There’s been a lot of news about ET Rover this week, owing to an unfortunate incident in which their survey crews entered or tried to enter the properties of some landowners without permission, in one case sparking a potentially dangerous confrontation. It’s unfortunate that it’s come to this, though it was also probably inevitable. ET Rover’s ham-handed dealings with landowners have done nothing but fuel the understandable frustration and anger of landowners. We hate to say “we told you so,” but several months ago, we told ET Rover that the industry’s thoughtless routine ways of communicating with landowners were not going to go over well here in southeast Michigan. They clearly did not listen to us.
At the center of this week’s story, however, is a legal question that we’ve addressed, though only briefly, before. ET Rover is claiming that they have the right under Michigan Law to enter private property to conduct surveys without landowner permission. Here is spokesperson Vicki Granado just this week:
“We do have, under Michigan Compiled Law, the right to enter, knock on the door and, if the landowner isn’t home and we’re following specs, we do have the right to enter,” ET Rover spokeswoman Vicki Granado said. “Again, if the landowner tells us that they don’t want us surveying (we won’t survey).”
And here is Granado in a different article this week:
“We have consulted with many attorneys and many sided with Rover in this particular process,” said Granado. “We have the right to conduct surveys and have given proper notification to landowners we are needing to survey. We would much rather do it in cooperation, that is our goal, but we do have permission from the state. They are not trespassing.”
Setting aside the legal question for a moment, Granado’s comments strike us as a bit contradictory. In the first one, she indicates that Rover won’t survey if the landowner does not give permission– even though this week’s incidents prove that statement not to be true. In the second remark, Granado seems to suggest the opposite: that ET Rover is going to conduct surveys even if landowners do not cooperate. Regardless of the legalities, we have to say that we think that is very bad policy. That sort of aggression and disrespect for property rights is only going to inflame landowners. In fact, even the natural gas industry’s main trade organization agrees with us on this point. The Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA) recommends avoiding trespass without landowner authority: “Trespassing by pipeline or contractor personnel should be avoided; approval by the landowner or duly authorized state agency of court is required for access to the right-of-way.” (See page 13 of this document)
So ET Rover appears to be violating their own industry standards. But are they violating the law?
In letters to landowners and comments to the press, ET Rover cites Michigan Compiled Law 213.54(3) as granting the company the right to survey without landowner permission. The law they point to is the state’s Uniform Condemnation Procedures Act (UCPA), passed in 1890, which stipulates “procedures for the condemnation, acquisition, or exercise of eminent domain of real or personal property by public agencies or private agencies; to provide for an agency’s entry upon land for certain purposes; to provide for damages; to prescribe remedies; and to repeal certain acts and parts of acts.”
The section of the law that Rover cites might, at first glance, appear to support ET Rover’s position. Here’s part of what 213.54(3) says (this is the part ET Rover thinks applies to them):
(3) An agency or an agent or employee of an agency may enter upon property before filing an action for the purpose of making surveys, measurements, examinations, tests, soundings, and borings; taking photographs or samplings; appraising the property; conducting an environmental inspection; conducting archaeological studies pursuant to section 106 of title I of the national historic preservation act, Public Law 89-665, 16 U.S.C. 470f; or determining whether the property is suitable to take for public purposes. The entry may be made upon reasonable notice to the owner and at reasonable hours.
There’s a serious problem with Rover’s citation of this section of the UCPA. As Atlas Township attorney David Lattie points out, ET Rover is ignoring another part of the law, 213.54(4), which says this:
(4) If reasonable efforts to enter under subsection (3) have been obstructed or denied, the agency may commence a civil action in the circuit court in the county in which the property or any part of the property is located for an order permitting entry. The complaint shall state the facts making the entry necessary, the date on which entry is sought, and the duration and the method proposed for protecting the defendant against damage.
So it would appear that the best case scenario here, for ET Rover, is that if they’re right and Michigan law does give them permission to survey, they can ONLY do so after first obtaining a court order. ET Rover has NOT received any court orders.
However, theres’ an even bigger problem here, one that even Atlas Township attorney David Lattie overlooks. Both Lattie and ET Rover seem to take for granted the idea that ET Rover qualifies as the sort of “agency” described in the statute above. However, they do not, which means that the very law ET Rover cites does not apply to their activities at all. Here’s why:
The first section of the Act (213.51), provides a list of “definitions” of the key terms used in the Act. One of them, of course, is “agency”– since it is an “agency” to which the part of the law ET Rover cites applies. The definition of an “agency” according to the Act is as follows:
(c) “Agency” means a public agency or private agency.
Because that definition isn’t terribly helpful, the terms “public agency” and “private agency” are also defined. And since ET Rover is obviously not a public agency, we’ll just give you the definition of a private one:
(h) “Private agency” means a person, partnership, association, corporation, or entity, other than a public agency, authorized by law to condemn property.
The important part here is “authorized by law to condemn property.” That means having the legal right of eminent domain (condemnation is the legal term for exercising eminent domain). ET Rover– this is an unassailable fact– does NOT have the legal right of eminent domain. They have NOT been “authorized by law to condemn property.” That authorization is what the FERC application process is for. If FERC approves ET Rover’s application– an application that Rover has not even filed yet— then and only then will ET Rover be “authorized by law to condemn property.”
What that means, then, is that ET Rover clearly– according to the plain language of the very statute they cite– does not meet the definition of a “private” agency (and hence an “agency.”) So while it is true that a private agency can get a court order to survey your property without your permission, ET Rover cannot do so because– again– they are NOT a private agency according to the law.
So ET Rover is either just plain wrong or they are willfully distorting the law for their own purposes. Of course, we can understand why they might think they qualify as a “private agency,” since in their mind receiving approval from FERC (and hence being granted the power of eminent domain) is a foregone conclusion. That’s how oil and gas companies think–and with good reason, given our industry-friendly regulatory agencies. It’s why Enbridge ran around invoking the power of eminent domain in front of Line 6B landowners– they did so with us– before they were even given that power by the MPSC. Here, ET Rover seems to be doing the same thing.
Of course, we’re not attorneys (though we sometimes play one on this blog). Sooner or later, some smart lawyer (we know who we’d like that person to be!) is going to have to make some version of the argument we’ve made above in front of a judge somewhere in order to bring some kind of clarity to this legal matter. Perhaps a township attorney like David Lattie will do it. But if he does, we hope he does not concede the crucial point– not about whether the UCPA gives ET Rover the right to survey that they claim, but whether the UCPA applies to ET Rover in the first place. We think it’s plain that it does not.
Great Article! Thanks for publishing!
FYI, the attorney’s name should be Lattie, not Attie
Oops! Fixed it! Thank you, Paula.
Do those individuals in law enforcement have a clear understanding of the law? Might they mistakenly support ET Rover?
Great question, Kate. I doubt that they have much understanding of this law at all. My guess is that they just believe whatever ET Rover tells them, assuming (wrongly and misguidedly) that a big powerful corporation knows the law– but forgetting that big powerful corporations often manipulate or skirt the law.
Great site…being one of the people in Mundy Twp directly affected by the attempted bullying from ET rover I have to say that local authorities do not initially know the law. They seem to read the paper that rover sends and believes they have the right to enter. I had to tell two different Rover employees and my wife called one from the certified letter to tell them they were not allowed to access our property without a court order as is their right(Possibly).They coincidentally don’t communicate with each other very well. The rover representative kept asking me if i received the certified letter? After telling him yes, I received the letter, but he will have to pursue his legal action to enter our property. They left and went to the farm house that owns the property behind me and tried to pull the same tactic on the elderly woman that lives there. She told them she could not physically stop them but that she did not want them on her property. They showed her the letter quoting a partial portion of the law and said they had the right. She called her son in law and he happened to be carrying his shotgun (perfectly legal on his property and his in laws) and the police were called. They read the letter and said they had the right (false). I explained to the officer there is more to that mcl and they have the right to ask the court to give them permission to access our property. The Mundy Twp attorney looked up the law and passed on the info to the police dept. Of course in the meantime rover deceitfully surveyed how many other property’s? They are still deciding rather charges will be filed against my neighbor for carrying a shotgun on his family property. If I knew then what I know now, I would make sure your local authorities know the law before the certified letters go out. We received the certified letter on a friday and they showed up on Monday.Another good piece of advice, log down the name of anyone you talk to and what was said, like I said, they don’t communicate well with each other.
Thanks for your comment, Mike. And thanks for standing up for landowners!
Even the terminology stating that “they may” enter a property is vastly differently from “they shall” or “they will” enter. Even a statement as “They can” enter infers that there are no impediments where “they may” infers that, of course, they may not, depending on many arguments.
My husband and I are hoping to move back to MI soon, but are leery due to the issues stated above. Your articles are very knowledgable. Can I ask why the State or County attorney’s are not involved as they are supposed to work for these constituents? How does the homeowner protect their property legally without losing every dime against these types of corporations with their staff of attorneys? What about the right to protect and defend trespassers, which this agency clearly appears to be and how has the State, County, Township, etc. not challenged this outdated and liberally applied law? I’m tired of hearing the adage being used by some Counties that St Clair, Lapeer and other Northern Counties are ‘less populated, rural, or ‘just farmland'”. The fact remains that ET Rover does not own this land, my understanding of eminent domain is very different to that being applied. Why can’t the line go thru the easements allowed via highways or other public utilities, I.e., electrical lines?
I’m not sure about state attorney, Sue– though my sense of it is that they’re just cowardly and beholden to big business, not ordinary citizens– but at the more local level it’s often a matter of resources: counties and townships just think they don’t have the resources to fight a legal battle against a large corporation and its army of lawyers. The corporations know this too, which is why they think (and act like) they can always get their way.
As for the route, well, that’s anyone’s guess…
I think any encounters by rover agents or representatives should be video tapped.
ET Rover survey crews have come to my house at least 3 times in the past couple weeks. EACH TIME they have arrived during the day when most people would be at work. Our neighbors have notified my husband twice and he has met them there and demanded they leave unless they show up with a court order. Each time there is a different land man with them claiming they “didn’t know” they had been told to stay off. Convenient right?
Just a heads up there is a Lima TWP meeting tonight at 5:00 with reps from Enbridge. .