Columbia Gas v. Tarbuck ( 1995 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1995 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    8-9-1995
    Columbia Gas v Tarbuck
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 94-3643
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    Recommended Citation
    "Columbia Gas v Tarbuck" (1995). 1995 Decisions. Paper 213.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1995/213
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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ----------
    No. 94-3643
    ----------
    COLUMBIA GAS TRANSMISSION
    CORPORATION
    v.
    MICHAEL D. TARBUCK,
    Appellant
    ----------
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civil No. 93-cv-02112)
    ----------
    Argued Wednesday, June 28, 1995
    BEFORE:   HUTCHINSON, ROTH and GARTH, Circuit Judges
    ----------
    (Opinion filed    August 9, l995)
    ----------
    Sanford S. Finder (Argued)
    Finder, Allison & Graham
    66 West Wheeling Street
    Washington, Pennsylvania 15301
    Attorney for Appellant
    Harry C. Bruner Jr.              Kevin C. Abbott
    Columbia Gas Transmission        Deborah P. Powell (Argued)
    Corp.                            Carolyn Holtschlag Allen
    P.O. Box 1273                    Thorp, Reed & Armstrong
    Charleston, WV 25325             One Riverfront Center
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222
    1
    Attorneys for Appellee
    2
    ----------
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ----------
    GARTH, Circuit Judge:
    Michael Tarbuck appeals the district court's order of
    October 14, 1994, which permanently enjoined Tarbuck from
    encroaching on rights of way owned by Columbia Gas Transmission
    Corporation.   Tarbuck argues that the amount in controversy
    between Columbia and himself does not exceed $50,000 as required
    by 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    .
    The district court found that Columbia owned two fifty
    foot rights of way over Tarbuck's property and that it would cost
    Tarbuck $4,000 to remove the overburden which had been placed by
    Tarbuck on the rights of way.    Tarbuck argues that $4,000 is the
    amount in controversy.    The Supreme Court's decision in Glenwood
    Light Co. v. Mutual Light Co., 
    239 U.S. 121
     (1915), however,
    settled that in diversity suits for injunctions the cost of
    compliance is not the definitive measure of the amount in
    controversy.   Rather, we measure the amount in controversy by the
    value of the rights which the plaintiff seeks to protect.
    Because the value to Columbia of protecting the rights
    of way by this action is alleged to be in excess of the
    jurisdictional minimum and the actual value to Columbia is not
    legally certain to be less than the jurisdictional threshold, we
    conclude that federal jurisdiction exists.      Accordingly, we will
    affirm the district court's judgment in favor of Columbia.      In
    3
    doing so, we hold that the district court had jurisdiction under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
     and that Columbia's rights of way are indeed
    fifty feet wide.
    I.
    Michael Tarbuck owns two parcels of land adjacent to
    Route 19 in Southwestern Pennsylvania.     Pursuant to two separate
    deeds, Columbia owns rights of way across the parcels to operate
    a twenty inch natural gas pipeline.     In December 1993, Columbia
    sought a preliminary and a permanent injunction, requiring
    Tarbuck to remove the overburden on the rights of way (i.e. the
    three to six feet of excess topsoil which Tarbuck placed on
    Columbia's rights of way).     Columbia also sought an order
    preventing Tarbuck from placing any further topsoil on the
    easements.
    In his answer, Tarbuck denied any encroachment, denied
    that Columbia's right of way was fifty feet in width, and claimed
    that the district court lacked jurisdiction because the amount in
    controversy did not exceed $50,000.
    To sustain its claim to diversity
    jurisdiction,1Columbia introduced the following evidence which
    the district court accepted.     Columbia engineers testified that
    the overburden placed additional pressure on the pipe which could
    result in a possible rupture.     Further, the engineers testified
    1
    For purposes of diversity, Columbia is a citizen of Delaware
    and West Virginia. Tarbuck is a citizen of Pennsylvania.
    4
    that the overburden interfered with instruments used in periodic
    federally mandated inspections of the protective coating of the
    pipeline. The district court recognized that if the pipeline were
    to leak, the escaping gas could migrate to a nearby building or a
    nearby road and explode, causing significant personal and
    property damage.   The district court also concluded that Columbia
    was presently violating the applicable federal regulations and
    thus could not continue to operate the pipeline under these
    conditions indefinitely.
    The district court also determined the following.   It
    would cost approximately $4,000 for Tarbuck to remove the excess
    cover.   Alternatively, it would cost Columbia $100,000 to raise
    the pipe to the appropriate level within the existing right of
    way or $1,000,000 to relocate the pipeline to different property.
    Neither party presented any evidence as to the value of the
    rights of way nor the value of Tarbuck's land whether or not
    burdened by the rights of way.
    Based on these facts, the district court concluded that
    the amount in controversy exceeded $50,000.   It further concluded
    that Tarbuck had encroached on the rights of way by placing
    additional topsoil over the pipeline and entered a permanent
    injunction requiring the removal of the overburden.
    Turning to the width of the rights of way, the district
    court found that Columbia's predecessor in interest obtained the
    easements in the 1940s by two deeds.   While one deed expressly
    provided for a fifty foot right of way, the other deed stated no
    width.
    5
    Columbia introduced evidence that it had regularly
    mowed twenty five feet to either side of its pipeline.      Further,
    it used the whole fifty feet in 1981 to replace part of the pipe.
    Finally, Columbia's engineers testified that Columbia needed
    fifty feet to maintain or repair the line because occupational
    safety regulations required that Columbia slope the excavation
    and place equipment safely around the stretch of pipe being
    repaired.
    Tarbuck was on notice of Columbia's claim to fifty feet
    before he acquired the property.      Three months before purchasing
    the property in April 1991, Tarbuck tacitly acknowledged the
    existence of a fifty foot right of way when he sought information
    on the building restrictions imposed by the rights of way.
    Representatives of Columbia marked the location of the pipeline
    with flags for Tarbuck and completed the Location of Gas Lines
    form which he signed.    The Columbia form Tarbuck signed
    explicitly stated that the rights of way were fifty feet in
    width.
    Based on this evidence, the district court concluded
    that each of the rights of way was fifty feet in width.
    II.
    The principal issue on appeal is whether the amount in
    controversy exceeds $50,000.    
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
     provides that:
    The district courts shall have original
    jurisdiction of all civil actions where the
    matter in controversy exceeds the sum or
    6
    value of $50,000, exclusive of interest and
    costs, and is between . . .   citizens of
    different States . . . .
    Tarbuck argues that we must measure the amount in controversy by
    reference to the cost ($4,000) of removing the overburden.
    Columbia principally contends that the appropriate measure of the
    jurisdictional amount is either the cost of the injuries which
    could result if the pipeline leaked or the cost of possible
    federal fines that could be imposed.    At oral argument, Columbia,
    citing Glenwood Light Co. v. Mutual Light Co., 
    239 U.S. 121
    (1915), additionally claimed that the value of maintaining its
    rights of way without interference from Tarbuck must be
    considered in determining the jurisdictional amount in
    controversy.
    The amount in controversy is measured by reference to
    the value of the rights which Columbia possesses by virtue of the
    rights of way.   We hold that because it is not legally certain
    that the value of these rights is less than $50,000, section 1332
    was satisfied, thereby meeting federal jurisdictional
    requirements.
    A party who invokes the jurisdiction of the federal
    courts has the burden of demonstrating the court's jurisdiction.
    McNutt v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 
    298 U.S. 178
    , 189
    (1936).   In diversity cases, we generally accept a party's good
    faith allegation of the amount in controversy, but where a
    defendant or the court challenges the plaintiff's allegations
    regarding the amount in question, the plaintiff who seeks the
    7
    assistance of the federal courts must produce sufficient evidence
    to justify its claims.   Burns v. Massachusetts Mutual Life
    Insurance Co., 
    820 F.2d 246
    , 248 (8th Cir. 1987).
    The test for determining the amount in controversy in
    diversity cases was established by the Supreme Court in St. Paul
    Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab. Co., 
    303 U.S. 283
     (1938).
    The rule governing dismissal for want of
    jurisdiction in cases brought in the federal
    court is that, unless the law gives a
    different rule, the sum claimed by the
    plaintiff controls if the claim is apparently
    made in good faith. It must appear to a
    legal certainty that the claim is really for
    less than the jurisdictional amount to
    justify dismissal. The inability of
    plaintiff to recover an amount adequate to
    give the court jurisdiction does not show his
    bad faith or oust the jurisdiction. Nor does
    the fact that the complaint discloses the
    existence of a valid defense to the claim.
    But if, from the face of the pleadings, it is
    apparent, to a legal certainty, that the
    plaintiff cannot recover the amount claimed,
    or if, from the proofs, the court is
    satisfied to a like certainty that the
    plaintiff never was entitled to recover that
    amount, and that his claim was therefore
    colorable for the purpose of conferring
    jurisdiction, the suit will be dismissed.
    
    Id. at 288-89
     (emphasis added and footnotes omitted).    Red Cab
    gave rise to two jurisdictional principles.   First, dismissal is
    appropriate only if the federal court is certain that the
    jurisdictional amount cannot be met; the reasonable probability
    that the amount exceeds $50,000 suffices to vest the court with
    jurisdiction.   Second, the ultimate failure to prove damages over
    $50,000 does not belatedly divest the federal court of
    jurisdiction unless the proofs at trial demonstrate that the
    8
    plaintiff never had a colorable claim that exceeded $50,000.      In
    that latter circumstance, the case will be dismissed.      Jones v.
    Knox Exploration Corp., 
    2 F.3d 181
     (6th Cir. 1993); Ehrenfeld v.
    Webber, 
    499 F. Supp. 1283
    , 1294 (D. Me. 1980).2
    Where the plaintiff in a diversity action seeks
    injunctive or declaratory relief, the amount in controversy is
    often not readily determinable.       Under those circumstances, the
    amount in controversy is determined by "the value of the object
    of the litigation."   Hunt v. Washington Apple Advertising Comm'n,
    
    432 U.S. 333
    , 347 (1977); McNutt v. General Motors Acceptance
    Corp., 
    298 U.S. 178
    , 191 (1936).       Unfortunately, this phrase has
    proven less than clear in its application to the many different
    claims for equitable relief that have arisen out of our diversity
    jurisdiction.    1 James Wm. Moore, Moore's Federal Practice § 0.95
    (2d ed. 1995).
    The case which most closely approximates the current
    case is Glenwood Light Co. v. Mutual Light Co., 
    239 U.S. 121
    (1915).   Glenwood Light sought the removal of Mutual Light's
    poles and wires, which had been constructed adjacent to
    Glenwood's poles and wires in a manner which endangered the
    operation and maintenance of Glenwood's facilities.      The district
    court found that the removal of the encroaching wires would cost
    $500, well below the then $3,000 jurisdictional minimum, and
    2
    In a substantially different context, we recently held that a
    contract which limits liability to $50,000 did not satisfy the
    amount in controversy. Valhal Corp. v. Sullivan Associates,
    Inc., 
    44 F.3d 195
    , 209 (3d Cir. 1995). But see Valhal Corp. v.
    Sullivan Associates, Inc., 
    48 F.3d 760
     (3d Cir. 1995) (statement
    sur denial of petition for rehearing).
    9
    dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction.    The Supreme Court
    disagreed.
    We are unable to discern any sufficient
    ground for taking this case out of the rule
    applicable generally to suits for injunction
    to restrain a nuisance, a continuing
    trespass, or the like, viz., that the
    jurisdictional amount is to be tested by the
    value of the object to be gained by
    complainant. The object of the present suit
    is not only the abatement of the nuisance,
    but (under the prayer for general relief) the
    prevention of any recurrence of the like
    nuisance in the future. . . .
    The District court erred in testing the
    jurisdiction by the amount that it would cost
    defendant to remove its poles and wires where
    they conflict or interfere with those of
    complainant, and replacing them in such a
    position as to avoid the interference.
    Complainant sets up a right to maintain and
    operate its plant and conduct its business
    free from wrongful interference by defendant.
    . . . The relief sought is the protection of
    that right, now and in the future, and the
    value of that protection is determinative of
    jurisdiction.
    Id. at 125-26.3
    Glenwood Light disposes of Tarbuck's argument that the
    cost of removing the overburden is the appropriate measure of the
    3
    We have previously applied Glenwood Light and found
    jurisdiction where discharge from an upstream coal plant created
    a nuisance and continuing trespass to downstream property even
    though the riparian owner had not yet been injured in excess of
    the jurisdictional minimum and the cost of abatement had not been
    settled. Kelly v. Leigh Nav. Coal Co., 
    151 F.2d 743
    , 745 (3d
    Cir. 1945), cert. denied, 
    327 U.S. 779
     (1946). "It is well
    settled that in an action of this nature, the jurisdictional
    amount is to be calculated on the basis of the property right
    which is being injured. If that property right has a value in
    excess of $3,000 [the previous jurisdictional threshold] the
    Federal Court has jurisdiction of such a diversity suit even
    though the plaintiff had not suffered $3,000 damage at the time
    suit was instituted." 
    Id. at 746
    .
    10
    amount in controversy.     In Glenwood Light, the Court rejected
    Mutual Light's claims that the $500 cost of removing its
    encroaching poles and wires was the amount in controversy.       We
    similarly reject the argument advanced here by Tarbuck that the
    $4,000 cost of removing the overburden is the amount in
    controversy in this case.
    In Glenwood Light, the defendant had not questioned
    that the value of the right identified by the Court -- "a right
    to maintain and operate its plant and conduct its business free
    from wrongful interference by the defendant" -- exceeded the
    jurisdictional minimum.     Consequently, the Court concluded that
    federal jurisdiction existed without determining the value of
    Glenwood Light's rights.     Here, however, Tarbuck has argued that,
    even if the measure is not his cost of compliance, the value of
    the rights of way or the value of obtaining the injunction is
    less than $50,000.
    III.
    The record here discloses the cost of two alternatives
    which Columbia might pursue to operate its pipeline without the
    removal of the overburden or without a fifty foot wide right of
    way.   Because Tarbuck had deposited additional soil on the rights
    of way, Columbia's pipeline, which should have been approximately
    three feet from the surface is now located seven feet beneath the
    surface.   Thus, as one alternative, Columbia could raise the pipe
    to the proper depth within the existing rights of way at a cost
    which the district court found to be $100,000.     As a second
    11
    alternative, Columbia could reroute the pipe on different
    property at a cost which the district court found to be
    $1,000,000.
    The cost of either alternative clearly exceeds the
    jurisdictional minimum.   No feasible lower cost alternative to
    obtaining the injunction is presented on this record.    Thus,
    jurisdiction exists under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    .
    At oral argument, Tarbuck argued that Columbia could
    have entered the right of way and removed the overburden itself.
    Because Columbia, in doing so, would have had to remain within
    the rights of way (the width of one of which had yet to be
    judicially determined when this action commenced) and would have
    had to dispose of the topsoil it removed, such an action would
    almost certainly cost more than $4,000.    However, we cannot say
    that Tarbuck was unreasonable in suggesting that the overburden
    removal by Columbia might still cost less than $50,000.
    Tarbuck's calculations however ignore the full measure
    of relief which Columbia seeks.    Columbia seeks not only the
    removal of the excess topsoil but it also seeks an order
    preventing any future encroachment.    To paraphrase Glenwood
    Light, "The object of the present suit is not only the [removal
    of the overburden], but . . . the prevention of any recurrence of
    the like [encroachment] in the future. . . . The relief sought is
    the protection of that right, now and in the future, and the
    value of that protection is determinative of jurisdiction."      
    239 U.S. at 125-26
    .
    12
    Given Tarbuck's vigorous defense of this suit and his
    repeated failures to comply with Columbia's requests that he
    cease interfering with the rights of way before the suit began,
    we do not doubt that the injunction sought by Columbia is an
    integral part of the controversy in this case.4
    We further note that once Tarbuck denied that
    Columbia's rights of way were fifty feet wide, the width of the
    rights of way became an essential part of the controversy.
    Columbia contends that it cannot properly maintain its lines
    without fifty feet in which to make repairs.   Any lesser amount
    would cause Columbia to be out of compliance with state and
    federal occupational safety regulations.   Columbia substantiates
    its claim by the unchallenged testimony that it used the whole
    fifty feet to repair the pipeline in 1981.    If the district court
    were to have determined that Columbia owned less than fifty feet,
    Columbia would apparently have been forced to obtain the
    additional footage or reroute its pipeline.
    Tarbuck claimed at oral argument that Columbia could
    have obtained the necessary additional width by eminent domain
    for less than $50,000, but there is no evidence in the record to
    substantiate his claim.   Nor is there any evidence from which we
    could conclude that eminent domain proceedings presented a timely
    alternative to Columbia's suit.
    4
    This does not suggest that a litigant may always meet the
    amount in controversy simply by requesting an injunction which
    prevents the recurrence of an allegedly impermissible trespass or
    nuisance. Such recurrence must not be speculative and the
    alternatives to the injunction must still exceed $50,000.
    13
    Our examination of the record does not disclose any
    additional means by which Columbia could operate its lines within
    the parameters of the applicable federal regulations.
    Consequently, we cannot say to a legal certainty that the cost of
    any alternatives available to Columbia is less than $50,000.
    Hence, we have federal jurisdiction over Columbia's claims under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1332.5
    We need not reach Columbia's speculative claims that
    the damage that might result from a leak or that the fines it
    might have to pay in administrative proceedings would exceed
    $50,000.   These claims present Columbia's conjecture, and we will
    not ordinarily consider such speculative arguments in determining
    the amount in controversy.   See Kheel v. Port of New York Auth.,
    
    457 F.2d 46
    , 49 (2d Cir.) ("[T]he jurisdictional test is
    applicable to that amount that flows directly and with a fair
    degree of probability from the litigation, not from collateral or
    speculative sources."), cert. denied, 
    409 U.S. 983
     (1972); see
    also Healy v. Ratta, 
    292 U.S. 263
    , 267 (1934) (refusing to
    consider the collateral effects of the judgment on other claims
    or other plaintiffs in determining the jurisdictional amount).
    IV.
    Having determined that we have jurisdiction, we turn to
    Tarbuck's claim on the merits that the right of way over one of
    his parcels was less than fifty feet in width.   Under
    5
    Because we conclude that we have jurisdiction under § 1332, we
    need not consider Columbia's claims that we have jurisdiction
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
     by virtue of the controversy's
    relationship to the National Gas Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 717
    -717z.
    14
    Pennsylvania law, ambiguous easements are construed to provide
    the grantee the "`reasonable and necessary' use of the right of
    way within the purpose of the easement and the intentions of the
    original parties to the grant."    Zettlemoyer v. Transcontinental
    Gas Pipeline Corp., 
    657 A.2d 920
    , 926 (Pa. 1995) (internal
    citations omitted).    Under this standard, we have little
    difficulty affirming the district court's determination that the
    deed, which did not expressly state a width, nonetheless granted
    Columbia fifty feet.
    The original deed expressly stated the purpose of the
    grant -- the operation of a pipeline.    Columbia introduced
    testimony that it could not properly maintain or repair the
    pipeline without twenty five feet of work space to either side of
    the pipeline.   Consistent with this assertion, Columbia has
    periodically mowed the full width of fifty feet and used the full
    fifty feet, when it was obliged to replace part of the pipe in
    1981.   Moreover, Tarbuck acknowledged the existence of a fifty
    foot right of way in February 1991 when he signed a Columbia form
    which listed the restrictions imposed on the use of the property
    as a result of the right of way.
    This evidence confirms that fifty feet is the
    reasonable and necessary width needed to operate a twenty inch
    gas pipeline.   See Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. Large, 
    619 N.E.2d 1215
     (Ohio Misc. 1992) (finding fifty feet to be the
    appropriate width); Roebuck v. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
    
    386 N.E.2d 1363
     (Ohio. App. 1977) (same).    The record fully
    supports the district court's conclusion "that the entire right-
    15
    of-way granted to Columbia is 50 feet wide," App. at 314, whether
    considered as a finding of fact, to which we would defer, or as a
    mixed question of law or fact, over which we have plenary review.
    Zettlemoyer, 657 A.2d at 926.    We are satisfied the district
    court did not err; hence, we affirm.
    V.
    Because the cost of the alternatives which would permit
    Columbia to continue to operate its business without interference
    and without obtaining a permanent injunction exceed $50,000, we
    conclude that the amount in controversy satisfies our
    jurisdictional requirement.     On the merits, we will affirm the
    district court's judgment that Columbia's rights of way are both
    fifty feet wide.
    16