Lead Opinion
The Natural Gas Act of 1938 ("NGA"),
I. BACKGROUND
As required by the NGA, Tennessee Gas holds a certificate of public convenience and necessity from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") authorizing it, inter alia , to construct natural gas pipelines in New Jersey and Pennsylvania to augment its natural gas delivery capacity in the region. As part of this project, Tennessee Gas seeks to obtain easements over a 975-acre tract of land in Pike County, Pennsylvania owned by King Arthur. Upon unsuccessfully attempting to purchase the requisite easements from King Arthur, Tennessee Gas filed the instant condemnation action under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 71.1 (" Rule 71.1").
After the parties stipulated that Tennessee Gas could access and possess the easements, they engaged in discovery pertinent to determining the appropriate compensation for the condemnation. Both parties retained various experts to appraise, inter alia , the value of the land before and after the taking, the value of the timber removed from the land, professional fees, development costs, and timber replacement and reforestation costs. Following *242the close of this discovery, Tennessee Gas moved for summary judgment on various issues, including that of compensation.
As to the issue of compensation, the District Court granted in part Tennessee Gas' motion. Relying entirely on a prior opinion deciding the same issue,
A few weeks later, King Arthur filed a motion to certify the District Court's order for interlocutory appeal, which the District Court granted. Another Panel of our Court then granted King Arthur's petition for interlocutory appeal. We are now faced with the purely legal question of whether state law or federal law governs the substantive determination of just compensation in condemnation actions brought by private entities under the NGA.
II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction under
III. DISCUSSION
A. Relevant Law
Before we delve into the merits of the instant issue, we pause to consider the legal landscape in which this dispute arises. In particular, we discuss the background legal principles relevant to (1) the NGA, (2) just compensation, (3) federal common lawmaking, and (4) persuasive case law on this subject.
1. The NGA
It is well-established that the federal government wields the authority to exercise eminent domain. See Kohl v. United States ,
In 1938, Congress enacted the NGA based on its recognition that "the business of transporting and selling natural gas for ultimate distribution to the public is affected with a public interest."
*243
As relevant here, the NGA allows gas companies to acquire private property by eminent domain to construct, operate, and maintain natural gas pipelines. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h). To do so, however, a natural gas company must first successfully obtain a certificate of public convenience and necessity from FERC and unsuccessfully attempt to purchase the required property from its owner.
When 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 or pipe lines for the transportation of natural gas, and the necessary land or other property, in addition to right-of-way, for the location of compressor stations, pressure apparatus, or other stations or equipment necessary to the proper operation of such pipe line or pipe lines, it may acquire the same by the exercise of the right of eminent domain in the district court of the United States for the district in which such property may be located, or in the State courts. The practice and procedure in any action or proceeding for that purpose in the district court of the United States shall conform as nearly as may be with the practice and procedure in similar action or proceeding in the courts of the State where the property is situated: Provided , That the United States district courts shall only have jurisdiction of cases when the amount claimed by the owner of the property to be condemned exceeds $3,000.
The statute's reference to state "practice and procedure," however, does not mean that it incorporates state law for the substantive determination of compensation.
As a result, the NGA is silent regarding the applicability of state law in condemnation proceedings under the statute. Indeed, the NGA is generally silent on the remedies available in the condemnation proceedings it allows. For example, it does not even expressly require that just compensation be provided.
2. Just Compensation
That concept of just compensation originates from the Fifth Amendment: although the federal government has "the authority to take private property for public use by eminent domain ... [it] is *244obliged by the Fifth Amendment to provide 'just compensation' to the owner" of the property. Kirby Forest Indus., Inc. v. United States ,
Thus, in cases involving partial takings, as here, the standard is "the difference between the market value of the entire holding immediately before the taking and the remaining market value immediately thereafter of the portion of property rights not taken." United States v. 68.94 Acres of Land ,
By contrast, Pennsylvania has enacted its own remedial scheme that is applicable to condemnation proceedings that take place within the state. Similar to federal law, Pennsylvania law defines just compensation as consisting of "the difference between the fair market value of the condemnee's entire property interest immediately before the condemnation and as unaffected by the condemnation and the fair market value of the property interest remaining immediately after the condemnation and as affected by the condemnation."
But fair market value appears to be a more inclusive concept under Pennsylvania law. In contrast to the federal rule regarding partial takings, the recoverable market value under Pennsylvania law appears to include any benefits to the value of the remaining property as a result of the taking. See
Further, although Pennsylvania law generally defines fair market value as "the price which would be agreed to by a willing and informed seller and buyer," it allows consideration of certain consequential damages within the concept.
*245Pennsylvania law also permits recovery of professional fees such as appraisal, attorney, and engineering fees.
3. Federal Common Law
"Federal common law refers to the development of legally binding federal rules articulated by a federal court which cannot be easily found on the face of a constitutional or statutory provision." McGurl v. Trucking Emps. of N. Jersey Welfare Fund, Inc. ,
Thus, "when Congress has not spoken 'in an area comprising issues substantially related to an established program of government operation,' " United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc. ,
In crafting such federal common law, however, courts need not "inevitably ... resort to uniform federal rules." Id. at 727-28,
In Kimbell Foods , the Supreme Court addressed the propriety of applying state law under an ambiguous or incomplete federal statute. Id. at 718, 723,
In light of Kimbell Foods and its progeny, where federal law governs a controversy but there is no federal rule of decision on a particular matter, a federal court must fill the void through common lawmaking, either by fashioning a uniform, national rule or by incorporating state law as the federal standard. Deciding which route to take turns on application of the Kimbell Foods factors outlined above.
4. Persuasive Case Law
The precise issue before us now is whether state law or federal law governs the measure of just compensation in condemnation proceedings brought by a private entity under the NGA. Although this is the first time we have considered this issue precedentially,
In Georgia Power Company v. Sanders , the Fifth Circuit, sitting en banc , encountered the same core issue, albeit in an analogous FPA context.
Accordingly, the Georgia Power court undertook the federal common lawmaking analysis described above. As a threshold matter, because the condemnation at issue arose under the FPA, a federal statute, the court determined that the measure of compensation should also derive from a federal source. Id . Given the statutory gap, the court then turned to Kimbell Foods to decide whether to fashion a uniform common law or incorporate state law as the applicable federal rule.
At the outset, the court noted that "[b]asic considerations of federalism,"
The Sixth Circuit reached the same conclusion in *247Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation v. Exclusive Natural Gas Storage Easement ,
B. Application
Having established the basic legal principles relevant to this dispute, we turn to applying them to the specific facts of this case. As an initial matter, we declare without hesitation that defining the contours of the compensation owed here is an issue of federal law. Indeed, the NGA is a federal statute implementing a nationwide federal program.
1. Kimbell Foods Applies Here
Given that conclusion, in order to resort to the Kimbell Foods analysis, we must also determine that there exists a gap in the statutory scheme. Here, we do so because (i) Miller does not resolve this case, (ii) the NGA does not answer the question at issue, and (iii) the existence of related common law in this domain is of no moment. We explain each in turn.
i. Miller Does Not Resolve This Case
Tennessee Gas' chief argument on appeal is that Miller dispositively resolves this case. In ruling in Tennessee Gas' favor at summary judgment, the District Court agreed. We, however, disagree.
In Miller , the Supreme Court considered "questions respecting standards for valuing property taken for public use" in relation to the federal government's condemnation of land for the purpose of building railroad tracks.
Over time, Miller and its progeny have added content to the federal common law of just compensation. See, e.g. ,
But nothing in Miller or its progeny expands its reach to condemnations by private entities. Indeed, Miller itself only concerned a condemnation by the federal government.
Further, Tennessee Gas is unable to muster any binding authority for the proposition that Miller applies beyond instances where the federal government is the condemnor. Although it contends that we have "applied federal law in every case involving the determination of compensation in a condemnation pursuant to the federal power of eminent domain," it can only cite cases in which the condemnor was the federal government. Appellee's Br. 16 (emphasis omitted) (citing, inter alia , United States v. 27.93 Acres of Land ,
That is because no such binding case exists. This makes sense, of course, because the powerful federal interest at play when the federal government is the condemnor is considerably weakened when a private entity is the condemnor. Two independent reasons support our view on this matter.
First, the development of natural gas pipelines is not an "essential governmental function[ ]." 93.970 Acres of Land ,
*249Nearly a century later, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that concern, this time ruling that, because the federal government's condemnation of land for naval aviation activities involved "essential governmental functions," federal law, not state law, determined the appropriate remedies for the condemnation. 93.970 Acres of Land ,
Second, where the federal government is the condemnor, there exists a significant concern about the spending of federal dollars, one that does not exist when a private entity is the condemnor. Indeed, the federal government has a strong interest in reducing the costs of its own exercises of eminent domain and being subject to different states' compensation regimes may defeat that. Cf. Edelman v. Jordan ,
ii. The NGA Does Not Answer the Question
Miller aside, the NGA also does not provide a federal rule of decision as to the appropriate compensation owed to condemnees under the statute. As mentioned previously, the NGA does provide that the "practice and procedure" in condemnation actions under the statute must "conform as nearly as may be with the practice and procedure in similar action or proceeding in the courts of the State where the property is situated." 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h). Some courts have concluded that this statutory directive mandates that state law govern the measure of just compensation. See, e.g. , Tabor ,
First, the clause has been superseded by Rule 71.1, which now "govern[s] proceedings to condemn real and personal property by eminent domain." Fed. R. Civ. P. 71.1(a). As a "law[ ] in conflict with" a rule of civil procedure, the clause has "no further force or effect."
Second, even if the clause was still in force, it would determine only procedural rules and nothing more. Faced with a similar statutory instruction to try condemnation cases according to "the forms and methods of procedure" provided by state law, Miller held that the federal substantive measure of just compensation was unchanged.
iii. That There Exists a Body of Related Common Law Does Not Matter
Tennessee Gas asserts as a secondary argument that Kimbell Foods applies only when no federal common law exists. But we have previously applied the Kimbell Foods framework to choose between incorporating state law and applying preexisting federal common law. See In re Columbia Gas Sys. Inc. ,
2. State Law Should Be Incorporated as the Federal Standard
Because the source of eminent domain power at issue here is federal, as embodied in the NGA, but neither the statute nor binding precedent specifies a rule of decision in this particular context, the task of "interstitial federal lawmaking" falls upon us. Ga. Power ,
We start with the presumption that state law should be incorporated unless there is an expression of legislative intent to the contrary or a showing that state law significantly conflicts with the federal interest present. See Kimbell Foods , 440 U.S. at 739,
But, even without such a starting presumption, we choose to incorporate state law as the federal rule in this context because the balance of Kimbell Foods factors weighs in favor of that. In particular, (i) fashioning a nationally uniform rule is unnecessary, (ii) incorporating state law does not frustrate the NGA's objectives, and (iii) application of a uniform federal rule would upset commercial relationships. We address each factor in turn.
i. Fashioning a Nationally Uniform Rule is Unnecessary
For five principal reasons, this case does not require a nationally uniform rule. First, the United States is not a party here-or in NGA condemnation proceedings generally-so the federal interest in a nationally uniform rule is relatively weak. The Fifth Circuit, for example, has noted that "the nature of the federal interests involved [where a private entity is the condemnor] differs markedly from the nature of the federal interests involved where the United States is the condemnor." Ga. Power ,
The Supreme Court has also suggested that whether the federal government is present in a case is important in deciding between state law and federal law. See Kimbell Foods , 440 U.S. at 726,
Second, because property rights are traditionally an area of state concern, the federal interest in a nationally uniform rule for property valuation is especially weak. See
Third, the NGA contemplates state participation in multiple ways, further undermining the case for a nationally uniform rule of compensation in such actions. Most notably, the statute allows licensees to bring condemnation proceedings in state court. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h) (articulating that private entities may bring condemnation proceedings "in the district court of the United States for the district in which such property may be located, or in the State courts " (emphasis added)). Indeed, the NGA requires that the proceedings take place in state court if the amount claimed by the property owner does not exceed $3,000. See id . Both the statutory option and mandate to proceed in state court suggest that incorporating state law would not upset any important interest in national uniformity.
But that is not the extent of the NGA's involving states. As another example, the NGA explicitly exempts from its coverage any entities or facilities that receive natural gas for distribution "within or at the boundary of a State if all the natural gas so received is ultimately consumed within such State, ... provided that the rates and service of such [entities] and facilities [are] subject to regulation by a State commission."
Fourth, to the extent that some nationwide uniformity is needed in NGA condemnation actions, Rule 71.1 provides a sufficient amount of that. Indeed, Rule 71.1 was promulgated precisely "to provide a unified and coherent set of rules and procedures to be used in deciding federal eminent domain actions." Land, Cullman Cty. ,
Fifth, Tennessee Gas' primary argument in favor of uniformity misses the mark. In particular, Tennessee Gas avers that applying various states' rules on compensation will lead to landowners in different states receiving different payouts from the same pipeline project. But how inequitable this may be is unfortunately of no moment in this analysis. The first Kimbell Foods factor is not whether a nationally uniform law would be fairer. Rather, it is whether proper "administration of the federal program[ ]" requires uniformity. See Kimbell Foods , 440 U.S. at 730,
ii. Incorporating State Law Does Not Frustrate the NGA's Objectives
The second Kimbell Foods factor calls for considering whether the incorporation of state law would frustrate specific objectives of the federal program at issue. "[C]onsiderations of federalism militate in favor of adopting state law as the federal rule of decision" unless "state law *253conflicts significantly with any federal interests or policies." Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Two Parcels of Land ,
To begin, we must identify the federal objectives potentially at risk. The NGA declares that the federal interest is in regulating "matters relating to the transportation of natural gas and the sale thereof."
Here, applying Pennsylvania law on just compensation would require Tennessee Gas to pay approximately $1 million more than it is required to pay under federal law. In other words, "[t]he only conceivable effect that adopting state law as the measure of compensation might have" is that "condemnors proceeding under the [NGA] might be required to pay more ... than under an alternative federal common-law rule." Columbia Gas ,
That said, a state could theoretically have a compensation law so far out of step with federal law as to create a significant conflict. At oral argument, counsel for Tennessee Gas was only able to muster one case in support of that proposition. See Nat'l R.R. Passenger ,
In National Railroad Passenger , the Second Circuit considered, as relevant here, whether to fashion a uniform federal rule or incorporate state law as the rule of decision in determining the appropriate compensation due to a property owner whose land the National Railroad Passenger Corporation ("Amtrak") had condemned.
In Georgia Power , moreover, resolving the question of compensation according to state law resulted solely in higher condemnation costs to FPA licensees. That would not be the case here. Under [state] law, a partial taking rendering excess property nonconforming under local zoning laws requires the condemnor to apply for a variance prior to the taking; failing that, the condemnor is to reimburse the owner for the entire parcel and take title in fee simple thereto.
*254We agree with [Amtrak] that application of the state rule of compensation here would place Amtrak in the unenviable position of having either to enmesh itself in the variance procedures of each locality in [the state] where property is sought to be condemned, or to pay for entire parcels irrespective of the nexus between the property so taken and the project necessitating condemnation. Inasmuch as Amtrak is authorized only to condemn property required for intercity rail passenger service, see45 U.S.C. § 545 (d)(1)(B), the latter alternative under [state] law conflicts with an express statutory limit on Amtrak's eminent domain power.
Nat'l R.R. Passenger ,
Here, those considerations are simply not at play. Like the condemnor in Georgia Power , Tennessee Gas would only be subject to higher condemnation costs if subjected to state laws on compensation. Pennsylvania compensation law does not entail a complicated variance requirement in which Tennessee Gas would have to "enmesh itself."
Pressed at length for other examples of "crazy state laws," counsel for Tennessee Gas could not produce any. Oral Arg. Audio 36:03-38:23 (mentioning Sabal Trail Transmission, LLC v. Real Estate , No. 16-CV-063,
iii. Application of a Uniform Federal Rule Would Upset Commercial Relationships
The third Kimbell Foods factor calls for us to consider whether application of a uniform federal rule would upset commercial expectations founded on state law. On the one hand, because there already exists "an established body of federal law on the issue of just compensation" in general, parties that conduct business in this industry are already on notice of the potential application of federal law. Ga. Power ,
On the other hand, "property rights have traditionally been, and to a large degree are still, defined in substantial part by state law." Columbia Gas ,
Though the balance is close, we conclude that fashioning a uniform federal common law to determine just compensation in condemnation actions by private entities under the NGA would risk "upsetting the parties' commercial expectations" based upon "the already well-developed state property regime." Columbia Gas ,
* * *
In sum, we determine that, at the threshold, federal law is the interpretive basis to determine just compensation in condemnation proceedings arising out of the NGA. But, because neither Miller nor any other binding authority provides a federal rule of decision as to what constitutes just compensation precisely where a private entity condemns private property under the statute, we turn to Kimbell Foods . That case and its progeny reflect a presumption in favor of state law, one not rebutted here. Even without that presumption, however, the Kimbell Foods factors collectively weigh in favor of state law because, for the reasons explained previously, (1) fashioning a nationally uniform rule is unnecessary, (2) incorporating state law does not frustrate the NGA's objectives, and (3) application of a uniform federal rule would upset commercial relationships. In light of this analysis, we decide to incorporate state substantive law as the federal standard of measuring just compensation in condemnation proceedings by private entities acting under the authority of the NGA.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the District Court's order and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
That case also concerned a condemnation action brought by Tennessee Gas under the NGA. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. v. Permanent Easement for 1.7320 Acres and Temporary Easements for 5.4130 Acres in Shohola Twp., Pike Cty., Pa. , No. 11-028,
Another Panel of our Court recently remarked on this issue in a footnote of an unpublished opinion. See Columbia Gas Transmission, LLC v. Easement in Washington Cty. ,
That said, we recognize that Miller articulates principles for compensation "grounded upon the Constitution."
Dissenting Opinion
The United States has delegated its eminent domain power under the Fifth Amendment to natural gas companies in certain instances pursuant to the Natural Gas Act (the "NGA" or the "Act"),
In my view, however, resolution of the question here presented begins and ends with the Miller decision. I believe that the standard by which we measure just compensation due for an exercise of the Fifth Amendment eminent domain power is the same regardless of whether it is the Government or a Government-delegatee that exercises that power.
I.
A.
The Fifth Amendment assures that private property shall not "be taken for public use, without just compensation." U.S. Const. amend. V. The eminent domain *256power belongs to the federal government, but Congress may "delegate[ it] to private corporations, to be exercised by them in the execution of works in which the public is interested." Boom Co. v. Patterson,
The NGA recognizes that "the business of transporting and selling natural gas for ultimate distribution to the public is affected with a public interest, and that Federal regulation in matters relating to the transportation of natural gas and the sale thereof in interstate and foreign commerce is necessary in the public interest."
B.
The Supreme Court long ago established that exercises of the federal eminent domain power require the application of federal substantive law regarding just compensation. See Miller,
The landowners urged the Court to apply state law by arguing that "Congress ha[d] adopted the local rule followed in the state where the federal court" sat.
We followed Miller's lead in United States v. Certain Parcels of Land,
*257
C.
Miller and our cases interpreting it are clear that when the substantive right to just compensation derives from the Constitution, such compensation is measured according to federal substantive law. One's right to just compensation under the Fifth Amendment is certainly triggered by an exercise of the federal eminent domain power. See, e.g., Kirby Forest Indus., Inc. v. United States,
These principles lead to the following conclusion: because Congress has authorized natural gas companies to invoke the federal eminent domain power under the NGA, and because exercise of that power entitles a landowner to just compensation under the Fifth Amendment, the question of just compensation in an NGA condemnation action is a question of federal substantive right to which federal substantive law applies.
The landowner ("King Arthur") and the majority disagree, cabining Miller's scope to condemnation actions by the federal government only and adopting the view that the law properly applicable to determining just compensation depends on who is exercising the federal power to condemn property. But the right to just compensation "grounded upon the Constitution of the United States" is a federal substantive right, Miller,
To carve out a separate set of rules for private parties exercising federal eminent domain power for a federal public purpose under 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h) would create "an artificial wedge between federal condemnations brought by the United States and federal condemnations brought by private entities acting pursuant to congressionally delegated authority." Tenn. Gas Br. 10; see also Ga. Power Co. v. Sanders,
My colleagues rest their acceptance of this distinction (and Miller's inapplicability) on the conclusion that "the powerful federal interest at play when the federal government is the condemnor is considerably weakened when a private entity is the condemnor." Maj. Op. 248 . This is so, according to the majority, because "the development of natural gas pipelines is not an 'essential governmental function[,]' " Maj. Op. 248 (quoting United States v. 93.970 Acres of Land,
The majority's final argument to distinguish Miller is likewise unpersuasive. My colleagues contend that Miller merely sets a constitutional floor for just compensation and that states may, through their own laws, provide for greater compensation for landowners. Assuming that that observation is correct, it still does not explain why Miller does not apply here, a federal condemnation proceeding. That states may provide landowners more generous compensation (under state law) is immaterial.
Because I view the Supreme Court's decision in Miller as controlling, I would *259affirm the District Court's application of federal substantive law to determine just compensation under the Fifth Amendment.
II.
For the above reasons, I respectfully dissent.
Indeed, the only time this Court has passed on the precise issue presented here, the panel unanimously held that federal substantive law applies - albeit in a non-precedential decision. See Columbia Gas Transmission, LLC v. An Easement to Construct Operate & Maintain a 20 Inch Gas Transmission Pipeline Across Props.,
As the majority recognizes, a body of federal law regarding just compensation already exists. Maj. Op. 250.
The majority reads Certain Parcels of Land as recognizing that Miller applies only to condemnation actions by the Government. But our statement that Miller "set forth ... the standard by which the amount of compensation due an owner of land condemned by the United States is to be determined" is merely an acknowledgement that Miller provided law for the same situation we addressed in that case. Certain Parcels of Land,
The majority notes that two other Courts of Appeals have opined on the issue before us. I do not consider the opinions from those courts to be persuasive. In reverse chronological order, the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Exclusive Natural Gas Storage Easement,
King Arthur also argues that Miller is inapplicable because there, unlike here, private property was taken for a public use. The majority does not appear to accept King Arthur's assertion that its land was not taken for a public use, and neither do I.
