Astra Capital, LLC v. BCI Aircraft Leasing, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 24, 2019
Docket1:17-cv-06431
StatusUnknown

This text of Astra Capital, LLC v. BCI Aircraft Leasing, Inc. (Astra Capital, LLC v. BCI Aircraft Leasing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Astra Capital, LLC v. BCI Aircraft Leasing, Inc., (N.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

ASTRA CAPITAL, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 17 C 6431 ) BCI AIRCRAFT LEASING, INC., AEGIS ) AIRCRAFT LEASING, LLC, and AIRCRAFT ) ENGINE LEASE FINANCE, INC., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge: Astra Capital, LLC has sued BCI Aircraft Leasing, Inc., Aegis Aircraft Leasing, LLC, and Aircraft Engine Lease Finance, Inc., for breach of contract. Astra Capital alleges that it is contractually entitled to referral fees for helping facilitate the sale of aircraft to Avior Airlines, a Venezuelan airline company. In the alternative, Astra Capital contends that it is owed referral fees because it was the procuring cause of the sales to Avior. The defendants have moved for summary judgment. Background Advanced European Technologies, Inc. is a company that trades aircraft and aircraft parts. In 2012, Avior Airlines approached Peter Hellebrand, the president of Advanced and a former vice president at Avior, about acquiring eight airplanes. Hellebrand took their offer to BCI, a commercial aircraft leasing company. At the time, the president of BCI was Brian Hollnagel, who remains the company's sole shareholder. In October 2012, Advanced and BCI entered into a referral fee agreement. The contract identified eight Boeing 737-400 aircraft and stated that if BCI successfully sold any of those aircraft to Avior before the contract term expired on December 27, 2012, it would pay Advanced a $250,000 referral fee for each plane sold.

Hellebrand testified that soon after they signed the referral fee agreement, Advanced and BCI agreed to an oral modification. Specifically, Hellebrand stated that they acknowledged that BCI would be unable to sell all eight aircraft to Avior before the contract term expired. The reasons for this are disputed, but Hellebrand testified that it was related to the Venezuelan government's restrictions on aircraft imports. Hellebrand stated that based on this restriction, Advanced and BCI agreed to modify the referral agreement to give Advanced the right to referral fees when the remaining planes were sold even if the contract term had elapsed. He testified that he and Hollnagel understood that Hellebrand would receive referral fees for a total of eight planes if BCI ultimately sold them to Avior. That alleged modification was never committed to writing,

but—importantly for the purposes of this motion—the defendants do not argue that a reasonable jury could not find that the oral modifications did not occur as Hellebrand described. In November 2012, BCI and Avior reached an agreement to sell four of the Boeing aircraft identified in the referral fee agreement. BCI delivered those aircraft in 2013 and 2014. But progress on an agreement to sell additional aircraft to Avior stalled from 2013 through 2014 while Hollnagel was tried and convicted of fraud in connection with his management of BCI. He served four months in federal prison and was released in December 2014. In 2015, Avior (or an associated business entity) agreed to buy five more aircraft from Aegis Aircraft Leasing, Hollnagel's consulting company, and Aircraft Engine Lease Finance Inc. (AELF), a commercial aircraft leasing company owned by Hollnagel's wife.1 Hellebrand testified that Advanced did not participate in any negotiations between BCI

and Avior after 2013. In January 2016, Advanced believed that BCI still owed it money under the referral fee agreement. The parties negotiated an agreement under which Aegis, Hollnagel's consulting company, agreed to pay Advanced a total of $260,000 over a period of several months. Hellebrand testified that the purpose of this agreement was to determine a payment plan for his referral fees for the first four planes BCI sold to Avior, and that Hollnagel told him that they would negotiate payment on the additional aircraft sales at a later time. In June 2016, Advanced and Hollnagel negotiated a second letter agreement. This contract noted that Aegis had paid the first $25,000 installment to Advanced and

stated that AELF, rather than Aegis, would pay the remaining $235,000. To date, the defendants have paid a total of $496,966 under the referral fee agreement. Some of that total was paid to Advanced and some to Astra Holdings Ltd., a holding company related to Advanced. In October 2016, Hellebrand and Hollnagel exchanged text messages about the referral fees that Hellebrand believed he was owed for the aircraft Avior agreed to buy in 2015. Hollnagel wrote that he felt "less ethically bound to pay on these," citing

1 The precise relationship between BCI, Aegis, and AELF is a matter of some dispute. Because the defendants do not raise the issue, the Court will assume that the distinctions among these entities are not material to this motion. "significant restructuring," "the fact that they still don't have any up in the air," and the de minimis amount that BCI had been paid on the aircraft thus far. Text Messages, Defs.' Ex. 15, dkt. no. 68-4, at 6. Hollnagel and Hellebrand did not reach an agreement for the payment of any additional referral fees.

In May 2017, Advanced and Astra Holdings, Ltd. assigned all their potential claims against BCI, Aegis, and AELF to Hellebrand's other holding company, Astra Capital LLC. Astra Capital then sued BCI, Aegis, and AELF in Illinois state court. The defendants removed the case to federal court, invoking this Court's diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The defendants have moved for summary judgment. Discussion Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine dispute of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); United States v. Z Inv. Props., LLC, 921 F.3d 696, 699-700 (7th Cir. 2019). The Court views the evidence and draws "[a]ll justifiable inferences" in favor of the non-

moving party. Giles v. Godinez, 914 F.3d 1040, 1048 (7th Cir. 2019). The defendants are entitled to summary judgment only if no reasonable jury could find in favor of Astra Capital. See Johnson v. Advocate Health & Hosps. Corp., 892 F.3d 887, 894 (7th Cir. 2018). In count 1 of the complaint, Astra Capital alleges that the defendants breached the referral agreement as orally modified by failing to pay referral fees for the planes Avior agreed to buy in 2015. In count 2, which is pleaded in the alternative to count 1, Astra Capital contends that even if it is not entitled to recover referral fees for the later- sold aircraft, it is entitled to $500,000—the extent to which Advanced discounted the referral fees to which it contends it was entitled for the sale of the first four planes in anticipation of future payment on the later-sold aircraft. In count 3, also pleaded in the alternative, Astra Capital alleges that it is entitled to referral fees because it is the "procuring cause" of BCI's sales to Avior.

A. Novation The defendants argue that they are entitled to summary judgment on counts 1 and 2 because the 2016 letter agreements are novations. "A novation occurs when by mutual agreement, a new debtor or creditor is substituted for an existing debtor or creditor, whereby the old debt is extinguished, or a new debt or obligation is substituted for an existing debt or obligation, which is thereby extinguished." Crest Hill Land Dev., LLC v.

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