APS Capital Corp. v. Mesa Air Group, Inc.

580 F.3d 265, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18743, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 276, 2009 WL 2526454
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 2009
Docket08-50770
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 580 F.3d 265 (APS Capital Corp. v. Mesa Air Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
APS Capital Corp. v. Mesa Air Group, Inc., 580 F.3d 265, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18743, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 276, 2009 WL 2526454 (5th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

This contract case, governed by Texas law, comes to us on appeal from summary judgment in favor of Mesa Air Group. APS argues that the district court erred in finding an enforceable contract on summary judgment, and in its award of damages.

I

Mesa Air Group is a regional airline that, in the course of Delta Airline’s bankruptcy proceedings in the Southern District of New York, was awarded an unsecured trade claim 1 with a face amount of $35 million against Delta. APS Capital Corporation’s business is the purchase and resale of trade claims and bank debt. After Mesa’s claim against Delta was approved by the bankruptcy court, APS contacted Mesa regarding possible sale of Mesa’s claim to APS. After several weeks of intermittent contacts, discussions came to a head on April 20, 2007, a Friday. Steven Kleckner, an APS employee who was charged with pursuing trade claim purchases and had initiated contacts with Mesa, spoke several times that day with George Murnane III, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Mesa. In these phone conversations, transcripts of which are in the record, APS informed Mesa that it could offer a relatively good price (58 cents on the dollar), 2 on the en *268 tire face value of Mesa’s claim (35 million dollars), and the parties reached an agreement on the transaction at that price. 3 At 2:58 pm CST that afternoon, APS sent an e-mail confirming the agreement. The email came from Steven A. Klenda, General Counsel of APS, and its substance ran as follows:

Please allow this e-mail to serve as a preliminary confirmation of our Delta Airlines, Inc. (the “Debtor”) transaction with a trade date of April 20, 2007. You have verbally agreed to sell approximately $35,000,000.00 face amount (“Purchase Amount”) general unsecured claims against the Debtor at fifty eight cents on the dollar (or 58% of the Purchase Amount).
Given the lateness of the hour here, I will follow-up on Monday with a formal written trade confirmation with customary terms that will memorialize the key terms of this transaction and provide for the negotiation and execution of a more extensive purchase-and-sale/assignment agreement.

On Tuesday, April 24, APS transmitted the promised “draft formal transaction confirmation” as an e-mail attachment, with Klenda noting in his accompanying e-mail that he “did not have the time today to draft [the agreement] personally or give it more than a cursory review,” encouraging Mesa to “review it in this light,” and asserting, “[w]e look forward to working with you moving this transaction toward completion.”

In addition to confirming the details already agreed upon (a “trade date” of April 20, the identity of buyer and seller, the price and assets involved), the document included some significant terms that Mesa objected to — certain warranty, risk-shifting, and indemnification provisions; a lengthy closure deadline; and a previously-undiscussed condition precedent to the transaction: APS’s finding a third-party buyer for the claim it was to purchase from Mesa. On April 26, through outside counsel, Mesa responded with a draft of its own, removing or modifying the objectionable provisions. Some language was consistent across both drafts, including multiple provisions to the effect that until the transaction actually was funded and closed, the agreement was non-binding and the transaction would be “null and void.” 4

The next afternoon, APS responded, with a new tone. Citing “Mesa’s deletion of material terms” from the proposed agreement, APS rejected the Mesa draft and then effectively walked away from the negotiating table, rejecting any future dealing on what it characterized as the “nascent transaction,” declaring it “null and void.” Further efforts failed to bring APS back to the table, and Mesa’s counsel finally warned, late that afternoon: “APS can expect litigation in this matter.” On Monday, April 30, 2007, the next business *269 day after Mesa so advised, APS brought suit in the Western District of Texas, seeking relief under the Texas and Federal Declaratory Judgment Acts. 5 Mesa counterclaimed on breach of contract and promissory estoppel grounds.

On April 11, 2008, Judge Sparks decided the parties’ cross-summary judgment motions in favor of Mesa, holding as a matter of law that the parties formed an enforceable contract on April 20, which was breached by APS’s final repudiation of the deal on April 27, 2007. Damages were argued at a bench trial, and the court ultimately awarded Mesa $1,545,379 in damages, plus interest and attorneys’ fees. The court reasoned that the phone calls and the e-mail unambiguously indicated an intent to be bound to all necessary terms in the transaction — what was being sold, the purchase price, and the date of sale— and that as such the communications recorded an enforceable contract between the parties.

A number of aspects of the district court’s ruling are not challenged on appeal, including its rulings as to the inapplicability of the statute of frauds, APS’s affirmative defenses, and numerous aspects of his damages ruling, including the adequacy of Mesa’s mitigation. The remaining disputes are over (1) the existence of a binding agreement, and (2) the date of the breach, which is relevant to damages. We turn first to the decisive issue of whether there was, as a matter of law, a binding contract made between the parties.

II

We review two aspects of the district court’s finding of a binding contract: first, whether the parties intended their April 20 agreement to be binding; and, if so, whether the agreement on April 20 was sufficiently definite to be an enforceable contract.

A

There is no doubt but that the parties achieved some agreement on April 20, memorialized in the e-mail of that afternoon. The parties dispute whether it was an enforceable contract with some customary terms to be supplied, or an agreement on a central price point only, with further negotiation over other key terms to follow.

APS advances the latter position, characterizing this as a case in which an “agreement to agree” went awry in the course of ongoing negotiations; by contrast, with an able district court on its side, Mesa characterizes this as a straightforward breach of contract, in which APS sabotaged what should have been the routine formalization of an already-agreed-upon contract with an unfair addition of terms followed by a precipitous exit from the negotiating table. In our de novo review of summary judgment, 6 we may only decide this dispute if there is no genuine issue of fact material to the answer. If the matter cannot be decided as a matter of law, we must remand for fact-finding.

The parties’ intent to be bound is the salient issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
580 F.3d 265, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 18743, 51 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 276, 2009 WL 2526454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aps-capital-corp-v-mesa-air-group-inc-ca5-2009.