OPINION
Before me in these consolidated cases are cross-motions for summary judgment filed, on the one hand, by plaintiff Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority *1511 (“SEPTA”), and, on the other hand, by defendant Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (“the PUC”), defendant Township of Lower Merion (“Lower Merion”), and defendant Township of Upper Gwynedd (“Upper Gwynedd”). For the reasons that follow, summary judgment will be granted in favor of SEPTA and the PUC will be permanently enjoined from assessing against SEPTA any costs for construction, design, maintenance, inspection or repair of the four subject highway bridges.
I.
Factual and Procedural Background
The background of these consolidated cases has been set out in some detail in a previous opinion denying defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim.
See Southeastern Pa. Transp. Auth. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm’n,
In 1991 and 1992, the PUC issued three separate orders requiring that SEPTA make payments toward the upkeep of four highway-bridge structures passing over railway lines owned and operated by SEPTA. 1 In each case, the PUC determined that SEPTA, as the operator of the railway line running under the bridge, benefited from a separated railway-highway crossing and should therefore share bridge-maintenance costs with the localities that owned the roads and also benefited from a separated crossing. 2 SEPTA argued unsuccessfully to the PUC that this assignment of costs to SEPTA violated a pair of federally-conferred tax exemptions: 45 U.S.C. § 581(c)(5) (1988) and 45 U.S.C. § 546b (1988).
The history of these tax-exemption statutes is fairly straightforward. In 1981, Congress required that the financially-troubled Consolidated Rail Corporation (“Conrail”)— established by federal law to provide national rail transportation—transfer its commuter rail operations to local commuter authorities. To assist these local authorities with handling the provision of commuter service, Congress created the Amtrak Commuter Services Corporation (“Amtrak Commuter”), as a wholly-owned subsidiary of the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (“Amtrak”), and afforded the local authorities a choice between contracting with Amtrak Commuter for provision of commuter rail service formerly handled by Conrail or operating commuter rail service directly. SEPTA decided to operate its own local commuter rail service and, on January 1, 1983, assumed from Conrail the operation of thirteen commuter rail lines.
On September 10, 1982, Congress enacted 45 U.S.C. § 546b, exempting Amtrak— which, like Conrail, was struggling financially—and its newly-created subsidiary Amtrak Commuter “from any taxes or other fees imposed by any State, political subdivision of a State, or a local taxation authority which are levied ... from and after October 1, 1981.... ” 96 Stat. 852 (1982), codified at 45 U.S.C. § 546b. In exempting Amtrak from state taxation, Congress reasoned that local jurisdictions benefitting from Amtrak’s rail service have an obligation to contribute to its continued existence through tax relief. Then, in 1988, Congress enacted 45 U.S.C. § 581(c)(5), providing that:
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any commuter authority that could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter for the provision of commuter service but which elected to operate directly its own commuter service as of January 1, 1983, shall be exempt from the payment of any taxes or other fees to the same extent as [Amtrak] is exempt.
45 U.S.C. 581(c)(5) (1988).
*1512
Relying on two Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court opinions,
3
the PUC determined, in three separate orders, that § 581(c)(5) did not exempt SEPTA from assessments for bridge maintenance because such assessments were not “taxes or other fees” within the meaning of the federal exemption. Subsequently, SEPTA appealed each PUC decision to the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court, and then apparently applied for, and was granted, a stay of each state proceeding after filing each of three separate complaints with this court. In these federal complaints, consolidated on August 19, 1992, SEPTA argues that the imposition upon SEPTA of bridge-maintenance costs violates the federal tax-exemption statutes; SEPTA seeks a declaration to that effect and a permanent injunction against assessment of such costs by the PUC with respect to the four bridges. In its complaints, and again in its motions for summary judgment, SEPTA relies heavily on
National R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm’n,
In a September 29,1992 opinion, I rejected defendants’ arguments that the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1988), or the Eleventh Amendment deprived this court of subject-matter jurisdiction over these consolidated cases, or that SEPTA had failed to state a legally sufficient claim. In doing so, and specifically in response to an argument that no “taxes or other fees” had been imposed upon SEPTA within the meaning of § 581(c)(5), I decided that, under Amtrak I, the costs in question in these consolidated cases are, as a matter of law, “taxes” under § 581(c)(5). Buoyed by this portion of my September 29 opinion, SEPTA, on January 8, 1993, moved for summary judgment, arguing that these cases had, in effect, already been resolved because they could not be distinguished from Amtrak I. At about the same time, the three defendants—the PUC, Lower Merion, and Upper Gwynedd—also moved for summary judgment, presenting a number of reasons why judgment should be entered against SEPTA. 4 Thereafter, all parties responded to the opposing motions for summary judgment. Defendants’ arguments for summary judgment in their favor and/or to resist summary judgment in favor of SEPTA fall into three categories: (1) deference to state policies and proceedings; (2) the unconstitutionality of § 581(c)(5); and (3) the inapplicability of § 581(c)(5) to the cases at bar (or, at least, factual uncertainty surrounding that statute’s applicability). I will address each of these arguments in turn.
The standards for granting or denying summary judgment do not change by virtue of cross-motions being presented.
United States v. Hall,
II.
Deference to State Policy and Proceedings
The PUC and Lower Merion recommend that this court decline to exercise its jurisdic
*1513
tion pursuant to either
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
[a]bstention from the exercise of federal jurisdiction is the exception, not the rule. “The doctrine of abstention, under which a District Court may decline to exercise or postpone the exercise of its jurisdiction, is an extraordinary and narrow exception to the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a controversy properly before it.”
Colorado River,
A. Burford Abstention
Under the
Burford
doctrine, “[i]f the exercise of' federal review would be disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy, and the policy concerns complicated local matters, abstention may be justified.”
United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Muir,
“While
Burford
is concerned with protecting complex state administrative processes from undue federal interference, it does not require abstention whenever there exists such a process or even in all cases where there is a ‘potential for conflict’ with state regulatory law or policy.”
New Orleans Public Serv., Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans,
In short, any disruptive effect on state policy in these cases would flow from a federal legislative design rather than from federal judicial oversight of issues of distinctive local concern. For this reason, it would be manifestly inappropriate to abstain in order to avoid what defendants perceive as “needless” conflict with state policy; where Congress has afforded an exemption from state taxation, any conflict with a State’s affairs that this engenders cannot be viewed by this court as “needless.” Therefore, I will not abstain on Bwrford grounds.
B. Cobrado River Deference
Nor is this a case where it would be appropriate to decline to exercise jurisdiction under
Colorado River.
In
Colorado River,
the Court recognized that there are “exceptional” circumstances where it may be appropriate for a federal court to withhold jurisdiction because of a pending state proceeding in order to preserve judicial resources and avoid piecemeal litigation.
Concern for judicial resources, far from supporting deference to the state proceedings, actually advises against such deference. Although the record before me is not at all clear as to the relevant procedural history in state court, it appears that, shortly after each of the three PUC orders was entered (on December 10, 1991, January 21, 1992, and June 2, 1992), and contemporaneously with the filing of each of these three federal actions (on January 8,1992, February 19, 1992, and June 30, 1992), SEPTA filed a petition for review in the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court in order to protect its right to appeal in the event of losing in federal court. Shortly after each state appeal was filed, SEPTA, as defendants acknowledge, was granted a stay pending resolution of the related federal proceeding. The PUC and
*1515
Lower Merion suggest that a reason to defer to the state proceedings is that SEPTA first filed appeals to the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court and only thereafter commenced these federal actions. Even assuming that the petitions for review to the Commonwealth Court preceded the filing of each of the federal complaints—an assumption that appears open to substantial question
6
—since the ultimate concern is the conservation of judicial resources, “priority should not be measured exclusively by which complaint was filed first, but rather in terms of how much progress has been made in the two actions.”
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp.,
Defendants also argue that this court should abstain to avoid piecemeal litigation. As the PUC puts it, “Piecemeal litigation results when different courts consider the same issue, duplicating efforts and reaching different results.” PUC’s Mem. in Sup. at 29;
see American Int’l,
Finally, it is significant also that the issue here is the scope of a federal right.
*1516
See Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp.,
For all of these reasons, I decline to withhold jurisdiction on the basis of Colorado River, as I have also declined to dismiss these complaints on Burford grounds.
III.
The Constitutionality of § 581(c)(5)
The PUC presents two reasons why § 581(c)(5) should be declared unconstitutional. First, it argues that § 581(c)(5) was not within Congress’ authority under the Commerce Clause because Congress lacked a rational basis for finding that an exemption of local commuter authorities from state and local taxes furthers interstate commerce. Alternatively, the PUC argues that, assuming Congress acted within its powers under the Commerce Clause in enacting § 581(c)(5), the statute nevertheless invades the core of state sovereignty reserved by the Tenth Amendment (at least as applied to SEPTA) by interfering with the Commonwealth’s right to control SEPTA. 9
A. The Commerce Clause
Because “the Commerce Clause is a grant of plenary authority to Congress,”
*1517
Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining and Reclamation Ass’n,
Notwithstanding the PUC’s objection that Congress made no explicit findings that the regulated activity affects interstate commerce—which is not required,
Katzenback v. McClung,
The PUC argues that § 581(c)(5) was not reasonably calculated to achieve the goal of sustaining and improving commuter rail service because “SEPTA’s financial security can hardly be secured by 45 U.S.C. § 581(c)(5).” PUC’s Mem., in Sup. at 24. However, the question is not whether tax exemption guarantees the survival of the exempted commuter rail authorities but whether, when state and local taxes are reasonably found to place a drag on interstate commerce, the elimination of those taxes is a reasonable method of facilitating interstaté commerce.
Cf. Arizona Pub. Serv. Co. v. Snead,
In sum, I find that Congress (1) had a rational basis for believing that state and local assessments interfered with the provision of historically unprofitable commuter rail service within and across state lines, and (2), by eliminating such assessments, selected a rational means of improving such service. It is not the province of this court to substitute its judgment for that of Congress.
B. The Tenth Amendment and Intrusions on State Sovereignty
The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively or to the people.” U.S. Const, amend. X. The PUC’s position that Congressional exemption of a railroad from state taxation impermissibly intrudes on the States’ traditional powers has been rejected by other courts in situations closely analogous to the case at bar. In
New Castle County, supra,
the court concluded that § 546b did not violate the Tenth Amendment because Congress acted within its express powers under the Commerce Clause in exempting Amtrak from state taxation and because the Court, in
Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
the power of Congress over interstate commerce is complete in itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in the Constitution, and Garcia has removed the Tenth Amendment as a substantive limitation within the Constitution to Congress’ power to legislate upon the States as States ...
In
New York, supra,
the Court indicated that the Federal Government’s power to command state legislatures to legislate is limited by the Tenth Amendment’s respect for state sovereignty. Observing that “the Constitution has never been understood to confer upon Congress the ability to require the States to govern according to Congress’ instructions,” — U.S. at-,
The PUC argues that Congress, by interfering with the Commonwealth’s ability to apportion maintenance costs at rail-highway crossings, has, contrary to
New York,
attempted to use state regulatory machinery to advance federal goals. But the PUC reads tqo much into
New York.
That opinion does not hold that, whenever a state regulatory body is required to follow federal guidelines, there is a Tenth Amendment problem. Rather,
New York
stands for a much more limited proposition: that when Congress desires to regulate, it must do so directly and cannot enlist the States to do its bidding. However, § 581(c)(5) does not employ the Commonwealth as a regulatory agency—i.e., does not compel the State to require or prohibit any acts—but merely directs the States to refrain from engaging in a certain form of regulation deemed inconsistent with cognizable federal interests. Even in the heyday of the Tenth Amendment, when
National League of Cities v. Usery,
*1520 the Federal Government may displace state regulation even though this serves to “curtail or prohibit the States’ prerogatives to make legislative choices respecting subjects the States may consider important.”
Federal Energy Regulatory Comm’n v. Mississippi,
The fact that pre-emptive federal legislation may impinge on a state revenue-raising scheme has no special Tenth Amendment implications. Congress’ authority to prohibit state taxation as an incident of the exercise of its delegated powers is well-entrenched—dating back, one might argue, to
McCulloch v. Maryland,
Therefore, it is clear that Congress can, in furtherance of its commerce power, displace state taxation and state police-power regulation of private activity. However, the PUC, by stressing SEPTA’s status as a public agency, suggests that § 581(c)(5) is somehow more intrusive because it interferes with the Commonwealth’s ability to structure and control its own sovereign operations. The problem with this argument is two-fold. First, even when the Court was invigorating the Tenth Amendment, in
National League of Cities,
the Court, indicated that ownership or operation of an interstate railroad is not an integral part of a State’s sovereign activities,
see
In any event, the PUC’s argument seems to rely on the so-called “traditional government functions” prong of the
National
*1522
League of Cities
test that the Court expressly rejected in Garcia.
19
Before
National League of Cities,
and again since its disavowal by the Court in
Garcia,
the Court has repeatedly allowed Congress to supersede a state’s governance of its own enterprises:
e.g.,
forbidding a state government to provide salary and wage increases to its own employees,
Fry v. United States,
IV.
The Applicability of Section 581(c)(5)
Section 581(c)(5) provides that:
any commuter authority that could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter for the provision of commuter service but which elected to operate directly its own commuter service as of January 1, 1983, shall be exempt from the payment of any taxes or other fees to the same extent as [Amtrak] is exempt.
The defendant townships argue that § 581(c)(5) does not prevent the PUC from allocating to SEPTA maintenance costs for the subject bridges because (1) SEPTA is not a “commuter authority that could have contracted with Amtrak Commutér,” and (2) the costs in question are not “taxes or other fees.”
A. The Potential to Contract with Amtrak Commuter
SEPTA, on March 24, 1982, issued a statement of intention to contract with Amtrak Commuter for the provision of commuter service; however, on September 22, 1982, the SEPTA Board of Directors voted to rescind that statement and undertake the provision of commuter services directly. While allowing that SEPTA is a “commuter authority,” see 45 U.S.C. § 502(8) (listing SEPTA as one of seven entities falling with the definition of “commuter authority”), the townships argue that SEPTA could not “have contracted with Amtrak Commuter” because SEPTA Board members realized that to do so would have subjected SEPTA to certain increased labor costs that it could not have afforded. As support for this proposition, the townships rely on the following testimony from Robert J. Thompson, a former SEPTA Board member:
To my recollection, the only reason, the compelling reason [for SEPTA] to go at it alone ... with commuter service was the cost of complying with the work rules and [labor] contracts that were in existence. It was a dollar and cents cost____ [T]he only way that the elected officials and the SEPTA Board felt that they could afford to continue the service, a very valuable service, was to renegotiate the contracts and operate it ourselves.
Lower Merion’s Mot. in Sup., Exh. C. at 16. From this testimony, defendants gather that “[t]he decision not to contract with 'Amtrak Commuter was not an independent election between two options, but rather the only alternative to avoid crippling labor mandates and keep the commuter rail system afloat.” Lower Merion’s. Mem. in Sup. at 16.
Defendants have provided no reason to believe that Congress intended the phrase “could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter” to eliminate from § 581(e)(5)’s coverage some commuter authorities that instead assumed direct operation of commuter rail lines formerly handled by Conrail. By enacting § 581(c)(5) in the wake of § 546b, Congress, in my view, intended to provide a tax-exempt status to any entity that, as of Janu *1523 ary ,1, 1983, began directly to operate commuter rail operations formerly handled by Conrail, whether that entity was Amtrak Commuter or a local commuter authority. Therefore, the phrase “could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter for the provision of commuter service but which elected to operate directly its own commuter service” was designed to cover any commuter authority that was offered a chance to contract with Amtrak Commuter (i.e., “could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter”) but proceeded to provide such service directly. This interpretation is consistent with the genesis of Amtrak Commuter, which was designed to assist local authorities in dealing with the newly-transferred commuter rail operations, and the fact that local authorities were offered a choice between contracting with Amtrak Commuter or operating those services themselves. After having granted Amtrak Commuter a tax exemption, Congress, through § 581(e)(5), plainly desired to insure that no commuter rail authority would be penalized by declining to deal with Amtrak Commuter. To exclude from § 581(c)(5) a commuter authority that was presented with the option of contracting with Amtrak Commuter but—for whatever reason—did not do so would be to defeat Congress’ intention that local agencies operating Conrail’s former lines stand on the same tax-exempt footing as Amtrak and Amtrak Commuter.
Even assuming, arguendo, that the phrase “could have contracted” was meant to excise from § 581(c)(5)’s coverage some subset of commuter authorities that came to operate commuter service directly, it could only have been designed to exclude those entities that, when presented with a choice to contract with Amtrak Commuter, simply could not have exercised that option. SEPTA did not encounter any legal or other formal constraint on its ability to contract with Amtrak Commuter. Rather, the testimony relied on by defendants at most demonstrates that SEPTA, having assessed the financial implications of contracting with Amtrak Commuter, determined that entering into such a contract would be too costly. See Upper Gwynedd’s Mem. in Sup. at 6 (“The record indicates that SEPTA chose not to contract with Amtrak Commuter Services to operate SEPTA trains due to the fact that SEPTA could not financially afford” to so contract): (In fact, just months earlier, the SEPTA Board had decided precisely the opposite: that SEPTA had little choice but to contract with Amtrak Commuter, see infra note 20.) Therefore, even on defendants’ view, SEPTA, although presented with the opportunity to contract with Amtrak Commuter, and although' it legally could have done so, rejected this option. That is to say, SEPTA, quite literally, “could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter for the provision of commuter service but ... elected to operate directly its own commuter service.” No language in § 581(c)(5) compels the perverse conclusion urged by defendants that a commuter authority, lacking the financial resources to contract with Amtrak Commuter, for this reasons loses a tax exemption.
In sum, I am not persuaded that Congress intended that the applicability of § 581(c)(5) turn on a subjective—and ultimately unverifiable—ex post judicial determination as to whether it was financially feasible for any given commuter authority to contract with Amtrak Commuter, where such determination would, at the least, require a parsing of the particular finances of each commuter authority relying on § 581(c)(5). 20 *1524 Therefore, because SEPTA was presented with the option of contracting with Amtrak Commuter, and had the legal opportunity to do so, but ended up operating commuter service directly, it is covered by § 581(c)(5).
B. “Taxes or Other Fees”
In
Amtrak I,
the Third Circuit determined that a special assessment on Amtrak to finance the replacement of a highway bridge traversing Amtrak’s railway lines was a “tax or other fee” within the meaning of § 546b and hence-precluded by that legislation. Section 581(c)(5), as we have already seen, confers a tax immunity on commuter authorities like SEPTA “to the same extent as” Amtrak. As their last line of attack, the defendant townships present a number of arguments as to why the bridge-maintenance costs in these cases are not “taxes or other fees” within the meaning of § 581(c)(5).
21
Many of these arguments were addressed in my previous opinion, wherein I concluded that, “just as the imposition of an assessment on Amtrak to finance the reconstruction of a bridge running over its tracks is a ‘tax or other fee’ under § 546b, so the allocation of maintenance responsibilities for the four bridges in question is—‘to the same extent’— a.‘tax or other fee’ within the meaning of § 581(c)(5).”
Lower Merion posits that the costs assessed against SEPTA with respect to the Montgomery Avenue Bridge differ from the costs assessed against Amtrak in
Amtrak I
because, unlike. Amtrak, “SEPTA derives a benefit from the existence of the Montgomery Avenue Bridge through the safe operation of trains under a roadway without any grade crossing.” Lower Merion’s Resp. to SEPTA’s Mot. in Sup. at 3. Therefore, Lower Merion concludes that so long as the costs assessed to SEPTA do not exceed the benefits supplied to it, there has been no tax imposed on SEPTA. However, Lower Merion fails to explain why the maintenance of an overhead highway bridge benefits SEPTA any more than a reconstructed bridge traversing Amtrak’s railway lines (designed to provide for both overhead vehicular and pedestrian traffic,
see National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
V.
Conclusion
Section 581(c)(5)—a constitutional exercise of Congress’ commerce power—entitles local commuter authorities that could have contracted with Amtrak Commuter for provision of commuter service but elected to provide that service themselves to the same tax exemption afforded Amtrak and Amtrak Commuter. SEPTA, which proceeded to operate its own commuter rail service instead of contracting with Amtrak Commuter for provision of that service, has a tax-exempt status under § 581(c)(5). Because Amtrak’s tax exemption has been interpreted to extend to assessments for maintaining or improving bridge .structures that pass over Amtrak’s railway lines, and because there is no basis for concluding that SEPTA is entitled to a lesser immunity from the similar assessments in these cases, the PUC .will be enjoined from allocating such costs against SEPTA with respect to the four subject bridges that pass over SEPTA’s railway lines.
An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
For the reasons given in the accompanying opinion, it is hereby ORDERED and DIRECTED that:
1. the motions for summary judgment submitted by defendants Public Utility Commission, Township of Lower Merion, and Township of Upper Gwynedd are DENIED;
2. the motions for summary judgment submitted by plaintiff Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (“SEPTA”) are GRANTED, and judgment is entered in favor of SEPTA with respect to each of these three consolidated cases;
3. any assignment of costs to SEPTA, by order of defendant Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (“PUC”) for costs associated with design, construction, maintenance, inspection, or repair of
a. the Montgomery Avenue bridge structure, substructure or associated stairway as identified in the PUC Opinion and Order entered December 10, 1991;
b. the Swedesford Road bridge structure, substructure or superstructure as identified in the PUC Opinion and Order adopted July 16, 1991 and entered January 21, 1992, and
c. the Johnson Avenue and the Willow Grove Avenue bridge structures as iden- ’ tilled in the PUC Opinions and Orders issued June 2, 1992,
violates 45 U.S.C. §§ 581(c)(5) and 546b as a tax or other fee levied upon SEPTA; and
4. defendants are permanently enjoined from assessing such tax or other fee regard *1527 ing the foregoing bridges, or enforcing the foregoing orders of the PUC against SEPTA.
Notes
. The four bridges are: the Montgomery Avenue bridge in defendant Lower Merion, Swedesford Road bridge located in defendant Upper Gwynedd, and the Johnson Street and Willow Grove Avenue bridges in the City of Philadelphia (not a defendant in the case at bar).
. With respect to three of the four bridges, the PUC found that SEPTA owned the bridge and cited this as an additional reason for requiring SEPTA to contribute to bridge maintenance.
.
See Southeastern Pa. Transp. Auth. v. Pennsylvania Pub. Util. Comm'n,
. Some of the defendants re-presented their arguments that either the Tax Injunction Act or the Eleventh Amendment robs this court of jurisdiction over these cases. Nothing presented by any of the defendants provokes me to reconsider my previous opinion denying defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction (in which substantially the same arguments were raised).
. The Court, in
Colorado River
and
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hosp.,
has identified a number of factors for a federal district court to consider in deciding whether to stay its proceedings in deference to pending state proceedings. These include: (1) whether either court has assumed jurisdiction over a
res;
(2) the relative convenience of the forums; (3) the desirability of avoiding piecemeal litigation; (4) the order in which the forums obtained jurisdiction,
see Colorado River,
. There is reason to doubt the defendants' chronology. SEPTA's petition for review to the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court from the December 10, 1991 PUC order (attached as an exhibit to the PUC's earlier-filed Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Subject-Matter Jurisdiction in Civ. A. No. 92-0112) is dated January 9, 1992—one day after the federal complaint seeking to enjoin enforcement of the December 10, 1991 PUC order (in Civ. A. No. 92-0112) was filed. Similarly, SEPTA's state-court petition for review from the January 21, 1992 PUC order (attached as an exhibit to the PUC's earlier-filed Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Subject-Matter Jurisdiction in Civ. A. No. 92-1029) is dated February 20, 1992—again one day after the related federal complaint was filed. I cannot find anything in the record as to when the state petition for review paralleling the third federal complaint (Civ. A. No. 92-3793, filed June 30, 1992) was brought.
. Were SEPTA to lose in this court (and on appeal, if any), SEPTA presumably could not represent the § 581(c)(5) argument in state court because, under Pennsylvania law,
*1516 [w]hen a court of competent jurisdiction has determined a litigated cause on its merits, the judgment entered and not reversed on appeal is, as between the parties to the suit and their privies, final and conclusive with regard to every fact which might properly be considered in reaching a judicial determination and with regard to all points of law adjudged as those facts and points of law relate directly to the cause of action - in litigation.
Stevenson v. Silverman,
. The PUC argues, that this court should withhold jurisdiction because the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court has previously ruled that bridge-maintenance costs can be allocated to SEPTA without violating § 581(c)(5). See
supra
note 3. Therefore, according to the PUC, SEPTA is now simply engaging in forum shopping. While forum shopping may be a ground to consider under
Colorado Review,
"there is no doctrine of abstention or deference that authorizes a federal court to decline to exercise jurisdiction on the ground of forum shopping alone.” Wright and Miller,
supra,
§ 4247, at 9 (Supp.1992) (footnote omitted). Moreover, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court, in those rulings, expressly declined to follow the Third Circuit’s interpretation of the phrase "taxes or other fees.”
See
. The PUC also argues that Congress exceeded its powers under the Commerce Clause in enacting § 581(c)(5) because the local commuter authorities immunized from state and local taxes are neither federal entities nor contractors with the federal government. This argument can be quickly dismissed. Based on a line of precedent beginning with the venerable
McCulloch v. Maryland,
17 U.S. (4 Wheat) 316,
. SEPTA notes that its commuter service operates directly between Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Trenton, New Jersey and, therefore, that it is engaged in interstate commerce. The'PUC does not dispute that SEPTA is engaged in interstate rail service. In any event, Congress' authority under the Commerce Clause extends even to a local transit system engaged in intrastate commerce activity, provided that those intrastate activities affect interstate commerce.
Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
. SEPTA was created pursuant to the Metropolitan Transportation Authorities Act of 1963. Act of August 14, 1963, P.L. 984, No. 450 (codified as amended at 66 Pa.Stat.Ann. §§ 2001-2043 (Purdon Supp. 1975 (repealed 1980)), reenacted and recodified as the Pennsylvania Urban Mass Transportation Law, 55 Pa.Stat.Ann. §§ 600.301-.407 (Purdon Supp. 1987 (repealed 1991)), reenacted and recodified at 74 Pa.Stat.Ann. §§ 1501-1543 (Purdon Supp. 1992). SEPTA is currently governed by the Public Transportation Law, 74 Pa. Stat.Ann. §§ 1501-1543 (Purdon Supp.1992). Section 1502 of that law—a recodification of the law pursuant to which SEPTA was originally created—provides for-the creation of transportation authorities such as SEPTA on the following terms:
There is hereby authorized the creation of a separate body corporate and politic in each metropolitan area, to be known as the transportation authority of such area, extending to and including all of the territory in the metropolitan area. An authority shall in no way be deemed to be an instrumentality of any city or county or other municipality or engaged in the performance of a municipal function, but shall exercise the public powers of the Commonwealth as an agency and instrumentality thereof.
74 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 1502(a). Given this statement of purpose in SEPTA’s charter, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has had “no hesitation in concluding that SEPTA was intended to be considered an agency of the Commonwealth.”
Feingold v. Southeastern Transp. Auth.,
. In
National League of Cities,
a five-member majority of the Court—locating principles of state sovereignty in the Tenth Amendment—overrode Congressional legislation extending the federal minimum wage and maximum hour provisions to state and municipal employees. Such federal legislation, the Court held, unduly intruded upon traditional state functions. Nine years later, in
Garcia, supra,
Justice Blackmun, who had voted with the
National league of Cities
majority, joined the four
National League of Cit- . ies
dissenters in reversing
National League of Cities.
The
Garcia
majority "rejected], as unsound in principle and unworkable in practice, a rule of state immunity from federal regulation that turns on a judicial appraisal of whether a particular governmental function is 'integral' or 'traditional.' "
. Congress' power to displace state regulation of railroads affecting interstate commerce has a particularly lengthy pedigree.
See, e.g., Wabash, St. L. & Pac. Ry. Co. v. Illinois,
. McCulloch, of course, is a case where Congress, in establishing the federal bank, had not expressly decreed that the bank’s operation should be exempt from taxation, and the Court made that pre-emptive implication unaided by express statutory language, based on the Supremacy Clause. See supra note 9.
. Indeed, the Commerce Clause, standing alone, imposes certain restrictions on the States’ power to tax.
See, e.g., Freeman v. Hewit,
.
See also Transportation Union v. Long Island R.R. Co.,
. Nor, for that matter, as the discussion heretofore has suggested, is taxation of an instrumentality of interstate commerce an indisputable attribute of state sovereignty.
See Atchison,
.
Cf. Helvering v. Powers,
. See supra note 12.
. Were financial feasibility the issue, this fact-based inquiry could not be resolved by reliance on mere announcements of financial "impossibility.” It is true, as defendants point out, that Mr. Thompson testified that at the September 1992 meeting "[t]here was unanimity among the members present that it would have been financially impossible for SEPTA to do anything but take over and operate the commuter rail system itself.” Lower Merion’s Mot. in Sup., Exh. C at 14 (as amended by attached affidavit of Mr. Thompson at ¶ 1). However, according to the minutes of the March 24, 1982 meeting—at which the Board expressed its intention to contract with Amtrak Commuter—various Board members, including Mr. Thompson himself, described in similar terms the necessity of doing precisely the opposite: contracting with Amtrak Commuter. See Lower Merion’s Mot. in Sup., Exh. C. (entitled SEPTA Exhibit 1) ("Mr. Thompson, as Chairman of the Railroad Committee, said that he agreed that SEPTA had "little choice but to go with AMTRAK commuter.”); id. (Mr. GirarddiCarlo said "that certain circumstances have occurred which, in his judgment, make it very difficult, if not impossible for SEPTA to proceed *1524 on its own.”). This shift from the hear impossibility of one option to the virtual impossibility of the other neatly demonstrates that what is "possible” is a fairly fluid—if not ineffable—concept, not lightly made a prerequisite of legal entitlement.
. The PUC does not, at least in any of its submissions at the summary-judgment stage, dispute that the costs in question are "taxes or other fees.”
. Lower Merion urges two differences, neither of which, it seems to me, has much to do with comparative benefits. Lower Merion argues, first, that "[b]y contrast to the bridge
m-Amtrak I,
the [Montgomery Avenue] Bridge is an existing overhead highway bridge that was reconstructed at no cost
to
SEPTA or SEPTA's predecessor.” Lower Merion’s Mem. in Sup. at 20. It is difficult to see why SEPTA benefits more from the existence of a bridge whose reconstruction it did not pay for than Amtrak benefits from the reconstruction and maintenance of a replacement bridge toward which, as a result of
Amtrak I,
it was not required to contribute. (Moreover, the district court in
Amtrak I
noted that the bridge, built in 1899-1900 by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, "was maintained by Pennsylvania Railroad in the past. Amtrak, the present owner of the tracks, has not maintained the bridge on its own.”
Second, Lower Merion argues that, unlike in
Amtrak I
(where a Commonwealth fund reimbursed the Township for costs imposed on it for reconstructing the bridge), there is no suggestion that- state monies will be used to finance maintenance of the Montgomery Avenue bridge. Lower Merion thinks that this should make a difference because the Third Circuit in
Amtrak I
indicated that, due to
Illinois Central R.R. v. City of Decatur,
Defendant Upper Gwynedd—which, unlike Lower Merion, does not expressly argue that a "tax” is imposed only so far as the costs outstrip the benefit received—raises a related argument: that SEPTA, as the owner of the Swedesford road bridge, "should be allocated the responsibilities that go with it as they do enjoy the benefits derived from it.” Upper Gwynedd’s Mem. in Sup. at 10. In my previous opinion denying defendants’ motions to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and/or for failure to state a claim, I opined that the mere fact that a party has been held to own the bridge does not dispose of the question whether a "tax or other fee” is imposed when the owner is compelled to maintain that bridge. There I wrote:
A second possible factual difference [between the costs levied on SEPTA and on Amtrak] is that, with regard to three of the four bridges involved in the instant consolidated cases, the PUC made a formal finding that SEPTA owned the structure. The PUC concluded that the conveyance of the rights-of-way included, with it, ownership of the overhanging structures. While this pronouncement of ownership may deserve res judicata effect on that particular issue, see National R.R. Passenger Corp.,665 F.Supp. at 407 , it is another “distinction without a difference” for purposes of § 581(c)(5). In Amtrak I, the district court determined, and the Third Circuit affirmed, that the allocation of bridge replacement costs was a "tax or other fee” without considering the question of ownership of the bridge or future ownership of the reconstructed bridge. The absence of discussion of bridge ownership suggests that this fact was not relevant to a characterization of the fee in question. (Indeed, the PUC itself, even in these consolidated cases, has allocated bridge maintenance costs to SEPTA where SEPTA was not the owner of the bridge; instead of stressing ownership of the bridge, the PUC, as in Amtrak II, has argued that the responsibility to maintain the bridge runs with ownership of the tracks beneath it.) Moreover, SEPTA—which evidently perceived no net benefit in bridge ownership—opposed any determination that it owned the various bridges. It would be inappropriate to hinge the scope of a federal tax immunity on a formal state declaration lacking any relevant effect on the underlying equities.
. Certain language in
National Railroad Passenger Corporation v. Pennsylvania,
No. Civ. A. 86-8357,
. In fact, Amtrak’s tax exemption was broadly construed partly because, as the Third Circuit observed, a House Report accompanying § 546b indicated that Amtrak was to be exempted from all state and local taxes " 'to the same extent as the United States is exempt.’ ”
