The Oklahoman

Judge says railroad talks should be included in lawsuits

- By Josh Funk

OMAHA, Neb. — A federal judge has ruled that the details of conversati­ons between the nation's four largest railroads should be included in lawsuits challengin­g billions of dollars of charges the railroads imposed in the past.

The ruling on Friday undercuts one of the defenses Union Pacific, BNSF, CSX and Norfolk Southern had offered in dozens of lawsuits major companies filed last year questionin­g the way railroads set rates. The lawsuits say the railroads conspired to boost prices starting in 2003 by imposing coordinate­d fuel surcharges and pocketing billions of dollars in profits.

The price-fixing allegation­s have been winding their way through U.S. courts for more than a decade since several companies first filed similar lawsuits in 2007. The cases are moving forward individual­ly after an appellate judge ruled last year that the case didn't qualify for class-action status for as many as 16,000 shippers affected by the rates.

The companies that filed the lawsuits — which include carmakers like Hyundai, manufactur­ers such as Campbell Soup and power companies like Dominion Energy — say the four railroads had meetings, phone calls and email communicat­ions through which they embarked on the conspiracy to apply the fuel surcharges to all traffic to generate profits.

One of the plaintiffs' attorneys, Stephen Neuwirth, said he's glad the details of those conversati­ons can be presented at trial.

“That evidence establishe­s that for at least five years,

the rail roads violated U.S. law by coordinati­ng fuel surcharges as a way to raise rail freight prices,” Neuwirth said.

In the lawsuits, the railroads have argued that their fuel surcharges were legal and were simply designed to recover the skyrocketi­ng cost of fuel at the time.

The railroads had also argued that an obscure law that allows railroads to discuss rates on shipments that cross multiple rail roads should have protected their conversati­ons about rates, but the judge rejected that argument on Friday.

CS X spokeswoma­n Cindy S child said the railroad based in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, believes the pricefixin­g allegation­s are unfounded, and it will continue to defend its surcharges because they were developed legally.

Union Pacific, which is based in Omaha, Nebraska, plans to continue“vigorous ly defending itself against the allegation­s in these lawsuits,” spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Graham said.

Norfolk Southern, based in Norfolk, Virginia, did not immediatel­y respond to questions about the lawsuit son Monday. Officials at BNSF, which is headquarte­red in Forth Worth, Texas, declined to comment.

In 1980, Congress largely de regulated railroads. That led to a number of consolidat­ions in the industry resulting in the four major railroad shippers that exist today: Norfolk Southern and CSX in the Eastern United States and B NSF and Union Pacific serving much of the West.

Although the companies are individual entities, they are legally allowed to work together to some degree to ensure the con tinu it yo ft he nation' s railroad network.

 ??  ?? In this July 31, 2018 photo, a Union Pacific train travels through Union, Neb. [NATI HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO]
In this July 31, 2018 photo, a Union Pacific train travels through Union, Neb. [NATI HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO]

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