AAXICO Airlines explained

Airline:AAXICO Airlines
Founded:23 March 1946
incorporated in Florida as American Air Export and Import Company
Ceased:
merged into Saturn Airways
Headquarters:Miami, Florida
United States
Key People:Howard J. Korth

AAXICO Airlines was an airline based in the United States. AAXICO is an acronym for American Air Export and Import Company. Initially founded as a non-scheduled airline or irregular air carrier, AAXICO was awarded certification as a scheduled air cargo airline in 1955 by the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), the now-defunct Federal agency that, at the time, tightly regulated almost all US air transport. However, in 1962 AAXICO reverted to a supplemental air carrier. In 1965, it was nominally bought by Saturn Airways, another supplemental airline but AAXICO was the surviving management and ownership.

A related company of the same name, owned by the family that controlled AAXICO Airlines, remained in the aircraft parts business until it was sold in 2012.

History

Initial passenger service

The company was founded in the fall of 1945 as a partnership in Miami, Florida by Charles A. Carroll, who started with $14,000, one airplane, and 14 employees.[1] The company was incorporated in Florida on 23 March 1946.[2] AAXICO initially focused on passenger service, operating as a nominally non-scheduled airline offering service to Miami, New York, Atlantic City, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Charlotte, Tampa, and Norfolk. It was the first airline to offer direct flights between New York and Havana, Cuba.[1] AAXICO's initial flight service consisted of five daily flights from New York to Atlantic City geared toward the horse racing industry, with the last flight scheduled to wait until after the last race.[3] The airline was clearly offering scheduled service, attracting unwanted attention from the CAB.[4]

Shift to freight and a scheduled certificate

Thus from October 1946 AAXICO shifted to air freight, flying cargo flights to Central and South America and operating under contract to the US military. In 1953, 98.4% of its operating revenues were from the military, 95.1% for military freight.[5] At the time of its certification award by the CAB in November 1955, it was concentrating on US military contracts. At the time, the airline had a fleet of eight C-46 aircraft, three of them owned.[6] AAXICO took almost a year to launch scheduled service on November 15, 1956.[7] In the same month, the company changed its name to AAXICO Airlines, Inc.[8]

Re-certification as a supplemental

In June 1959, the CAB granted AAXICO's request to suspend scheduled service. AAXICO said it losing too much money flying on a scheduled basis between New York, Atlanta and New Orleans. The CAB noted AAXICO had never used its authority to fly to nine other cities in Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, Michigan, Illinois, Indianapolis and the District of Columbia, and that it had only served Philadelphia and Birmingham, AL on a flag stop basis.[9] AAXICO continued with charter business, but in June 1962, the CAB made final a case in which it considered scheduled cargo operator certificates for renewal, and in view of AAXICO's suspension of scheduled service, the CAB declined to renew its certificate.[10] This would have shut AAXICO down completely on September 1, but the airline was lucky. Congress had resolved a long-running drama over the legality of nonscheduled carriers (now called supplemental air carriers) by passing a law on July 10 to specifically create a certificate for such airlines.[11] This, among other things, allowed airlines to apply for provisional supplemental certificates based on certain criteria, and AAXICO qualified. It duly received an interim supplemental certificate on October 5, 1962, returning the airline to non-scheduled status,[12] and in the CAB extended AAXICO's old scheduled certificate to cover the gap between September 1 and October 5.

Reliance on US Air Force

AAXICO operating revenue, operating profit and revenue-ton miles! (000)\Year ending June !! 1959 !! 1960 !! 1961 !! 1962
Operating revenue ($)7,040[13] 11,042[14] 850 9,092[15]
Operating profit ($)714 1,856 (192) 204
Charter revenue ton-miles(1)34,134[16] 71,598 -[17] 57,413
Scheduled revenue ton-miles4,278 - - -+ align="bottom" style="caption-side: bottom; text-align: left;" (1) A RTM is one ton carried one mile for pay
AAXICO's fortunes depended on its ability to secure a share of the annual Air Force Logair contract (the Air Force's domestic air freight network), which covered the period July through June of the following year. In 1959 AAXICO secured a substantial increase in its share of the Logair contract resulting in a doubling in charter revenue-ton miles (see table)[18] making it by far the largest Logair contractor.[19] The start of this period coincided with the beginning of its suspension of the scheduled freight operation. The company saw a more than doubling of its operating profit from YEJune 1959 to YE June 1960 with the combination of the bigger Logair operation and elimination of the money-losing scheduled operation. But AAXICO was then shut out entirely from the Logair contract for the next year, so it simply did not operate at all from July 1960 to June 1961, leasing 25 C-46 aircraft to one of the winning Logair bidders for that period.[20] AAXICO laid off everyone except seven employees, including 221 pilots.[21] In 1961, however, AAXICO won new Logair contracts, including for DC-6 service, so started back up in operation on July 1, 1961.

Labor issues

The year-long shut down had long-term labor repercussions. AAXICO pilots were represented by the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). The airline took the position that, because it had shut down for a year, its ALPA contract no longer had effect. ALPA was informed of this during the shut down, but failed to grieve the issue at that time. So, when AAXICO returned to operation in 1961, it hired new pilots. ALPA pursued AAXICO in court, which turned out to be a mistake, because a Federal appeals court noted that the appropriate forum was the National Mediation Board (NMB), which oversees labor relations in the airline industry. The court also noted that ALPA could have saved everyone a lot of trouble by grieving the issue as soon as they were aware of it.[22] The issue was remanded to the NMB. In the meantime, AAXICO and Saturn Airways agreed to merge (see below), and ALPA tried to get the CAB to prevent the merger until AAXICO lived up to what ALPA saw as its obligations. The CAB said the same thing: the NMB will decide this issue. However, the CAB did direct the new merged airline to wait on integrating the pilot corps until the NMB process ended.[21] And in fact the NMB process did rule against AAXICO and the matter was settled in favor of ALPA.[23]

Merger with Saturn

On 13 November 1964, AAXICO and Saturn Airways announced Saturn was buying AAXICO.[24] The sale was nominal as Saturn's owner was left with only 5% stake in the combined company and Howard J. Korth, who owned 96.5% of AAXICO, lead the combined company. The difference in financial strength was stark: it was determined that the fair market value of Saturn was $620,000, whereas that of AAXICO was $10.5mm. AAXICO was by far the stronger of the two companies financially, whereas Saturn was in poor shape, but each company brought something to the table:

Since Saturn had the transatlantic authority, and acquisition of Saturn would require re-applying for that authority, Saturn had to be the surviving entity, though AAXICO was the surviving management and ownership.[21] The merger closed November 5, 1965.[25] On 7 February 1966, Howard J. Korth, now president of the new Saturn, announced its first orders for jets, two DC-8-61s.[26]

AAXICO Sales

Not included in the Saturn merger was AAXICO Sales, Inc., a parts distribution company. This was retained by the Korth family and its existence became an issue with the CAB, because it had a legislative mandate to ensure any interlocking arrangement between airlines and any other phase of aviation was in the public interest. Howard Korth sold off his stake to other family members, but Saturn was still restricted from doing more than $100,000 in yearly business with AAXICO Sales without CAB approval.[25] AAXICO Sales, eventually just AAXICO, continued in business in the parts manufacturing and distribution business, still owned by the Korth family, until it was sold in 2012 to Kapco-Global, now known as Proponent, an aircraft parts supplier.[27] In this way the AAXICO name remained present in the aviation business for almost an additional half century.

Fleet

At the time the CAB reviewed the merger, AAXICO had the following fleet:[21]

In addition, it also owned another 11 C-46s on lease to Zantop Air Transport.

Incidents and accidents

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Contract Airlines Prosper Here As Travel Spurts . Newspapers.com . Miami Herald . 1-E . 8 September 1946 . 22 June 2023 . Rees . Robert.
  2. Web site: opencorporates.com Florida incorporation record for Aaxico Airlines. opencorporates.com. opencorporates.com. en. 15 August 2024.
  3. none. Billboard. August 10, 1946.
  4. https://www.newspapers.com/image/617733164 CAB Cracks Down On 7 Air Lines: Agreement Reported By AAXICO, Miami Herald, 16 November 1946
  5. The Large Irregular Air Carrier Industry in 1953. Air Transport Association of America. 15 December 1954. B-13. Washington, DC. 2027/uc1.c100995252. free.
  6. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 22. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 253–321. November–December 1955 . North-South Airfreight Renewal Case. 2027/osu.32435022360515. free .
  7. Aviation Week. 1957. 28 January 1957 . AAXICO Moves Cautiously in New North-South Air Cargo Route. 50. 66. 4. 0005-2175.
  8. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 24. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 796–797. September 1956 – March 1957 . AAXICO Airlines, Inc., Re-issuance of Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity. 2027/osu.32437011658073. free .
  9. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 29. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 1329–1330. March–September 1959 . AAXICO, Suspension of Service. 2027/osu.32435022360440. free .
  10. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 36. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 344–429. April–September 1962 . Domestic Cargo-Mail Service Case. 2027/osu.32437011658669. free . .
  11. AN ACT, To amend the Federal Aviation Act of 1958, as amended, to provide for supplemental air carriers, and for other purposes. 10 July 1962. Pub. L.. 87-528. Stat.. 76. 143.
  12. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 37. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 110–119. October 1962 – February 1963 . AAXICO Airlines, Inc., Interim Certificate. 2027/osu.32437011658610. free .
  13. Quarterly Report of Air Carrier Financial Statistics. 2027/mdp.39015026081482. free. 30. Civil Aeronautics Board. 30 June 1960.
  14. Quarterly Report of Air Carrier Financial Statistics. 2027/mdp.39015026081482. free. 30. Civil Aeronautics Board. 30 June 1961.
  15. Air Carrier Financial Statistics. 2027/msu.31293024880589. free. 19. Civil Aeronautics Board. 30 June 1963.
  16. Monthly Report of Air Carrier Traffic Statistics. 2027/mdp.39015024489430. free. 71. Civil Aeronautics Board. 30 June 1960.
  17. Monthly Report of Air Carrier Traffic Statistics. 2027/uiug.30112104060295. free. 59. Civil Aeronautics Board. 30 June 1962.
  18. Aviation Week Including Space Technology. 1959. 15 June 1959 . AAXICO Request. 25. 70. 24. 0005-2175.
  19. Aviation Week and Space Technology. 1960. 14 March 1960 . Logair Operations During 1959. 41. 72. 11. 0005-2175.
  20. Aviation Week and Space Technology. 1960. 4 July 1960 . Cargo Award Spurs Turboprop Activity. 40. 73. 1. 0005-2175.
  21. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 43. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 150–173. July 1965 – January 1966 . Saturn-AAXICO Merger Case. 2027/osu.32437011658313. free .
  22. Aaxico Airlines v. Air Lines Pilots, Int'l. 331. F.2d. 433. 5th Cir.. 1964. https://casetext.com/case/aaxico-airlines-v-air-lines-pilots-intl.
  23. https://www.newspapers.com/image/621324139/ Aaxico Ex-Pilots Triumph, Miami Herald, 28 July 1966
  24. https://www.newspapers.com/image/301856839/ 2 Airlines Here Ask Approval To Merge, Miami News, 13 November 1964
  25. Civil Aeronautics Board Reports. 49. U.S. General Printing Office. Washington, DC. 824–827. August–December 1968 . Saturn Airways, Control by Korth. 2027/osu.32437011658016. free .
  26. https://www.newspapers.com/image/302025137 Saturn Buys Largest Airliners, Miami News, 7 February 1966
  27. Web site: AAXICO Joins the Kapco Global Family. proponent.com. Proponent. 10 February 2012. 16 August 2024. en.
  28. Web site: AAXICO (American Air Export and Import Company), Curtiss C-46, N 5140B, Dyess Air Force Base, Abilene, Texas, September 2, 1959 . 4 April 1960 . 22 June 2023 . Civil Aeronautics Board.
  29. Web site: AAXICO Airlines, Inc., C-46-F, N67941, Near Great Falls, Montana, August 14, 1963 . 1 May 1964 . 22 June 2023 . Civil Aeronautics Board.
  30. Web site: Investigation of Aircraft Accident: AAXICO AIRLINES: LAS VEGAS, NEVADA: 1963-09-25 . 19 May 1964 . 22 June 2023 . Civil Aeronautics Board.
  31. Web site: AAXICO Airlines, Inc. Douglas DC-6A, N6541C, West Slope of Mt. Rainier, Washington, April 23, 1965 . 16 March 1967 . 22 June 2023 . Civil Aeronautics Board .
  32. Web site: Investigation of Aircraft Accident: AAXICO AIRLINES, INC: KNOB NOSTER, MO.: 1965-05-18 . Civil Aeronautics Board . 27 October 1966 . 22 June 2023.