This appeal requires us to determine whether the district court has federal question jurisdiction over the declaratory judgment action brought by the City of Huntsville, Alabama. Appellees, other Alabama local governments, had threatened to sue Huntsville for breach of contract as third-party beneficiaries to Huntsville’s contract with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). In the district court, Appellant Huntsville sought a declaration of its contractual rights and obligations to Appellees.
Huntsville contends that federal question jurisdiction exists under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 because a determination of its contractual rights and obligations turns on interpretation of a section of the federal statute governing the TVA. We hold that, in the absence of a private cause of action under the federal statute, interpretation of that statute as a necessary element of an otherwise state contract claim is not enough to permit exercise of federal question jurisdiction. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s order dismissing Huntsville’s declaratory judgment action for lack of federal question jurisdiction.
I.
In 1980, Huntsville entered into a twenty-year contract with the TVA to purchase excess TVA-generated power for resale to *171 Huntsville’s residents and the residents of the Appellee local governments. 1 Under the contract, Huntsville is permitted to deposit into its general fund an amount “in lieu of taxes,” i.e., tax equivalent payments (TEP), from the electrical system revenues. 2 The TEP are only to be deposited if funds are left after the electrical system revenues have been used to pay operating expenses and interest, and to establish a reserve fund for the electrical system. The contract requires the TEP to represent the fair share of the cost of government properly borne by Huntsville and caps them at a maximum amount based on a prescribed formula. The contract also provides that Huntsville is responsible for distributing the TEP to the localities in which it operates as required by law or as it deems appropriate under § 13 of the TVA Act.
The first three paragraphs of § 13 of the TVA Act authorize TVA to make payments in lieu of taxation to states and counties in which it has acquired property that had been subjected to state and local taxation. The fourth paragraph, the crux of Huntsville’s claim, reads:
Nothing herein shall be construed to limit the authority of the [TVA] in its contracts for the sale of power to municipalities, to permit or provide for the resale of power at rates which may include an amount to cover tax-equivalent payments to the municipality in lieu of State, county, and municipal taxes upon any distribution system or property owned by the municipality, or any agency thereof, conditioned upon a proper distribution by the municipality of any amounts collected by it in lieu of State or county taxes upon any such distribution system or property; it being the intention of Congress that either the municipality or the State in which the municipality is situated shall provide for the proper distribution to the State and county of any portion of tax equivalent so collected by the municipality in lieu of State or county taxes upon any such distribution system or property.
16 U.S.C. § 83U
Huntsville supplies TVA-purchased electricity to local governments through Huntsville Utilities and has been depositing the TEP from Huntsville Utilities’ revenues into its general fund. Huntsville does not redistribute any portion of the TEP to any of the local governments in which Huntsville Utilities operates.
By filing the underlying declaratory judgment action, Huntsville preempted the threatened suit by one of the local governments to force Huntsville to distribute a portion of the TEP funds to the local governments serviced by Huntsville Utilities.
II.
Federal district courts have original jurisdiction of all civil actions that arise under the Constitution or laws of the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Federal question jurisdiction may be based on a civil action alleging a violation of the United States Constitution,
see Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
This case does not present a constitutional cause of action; nor did Congress expressly create a private cause of action under § 13 of the TVA Act. Moreover, Huntsville does not contend that § 13 contains an implied private remedy permitting it to sue directly under the statute.
See Merrell Dow,
III.
It has long been recognized that a declaratory judgment plaintiff such as Huntsville may only claim federal question jurisdiction if the anticipated lawsuit by the declaratory judgment defendant, in this case Appellee local governments, arises under federal law.
See Franchise Tax Bd.,
A declaratory judgment action must satisfy the well-pleaded complaint rule
4
and show that the “displaced coercive action” — the declaratory judgment defendant’s coercive action being displaced by the declaratory judgment suit — is created by federal law or necessarily depends on resolution of a substantial, disputed question of federal law.
See id.
at 8-18
&
n. 19,
In the absence of a federal cause of action under § 13 of the TVA Act, Appellee *173 local governments could only sue Huntsville through a state contract claim as third-party beneficiaries to the Huntsville-TVA contract. Their complaint would allege in part that Huntsville is violating state law by refusing to distribute a portion of the TEP it collects. See infra part TV and note 7. Because the contract is written in the disjunctive, however, see supra note 2, the contract claim would also involve interpretation of federal law: whether Huntsville is in breach of its contract with TVA because its actions are not in accord with § 13 of the TVA Act. 5 Accordingly, Huntsville’s declaratory judgment complaint displaces a coercive state law action that would involve interpretation of a federal statute.
This case falls squarely within the “litigation-provoking problem” of whether federal question jurisdiction lies when a federal issue is involved in a state cause of action.
Merrell Dow,
IV.
The Huntsville-TVA contract states that Huntsville is responsible for TEP distribution as may be required by law or as it deems appropriate under § 13 of the TVA Act. See
supra
note 2. An Alabama Supreme Court decision seemingly would require Huntsville to distribute a portion of the TEP funds.
See North Courtland v. Court-land,
A.
In
Merrell Dow,
the Supreme Court addressed the question of whether, in the absence of a federal cause of action created by a private remedy for violation of a federal statute, federal question jurisdiction may nevertheless be exerted over a state claim
*174
incorporating that federal statute. There, the Court concluded that if Congress did not create a private remedy for violation of the federal statute, interpretation or application of that federal statute in order to determine the merits of a state claim is insufficient to confer federal question jurisdiction.
Id.
at 811-13,
This ease falls squarely within that dictate. Interpretation of § 13 of the TVA Act, necessary to settle the state contract claim between Huntsville and Appellees, is on its own not enough to confer federal question jurisdiction over Huntsville’s declaratory judgment complaint.
Merrell Dow,
B.
The language of
Merrell Dow
quoted above could be read as a bright-line rule establishing that federal courts simply should not exercise federal question jurisdiction where a federal statute without a private remedy is incorporated in a state cause of action.
See id.
at 817,
According to the Court, a Congressional decision to preclude a federal private remedy “is tantamount” to a Congressional conclusion that a claimed violation of that statute does not present a federal interest substantial enough to confer federal question jurisdiction.
Merrell Dow,
Section 13 of the TVA Act is not that rare statute. See supra notes 3 and 7. We conclude that, in the absence of a private remedy, the necessity to interpret § 13 of the TVA Act does not present a substantial question of federal law that would confer federal question jurisdiction over the displaced state contract action.
V.
We hold that Huntsville’s declaratory judgment complaint, which displaces a state contract claim that requires interpretation of a federal statute without a private remedy, does not arise under the laws of the United States. Accordingly, the district court prop *175 erly refused to exercise federal question jurisdiction and its order is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The TVA Act of 1933, 16 U.S.C. § 831 et seq., permits the TVA to contract to sell its surplus power and to include in the contracts such terms and conditions it deems necessary to carry out the purposes of the Act. 16 U.S.C. § 83 li.
. Section 2 of the Schedule of Terms and Conditions, entitled "Payments of or in Lieu of Taxes,” and incorporated in the Huntsville-TVA contract, provides in relevant part:
(a) To the extent revenues are available after the satisfaction of all items set forth [in earlier paragraphs] of the contract of which these Terms and Conditions are a part, [Huntsville] may take each year from the electric system, in lieu of taxes, an amount representing the fair share of the cost of government properly to be borne that year by its electric system, not to exceed a maximum amount ... calculated by applying the prevailing municipal, county and State property tax rates to the depreciated original cost of tangible property used in electric operations within the respective taxing jurisdictions ....
(b) It shall be the responsibility of [Huntsville] to provide for such distribution as may be required by law or as it deems appropriate under the provisions of Section 13 of the TVA Act to the State, counties and any other municipal corporations in which it operates of any tax equivalents so collected by [Huntsville] in lieu of State, county and other municipal taxes....
. Federal common law articulated in rales fashioned by federal court decisions are also "laws” under § 1331.
National Farmers Union Ins. Co. v. Crow Tribe,
Federal common law may govern a state claim based on a contract with the United States, which was entered into under authority of a federal statute, if a uniform national rale is necessary to further the interests of the federal government.
Miree v. DeKalb County,
. Federal question jurisdiction must be determined by reference to the well-pleaded complaint rale. Under that rule, the federal basis for jurisdiction must show on the face of the plaintiff's complaint.
See, e.g., Merrell Dow,
. Appellees, as Plaintiffs in state court, may not omit pleading necessary issues of federal law in their complaint in order to force Huntsville to raise the federal statute in the posture of a federal defense to their state contract action.
Cf. Franchise Tax Bd.,
. We are aware that in
Tullahoma
the Sixth Circuit exercised jurisdiction to interpret § 13 of the TVA Act.
.The parties have not identified an Alabama statute requiring a municipality to redistribute the TEP to other local governments, nor have we located such a statute. The Alabama Supreme Court in
North Courtland
adopted the rationale of the Tennessee Supreme Court in
Rutherford County v. City of Murfreesboro,
205 Term. 362,
