MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Plaintiff Tres Lotes LLC’s Motion to Remand and Supporting Memorandum [Doc. 11]. The Court, having considered the motions, briefs, relevant law, and being otherwise fully informed, finds that the motion is well-taken and will be granted.
BACKGROUND
Despite the extensive procedural maneuvering by the parties and the disagreement regarding the timeline of events, the facts relevant to Plaintiffs Motion are easily summarized.
I. The Property Dispute
In the -winter of 2011, Plaintiff Tres Lotes LLC (“Tres Lotes”) began “looking into the purchase of’ a building for use as a law office, including the “Subject Property” at issue here. Doc. 8-1 ¶ 8. While generally suitable to the Plaintiff, the south wall of the Subject Property immediately abuts the BNSF Railway Company’s (“BNSF”) rail terminal, such that it “is not physically possible to obtain access, ingress or egress” to a portion of the Subject Property without traversing BNSF’s land. Id. ¶ 7. Tres Lotes alleges that, upon learning of the property’s idiosyncratic limitations, its members met -with Mark Bryant, a representative of BNSF, to discuss “their desire and intent to access, for ingress and egress purposes” a portion of BNSF’s property immediately adjacent to the Subject Property. Id. ¶ 13. According to the Plaintiff, Bryant, after speaking with “unknown individuals at BNSF,” advised the Plaintiffs members that BNSF agreed with the proposed access agreement. Id. ¶¶ 17-21.
Months later, after renovations had begun on the Subject Property, another BNSF employee, Mr. Harry Lara, approached workers at the building and accused them of trespassing on BNSF property; Plaintiff states that Lara later explained that BNSF had changed its mind and that Tres Lotes no longer had permission to traverse BNSF property. Id. ¶¶ 56, 60-63. Doc. 8-4 ¶¶ 14-15. As
II. Procedural History
This is the parties’ second trip to federal court on this dispute. On January 29, 2014, Tres Lotes filed its first Verified Complaint in a New Mexico district court against BNSF; BNSF promptly removed the action to federal court. See Doc. 1 at 3. Evidently perceiving a weakness in its argument against federal diversity jurisdiction, Tres Lotes dismissed the first Verified Complaint in favor of a second Verified Complaint, which purports to join as a defendant to the action Mark Bryant, a New Mexico citizen. See Doc. 8-1 ¶2; Doc. 1 at 3-4. Shortly after the instant case was filed, BNSF again complied with the procedural requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1446 and again removed the action to this Court. See Doc. 1 at 5.
Tres Lotes seeks injunctive relief recognizing an easement, either by implication, necessity, estoppel, or prescription, across a portion of Defendant’s property, including a “strip of BNSF’s existing paved surface” about twenty-five feet wide. See Doc. 8-1 ¶¶ 113-15, 117, 123, 131. ■ It appears that this injunction would, in effect, enforce the terms of the purported access agreement with BNSF. The area included in this twenty-five foot strip, however, is immediately adjacent to Track 504, an active spur of BNSF’s railroad, which is currently “subject to an industry track agreement” with a third party, who “uses the track for loading and storage of cars used to transport grain.” Doc. 1-3 ¶ 7.
In the alternative, the Plaintiff requests monetary damages not to exceed $74,000.
DISCUSSION
A state court defendant is generally entitled to remove “a civil action over which the federal district courts would have original jurisdiction” to an appropriate federal court. Caterpillar Inc. v. Lewis,
I. Federal Question Jurisdiction
BNSF contends that removal is proper because Tres Lotes’s claims are
To begin, the ICCTA provides that “the jurisdiction of the [Surface Transportation Board] over:
(1) transportation by rail carriers, and - the remedies provided in this part with respect to rates, classifications, rules (including car service, interchange, and other operating rules), practices, routes, services, and facilities of such carriers; and
(2) the construction, acquisition, operation, abandonment, or discontinuance of spur, industrial, team, switching, or side tracks, or facilities, even if the tracks are located, or intended to be located, entirely in one State,
is exclusive. Except as otherwise provided in this part, the remedies provided under this part with respect to regulation of rail transportation are exclusive and preempt the remedies provided under Federal or State law.
49 U.S.C. § 10501(b). “Transportation,” in turn, is defined as:
(A) a locomotive, car, vehicle, vessel, warehouse, wharf, pier, dock, yard, property, facility, instrumentality, or equipment of any kind related to the movement of passengers or property, or both, by rail, regardless of ownership or an agreement concerning use; and
(B) services related to that movement, including receipt, delivery, elevation, transfer in transit, refrigeration, icing, ventilation, storage, • handling, and interchange of passengers and property
49 U.S.C. § 10102(9).
Despite this express preemption in the statute, however, the question remains whether Congress intended for the ICCTA to exert complete preemption in the context presented in the instant case. See Elam v. Kan. City S. Ry. Co.,
The Court is persuaded by the reasoning of the Fifth Circuit, which explained that the preemptive “exclusive remedies” provision quoted above is “the relevant part of Section 10501(b) for determining the scope of the ICCTA’s preemption of state law.” Elam,
The facts of Elam itself are illustrative of this distinction. There, a couple who drove their “automobile into the side of a train” owned by the defendant railroad brought suit, alleging negligence per se based on a violation of a state statute in addition to a claim for ordinary negligence. Id., at 801-02. The panel explained that because the Mississippi statute in question sought to “manage or govern rail transportation,” including purporting to regulate directly the railroad’s “decisions as to train speed, length, and scheduling,” it was completely preempted by the ICCTA. Id., at 807. In other words, because the statute directly limited the amount of time a train was permitted to “block” road traffic at a rail crossing and therefore overtly interfered with the operations of the railroad, it was completely preempted by the ICCTA. Id. See also Guild v. Kan. City S. Ry. Co.,
However, the court continued that the ICCTA did not completely preempt the couple’s ordinary negligence claim because a “typical negligence claim seeking damages for a typical crossing accident ... does not directly attempt to manage or govern a railroad’s decisions in the economic realm.” Elam,
This explanation of the complete preemption doctrine as applied to the ICCTA resonates strongly with the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Emerson v. Kan. City S. Ry. Co.,
This same distinction must be drawn here. Tres Lotes’s contract, quasi-contract, and property claims are each predicated on areas of substantive New Mexico law that are generally unrelated to rail transportation of any kind. Cf. New Orleans & Gulf Coast Ry. Co. v. Barrois,
In much the same way, the Surface Transportation Board itself has explained that “[t]hese crossing cases are typically resolved in state courts ” and that “non-conflicting uses, such as nonexclusive easements for at-grade road crossings, wire crossings, sewer crossings, etc., are not preempted so long as they would not impede rail operations or pose undue safety risks.” Id., at 333 (emphasis added) (citing Maumee & W. R.R. Corp. and RMW Ventures, LLC-Petition for Declaratory Order, STB Finance Docket No. 34354,
The Court hastens to emphasize that its holding is limited to the “extraordinary” doctrine of complete preemption; Tres Lotes’s claims may be preempted by the ICCTA, but that determination is consigned to the considered judgment of the state court on remand. See Felix,
II. Diversity Jurisdiction
Although this action does not present a federal question, this Court has subject
Here, Plaintiff Tres Lotes requests in-junctive relief or monetary damages not to exceed $74,000, an amount apparently selected in a calculated attempt to avoid federal diversity jurisdiction. See Doc. 8-1 ¶ 131. BNSF counters that this cap is both artificial and deceptive, contending that the value of the requested injunction is greater than the $75,000 jurisdictional threshold. See Doc. 1 at 9-10. Therefore, BNSF argues, despite the limit in Tres Lotes’s Verified Complaint, the amount in controversy requirement has been satisfied because “it will cost BNSF more than $75,000 to” comply with the requested in-junctive relief. Doc. 1 at 10-11.
Even assuming, arguendo, that BNSF’s assessment of the value of a potential injunction is both accurate and sufficiently probative for jurisdictional purposes, it still does not reflect the amount in controversy in this case. Tres Lotes’s Verified Complaint states overtly that it “does not seek injunctive relief that, in the judgment of the Court” would result in a loss of more than $74,000 to BNSF. Doc. 8-1 ¶ 131. Similarly Plaintiff seeks monetary damages not to exceed $74,000 if and only if its injunctive relief is denied. Id. Hence, any potential recovery valued at more than $74,000 is simply not at issue in this case. This express limit on Tres Lotes’s potential recovery disqualifies the case from removal predicated on diversity jurisdiction.
None of the cases BNSF cites is to the contrary. For example, the court in McPhail v. Deere & Co. confronted a situation in which the “state court complaint [did] not identify a specific amount” sought as recovery.
These cases contrast sharply with the case at bar. Tres Lotes’s Verified Complaint leaves no ambiguity that the aggregate value of the suit is limited to $74,000 and does not admit of the possibility of recovery beyond that amount. Doc. 8-1
This holding comports with the decisions of other courts that have confronted similar situations. The District of Maine addressed this precise issue and cogently explained that “[e]ven if [the plaintiffs] claim could be worth more than $75,000, the United States Supreme Court has noted that a plaintiff is permitted to prevent a defendant from removing to federal court by Tesort[ing] to the expedient of suing for less than the jurisdictional amount.’ ” Raymond v. Lane Const. Corp.,
Indeed, it appears that the authorities cited by BNSF hew to this same understanding of the amount in controversy requirement. For example, the Southern District of West Virginia, in a case • cited favorably in the Marlow decision on which BNSF relies, noted that it “has consistently remanded cases where a Plaintiff executes an affidavit or certification limiting recovery, other than an ad damnum clause, before removal.” Hatfield v. Wilson, No. 3:12-0944,
Consequently, the amount in controversy requirement has not been met and this Court cannot ground jurisdiction in 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Absent subject matter jurisdiction, this Court is powerless to hear this case; the Court’s sole option is to remand the matter to the state court from which it was removed. See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) (“If at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded.”).
CONCLUSION
Because the ICCTA does not completely preempt Tres Lotes’s claims and because the amount in controversy is less than $75,000, this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction and must remand the case to the Ninth Judicial District Court for the State of New Mexico, County of Curry.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the Plaintiffs Motion to Remand is granted.
