief, for petitioner Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Authority.
    Carol J. Neustadt, Attorney, Federal Maritime Commission, __________________
    with whom Robert D. Bourgoin, General Counsel, and C. Douglass __________________ ___________
    Miller, Attorney, Federal Maritime Commission, and Anne K. ______ ________
    Bingaman, Assistant Attorney General, John J. Powers III and ________ ___________________
    ____________________

    *Of the U.S. Court of International Trade, sitting by
    designation.












    Robert J. Wiggers, Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice, were on _________________
    brief, for respondents Federal Maritime Commission and United
    States of America.
    Rick A. Rude for intervenor Stanley Hecht. ____________
    Nathan J. Bayer, with whom Torbjorn B. Sjogren and Sher & ________________ ___________________ ______
    Blackwell were on brief, for amici curiae United States Atlantic _________ _____ ______
    and Gulf/Southeastern Caribbean Conference, United States
    Atlantic and Gulf Hispaniola Steamship Freight Association, Latin
    American Shipping Service Association, Venezuelan American
    Maritime Association and the Credit Agreement.


    ____________________

    February 6, 1996
    ____________________



















































    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. May the Federal Maritime LYNCH, Circuit Judge. ______________

    Commission, in exercising its administrative lawmaking

    function, excuse a party from paying sums awarded against it

    by a final judgment entered by a U.S. District Court and

    affirmed on appeal? We preserve harmony between the two

    systems of law and respect for judgments entered by the

    courts by concluding, on the facts of this case, that the

    party was not free before the agency to seek to undo the

    court judgment. Accordingly, we reverse the FMC's

    determination that Save-On Shipping (SOS) need not pay the

    attorneys' fees and costs awarded to Puerto Rico Maritime

    Shipping Authority (PRMSA) by the United States District

    Court for the Southern District of Florida and by the United

    States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. To the

    extent that the FMC's order is prospective and does not

    involve sums awarded by the judgment entered, we affirm.

    PRMSA carried four shipments of frozen food and

    other items to San Juan, Puerto Rico for SOS. When SOS

    refused to pay about $11,000 of PRMSA's bill, PRMSA began an

    action against SOS in the federal court in Florida seeking

    the unpaid freight charges, interest, collection costs and

    attorneys' fees pursuant to the terms of PRMSA's bill of

    lading to SOS.1 Jurisdiction was under the maritime and

    ____________________

    1. PRMSA's lawsuit in federal district court was filed by an
    agent of PRMSA, Puerto Rico Marine Management, Inc. (PRMMI),
    and the judgment in the federal court action ran in favor of

    -3- 3













    admiralty jurisdiction of the federal courts, 28 U.S.C.

    1333. The bill of lading, which employed language found in a

    bill of lading tariff filed with the FMC, provided that:

    [t]he shipper, consignee, holder hereof, and owners
    of the goods shall be jointly and severally liable
    to Carrier for the payment of all freight,
    demurrage, General Average and other charges,
    including, but not limited to court costs, expenses
    and reasonable attorney's fees incurred in
    collecting sums due Carrier.

    SOS moved for summary judgment; PRMSA filed a cross motion.

    SOS lost on both motions. The court awarded PRMSA the unpaid

    freight, attorneys' fees and costs, enforcing the terms of

    the bill of lading.

    SOS moved for reconsideration and then for a stay

    of the district court proceeding while SOS pursued a

    complaint (FMC Docket No. 92-12) it had filed (after losing

    the summary judgment motions) before the FMC. That

    administrative complaint challenged, inter alia, the _____ ____

    attorneys' fees provision of the tariff upon which the bill

    of lading was based, but did not directly challenge the

    attorneys' fees awarded on the four shipments at issue in the

    federal court action. It asserted that the attorneys' fees

    tariff provision was unreasonable under sections 17 and 18(a)

    of the Shipping Act of 1916, 46 U.S.C. app. 816 and 817(a)

    (the 1916 Act), and section 2 of the Intercoastal Shipping

    ____________________

    PRMMI. Because the distinction between PRMSA and PRMMI is
    unimportant to the disposition of this petition, this opinion
    refers only to PRMSA.

    -4- 4













    Act of 1933, 46 U.S.C. app. 844 (the 1933 Act). It

    involved seven shipments on which PRMSA had not sought

    freight collection in the court action. Because the

    shipments had occurred two years prior to the filing of the

    administrative complaint, SOS sought only prospective relief

    in the form of cease and desist orders. SOS's motion for a

    stay of the district court proceedings was the first time

    that SOS argued before the district court that the attorneys'

    fees provision might be illegal or unreasonable and thus

    unenforceable because it was unilateral. The motion for a

    stay did not argue that the district court lacked

    jurisdiction over the attorneys' fees issue. Rather,

    recognizing that primary jurisdiction is a rule of

    "deference" and not of jurisdiction, it argued that primary

    jurisdiction was in the FMC. The district court denied both

    of SOS's motions.

    SOS appealed the judgment to the United States

    Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit and moved to stay

    the appellate proceedings or, in the alternative, to refer

    the case to the FMC under the doctrine of primary

    jurisdiction. The Eleventh Circuit denied the motion for

    stay. It later affirmed the district court, without opinion,

    and denied the motion for referral as moot. PRMSA was

    eventually awarded attorneys' fees and costs of approximately





    -5- 5













    $100,000. The parties do not identify any further appeals

    taken by SOS in the federal court action pertinent here.

    Having lost in federal court, SOS filed a second

    complaint before the FMC (FMC Docket No. 93-21) directly

    challenging the attorneys' fees awarded on the four shipments

    that were at issue in the Eleventh Circuit. This

    administrative complaint also alleged that the tariff and

    bill of lading language concerning attorneys' fees and costs

    was unlawful and unreasonable. It sought reparations

    pursuant to section 22(a) of the 1916 Act, 46 U.S.C. app.

    821(a), in the amount of attorneys' fees that were granted by

    the federal court. The FMC eventually consolidated FMC

    Docket No. 92-12 and FMC Docket No. 93-21 on the attorneys'

    fees issue.

    The FMC agreed with SOS on the attorneys' fees

    issue. The FMC held that because the bill of lading tariff

    provision was unilateral (allowing the carrier, but not the

    shipper, to recover fees and costs), it was in conflict with

    an FMC decision, West Gulf Maritime Ass'n v. Galveston, 22 _________________________ _________

    F.M.C. 101 (1979), and the provision was unjust and

    unreasonable. It granted SOS's relief in both FMC Docket No.

    92-12 and FMC Docket No. 93-21. In so doing, it decided

    three issues of relevance here. It first rejected PRMSA's

    argument that claim preclusion barred the reparations claim

    in FMC Docket No. 93-21 as to the four shipments involved in



    -6- 6













    the court action. It next ordered PRMSA to pay back as

    reparations in FMC Docket No. 93-21 any amount PRMSA

    collected in attorneys' fees pursuant to the federal court

    judgment. It also granted SOS's motion for summary judgment

    in FMC Docket No. 92-12 seeking a cease and desist order

    preventing PRMSA from publication and attempted enforcement

    of the provisions of FMC-F-No. 10 (the bill of lading tariff)

    and its bill of lading allowing for costs, expenses, and

    attorneys' fees.

    PRMSA has petitioned here for review of the FMC's

    order. The FMC and the United States are respondents;

    Stanley Hecht, president of SOS, has appeared as an

    intervenor.2 In its petition, PRMSA presses the claim

    preclusion argument it made before the FMC. It also claims

    that the FMC's decision on the merits of the attorneys' fees

    issue was error.

    Because the question of claim preclusion is purely

    a matter of law within the expertise of the federal courts

    and is not a question within the particular expertise of the

    FMC, our review of that issue is plenary. Cf. Dion v. ___ ____

    Secretary of Health and Human Servs., 823 F.2d 669, 673 (1st _____________________________________

    Cir. 1987). We also note the doctrine that "[j]udgments

    ____________________

    2. PRMSA's suit in the district court was filed against both
    SOS and Stanley Hecht. Midway through the litigation, SOS
    represented that it had gone out of business, and the
    litigation was carried on only in the name of Stanley Hecht.
    In this opinion, "SOS" designates both parties.

    -7- 7













    within the powers vested in courts by the Judiciary Article

    of the Constitution may not lawfully be revised, overturned

    or refused faith and credit by another Department of

    Government." Chicago & Southern Air Lines, Inc. v. Waterman __________________________________ ________

    S.S. Corp., 333 U.S. 103, 113 (1948). Because we believe __________

    that FMC Docket No. 93-21 was barred under principles of

    claim preclusion, we reverse the FMC's order with respect to

    FMC Docket No. 93-21 including its order granting reparations

    of the amount of attorneys' fees collected by PRMSA pursuant

    to the federal court action. We do not, however, believe

    that FMC Docket No. 92-12 was barred and, in light of our

    deferential review of the FMC's construction of a statute it

    administers, see Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources ___ _____________________ _________________

    Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837 (1984), we affirm the FMC's _______________

    order in that case.

    1. FMC Docket No. 93-21: The Reparations Claim. _______________________________________________

    Since the identity of the parties and the existence of a

    final judgment on the merits are not in dispute, the parties

    have focussed on whether there was sufficient identity

    between the causes of action actually litigated in the

    federal court action and the claim for reparations before the

    FMC. We do not enter the fray, as do the parties, for under

    the principle of claim preclusion, "'a final judgment on the

    merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies

    from relitigating issues that were or could have been raised ______________________



    -8- 8













    in that action.'" Manego v. Orleans Bd. of Trade, 773 F.2d ______ ____________________

    1, 5 (1st Cir. 1985) (quoting Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, _____ _______

    94 (1980) (emphasis supplied)), cert. denied, 475 U.S. 1084 _____ ______

    (1986); accord Kelly v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & ______ _____ __________________________________

    Smith, Inc., 985 F.2d 1067, 1070 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, ___________ _____ ______

    114 S. Ct. 600 (1993).

    The claims of unreasonableness, and hence,

    illegality, of the attorneys' fees provision in the bill of

    lading could have been raised as an affirmative defense in

    the action over which the district court plainly had

    jurisdiction. Although SOS could have raised

    unreasonableness as an affirmative defense and requested the

    district court to stay the action and refer the question to

    the FMC as a matter of primary jurisdiction, see Holt Marine ___ ___________

    Terminal, Inc. v. United States Lines, 472 F. Supp. 487, 489 _______________ ___________________

    (S.D.N.Y. 1978); cf. P.R. Maritime Shipping Auth. v. Valley ___ _____________________________ ______

    Freight Sys., 856 F.2d 546, 549 (3d Cir. 1988) (referral to ____________

    Interstate Commerce Commission), the decision to refer was

    within the discretion of the federal court. Valley Freight ______________

    Sys., 856 F.2d at 549. The doctrine of primary jurisdiction ____

    does not implicate the subject matter jurisdiction of the

    federal court. Id. ___

    Normally, this would be the end of the matter.

    Under the transactional approach of the Restatement (Second)

    of Judgments 24 (1980) applicable here, see Manego, 773 ___ ______



    -9- 9













    F.2d at 5; see also Wallis v. Justice Oaks II, Ltd. (In re ___ ____ ______ _____________________________

    Justice Oaks II, Ltd.), 898 F.2d 1544, 1551 (11th Cir.) ________________________

    (applying Restatement's transactional approach), cert. _____

    denied, 498 U.S. 959 (1990), defendants can no more split ______

    defenses arising out of the same transaction or occurrence

    than plaintiffs can split claims. Even if SOS's reparations

    claim before the FMC is characterized as a counterclaim

    rather than an affirmative defense, it would not be a

    separate cause of action. The reparations claim, which is

    based on the very same four shipments at issue in the federal

    court collection action, clearly arose out of the same

    transaction or occurrence and virtually all of the facts

    necessary to the reparations claim would have formed the

    basis of a defense to the collection action. Cf. Pirela v. ___ ______

    Village of North Aurora, 935 F.2d 909, 912 (7th Cir.), cert. ________________________ _____

    denied, 502 U.S. 983 (1991). ______

    Indeed, the required joinder of compulsory

    counterclaims, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 13(a) and Restatement ___

    (Second) of Judgments 22, is designed to prevent parties

    from hiding behind formal distinctions between defenses and

    counterclaims. Under usual circumstances, SOS's reparations

    claim would be a compulsory counterclaim and SOS's failure to

    assert it in the federal court action would have barred it

    from bringing it in a subsequent action. See id. ___ ___





    -10- 10













    The FMC urges that those usual rules should not

    apply, relying on the opinion in Government of Guam v. ___________________

    American President Lines, 28 F.3d 142 (D.C. Cir. 1994). That ________________________

    case held that there is no express or implied cause of action

    in federal district courts over reparations claims brought

    under either the 1916 Act or the 1933 Act.3 The argument

    goes that SOS cannot be barred from pursuing a reparations

    action that could not have been brought in the federal

    district court. That argument begs the question. The issue

    here is whether principles of claim preclusion bar the

    assertion of a claim before an agency which is based on a

    legal theory that could have been raised by way of defense to




    ____________________

    3. In Government of Guam the shippers first initiated an ___________________
    action before the FMC against carriers for reparations for
    rates alleged to be unlawful under the 1916 and 1933 Acts.
    The shippers later filed a virtually identical claim in
    federal court which the court dismissed. The D.C. Circuit
    affirmed the dismissal. The shippers conceded that the FMC
    had the task of resolving the merits of the dispute, 28 F.3d
    at 144, and there was no private cause of action expressly
    provided in the 1916 and 1933 Acts for a shipper to challenge
    a carrier's rates in federal court. The shippers sought to
    continue the court action in order to preserve ultimate
    claims of a class, claims which the FMC could not hear, and
    argued there was an implied cause of action. The D.C.
    Circuit declined to imply a cause of action.
    In contrast, here, the carrier had a cause of
    action that was properly before the federal court. There is
    little reason to think the Government of Guam court intended __________________
    to resolve a dispute of the sort faced on the facts here.
    Indeed, in a separate part of the opinion, the Government of _____________
    Guam court declined to give the shippers relief from the ____
    consequences of their failure to have raised certain legal
    theories in the district court. Id. at 149-50. ___

    -11- 11













    the district court claim and which, if it had been raised,

    could have provided the same relief.

    A defendant is barred from relitigating a defense

    which was available in a prior action by making it the basis

    of a claim that would "nullify the initial judgment or would

    impair rights established in the initial action."

    Restatement (Second) of Judgments 22(2)(b). A defendant's

    failure to raise such a defense precludes the defendant from

    seeking restitution of the amount that may have been awarded

    to the plaintiff in the first action. Id. cmt. b & f, illus. ___

    2, 3, 9. The reparations action SOS seeks in this case is

    precisely the type of restitutionary remedy that, under this

    rule, is barred. Were SOS to be allowed a reparations

    remedy, the district court's award of attorneys' fees would

    be rendered totally meaningless and there would be a

    concomitant waste of judicial resources. We hold that SOS's

    claim for reparations before the FMC is barred.

    The policies of economy, efficiency, repose and

    fairness underlying the claim preclusion doctrine are best

    served by holding SOS to the consequences of its actions and

    inactions. Under the facts of this case, SOS had a full and

    fair opportunity to litigate the attorneys' fees issue before

    the district court.4 Although it had an opportunity to do

    ____________________

    4. A defendant must, of course, have a full and fair
    opportunity to raise the claim in the first action. In the
    analogous situation of plaintiffs' claim splitting, for

    -12- 12













    so, SOS neither raised the reparations claim before the

    federal court nor argued that there was no jurisdiction over

    the attorneys' fees issue. SOS, as a result, gains no

    benefit from any jurisdictional competency or "formal

    barrier" exception to the doctrine of claim preclusion. Cf. ___

    Restatement (Second) of Judgments 26(1)(c). Further, the

    Government of Guam outcome was not supported by precedent in __________________

    the Eleventh Circuit nor is it binding on that circuit.

    Indeed, the FMC itself has in the past taken the position

    that federal courts have concurrent jurisdiction over

    reparations claims brought under section 22 of the 1916 Act

    and that a reparations counterclaim could be raised in

    federal district court. See Interconex, Inc. v. Federal ___ _________________ _______

    Maritime Comm'n, 572 F.2d 27, 30 (2d Cir. 1978). _______________

    There is virtually no practical difference between

    the relief SOS could have received before the district court

    and what it sought before the FMC. The legal theory -- the

    unreasonableness of the unilateral attorneys' fees provision

    -- was available to SOS in the district court action. The

    extent of the relief sought -- relief from payment of the

    attorneys' fees -- was available in the district court.


    ____________________

    example, the Restatement recognizes that the first court must
    have been competent to adjudicate the claim. See ___
    Restatement (Second) of Judgments 26(1)(c); see also id. ___ ____ ___
    22(2) (claim preclusion over counterclaims is limited to
    claims that the defendant "may [have] interpose[d]" as a
    counterclaim in the first action).

    -13- 13













    The purely formal distinctions on which FMC and

    intervenor uneasily rest have met with considerable hostility

    when used as attempts to avoid claim preclusion. For example,

    parties who have failed to raise fraud and forgery defenses

    in state court actions have been barred from bringing RICO

    claims in federal court based on allegations of fraud and

    forgery even where jurisdiction over the RICO claim may have

    been exclusively federal. See, e.g., Henry v. Farmer City ___ ____ _____ ___________

    State Bank, 808 F.2d 1228, 1236-37 (7th Cir. 1986); cf., __________ ___

    also, Pirela, 935 F.2d at 912. The underlying rationale is ____ ______

    that claim preclusion applies if the formal barriers did not

    prevent the party from a full and fair opportunity in the

    first action to litigate the substance of the legal theory

    advanced and remedy sought in the second action.

    Finally, the results reached here with respect to

    the reparations action are not outweighed by concerns over

    the 1916 and 1933 Acts' statutory scheme. Cf., e.g., United ___ ____ ______

    States v. American Heart Research Found., Inc., 996 F.2d 7, ______ _____________________________________

    11 (1st Cir. 1993) (claim-splitting limitation relaxed where

    applying it would frustrate a statutory objective). A

    different factual setting might more strongly involve the

    policies behind the 1916 and 1933 Acts, but this is basically

    an action between two private parties over who will bear the

    costs and fees of the collection action here. In order to

    collect $11,000 in freight charges, an amount SOS says it has



    -14- 14













    now paid and does not dispute, PRMSA was forced to spend over

    $100,000 in attorneys' fees. That Congress may have

    preferred that the FMC decide questions of the reasonableness

    of attorneys' fees provisions in carrier tariffs does not

    justify upsetting the strong policy of honoring final

    judgments entered by federal courts. Cf. Plaut v. ___ _____

    Spendthrift Farm, Inc., 115 S. Ct. 1447 (1995) (retroactive _______________________

    legislation which reverses a judgment within the power vested

    by the courts is unconstitutional as a violation of

    separation of powers). Nor does it excuse compliance by

    litigating parties with general rules of federal claim

    preclusion.

    SOS had a range of actions available, which it

    chose not to follow, that would have accommodated the

    interests of both the judicial and administrative systems.

    Before SOS was sued, it could have paid PRMSA's bill and the

    fees and then brought an action before the FMC for

    reparations. Alternatively, once sued, SOS could have

    asserted an affirmative defense of illegality and/or brought

    a reparations counterclaim in district court and sought a

    ruling on the question of whether there was subject matter

    jurisdiction over the reparations counterclaim. It could

    also have brought a timely action in the FMC and it could

    have asked in a timely fashion for a stay of the district

    court action or a primary jurisdiction referral. It could



    -15- 15













    also have asked the district court to make its decision

    without prejudice to pursuing the reparations claim before

    the FMC. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments 26(1)(b). ___

    On these particular facts and equities,5 the FMC's

    decision that SOS was free to avoid claim preclusion and thus

    the federal court judgment against it on the four shipments

    for costs and attorneys' fees is, we believe, in error and is

    reversed.




    ____________________

    5. The result reached here coincides with the results
    reached in Delta Traffic Serv., Inc. v. Georgia-Pacific ___________________________ _______________
    Corp., 936 F.2d 64 (2d Cir. 1991), which addressed the _____
    jurisdictional relationship between the federal courts and
    the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) over rate
    reasonableness issues. In that case, the Second Circuit
    denied requests to remand the case to the district court to
    assert rate reasonableness defenses that were not raised in
    the district court, but stated that Georgia-Pacific could
    nevertheless continue to pursue a reparation action based on
    rate unreasonableness before the ICC. See id. at 66. In ___ ___
    Georgia-Pacific, however, Georgia-Pacific requested a stay of _______________
    the district court action and a referral to the ICC
    "[c]oincident with the service of its answer" in the federal
    action. Id. at 65. Moreover, the rate reasonableness issue ___
    was pending before the ICC before judgment entered in the
    federal court action. Aware of the ICC action, the Second
    Circuit carefully limited the scope of its decision, which
    may have restricted any claim preclusive effects it might
    otherwise have had. Id. at 66; see 18 Charles A. Wright et ___ ___
    al., Federal Practice and Procedure 4413 (1981). Georgia- _______________________________ ________
    Pacific does not stand for the proposition that a party may _______
    collaterally attack a federal court's final judgment by
    raising before an agency a claim based on a defense that
    could have been, but was not, raised in the federal court.
    Indeed, in a similar case the Second Circuit had earlier
    refused to undermine a federal district court judgment based
    on a rate unreasonableness defense raised for the first time
    on appeal. See Delta Traffic Service, Inc. v. Appco Paper & ___ ___________________________ _____________
    Plastics Corp., 931 F.2d 5, 7 (2d Cir. 1991). ______________

    -16- 16













    2. FMC Docket No. 92-12: Cease and Desist Orders. _______________________________________________

    The issues raised by the appeal from the other administrative

    complaint are different, as is the outcome. As PRMSA states

    in its brief, the seven shipments at issue in FMC Docket No.

    92-12 were never part of the federal court action brought by

    PRMSA. Even if these seven shipments arose out of the same

    transaction or occurrence (which is unclear on the record

    before us), as they must for PRMSA successfully to assert

    claim preclusion, the bar would work against PRMSA. PRMSA

    would then have split its claim and would be barred from

    suing on the seven shipments. A defendant has no obligation

    to raise affirmative defenses to claims that have not been

    brought against it. Cf. Restatement (Second) of Judgments ___

    22 cmt. b.

    The pertinent statutes are silent on the merits of

    whether the attorneys' fee provision in PRMSA's tariff and

    bill of lading was unreasonable because it was unilateral.

    We defer to the expertise of the FMC on the issue. See ___

    Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842-43. Section 18(a) of the 1916 Act _______

    provides that carriers will enforce "just and reasonable"

    tariffs and practices relating thereto. 46 U.S.C. app.

    817(a). The FMC, which administers the 1916 Act, is charged

    with deciding whether a carrier's tariff and bill of lading

    is "just and reasonable." In light of the fact that these

    provisions are ubiquitous and shippers have no meaningful



    -17- 17













    ability to avoid the provision, the FMC held that the

    attorneys' fees and costs provision was not just and

    reasonable under a prior analogous FMC decision, West Gulf _________

    Maritime Ass'n v. Galveston, 22 F.M.C. 101 (1979) (holding ______________ _________

    unreasonable under section 17 of the 1916 Act an attorneys'

    fees provision that allowed a terminal operator, but not a

    user, to collect attorneys' fees). We recognize that, West ____

    Gulf notwithstanding, two of the FMC's commissioners ____

    dissented from the decision at issue here and that the

    question of unreasonableness of the attorneys' fees provision

    is by no means free from doubt. But the FMC's construction

    of the statute appears to be permissible. See Chevron, 467 ___ _______

    U.S. at 842-43. We therefore affirm the FMC's order insofar

    as it relates to FMC Docket No. 92-12.

    Conclusion

    The judgment of the FMC is reversed in part, ________

    affirmed in part, and remanded with directions that the FMC ________________ ________

    dismiss FMC Docket No. 93-21 and modify its order in

    accordance with this opinion. Parties to bear their own

    costs on appeal. It is so ordered. ________________













    -18- 18