MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
On June 25, 1997, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC” or “the Commission”) issued, pursuant to the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. § 717 et seq., a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (the “Certificate”) to Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company. Tennessee is a company engaged primarily in the business of transporting, via pipeline, natural gas and its by products The Certificate authorizes Tennessee to construct, install, operate, and maintain a 7.54 mile extension of its existing pipeline in the Town of Saugus, to an existing natural gas terminal in the city of Everett. 1 On December 24, 1997, FERC issued an order denying various requests for rehearing and a stay of the Certificate. It also specified that Tennessee “shall complete construction and place in service the facilities authorized [in the Certificate] within one year of the date of issuance of th[e] order.”
The pipeline extension is planned to run generally along what is known as the “Sau-gus Branch” of the Boston & Maine Corporation Railroad, through the cities of Revere, Malden and Everett. The Saugus Branch is owned by the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority (“MBTA”). The planned route also traverses property owned by the City of Malden and used as a parking lot, “conservation” property owned by the Town of Saugus, and a railway right-of-way owned by Consolidated Railroad (“Conrail”). Because Tennessee was unable to reach respective agreements with each of these property owners, it sued — in four cases deemed “related” — for judgments of taking by eminent domain. It further sued for injunctions prohibiting the property owners and other interested parties 2 from interfering with Tennessee’s exercise of the authority it was granted by FERC. Tennessee now moves for summary judgment declaring its right to take by eminent domain the MBTA and Malden properties, and to enjoin interference by the defendants in the MBTA and Malden cases. 3
Tennessee’s Motions for Summary Judgment
Tennessee argues that it is authorized to take the MBTA and Malden properties pursuant to Section 7(h) of the Natural Gas Act (“NGA”), 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h). Section 7(h) grants the right of eminent domain to an entity meeting the statutory definition of “natural gas company” 4 where: (1) the company holds a FERC Certificate authorizing a particular pipeline project, (2) the use of the land to be taken is necessary to the project, and (3) the company and the relevant property owners have failed to agree on a price for the property. Specifically, the statute provides:
*109 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 ..., 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.
15 U.S.C. § 717f(h). There is no dispute that these conditions have been satisfied.
The defendants oppose, however, on one or more of the following grounds: (1) the FERC Certificate held by Tennessee is not final and binding, and, in the ease of Boston and Maine Railroad (“B & M”), even if it is final, it is not binding on Boston and Maine in light of that entity’s not having been provided individual notice of the FERC proceedings; (2) Tennessee has failed to implement reasonable safety precautions; (3) the DO-MAC project may interfere with the defendant owners’ and defendant easement holders’ respective property rights and interests, which in turn would be a public hardship because those rights involve public utilities and services; (4) there is no true public need for a greater supply of natural gas; and (5) Massachusetts law prohibits the taking. None of the defense arguments has merit.
With respect to the first argument, Tennessee’s FERC Certificate is indeed final and binding. The NGA itself directs that an order by FERC not be stayed unless either FERC itself—in the context of a rehearing— or the reviewing Court of Appeals specifically orders a stay.
See
15 U.S.C. § 717r(e).
5
See also Ecee, Inc. v. Federal Power Comm’n,
The related claim of lack of individualized notice asserted by B & M—which is taken to charge that the Certificate is therefore not binding as to property in which the railroad has an interest—also fails. The claim is, in essence, a collateral attack on the validity of the Certificate. As explained more fully below, such a challenge is impermissible.
See Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. v. 104 Acres of Land, More or Less,
Nor do defendants’ safety and interference arguments save the day. As an initial point, no defendant has brought to the
*110
debate any evidentiary support for the claims of potential danger or interference. Moreover, even if defendants were to proffer sufficient detail to raise questions about the advisability or fairness of FERC’s actions related to safety and the potential impairment of others’ property rights, this Court would have no authority to amend or qualify the Commission’s order. This Court’s role is one of mere enforcement.
Williams Natural Gas Co. v. City of Oklahoma City,
Under the statutory framework, there is no appeal of a FERC decision save to the appropriate Court of Appeals. Disputes as to the propriety of FERC’s proceedings, findings, orders, or reasoning, must be brought to FERC by way of request for rehearing. 15 U.S.C. § 717r(a);
104 Acres of Land,
Moreover, collateral attack of a FERC certificate in the District Court is impermissible. In
Williams,
the Tenth Circuit held that the district courts’ authority under the NGA — to authorize the FERC certificate holder to condemn property — “does not provide challengers with an additional forum to attack the substance and validity of a FERC order.”
Id.
at 264;
104 Acres of Land,
The rule collateral attack is grounded in Congress’s having vested in FERC exclusive jurisdiction over the regulation of the transport and sale of natural gas in interstate commerce.
In re Permian Basin Area Rate Cases,
Defendants’ argument that there is no present public need for the DOMAC project lacks merit for the same reasons.
See Federal Power Comm’n v. Sunray DX Oil Co.,
The final defense argument, asserted by the MBTA alone, is that Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 164, § 75C prohibits the taking by eminent domain of the Saugus Branch property. The MBTA argues that the proposed taking would be illegal because section 75C bars the taking of property “within the location of any railroad,” and the easements sought by Tennessee are, by virtue of proximity to the Saugus Branch, such property. The argument lacks merit.
As a threshold matter, the language of the statute on which the MBTA relies unambiguously relates only to takings under particular Massachusetts state laws — namely chapter 79 of the General Laws, which is the general eminent domain chapter, and section 75C itself, which states procedures required for chapter 79 takings by natural gas pipeline companies. Section 75C provides in relevant part:
No lands or rights of way or easements therein shall be taken by eminent domain under the provisions of this section ... within the location of any railroad....
(emphasis supplied). Because Tennessee does not seek to take the MBTA property under the provisions of section 75C, the statutory prohibition on pipeline companies’ taking property within the location of a railroad is not applicable to the case at hand.
In any event, the Massachusetts statute is preempted by the NGA. As the MBTA acknowledges in its brief, the NGA “occupies the field” with respect to the regulation of natural gas “rates and facilities.”
See Schneidewind v. ANR Pipeline Co.,
There is no question that the pipeline itself is a “facility” used in the transportation of natural gas. The MBTA’s argument, however, is that section 75C is not a regulation of natural gas facilities because it concerns only the
taking
of property for the facilities. The argument is unpersuasive. A pipeline must be built and housed on property, and interference with access to that property is interference with the facility itself. The MBTA cites no authority suggesting otherwise. In any event, the Massachusetts statutory prohibition of the taking of certain property by eminent domain is in direct conflict with the federal authorization, and that conflict is dis-positive of the preemption issue.
See Schneidewind,
* * * * ‡ X
The Motions for Summary Judgment on the issue of Tennessee’s right to take by eminent domain the MBTA and City of Mal-den properties — as described in exhibits to the Complaint in Condemnation in case 97-CV-12724, and the Amended Complaint in *112 Condemnation in case 97-CV-12577, respectively — are granted.
Tennessee’s Motions to Enjoin Interference are denied without prejudice, on the grounds that defense counsel explicitly or tacitly represented at oral argument that their clients would not improperly interfere with the proposed condemnation.
Submit proposed decrees on notice.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The terminal is owned by Distrigas of Massachusetts Corporation (“DOMAC”), and the pipeline extension is actually referred to as the "DO-MAC project.”
. Several entities claim to enjoy rights associated with, or to hold various property interests in, the MBTA’s Saugus Branch property. Of them, the following have intervened (unopposed) as defendants in the MBTA case: Boston Gas Company, New England Power Company, Massachusetts Electric Company, Boston & Maine Railroad, and the cities of Revere and Malden.
. Tennessee originally moved in each of the four cases for immediate entry on and possession of the respective properties. Oral argument on the motions in the MBTA and Malden cases was held on March 11, 1998. At argument, Tennessee moved orally for the conversion of the motions to the present motions for summary judgment. The motion was allowed, and the parties agreed to a March 20, 1998 deadline for defendants’ submission of any additional evidentiary materials. No such materials were filed.
.The relevant provision defines a "natural gas company" as "a person engaged in the sale or transportation of natural gas in interstate commerce, or the sale in interstate commerce of such gas for resale.” 15 U.S.C. § 717a. There is no dispute that Tennessee is a natural gas company.
. The statute provides:
The filing of an application for rehearing ... shall not, unless specifically ordered by the Commission, operate as a stay of the Commission's order. The commencement of proceedings [before a reviewing Court of Appeals] shall not, unless specifically ordered by the court, operate as a stay of the Commission's order.
15 U.S.C. § 717r(c).
. In
Schneidewind,
a unanimous Court held that a state statute requiring natural gas companies to obtain approval from a state public service commission before issuing long-term securities was preempted by the NGA.
. The MBTA appears to have anticipated an argument by Tennessee that the field occupied by the NGA was broader than just "rates and facilities.” The section in its brief on the scope of preemption, therefore, predictably, cites authority,
i.e., No Tanks Inc. v. Public Utils. Comm'n,
