Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 1 of 8
[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 16-15701
________________________
Agency No. 42130
SUNBELT CHLOR ALKALI PARTNERSHIP,
Petitioner,
versus
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD,
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Respondents,
NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY,
Intervenor.
________________________
Petition for Review of a Decision of the
Surface Transportation Board
________________________
(January 26, 2018)
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 2 of 8
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, JILL PRYOR and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Sunbelt Chlor Alkali Partnership petitions for review of the Surface
Transportation Board’s decision that the rate Norfolk Southern Railway Company
charges Sunbelt is reasonable. After careful review and with the benefit of oral
argument, we deny the petition for review.
I. BACKGROUND
Sunbelt manufactures chlorine in its plant in McIntosh, Alabama and ships
its product by rail from the plant to LaPorte, Texas. For the first leg of the route,
from McIntosh to New Orleans, Louisiana, Norfolk Southern is the only available
rail service provider. In July 2011, Sunbelt filed a complaint before the Board
challenging as unreasonable the rate for this leg of the route. To support its claim,
Sunbelt used the Board’s stand-alone cost (“SAC”) test, which requires the
complaining shipper to create a hypothetical, stand-alone railroad (“SARR”).
Under the SAC test, if the existing railroad’s challenged rate exceeds the amount
the SARR would need to charge to serve the shipper, cover the SARR’s costs, and
earn a reasonable return on investment, the rate is unreasonable.
As required by the SAC test, in its opening evidence Sunbelt proposed a
SARR along with a detailed operating plan, which it contended showed that
Norfolk Southern’s rate was unreasonable. Relevant here, Sunbelt’s plan proposed
2
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 3 of 8
a hub at Birmingham, which lies between McIntosh and New Orleans. At the
Birmingham hub, Sunbelt chose not to include a hump yard, which would be more
expensive to construct but more efficient at managing high rail car traffic. Sunbelt
also proposed that the SARR would amortize its debt by making quarterly interest-
only payments (“coupon method”).
In response, Norfolk Southern submitted its own operating plan for the
SARR, which it contended showed that the rate it charged Sunbelt was reasonable.
Notably, that plan included a hump yard at Birmingham to manage traffic. Norfolk
Southern also proposed the standard debt amortization method under Board
precedent, which would require the SARR to pay down its debt gradually over
time, similar to payments on a mortgage. By including the Birmingham hump yard
and having the SARR pay both interest and principal on its debt, Norfolk
Southern’s proposal was considerably more expensive than Sunbelt’s. On rebuttal,
Sunbelt continued to maintain that a hump yard at Birmingham was unnecessary
and that it had properly accounted for the SARR’s expenses regarding its debt.
Evaluating the parties’ competing proposals, the Board determined, and
Sunbelt does not challenge here, that the SARR needed a hump yard at
Birmingham to serve the traffic. The Board explained that this “major design
flaw” rendered Sunbelt’s plan infeasible: therefore, the Board accepted Norfolk
3
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 4 of 8
Southern’s operating plan. Decision at 13 (JA 1036).1 Additionally, the Board
rejected Sunbelt’s method of debt amortization as inconsistent with the SAC test,
adopting Norfolk Southern’s proposal instead. After conducting the SAC analysis
using Norfolk Southern’s operating plan and debt amortization method, the Board
concluded that Sunbelt had failed to demonstrate that the rate Norfolk Southern
charged was unreasonable.
Sunbelt petitioned the Board for reconsideration. Sunbelt argued that once
the Board determined a hump yard was necessary, the Board should have
incorporated a hump yard into Sunbelt’s operating plan, rather than accepting
Norfolk Southern’s plan. Sunbelt also argued that the Board erred in rejecting
Sunbelt’s use of the coupon method to amortize its debt. The Board rejected
Sunbelt’s arguments.
Sunbelt now petitions this Court for review of the Board’s order.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Administrative Procedure Act requires federal courts to “hold unlawful
and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions” that are “arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”
5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). To make this determination, courts must “consider whether
the decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there
1
Citations to material in the administrative record are to the joint appendix filed in this
Court.
4
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 5 of 8
has been a clear error of judgment.” N. Buckhead Civic Ass’n v. Skinner,
903 F.2d
1533, 1538 (11th Cir. 1990) (internal quotation marks omitted).
III. DISCUSSION
The Board regulates the rates charged by interstate railroads. See BNSF Ry.
Co. v. Surface Transp. Bd.,
526 F.3d 770, 773 (D.C. Cir. 2008). When a single
railroad exercises “market dominance,” meaning there is an “absence of effective
competition from other rail carriers or modes of transportation” in the relevant
market, a party may bring a complaint before the Board challenging the railroad’s
rate. 49 U.S.C. §§ 10701(d)(1), 10707(a)-(b). The Board then determines whether
the rate charged by the railroad is reasonable.
Here, the parties agree that Norfolk Southern exercised market dominance
for the route from McIntosh to New Orleans, meaning the Board had the authority
to review Sunbelt’s challenge to the rate for this route. The parties disagree over
the Board’s determination that Norfolk Southern’s rate was reasonable.
Sunbelt argues that the Board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious for two
reasons. First, it argues that the Board should have inserted Norfolk Southern’s
hump yard into Sunbelt’s proposed plan, creating a hybrid plan, rather than
accepting Norfolk Southern’s plan. Second, it argues that the Board erred in
accepting Norfolk Southern’s method for debt amortization over Sunbelt’s. We
address these arguments in turn.
5
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 6 of 8
A. The Hump Yard
Sunbelt argues that once the Board determined that a hump yard was
necessary at Birmingham, it should have substituted a hump yard for the flat yard
in Sunbelt’s operating plan, instead of accepting Norfolk Southern’s plan. We
disagree.
After Norfolk Southern proposed the hump yard in its operating plan,
Sunbelt could have modified its own plan to include a hump yard. Instead, in its
rebuttal brief, Sunbelt continued to oppose the addition of a hump yard. It was
only in its petition for reconsideration, after the Board’s decision in Norfolk
Southern’s favor, that Sunbelt for the first time argued that the Board should create
a hybrid plan. But as the Board explained in its decision denying reconsideration,
the Birmingham hump yard was the “keystone to the entire system’s
functionality,” so the Board could not “simply try to stitch [Norfolk Southern’s]
hump yard onto Sunbelt’s operating plan . . . without requiring additional changes
to evidence that the Board was not in a position to make.” Recons. Decision at 4-5
(JA 1340-41). Indeed, doing so would have required the Board to assess
independently the hump yard’s impact on the complex Rail Traffic Controller
(“RTC”) model,2 as well as the added costs to the operating plan.
2
The RTC is a computer program that tests the feasibility of the infrastructure in the
operating plan. As the Board has explained, the RTC “provides essential evidence to support a
6
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 7 of 8
We agree with the Board that, after making the tactical choice to oppose the
addition of a hump yard until its petition for reconsideration, “Sunbelt may not
now claim error” based on the Board’s failure to incorporate a hump yard into
Sunbelt’s SARR.
Id. at 6 (JA 1342). Although we agree with Sunbelt that the
Board is more than a passive arbiter, it is not required “to identify alternatives that
parties did not identify, particularly when . . . the effect of those changes is
unclear.”
Id. at 6-7 (JA 1342-43). Therefore, we cannot say that the Board’s
decision to reject Sunbelt’s proposal on reconsideration to incorporate a hump yard
into Sunbelt’s operating plan was arbitrary or capricious.
B. Debt Amortization
Sunbelt also argues that the Board erred in adopting Norfolk Southern’s
proposal for debt amortization. Again, we disagree. The parties proposed different
plans for paying off the SARR’s debt. Sunbelt proposed the coupon method, under
which the SARR would make interest-only payments and then take on new debt as
the principal became due. Norfolk Southern, by contrast, proposed that the SARR
would pay off the principal gradually over time, along with decreasing interest
payments. The Board selected Norfolk Southern’s proposal, determining that
Sunbelt’s coupon method would allow the SARR to avoid paying for its assets in
SARR’s configuration and certain broader operating statistics.” Recons. Decision at 5 (JA
1341).
7
Case: 16-15701 Date Filed: 01/26/2018 Page: 8 of 8
violation of the SAC test, which assesses “whether the SARR can pay the cost of
constructing, maintaining and operating its system.” Decision at 191 (JA 1214).
According to the Board, Norfolk Southern’s proposal was consistent “with long-
standing policy.” Recons. Decision at 10 (JA 1346).
Sunbelt argues that it was arbitrary and capricious for the Board to reject its
plan for interest-only debt amortization in favor of Norfolk Southern’s mortgage-
style proposal because requiring the SARR to pay its principal constitutes a barrier
to entry—which “must be omitted from the SAC analysis”—because existing
railroads use the coupon method. Decision at 5 (JA 1028). As the Board noted,
however, allowing the SARR to pay only interest would “abandon the fundamental
structure of the SAC test.”
Id. at 191 (JA 1214). Furthermore, under “Board
precedent . . . the SARR’s debt payments contain an interest component and a
principal component, and the interest portion decreases as the debt is amortized
over time.”
Id. Sunbelt points to no case where the Board applied a different debt
amortization method than the one Norfolk Southern proposed. We therefore
cannot conclude that the Board’s decision to apply that method here was arbitrary
and capricious.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we deny Sunbelt’s petition for review.
DENIED.
8