Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC v. Western Pocahontas Properties ( 2019 )


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  •                                     PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 18-1329
    MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE, LLC,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    WESTERN POCAHONTAS PROPERTIES LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, Parcel ID
    No. 6-5F-1 (Terminated: 1/11/2018), 1-31-10, 1-30-8, 5-26-2,
    Defendant - Appellant,
    and
    D. LANE MCMILLION, Parcel ID No. 1-13-49, 1-13-68; DALE L. MCMILLION,
    Parcel ID No. 1-13-49, 1-13-68; ALICIA D. MCMILLION, Parcel ID No. 1-13-49,
    1-13-68; PACO LANE, INC., Parcel ID No. 1-18-69; BRIAN ARMSTRONG,
    Parcel ID Nos. 1-18-86, 1-18-84; BETH ARMSTRONG, Parcel ID Nos. 1-18-86,
    1-18-84; JERRY ALLEN HAMMONS, Parcel ID No. 1-24-35; MARY E. HAMMONS,
    Parcel ID No. 1-24-35; BRUCE A. ROBERTS, Parcel ID No. 5-34-2;
    KIMBERLY ROBERTS, Parcel ID No. 5-34-2; TODD E. WHITE, Parcel ID No.
    5-34-4; TAMARA L. WHITE DELONG, Parcel ID No. 5-34-4;
    VIRGINIA D. MCCLUNG, Parcel ID No. 1-24-7; CONNIE MCCLUNG, Parcel
    ID No. 1-24-7; ARTIE ORLENA ROBINSON, Parcel ID No. 5-14-22;
    DAVID LANE ROBINSON, Parcel ID No. 5-14-22; QUINWOOD COAL
    COMPANY, f/k/a Alex Energy, LLC, f/k/a Alex Energy, Incorporated, f/k/a Green
    Valley Coal Company, LLC, Parcel ID No. 5-15-28, 5-20-48, 11-30-19;
    C. L. KEENER, Estate of (Parcel ID No. 11-22-75); JAMES KEENER, Parcel ID
    No. 11-22-75; JOHNNIE RAY KEENER, Parcel ID No. 11-22-75;
    BRANDE NICOLE KEENER, Parcel ID No. 11-22-75; DAVID HARMON,
    Parcel ID No. 11-22-75; THOMAS KENNER, Parcel ID No. 11-22-75;
    CLYDE FOX, Parcel ID No. 11-30-5; MICHAEL FOX, Parcel ID No. 11-30-5;
    NAOMI J. FOX, Parcel ID No. 11-30-5; ROBERT W. FOX, Parcel ID No. 11-30-
    5; REX COAL LAND COMPANY, Parcel ID No. 11-39-7; EUGENE RAY TUCKWILLER,
    Parcel ID No. 11-54-13; TINA ROBIN TUCKWILLER, Parcel ID No. 11-54-13;
    SILAS STEVEN TUCKER, Parcel ID No. 11-54-12; LAUREL TUCKER, Parcel
    ID No. 11-54-12; JEFFREY DEWAYNE OSBORNE, Parcel ID No. 11-68-33;
    MARTHA I. KESSLER, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    MARY L. SURBAUGH, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    NORA E. VANDALL, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    AZEL FORD ZICKAFOOSE, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    JOSEPH ORVILLE ZICKAFOOSE, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    ROBERT C. ZICKAFOOSE, Unknown heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-13-24);
    DOREEN S. ALLEN, Parcel ID No. 11-68-10; FREDERECK M. OSBORNE,
    Parcel ID No. 11-68-10; JO LYNN BLANKENSHIP, Parcel ID No. 11-68-10;
    MICKEY D. OSBORNE, Parcel ID No. 11-68-10; SCOTT S. OSBORNE, Parcel
    ID No. 11-68-10; DONNA M. HUFFMAN, Parcel ID No. 09-13-10.1;
    NORVEL MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.3; JEAN MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-
    31.3; THOMAS B. MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.3; HANNAH G. MANN,
    Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.3; CHLODA CROSIER, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.3;
    WILLIAM H. MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.3; LUCY G. BOOTH, Parcel ID
    No. 05-25-31.5; HARRY L. MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.5; NANCY L. PHILLIPS,
    Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.5; DONALD E. MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.5;
    CARL E. MANN, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.5; LARRY W. MANN, Parcel ID No.
    05-25-31.5; BONNIE K. BARBERIE, Parcel ID No. 05-25-31.5;
    REBECCA K. BRAGG, Parcel ID No. 05-5-27; LANDCEY RAGLAND, Parcel ID
    No. 05-14-1, 05-14-19.2, 05-14-24; JOHN WHITE, II, Parcel ID No. 05-14-21,
    05-18-3.1, 05-19-11.2; PETRIE DOBBS BROWN, Parcel ID No. 05-18-3;
    ADDISON DUNLAP DOBBS, Parcel ID No. 05-18-3; LEE FILMORE DOBBS, III,
    Parcel ID No. 05-18-3; OSCAR D. DARAGO, Parcel ID No. 05-18-11;
    DAVID R. HUGHES, Parcel ID No. 03-12-9; JAMES ROBERT PERSINGER,
    Parcel ID No. 03-12-19; LILLIAN SUE PERSINGER, Parcel ID No. 03-12-19;
    STEPHEN C. BROYLES, Parcel ID No. 05-31-25.3; LORRIE P. BROYLES,
    Parcel ID No. 05-31-25.3; PAULETTE A. SEARS, Trustee of the Paulette A. Sears
    Family Trust (Parcel ID No. 03-18-32, 03-18-4); MELANIE J. MILLER, Parcel ID
    No. 03-18-8, 03-18-9, 03-18-10; ANNE C. CHAMBERS, Executrix of the Estate
    of Thomas P. Long (Parcel ID No. 03-18-23.3); THOMAS P. LONG, The Estate of
    (Parcel ID No. 03-18-23.3); CAROL M. VASS, Parcel ID No. 03-18-23.4;
    KENNETH L. VASS, Parcel ID No. 03-18-23.4; LACY H. TONEY, Trustee of the
    Lacy H. Toney Farm Trust (Parcel ID No. 03-30-18); MOUNTAIN LAIR, LLC,
    Parcel ID No. 03-30-38; DANNY SPENCE, JR., Administrator of the Estate of
    Dannie Lee Spence (Parcel ID No. 03-12-7); DANNIE LEE SPENCE, The Estate
    of (Parcel ID No. 03-12-7); LAURA BOWEN-COFFELT, Trustee of the Susan H.
    Leeper (a/k/a Ella Susan Houcins) Revocable Living Trust (Parcel ID No. 09-17-
    10); SUSAN H. LEEPER, a/k/a Ella Susan Houcins, Revocable Living Trust
    (Parcel ID No. 09-17-10); MONTE G. MCKENZIE, Parcel ID No. 09-17-21;
    ELORA C. MCKENZIE, Parcel ID No. 09-17-21; EARL C. WILLIAMS, Parcel
    ID No. 05-25-1.13; ROGER D. CRABTREE, Parcel ID No. 03-30-18.8;
    2
    REBECCA H. CRABTREE, Parcel ID No. 03-30-18.8; BONNIE LAREW WALSH,
    Parcel ID No. 05-14-25; GLADYS LAREW CARTER, Parcel ID No. 05-14-25;
    JAMES TULLY LAREW, Parcel ID No. 05-14-25; JANET LAREW HAAG,
    Parcel ID No. 05-14-25; ALLAN WALTER LEHR, Parcel ID No. 03-12-22;
    J. H. HARRAH, Heirs of (Parcel ID No. 3-12-23); IRA HICKMAN HARRAH,
    Parcel ID No. 3-18-15; RICHARD BERKLEY, Parcel ID No. 7-4-20;
    ANNE M. BERKLEY, Parcel ID No. 7-4-20; CONNIE HARPER, Parcel ID No.
    7-4-19; MELISSA A. LESLIE, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; ANTHONY D. RICHMOND,
    Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; DENNIS WAYNE RICHMOND, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19;
    RHONDA RICHMOND, Administrator of the Estate of Roger L. Richmond
    (Parcel ID No. 7-4-19); ROGER L. RICHMOND, The Estate of (Parcel ID No. 7-
    4-19); SANDRA RICHMOND, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; ERVIN E. RICHMOND,
    Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; GERALD K. RICHMOND, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19;
    JESSE JAMES RICHMOND, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; CAROLYN S. WALLS,
    Parcel ID No. 7-4-19; RICHARD DEAN WARD, Parcel ID No. 7-4-19;
    ASHBY A. BOONE, Parcel ID No. 7-7-27.3; EMMA JEAN BOONE, Parcel ID
    No. 7-7-27.3; DOROTHY MARIE BOONE FOGLE, Parcel ID No. 7-7-27.3;
    MARK GREY SMITH, Parcel ID No. 7-15A-5; CAITLYN A. GRAGG, Parcel ID
    No. 7-15-125; GENE WISEMAN, Trustee of the Wiseman Living Trust (Parcel ID
    No. 7-15-25); PHYLLIS M. WISEMAN, Trustee of the Wiseman Living Trust
    (Parcel ID No. 7-15-25); ROBERT JACKSON HOLT, Parcel ID No. 3-23-16, 3-
    23-12, 3-23-15; PHILIP J. HARRAH, Parcel ID No. 3-23-12.3, 3-23-12.4;
    REINHARD BOUMAN, Parcel ID No. 3-18-17, 3-23-12.2, 3-23-24, 3-18-16, 3-
    23-12.5; ASHOFTEH ASSAD-BOUMAN, Parcel ID No. 3-18-17, 3-23-12.2, 3-
    23-24, 3-18-16, 3-23-12.5; MEADOW CREEK COAL CORPORATION, Parcel
    ID No. 7-4-20.1; KIRANASA SWAMI, Parcel ID No. 3-18-17.1;
    DANNY R. BERRY, Parcel ID No. 7-15-80.7-80.13; GREGORY L. BERRY, Parcel
    ID No. 7-15-80.7-80.13; LC MILLER, JR., Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11;
    JAMES R. MILLER, Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11; CHARLES D. SIMMONS, Parcel
    ID No. 7-13D-11, 7-13-D-15; SHARON SIMMONS, Administratrix of the Estate
    of Charles D. Simmons (Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11, 7-13D-15);
    JOSHUA SIMMONS, Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11, 7-13D-15; JERRY L. CANNADY,
    Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11, 7-13D-15; BRYAN SIMMONS, Parcel ID No. 7-13D-11;
    RED HAWK TRUST, Parcel ID No. 7-13E-10; WILLIAM G. LLOYD, Parcel ID
    No. 7-12F-11; JAMES MCALLISTER, Parcel ID No. 7-13F-2;
    HILRY GORDON, Parcel ID No. 14-123-41; CHAD W. JOHNSON, Parcel ID
    No. 14-163-86; MARTHA JEAN KOTSCHENREUTHER, Parcel ID No. 14-
    163-86; KAREN JEAN KOTSCHENREUTHER, Parcel ID No. 14-163-86;
    ELSA LYN         KOTSCHENREUTHER, Parcel ID No. 14-163-86;
    BARBARA JUNE REGER, Estate of (Parcel ID No. 14-163-86);
    BARRY G. PALLAY, Parcel ID No. 18-242-23.1; GLENN D. MATHENY, II,
    Parcel ID No. 18-282-108; CHARLES CHONG, Parcel ID No. 18-322-14;
    REBECCA         A.    ENEIX-CHONG,       Parcel   ID   No.     18-322-14;
    3
    COURTNEY CECIL, Parcel ID No. 18-321-40; STACEY POSTUS, Parcel
    ID No. 18-321-40; CLIFFORD S. CLEAVENGER, Parcel ID No. 18-321-40;
    LAURA CLEAVENGER, Parcel ID No. 18-321-40; TERESA D. ERICKSON,
    POA for Gerald Wayne Corder                (Parcel ID No. 20-362-20);
    GERALDWAYNEORDER, Parcel ID No. 20-362-20; LORENA B. KRAFFT, POA
    for Randall N. Corder (Parcel ID No. 20-362-21); KINCHELOE MITIGATION
    HOLDINGS LLC, Parcel ID No. 20-421-8, 20-421-5, 20-421-4, & 20-421-6, 03-
    4A-27 & 03-4A-29; DANNY MARTIN, Parcel ID No. 18-321-40.5, 18-321-41;
    TINA MARTIN, Parcel ID No. 18-321-40.5, 18-321-41; GARY CASTO, Parcel
    ID No. 02-4J-39.1; SHARON CASTO, Parcel ID No. 02-4J-39.1;
    AVERAL TODD CASTO, Parcel ID No. 02-4J-39.1; ARTHUR C. ROBERTS,
    Parcel ID No. 02-4L-19, 02-4L-12; JUDY D. ROBERTS, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-19,
    02-4L-12; FRED L. GOLDEN, Parcel ID No. 01-4M-10, 01-4M-10.1;
    SHERMAN GAMBLE, Parcel ID No. 01-5P-5; MARY GAMBLE, Parcel ID No.
    01-5P-5; DAVID FINSTER, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-16; DONALD J. FINSTER,
    Parcel ID No. 02-4L-16; PAUL W. FINSTER, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-16;
    DANA M. FINSTER, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-25; LEONARD G. FINSTER, JR.,
    Parcel ID No. 02-4L-25; VENICE EILEEN FINSTER, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-25;
    DIANA WIMER, Parcel ID No. 02-4L-25; BRIAN VAN NOSTRAND, Parcel ID
    No. 6-6D-10; HELEN MONTAGUE VAN NOSTRAND, Parcel ID No. 6-6D-10;
    GEORGE ERNEST BRIGHT, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; JOHN A. BRIGHT, Trustee
    of the John A. Bright Revocable Living Trust (Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1);
    WILLIAM TOWNSEND              BRIGHT,      Parcel    ID    No.      6-6E-1;
    WILLIAM H. BROWN, JR., Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; WILLIAM MORRISON,
    Trustee under the will of (Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1); ROBERT J. MORRISON,
    Trustee under the will of (Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1); A. L. MORRISON, for the
    benefit of (Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; C. F. MORRISON, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1;
    HELENA M. BERRY, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; HERMAN R MORRISON, Parcel ID
    No. 6-6E-1; MARTHA M. COOPER, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; RUTH M. WARD,
    Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; MABEL M. LEWIS, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1;
    MARY E. SEBRING, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1; MEGANN M. SHEPPARD, Parcel ID
    No. 6-6E-1; JESSE FRANK WILLIAMS, IV, of the WMS WVMinerals Trust
    (Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1); WMS WVMINERALS TRUST, Parcel ID No. 6-6E-1;
    ICG EASTERN, LLC, Parcel ID No. 4-4P-01, 4-4Q-13.1, 4-4Q-15, 4-4Q-16;
    DALE EASTHAM, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3; TRAVIS EASTHAM, Parcel ID No.
    4-14-39.3;     ANDREW        FAIRBANKS,     Parcel   ID   No.    4-14-39.3;
    BRENT FAIRBANKS, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3; DAVID FAIRBANKS, Parcel ID
    No. 4-14-39.3; MICHAEL FAIRBANKS, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3;
    EDWARD CHARLES SMITH, SR., Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3; EDWARD CHARLES SMITH,
    II, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3; TODD EDWARD SMITH, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3;
    JEREMY COLLINS, Parcel ID No. 4-14-39.3; NANCY JANE SHEWMAKE BATES,
    Parcel ID No. 04-35-11; JOHN H. MELVIN, Parcel ID No. 04-29A-1.14;
    PAMELA J. MELVIN, Parcel ID No. 04-29A-1.14; UNKNOWN PERSONS AND
    4
    INTERESTED PARTIES; AN EASEMENT TO CONSTRUCT, OPERATE AND
    MAINTAIN A 42-INCH GAS TRANSMISSION LINE ACROSS PROPERTIES
    IN THE COUNTIES OF NICHOLAS, GREENBRIER, MONROE, AND
    SUMMERS, WEST VIRGINIA, et al; CHERYL L. BOONE, Parcel ID No. 7-7-
    27.2; KERRY N. BOONE, Parcel ID No. 7-7-27.2; MARJORIE BOOTHE, Parcel
    ID No. 03-18-3; RODGER L. BOOTHE, Parcel ID No. 03-18-3;
    CHERYL BOWERS, Parcel ID No. 03-18-11; CYNTHIA A. BROYLES MORRIS,
    Trustee of the William S. Broyles Revocable Trust and the Virginia B. Broyles
    Revocable Trust, Parcel ID No. 03-24-39; WILLIAM S. BROYLES, Revocable
    Trust (Parcel ID No. 03-24-39); TAMMY A. CAPALDO, Parcel ID No. 7-15-125;
    CARLA       D.    FOUNTAIN,        Parcel ID    No.    05-19-36,    05-19-24;
    DENNIS F. FOUNTAIN, Parcel ID No. 05-19-36, 05-19-24; JAMES GORE, Parcel
    ID No. 03-12-7, 03-12-8; ROBERT M. JARRELL, Parcel ID No. 7-11-15;
    DAVID ALLEN JOHNSON, Parcel ID No. 05-19-9; EVERETT JOHNSON, JR.,
    Parcel ID No. 05-19-9; WAYNE JOHNSON, Parcel ID No. 05-19-9;
    MAURY JOHNSON, Parcel ID No. 05-19-9; ZANE LAWHORN, Parcel ID No.
    03-12-18;     BARRY      G.     MEADOWS,     Parcel    ID    No.    03-12-18;
    LISA B. MEADOWS, Parcel ID No. 03-12-18; JOYCE A. REESE, Parcel ID No.
    03-30-20; ROY P. REESE, Parcel ID No. 03-30-20; KELLEY ANNE SANDELL SILLS,
    Parcel ID No. 05-25-1, 05-25-1.6; CLARENCE FRANK SILLS, JR., Parcel ID No.
    05-25-1, 05-25-1.6; ELISABETH TOBEY, Parcel ID No. 11-84-10;
    RONALD TOBEY, Parcel ID No. 11-84-10; AUSTIN B. TONEY, Parcel ID No.
    03-12-6; ROSETTA B. TONEY, Parcel ID No. 03-12-6; THOMAS E. TONEY,
    Parcel ID No. 03-12-6; PATRICIA J. WILLIAMS, Parcel ID No. 05-25-1.13;
    ORUS ASHBY BERKLEY, Parcel ID No. 7-15A-13, 7-15A-13.1;
    VIRGINIA B. BROYLES, Revocable Trust (Parcel ID No. 03-24-39),
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia at
    Charleston. John T. Copenhaver, Jr., Senior District Judge. (2:17-cv-04214)
    Argued: September 28, 2018                                    Decided: March 13, 2019
    Before GREGORY, Chief Judge, WYNN and THACKER, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge Gregory wrote the opinion, in which
    Judge Wynn and Judge Thacker joined.
    5
    ARGUED: George A. Patterson, III, BOWLES RICE, LLP, Charleston, West Virginia,
    for Appellant. Nicolle Renee Snyder Bagnell, REED SMITH LLP, Pittsburgh,
    Pennsylvania, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Fazal A. Shere, BOWLES RICE, LLP,
    Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellant. Colin E. Wrabley, REED SMITH LLP,
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for Appellee.
    6
    GREGORY, Chief Judge:
    This appeal arises from a condemnation proceeding commenced by Appellee
    Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC (“MVP”). MVP is a natural gas company that was
    authorized by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) to exercise the right
    of eminent domain in order to construct a pipeline. The United States District Court for
    the Southern District of West Virginia granted MVP partial summary judgment on its
    right to condemn certain temporary and permanent easements on the properties of several
    landowners, including Appellant Western Pocahontas Properties, Limited Partnership
    (“WPPLP”). The district court also granted MVP’s motion for a preliminary injunction
    allowing MVP immediate access to the easements described in MVP’s complaint.
    WPPLP appeals the district court’s decision granting MVP’s motions for summary
    judgment and a preliminary injunction.       WPPLP also challenges the district court’s
    exclusion of evidence proffered during the preliminary injunction hearing.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s order in its entirety.
    I.
    The Natural Gas Act (“the NGA”) authorizes the holder of a certificate of public
    convenience and necessity to condemn land necessary for a particular project if it cannot
    acquire the land through contract or cannot agree with the landowner as to the
    compensation. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h). Our holding in East Tennessee Natural Gas Co. v.
    Sage allows district courts to utilize their equitable power to grant injunctions to gas
    companies in NGA condemnation proceedings where the company has demonstrated that
    7
    it has a substantive right to the property pursuant to the NGA and has met the
    requirements for a preliminary injunction. 
    361 F.3d 808
    , 828 (4th Cir. 2004).
    On October 13, 2017, FERC issued a certificate of public convenience and
    necessity to MVP. The FERC certificate authorizes MVP to construct and operate a
    303.5-mile natural gas pipeline from Wetzel County, West Virginia to Pittsylvania
    County, Virginia. After failing to acquire certain properties necessary for the pipeline
    through negotiation, MVP filed condemnation actions pursuant to the NGA against
    landowners in three district courts: in the United States District Courts for the Western
    District of Virginia and the Southern District of West Virginia on October 24, 2017, and
    in the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia on
    December 8, 2017. This appeal concerns the action before the Southern District of West
    Virginia. 1
    In that action, MVP condemned easements on three parcels of land belonging to
    WPPLP.        MVP condemned only the surface of those properties, asserting that the
    pipeline project did not require condemnation of the mineral rights or coal estate. MVP
    moved for partial summary judgment on its right to condemn temporary and permanent
    easements on the properties of several landowners (including those properties belonging
    to WPPLP) and sought a preliminary injunction allowing immediate access to the
    properties. MVP requested access to the landowners’ property by February 1, 2018, a
    1
    Other landowners in the three condemnation actions challenge the district courts’
    issuance of preliminary injunctions before this Court in a consolidated appeal. See
    Mountain Valley Pipeline, LLC v. 6.56 Acres of Land, No. 18-1159(L).
    8
    date MVP claimed would allow it to adhere to its construction schedule, complete tree-
    clearing in accordance with environmental requirements, and place the pipeline into
    service in late 2018.    On January 19, 2018, WPPLP filed a motion to dismiss the
    condemnation action for failure to join an indispensable party. The district court granted
    MVP’s motion to strike WPPLP’s motion to dismiss from the record, arguing that no
    pleadings outside of the answer are permitted in an eminent domain proceeding.
    On February 7, 2018, the district court held an evidentiary hearing regarding
    MVP’s motion for partial summary judgment and preliminary injunction.                 At a
    prehearing conference, WPPLP proffered testimony to be heard at the preliminary
    injunction hearing. The majority of the proffered evidence would not relate to the surface
    tracts named in MVP’s complaint but would instead address potential damage to coal and
    to the interests of WPPLP’s affiliate, Western Pocahontas Properties, LLC (“WPPLLC”)
    – a party that had not been joined in the condemnation action. The district court excluded
    the proffered evidence. After confirming with WPPLP that the proffered evidence did
    not relate to property that MVP sought to condemn in the complaint, the district court
    found the evidence to be irrelevant. In reaching its conclusion, the district court reasoned
    that it would not “hear evidence on properties that are not being taken.” J.A. 161.
    Following the evidentiary hearing, the district court granted MVP’s motion for
    partial summary judgment and preliminary injunction. This appeal followed. WPPLP
    argues that the district court committed reversible error by: (1) excluding WPPLP’s
    proffered evidence; (2) failing to join WPPLP’s affiliate, WPPLLC, as a party to the
    condemnation action; and (3) granting MVP’s motion for summary judgment and
    9
    preliminary injunction. We address each of WPPLP’s challenges below and affirm the
    district court’s order in its entirety.
    II.
    WPPLP contends that the district court abused its discretion when it precluded
    WPPLP from introducing evidence regarding potential damage to WPPLP and
    WPPLLC’s coal as a result of the pipeline. MVP responds that the district court did not
    abuse its discretion, because MVP had the sole power to define the extent of the taking
    and evidence related to property that MVP did not seek to condemn would therefore be
    irrelevant. We agree with MVP’s position and find that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in excluding the evidence.
    A district court’s evidentiary ruling is reviewed for abuse of discretion. United
    States v. Medford, 
    661 F.3d 746
    , 751 (4th Cir. 2011) (citing United States v. Murray, 
    65 F.3d 1161
    , 1170 (4th Cir. 1995)). Under this standard of review, the appellate court
    affords the evidentiary ruling “substantial deference,” and will not overturn the ruling
    unless the decision was “arbitrary and irrational.” 
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Weaver,
    
    282 F.3d 302
    , 313 (4th Cir. 2002)). A court abuses its discretion “when it acts in an
    arbitrary manner, when it fails to consider judicially-recognized factors limiting its
    discretion, or when it relies on erroneous factual or legal premises.” United States v.
    Henry, 
    673 F.3d 285
    , 291 (4th Cir. 2012) (internal citations omitted).
    As WPPLP acknowledges, the general rule laid out by this Court in United States
    v. 21.54 Acres of Land, More or Less, in Marshall County (“Marshall County”), is that
    10
    “the extent of the take is a discretionary decision for the condemning authority which
    may not be modified by the judiciary.”        
    491 F.2d 301
    , 304 (4th Cir. 1973). 2      We
    recognized, however, that the judiciary could take up a landowner’s challenge where “the
    issue . . . is not the extent of the take but rather whether [the condemning authority] has,
    in fact, accurately described the land in which it intends to take easements.” 
    Id. at 305
    .
    In Marshall County, the government chose to condemn “flowage easements” along a
    creek because it determined that a dam project would raise the ordinary high water mark.
    
    Id.
     The government declared its intention to acquire easements in land lying between
    “the highest elevation of the land to be acquired and the existing ordinary high water
    mark.” 
    Id.
     The government and landowners disagreed about the location of the existing
    ordinary high water mark. 
    Id.
     Given this factual dispute as to the location of the water
    mark, we held that the district court could address the issue in order “to effectuate the
    expressed intention of the condemning authority.”        
    Id. at 306
    .   The landowners in
    Marshall County did not challenge the scope of the take or seek to force the government
    to take more than it described in the complaint. Rather, they sought to require the district
    court to determine what property the government had described in the complaint. In
    other words, the dispute was not whether the government had to take more than it
    originally intended but how to give effect to the government’s expressed intention.
    2
    In Marshall County, the Court applied this rule to the government, but the rule
    also applies to a gas company to which eminent domain power has been delegated. See
    Columbia Gas Transmission, LLC v. 76 Acres, More or Less, in Baltimore and Hartford
    Counties, Maryland, 701 F. App’x 221, 226 (4th Cir. 2017).
    11
    Here, MVP’s expressed intention is to condemn easements on the surface of
    WPPLP’s property. Unlike the landowners in Marshall County, WPPLP does not debate
    what the term “surface” means or claim that the surface begins at a different point than
    MVP asserts. Nor does WPPLP assert that MVP’s conception of the “surface” it intends
    to take is mistaken or that it inaccurately describes the easements listed in the complaint.
    Rather, WPPLP argues that the pipeline will likely result in damage to coal that belongs
    to WPPLP and WPPLLC and that MVP must condemn the coal in addition to the
    properties designated in the complaint. 3 In other words, WPPLP argues that MVP should
    be required to take more than MVP described in its complaint. However, allowing
    evidence as to property not described in the complaint in an effort to compel the
    condemnor to condemn additional property does not comport with our holding in
    Marshall County. Indeed, consideration of such evidence would serve to frustrate the
    intention of MVP rather than effectuating its expressed intention.
    An Eighth Circuit decision we cited favorably in Marshall County further
    illustrates the flawed nature of WPPLP’s argument. In United States v. 3,317.39 Acres of
    3
    To the extent evidence of damage to coal within the area condemned by MVP
    could support the posting of a higher bond, we note that the district court expressly
    considered an affidavit submitted by WPPLP in which WPPLP’s general partner,
    Gregory Wooten, asserted that the value of its property was far above MVP’s estimate
    due to damage to “near-surface coal” that would be caused by the pipeline. See J.A.
    1145. After considering the affidavit and other evidence, the district court required MVP
    to deposit an amount four times the preliminary estimate of its appraiser before taking
    possession of the condemned property described in the complaint. Similarly, to the
    extent that the taking impacts the value of improvements on the surface or the value of
    WPPLP’s minerals below the surface, this would also factor in to the ultimate
    compensation determination in this action.
    12
    Land, More or Less, in Jefferson County, 
    443 F.2d 104
    , 105–06 (8th Cir. 1971)
    (“3,317.39 Acres of Land”), the government acquired flowage easements in connection
    with a project on a river, and the landowners contended that the taking failed to include
    an additional amount of land that would also be flooded upon completion of the project.
    Given the landowners’ contention, the district court admitted evidence of valuation
    addressing the “increased” take. 
    Id. at 106
    . The Eighth Circuit reversed, finding that
    damages must be limited to the land described in the government’s declaration of taking.
    
    Id.
    Like the landowners in 3,317.39 Acres of Land, WPPLP asserts that MVP is going
    to take more property than it is representing in its complaint and that MVP therefore must
    condemn that additional property now. However, a gas company authorized by FERC to
    exercise eminent domain has “the discretion to determine the size” of the easements it
    needs to take, and the district court is not entitled to modify that decision. Columbia Gas,
    701 F. App’x at 227; see also Marshall Cnty., 
    491 F.2d at 304
    . Therefore, while WPPLP
    “may recover compensation for these damages in a separate action,” it may not “assert
    such collateral claims within a condemnation proceeding.” Columbia Gas, 701 F. App’x
    at 227–28 (internal citations omitted). Contrary to WPPLP’s assertion, there is a remedy
    available to WPPLP (and WPPLLC) should MVP take more than it described in its
    complaint: an inverse condemnation action. See United States v. Clarke, 
    445 U.S. 253
    ,
    257 (1980) (describing an inverse condemnation action as a cause of action against a
    condemnor “to recover the value of property which has been taken in fact by the
    [condemnor], even though no formal exercise of the power of eminent domain has been
    13
    attempted” by the condemnor). As WPPLP freely admitted at oral argument, all of its
    potential losses are compensable. Thus, any losses it may potentially suffer could be
    recovered in an inverse condemnation action if necessary.         However, evidence of
    potential damage to property outside MVP’s complaint is irrelevant in the condemnation
    proceeding.
    The district court correctly applied our precedent regarding the extent of a taking
    in determining which evidence to consider at the preliminary injunction hearing.
    Therefore, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it excluded WPPLP’s
    proffered evidence.
    III.
    WPPLP next argues that the district court erred by failing to join WPPLLC as an
    indispensable party. MVP argues that WPPLP waived its indispensable party argument
    when it failed to preserve that argument in its answer or to properly develop it in its
    opening brief. Because we agree that WPPLP waived its indispensable party argument,
    we find no error on this basis.
    Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 71.1, a defendant in a condemnation
    proceeding must state all its objections and defenses to the taking in its answer and
    waives any objections and defenses not so included.         Fed. R. Civ. P. 71.1(e)(3).
    Moreover, no other pleading or motion asserting an additional objection or defense is
    allowed. 
    Id.
     Here, WPPLP raised its arguments regarding indispensable parties in a
    motion to dismiss MVP’s complaint, which the district court struck from the record.
    14
    Under the plain language of Rule 71.1 and our precedent, a defendant in a condemnation
    action is not permitted to file any pleading or motion aside from the initial answer. See
    Washington Met. Area Transit Auth. v. Precision Small Engines, 
    227 F.3d 224
    , 228 n.2
    (4th Cir. 2000) (“Simply put, no other pleading beside the answer is contemplated.”
    (internal citation omitted)); see also Atl. Seaboard Corp. v. Van Sterkenburg, 
    318 F.2d 455
    , 458 (4th Cir. 1963) (holding that a defendant’s motion for a more definite statement
    and motion to dismiss in a condemnation proceeding were unallowable and recognizing
    that “[o]ne pleading to raise all objections and defenses to the taking and one hearing to
    dispose of them are contemplated, not successive pleadings and successive hearings”).
    Because WPPLP did not raise the indispensable parties argument in its answer to MVP’s
    complaint, it waived its objection on this basis. Therefore, the district court did not err in
    declining to join WPPLLC in the condemnation action.
    IV.
    According to WPPLP, even if the district court did not err in excluding WPPLP’s
    evidence or failing to join WPPLLC as an indispensable party, it nevertheless erred in
    granting MVP’s motion for partial summary judgment and injunction in this case.
    Because we find no reversible error, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment and injunction in favor of MVP.
    A.
    We review an award of summary judgment de novo. Adams v. Trs. of the Univ. of
    N.C.-Wilmington, 
    640 F.3d 550
    , 556 (4th Cir. 2011) (internal citation omitted).
    15
    Summary judgment is appropriate if “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In
    considering the matter on appeal, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the non-moving party and draw all reasonable inferences in its favor. See Adams, 
    640 F.3d at 556
    ; FDIC v. Cashion, 
    720 F.3d 169
    , 173 (4th Cir. 2013). However, we do not
    weigh evidence or make credibility determinations. Foster v. Univ. of Maryland-Eastern
    Shore, 
    787 F.3d 243
    , 248 (4th Cir. 2015) (internal citation omitted).
    WPPLP argues that the district court erred in granting MVP’s motion for partial
    summary judgment on its right to condemn. A plaintiff must meet three requirements to
    exercise eminent domain under the NGA: (1) it must hold a valid FERC certificate; (2)
    the property it seeks must be necessary to the project; and (3) it must have been unable to
    acquire the property by agreement. 15 U.S.C. § 717f(h); see also Equitrans, L.P. v.
    Moore, 725 F. App’x 221, 224 (4th Cir. 2018) (per curiam) (holding that where property
    was necessary for the pipeline, FERC had issued the gas company a certificate, and the
    gas company was unable to acquire the land by agreement, “the only issue before the
    district court in the ensuing eminent domain proceeding is the amount to be paid . . . as
    just compensation”). WPPLP does not dispute that MVP holds a valid FERC certificate
    and that the property it seeks to condemn is necessary to the pipeline. Rather, WPPLP
    argues that the motion for summary judgment should have been denied, because: (1)
    MVP made no offer to WPPLP or WPPLLC that included any valuation for coal; and (2)
    MVP failed to negotiate in good faith when it withheld its third-party engineering firm’s
    evaluation of the effect of the pipeline on WPPLP’s coal.
    16
    We do not find either of WPPLP’s arguments persuasive. First, because MVP did
    not seek to condemn WPPLLC’s property in the eminent domain action, MVP was not
    required to attempt to negotiate or reach an agreement with WPPLLC. 4 See Marshall
    Cnty., 
    491 F.2d at 304
    . Nor was MVP required to make an offer to WPPLP for any of its
    property that was not described in the complaint. Second, as to WPPLP’s argument
    regarding good faith, we note that this Court has never directly addressed the issue of
    whether the NGA requires gas companies to seek property by agreement in good faith
    before exercising eminent domain.      We need not resolve that issue here, however,
    because WPPLP has failed to point to any authority that required MVP to disclose the
    results of its engineering analysis during negotiations for the surface easements in order
    to act in good faith. Indeed, WPPLP has not pointed to any evidence in the record that it
    requested and was denied the analysis. Because MVP was unable to reach an agreement
    with WPPLP as to the easements described in the complaint, the district court did not err
    when it granted summary judgment to MVP on its right to condemn. See 15 U.S.C.
    § 717f (h).
    WPPLP has not pointed to a genuine dispute of material fact as to MVP’s claim to
    invoke its eminent domain powers. Accordingly, we hold that the district court did not
    err in granting MVP’s motion for summary judgment.
    4
    For the same reason, even if the FERC certificate required MVP to negotiate
    with landowners of condemned property, as WPPLP argues, such a requirement would
    not compel MVP to negotiate for land it was not condemning or with a party that did not
    own condemned property.
    17
    B.
    Finally, WPPLP argues that the district court abused its discretion in granting
    MVP’s request for a preliminary injunction. For the reasons that follow, we find that the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in granting MVP’s motion for a preliminary
    injunction.
    A preliminary injunction is “an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded
    upon a clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief” and may never be
    awarded “as of right.” Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    555 U.S. 7
    , 22, 24 (2008)
    (internal citations omitted); see also Dewhurst v. Century Aluminum Co., 
    649 F.3d 287
    ,
    290 (4th Cir. 2011) (“Winter thus requires that a party seeking a preliminary injunction
    . . . must clear[ly] show[] that it is likely to succeed on the merits.” (alterations in
    original) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted)).        In order to receive a
    preliminary injunction, a plaintiff must establish that: (1) it is likely to succeed on the
    merits; (2) it is likely to suffer irreparable harm without the preliminary injunction; (3)
    the balance of equities tips in its favor; and (4) the injunction is in the public interest.
    Winter, 
    555 U.S. at 20
    . Each of these four requirements must be satisfied. 
    Id.
     A
    preliminary injunction is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Dewhurst, 
    649 F.3d at 290
    (internal citation omitted).   We review factual findings for clear error and legal
    conclusions de novo. 
    Id.
    As to the first Winter requirement, the probability of success on the merits, the
    district court properly found that it was satisfied. Because MVP had already proved that
    it had a right to condemn the property at issue, success on the merits was not only
    18
    probable but guaranteed. As to the second Winter requirement, the district court properly
    determined that MVP had proven that it was likely to suffer irreparable harm absent an
    injunction.    We note that under our precedent, economic damages may constitute
    irreparable harm where no remedy is available at the conclusion of litigation. See, e.g.,
    Sage, 361 F.3d at 830.        MVP set forth evidence that it would suffer significant
    unrecoverable financial damages and that it would face delays and miss an internal
    construction deadline in the absence of an injunction. Accordingly, the district court did
    not abuse its discretion in finding that MVP had satisfied the second Winter requirement.
    As to the third Winter requirement, the balance of the equities, the district court
    did not abuse its discretion in determining that the significant irreparable harms faced by
    MVP in the absence of an injunction outweighed the potential harm of an injunction to
    WPPLP. We note that the district court did not expressly address the potential that
    immediate rather than postponed possession could be harmful to certain landowners. The
    district court relied heavily on our opinion in Sage in concluding that the balance of
    equities tipped in MVP’s favor. J.A. 1140 (“In Sage, the Fourth Circuit conclusively
    spoke on this issue in the context of NGA condemnation actions.”). While Sage is indeed
    controlling and suggests that the balance of equities may often tip in favor of the pipeline
    company in the context of NGA condemnations, we take this opportunity to clarify that
    such an outcome is by no means guaranteed. District courts in NGA condemnation
    actions must consider the particular harms to landowners in weighing the balance of the
    equities and may never grant a preliminary injunction “as of right.” See Winter, 
    555 U.S. at 24
    .
    19
    After thoroughly reviewing the particular evidence in this case, we agree with the
    district court that there was no evidence presented of harm to WPPLP resulting from the
    injunction, as opposed to the pipeline itself, that would outweigh the irreparable harm
    that MVP would likely suffer absent an injunction. Indeed, there is no indication that
    WPPLP will suffer any non-compensable harms from the issuance of an injunction. On
    this record, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the balance of
    equities tipped in MVP’s favor.
    Finally, as to the fourth Winter element, the district court reasonably determined
    that the preliminary injunction was in the public interest, because it would allow for
    expeditious construction of a FERC-approved pipeline. As we explained in Sage, the
    issuance of a FERC certificate signifies that the Commission – the agency charged with
    administering the NGA – has determined that pipeline construction will advance the
    congressional purposes behind that Act and “serve the public interest,” making available
    to consumers an adequate supply of natural gas at reasonable prices. 361 F.3d at 830. It
    follows, we reasoned, that granting a gas company immediate access to necessary
    easements during the pendency of condemnation proceedings likewise would advance the
    public interest, because a “delay in construction would postpone these benefits.” Id.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in applying Sage to the facts of this
    case. As the district court recognized, MVP’s certificate rests on an agency finding that
    the proposed pipeline will benefit the public by meeting a market need for natural gas,
    and will do so in a way that is environmentally acceptable. J.A. 1141 (“FERC conducted
    a careful analysis of the [project] and determined that the project will promote [the
    20
    NGA’s] goals and serve the public interest.” (quoting Sage, 361 F.3d at 830)). A delay in
    construction would therefore result in a delay of the benefits of the pipeline.
    That is not to say, of course, that a FERC certificate necessarily will be dispositive
    of the public interest inquiry under Winter. Apart from setting an in-service deadline, a
    FERC certificate does not address timing, and so cannot establish by itself that immediate
    possession, as opposed to pipeline construction generally, is in the public interest. But
    echoing our reasoning in Sage, the district court here concluded that because delaying
    construction would delay the public benefits identified by the Commission, the public
    interest factor favored preliminary relief. And while there may be cases in which there
    are public-interest arguments against immediate possession that were not considered by
    the Commission in reviewing the public benefit of the pipeline project writ large, this is
    not one of them.
    We note that the district court did not expressly recognize the distinction between
    the public interest in pipeline construction generally and in immediate access specifically.
    See Winter, 
    555 U.S. at 20
     (“A plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must establish
    . . . that an injunction is in the public interest.” (emphasis added)). The district court did,
    however, incorporate our reasoning under the public-interest prong in Sage, which does
    address that issue and finished with the common-sense observation that a construction
    delay would postpone the benefits relied on by FERC in issuing its certificate. See J.A.
    1141 (citing Sage, 361 F.3d at 830).          Under these circumstances, the absence of
    additional analysis of the public-interest prong does not amount to an abuse of discretion.
    We therefore affirm the district court’s grant of an injunction to MVP.
    21
    V.
    In sum, the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding WPPLP’s
    proffered evidence as to property that MVP did not identify in the complaint as part of its
    taking. The district court also properly declined to join WPPLLC as an indispensable
    party to the action. Finally, the district court properly granted summary judgment in
    favor of MVP and did not abuse its discretion in granting MVP’s motion for a
    preliminary injunction. We therefore affirm the district court’s order in its entirety.
    AFFIRMED
    22