COLUMBIA GAS TRANSMISSION CORPORATION v. Deana DRAIN
No. 98-2091
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit
September 8, 1999
191 F.3d 552
Before ERVIN, HAMILTON, and LUTTIG, Circuit Judges.
Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the
OPINION
LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:
Deana Wingfield Drain appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the District of West Virginia granting Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation a declaration that it is entitled to a fifty-foot easement over her property and a permanent injunction prohibiting her from encroaching on that easement. Finding that the lower court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Columbia‘s claim, we vacate the judgment and remand with instructions to dismiss.
I.
Deana Wingfield Drain owns .44 acres in Randolph County, West Virginia. She obtained the property by deed from her father, Oliver Leroy Wingfield, in 1977.
In 1950, Columbia Gas, through its predecessor-in-interest Cumberland and Allegheny Gas Company, purchased from Mr. Wingfield‘s predecessors-in-interest, members of the Currence family, a right-of-way to lay, maintain, operate, repair, and remove an eight-inch gas pipeline under the subject property. The right-of-way agreement specifies the length of the right-of-way as “1139 feet or 69 rods,” for which Cumberland and Allegheny compensated the grantors at a rate of $1.50 per rod per family member. The agreement does not specify the width of the right-of-way. After securing the right-of-way, Columbia‘s predecessor-in-interest installed an underground gas transmission pipeline along the property as contemplated by the agreement.
In 1965, Mr. Wingfield, who had subsequently purchased the land, installed a cement block foundation and constructed a shed six inches from Columbia‘s gas line. There the structure remained for nearly
Six months later, in April 1993, Columbia informed Ms. Drain that it owned a fifty-foot easement (twenty-five feet on either side) along the right-of-way, and that her modular home encroached on that easement. On June 27, 1994, the company informed Ms. Drain for the first time that she would have to move her modular home to a location twenty-five feet from the pipeline, and several days later threatened legal action if she refused to do so. On December 6, 1994, Columbia Gas brought an action in federal district court seeking a declaration that under West Virginia law and federal regulations the right-of-way agreement entitled it to a fifty-foot easement over the Drain property, and preliminary and permanent injunctions ordering Ms. Drain to move her home and shed twenty-five feet from the pipeline and prohibiting her from conducting any further construction on the pipeline or otherwise interfering with Columbia‘s claimed easement.
In July 1995, Ms. Drain did move her home and shed from the easement, but also filed an Answer and Counterclaim to the complaint. In her answer, Ms. Drain raised both a challenge to the court‘s jurisdiction and a number of defenses on the merits. In her counterclaim, she sought declaratory and injunctive relief and damages pursuant to
The district court concluded that West Virginia law governed the question of the easement‘s width and that under that state‘s law Columbia was entitled by virtue of its express agreement to a “reasonably necessary” easement, which after a bench trial the court determined to be fifty feet. The district court granted Columbia the permanent injunction and declaratory relief it sought on these state law grounds, while exercising its equitable powers to order Columbia to pay Ms. Drain‘s house-moving expenses, and held that there had been no unconstitutional taking of Ms. Drain‘s property. Ms. Drain appeals.
II.
Drain renews before this court her argument that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over what she claims is nothing more than a standard state law action to enforce an easement over her property. The district court, after noting that it could not hear what it termed a “typical state court action . . . absent some basis for Federal jurisdiction,” and before resolving that complaint on purely state law grounds, identified the requisite basis for federal jurisdiction not in the statute pursuant to which the action was brought, the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act,
A.
In its action for injunctive and declaratory relief, Columbia argued that jurisdiction for its claims lay under the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act. That act, intended as its title suggests to ensure the safe functioning of natural gas pipelines and facilities, imposes certain safety obligations on pipeline operators and empowers the Secretary of Transportation to issue regulations establishing minimum safety standards. The Act also authorizes the Attorney General, on behalf of the Secretary of Transportation, to bring civil actions to enforce the provisions of the Act or regulations prescribed thereunder,
For although appellee is, as it argues, a “person” under the Act, and therefore entitled to seek injunctive relief for violations thereof, the Act and the regulations prescribed pursuant to it are silent as to rights-of-way and easements, the subject of this action. In fact, appellee has not alleged a violation on Ms. Drain‘s part of the only duty the Act imposes on private landowners like her—that they utilize a special “one-call notification system” prior to engaging in an activity that could threaten the safety of a pipeline facility,
Although appellee relied in its complaint only on the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act as the basis for jurisdiction, the district court adverted to the Act‘s explicit statement of the non-exclusivity of its remedies, see
The district court grounded its determination of federal-question jurisdiction in this last provision of the Natural Gas Act. Reasoning that a federal court cannot properly adjudicate claims of eminent domain without considering the extent and location of the necessary easement, the district court held that the “natural extension” of section
Section
[w]hen any holder of a certificate of public convenience and necessity cannot acquire by contract, or is unable to agree with the owner of property to the compensation to be paid for, the necessary right-of-way to construct, operate, and maintain a pipe line . . . it may acquire the same by the exercise of the right of eminent domain in the district court....
The district court is doubtless correct that the power to determine the extent and location of that right-of-way “necessary” to the pipeline‘s construction, operation, and maintenance is itself a necessary incident of the court‘s jurisdiction under section
It bears reminding that Columbia has not brought an eminent domain action, for understandable reasons. To do so would require, a fortiori, a concession by the gas company that it does not already own by express agreement the easement it claims it needs for the safe operation and maintenance of its line. Such an admission, while clearing the way for the condemnation action contemplated by the section, would of course require Columbia to compensate the defendant for the loss of the productive use of her property. This result, while perfectly consistent with the design of the section, would not comport with Columbia‘s apparent objective of obtaining its easement through declaratory and injunctive relief and without additional cost. Rather than petition the district court to authorize condemnation, as the provision explicitly allows, the company asks the district court instead to declare that it already owns the necessary right-of-way. This the statute does not authorize. We decline to read a provision that authorizes the district court to act where a party cannot obtain a right-of-way by agreement also to create jurisdiction over a party‘s claim not merely that it can do so, but that it already has.
Even if we somehow had authority “naturally” to extend the jurisdiction of the federal courts beyond the limitations imposed by the statute‘s plain language, we would decline to do so here. The allocation of property rights among contracting parties is a paradigmatic question of state law, and one that is within the particular expertise of our state courts. Congress, in enacting section
Appellee, wisely recognizing that neither the statute it advanced nor the one on which the district court relied can sustain jurisdiction, argues that the two in combination, or, as appellee says, in pari materia, accomplish what either alone could not. Thus, somehow, the whole of federal jurisdiction is asserted to be greater than the sum of its parts. We are not aware of caselaw establishing the proposition that federal-question jurisdiction may be found in the emanations of two statutes neither of which individually creates it, and appellee has not directed us to any. Accordingly, we must conclude that the absence of any actual provision in either statute evidencing congressional intent to create federal-question jurisdiction over appellee‘s state law property claim is dispositive.
B.
Although in its complaint appellee limited its claim of subject matter jurisdiction to the specific federal-question jurisdiction assertedly established by the Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act, in its appellate brief it asserts in a single sentence that general federal-question jurisdiction is established under
Section
[t]he district courts shall have original jurisdiction over all civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.
It is well-established that this statutory grant of general federal-question jurisdiction is narrower than the similarly defined constitutional power. See Verlinden B.V. v. Central Bank of Nigeria, 461 U.S. 480, 495 (1983); International Science & Techn. Institute, Inc. v. Inacom Communications, Inc., 106 F.3d 1146, 1154 (4th Cir. 1997). In the “vast majority” of cases, federal question jurisdiction exists under section
The only argument that can reasonably be made after Merrell Dow in favor of plaintiff‘s perfunctory claim of “arising under” federal-question jurisdiction, then, is that under West Virginia law the width of the easement will be determined by what is “reasonably necessary,” and a determination of what is “reasonably necessary” turns on what actions Columbia must take in order to comply with federal safety regulations. That is to say, a determination of what is “reasonably necessary” depends upon resolution of the substantial federal question of what federal regulations require.
“something of that common-sense accommodation of judgment to kaleidoscopic situations which characterizes the law in its treatment of causation . . . a selective process which picks the substantial causes out of the web and lays the other ones aside.”
Id. (quoting Franchise Tax Board, 463 U.S. at 20-21) (quoting Gully v. First Nat‘l Bank, 299 U.S. 109, 117 (1936)).
Fortunately, there are no kaleidoscopic situations here, and resolution of this claim of federal jurisdiction is possible without resort to such an accommodation of judgment. Rather, we may conclude without hesitation that appellee‘s presumed claim to this far less common variant of statutory “arising under” jurisdiction fails because plaintiff‘s right to relief does not, as the Supreme Court precedents require, necessarily depend upon resolution of any question of federal law, substantial or otherwise. That is, the determination that a fifty-foot easement is “reasonably necessary” for the safe operation and maintenance of a natural gas transmission line is one that can be, and indeed often is, reached without reference to federal law or regulations. Even in this case, the district court—after finding that it had specific federal-question jurisdiction—based its conclusion that a fifty-foot easement was necessary not on some construction of federal law or regulations, but rather on expert testimony that safety required it. Indeed, the district court considered the absence of a legitimate federal question as to the underground clearance required by law so incontestable that it took judicial notice of the fact that no federal “statute, regulation, guidance document, or policy requires a greater clearance than twelve inches for the safe operation and maintenance of a gas pipeline.” Appellee does not contest this finding on appeal, and we are aware of no authority that contradicts it.3
Similarly, in deciding substantially identical actions brought by this same plaintiff, the courts of at least one state have almost without exception recognized as reasonably necessary the fifty-foot easement Columbia Gas seeks in this case, and in doing so have either considered federal regulations merely as one of a number of factors or, in some cases, not at all. See Roebuck v. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., 57 Ohio App. 2d 217, 386 N.E.2d 1363 (1977); Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Adams, 68 Ohio Misc. 2d 29, 646 N.E.2d 923 (1994); Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Large, 63 Ohio Misc. 2d 63, 619 N.E.2d 1215 (1992). The implication of these state court decisions for our analysis is evident. What these decisions, like the district court‘s explicit disavowal of any reliance on federal law or regulations, make clear is that no disputed question of federal law is a necessary element of appellee‘s state law claim, the resolution of which plainly turns on interpretation of state common law as to the width of an easement obtained by express agreement where the agreement leaves that term unspecified. See Franchise Tax Board, 463 U.S. at 13 (concluding that
C.
Finally, we also direct the district court to dismiss appellant‘s counterclaims for a declaratory judgment that the grant of a fifty-foot easement would affect an unconstitutional taking and for injunctive relief and damages pursuant to
Here, appellant raised her “unconstitutional takings” argument both as a defense to Columbia‘s complaint and as the basis for what we take to be compulsory counterclaims under
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss both the complaint and the counterclaims so that they might be brought in a proper forum.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
ERVIN, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
I concur only in the result announced today. I write separately to state that I do not join in the majority‘s rejection of federal jurisdiction over properly-pled actions for declaratory and injunctive relief under the Natural Gas Act. See
Yet I part company with the majority over its characterization of Columbia‘s action as a “quintessential state law claim.” In recognition of the broad public interest in the safe and efficient provision of natural gas to consumers, Congress enacted the Natural Gas Act, thereby establishing a comprehensive regulatory scheme to govern all aspects of “the transportation of natural gas and the sale thereof ....”
The majority concludes that Columbia‘s federal cause of action is limited to a condemnation lawsuit. Yet even if Columbia were to accede to the majority‘s wishes and file such an action, under the majority‘s analysis the district court would face a conundrum: How could it determine the dimensions of any additional property that might be subject to condemnation when it lacks the power to determine the width of the original easement? Both determinations are necessary lest Columbia be forced to pay twice for the easement that it purchased from Drain‘s predecessors-in-interest in 1950.
The majority also castigates Columbia Gas for its unwillingness to compensate Drain “for the loss of the productive use of her property.” This view of the facts presumes that Columbia Gas does not already own a fifty foot easement, despite uncontroverted evidence in the record that state courts routinely uphold Columbia‘s assertion of an easement of this width. Assuming that the majority is correct, however, under the reasoning adopted today Colum
* With the exception of easement disputes over property with a value of less than $3000. See
