Robinson Township v. Commonwealth

147 A.3d 536, 637 Pa. 239, 2016 WL 5597310
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 2016
DocketNo. 104 MAP 2014; No. 105 MAP 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 147 A.3d 536 (Robinson Township v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson Township v. Commonwealth, 147 A.3d 536, 637 Pa. 239, 2016 WL 5597310 (Pa. 2016).

Opinions

OPINION

JUSTICE TODD

This is a consolidated appeal from the decision of the Commonwealth Court following our remand to that tribunal to resolve open issues pursuant to our Court’s mandate in Robinson Township v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 623 Pa. 564, 83 A.3d 901 (2013) (“Robinson II”). In that case, our Court struck the entirety of Sections 3215(b), 3215(d), 3303, and 3304 of Act 13 of Feb. 14,2012, P.L. 87 (“Act 13”),1 as violative of the Pennsylvania Constitution, - and we enjoined the application and enforcement of Section 3215(c) and (e) and Sections 3305 through 3309, to the extent that they implemented or enforced the provisions of Act 13 which our Court invalidated. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the portion of the order the Commonwealth Court issued on remand, Robinson Township v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 96 A.3d 1104 (Pa.Cmwlth.2014) [542]*542(“Robinson- III”), holding that Sections 3305 through 3309 were not severable from Sections 3303 and -3304, and we also uphold its conclusion that the passage of Act 13 did not violate Article III,. Section 3 of the Pennsylvania Constitution—the “single subject rule.” However, because we conclude that Sections 3218.1, 3222.1(b)(10) and- 3222.1(b)(l 1) contravene Article III, Section 32 of,the Pennsylvania Constitution, due to our determination that they constitute special legislation which is forbidden by that constitutional provision, we reverse the Commonwealth Court’s order upholding these sections, and' enjoin their further application and enforcement. In that regard,' we stay our mandate with respect to Section 3218.1 for 180 days in order to give the General Assembly sufficient time to enact remedial legislation. Further, because we determine that Section 3241 is unconstitutional on its face, as it grants a corporation the power of eminent domain to take private property for a private purpose, in violation of the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Sections 1 and 10 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, we reverse the Commonwealth • Court’s order and direct this provision be stricken as -well, and enjoined from further application and enforcement.

I. Background

In February 2012, the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed Act 13—a sweeping law regulating the oil and gas industry—which, inter alia, repealed parts of the existing Oil and Gas Act of 1984 2 codified in Title 58 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes and created six new chapters therein, the specific provisions of two of which—Chapters 32 and 33—are at issue in this appeal. The questions raised in the instant appeal involve Sections 3218.1, 3222.1, and 3241 of Chapter 32, and Sections 3305 through 3309 of Chapter 33, the operation of which we describe briefly at the outset of this opinion so.that the reader may understand the extensive prior jurisprudence from our Court and the Commonwealth Court concerning the function and interplay of these statutory provisions.3

Chapter 32 of Title 58, entitled “Development,” delineates various permitting, operational, notification, and disclosure requirements for companies, individuals, and governmental entities concerning the drilling and operation of wells for gas, petroleum, and related liquids. It also provides for the implementation of certain subsurface storage methods for natural gas within our Commonwealth. As explained more fully herein, Section 3218.1 establishes a requirement that the DEP, upon being informed of a “spill,” and, after investigation, “notify any public drinking water facility that could be affected by the event that the event occurred.” 58 Pa.C.S. § 3218.1.

Section 3222.1 applies to hydraulic fracturing activities, i.e., “fracking,” carried [543]*543out in the drilling and operation of “unconventional wells” to extract natural gas.4 It requires a service provider, vendor, or operator of such a well to disclose chemicals used in the operation of the well within 60 days of the conclusion of fracking activities to a “chemical disclosure registry,” which is an internet website jointly operated by a group of state water quality officials and representatives of oil and gas producing states.5 58 Pa.C.S. §§ 3203, 3222.1(b)(2). However, Section 3222.1 specifically exempts from such disclosure the “identity of a chemical or the concentration of a chemical, or both” which a “service provider who performs any part of a hydraulic fracturing treatment,” “a vendor who provides hydraulic fracturing additives directly to [a well] operator for a hydraulic fracturing treatment,” or a well “operator,”- has claimed to be “a trade secret or confidential proprietary information.” 58 Pa.C.S. § 3222.1(b), (1), (3). In such circumstances, the service provider, vendor, or well operator is only required to submit a signed written statement to the registry that the record contains a trade secret or confidential proprietary information, and must include in the disclosure form “the chemical family or similar description associated with the chemical.” Id, § 3222.1(b)(3). Section 3222.1(b)(5) also provides that any information which is protected as a trade secret or as confidential proprietary information which has been submitted to the DEP is not a public record. 58 Pa.C.S. § 3222.1(b)(5).

Additionally, Section 3222.1 limits the disclosure by a service provider, vendor, or well operator to any “health professional”6 of the identity and amounts of chemicals claimed to be trade secrets or confidential proprietary information. It requires that, in order for health care professionals to obtain this information from such persons or entities as part of the routine treatment of a patient, they must execute a confidentiality agreement as well as provide a written statement attesting that: “[t]he information is needed for the purpose of diagnosis or treatment of an individual;” “[t]he individual being diagnosed or treated may have been exposed to a hazardous chemical;” or “[kjnowledge of [such] information will assist in the diagnosis or treatment of an individual.” Id. § 3222.1(b)(10)(i—iii). Section 3222.1(b)(ll) affords health professionals a limitéd opportunity to orally request such information in the event the professional determines that “a medical emergency exists,” and that the information is “necessary for emergency treatment”; however, in order to obtain the information in those circumstances, the health professional is required to verbally acknowledge “that the information may not be used for purposes other than the health needs asserted” and that the health professional will keep the information confidential. Id. § 3222.1(b)(ll). Even after the health professional makes such a verbal request and acknowledgment, the service provider, vendor, or well operator may still require that the health profes[544]*544sional execute a written statement of need and a confidentiality agreement “as soon as circumstances permit, in conformance with regulations promulgated under this chapter.” Id.

Section 3241 allows “a corporation empowered to transport, sell or store natural gas or manufactured gas in this Commonwealth” the right to “appropriate an interest in real property located in a storage reservoir7 or reservoir protective area8 for injection, storage and removal from storage of natural gas or manufactured gas in a stratum which is or previously has been commercially productive of natural gas.” Id. § 3241(a).

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.3d 536, 637 Pa. 239, 2016 WL 5597310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-township-v-commonwealth-pa-2016.