Atlas Noble, LLC v. Krizman Enterprises

692 F. App'x 256
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 2017
Docket15-4385, 15-4400, 16-3002
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 692 F. App'x 256 (Atlas Noble, LLC v. Krizman Enterprises) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Noble, LLC v. Krizman Enterprises, 692 F. App'x 256 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

This case revolves around an agreement to buy and sell oil-and-gas leases entered into by Atlas Noble, LLC (“Atlas” or “buyer”) and Krizman Enterprises, MKE Producing, Inc., and Wayne Hammond Enterprises, Inc. (collectively “Krizman” or “sellers”). Each blames the other for the failure of the deal. The district court found that Atlas anticipatorily repudiated the agreement and that this repudiation entitled the sellers to the earnest money in the escrow account—but nothing more—because the court construed the agreement’s earnest-money provision as a liquidated-damages clause. The district court also denied Beau Croxton’s motion to intervene.

The district court resolved most of this matter correctly. It was right to construe the earnest-money provision here as a liquidated-damages clause. And the district court did not err in denying Groxton’s motion to intervene. Further, it correctly found the contract required Krizman to be in a position to deliver title by 11:59 p.m. on April 3 and that Atlas anticipatorily breached the contract by unilaterally terminating the agreement at 5:52 p.m. that same day. Krizman, however, took no further action after Atlas’s 5:52 p.m. email and it, too, did not tender performance under the contract. But Atlas’s repudiation of the contract may excuse Krizman’s nonperformance if Krizman can demonstrate that the repudiation was a material reason for its failure to tender performance. This, in turn, requires Krizman to demonstrate that it was in fact capable of performing its obligations by 11:59 p.m. on April 3. Otherwise, the parties are in mutual breach of the agreement. Because there remains a genuine dispute of material fact about whether Atlas’s repudiation was a material reason for Krizman’s non-performance, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Krizman on this issue and remand this matter to the district court.

I.

Atlas entered into a Purchase and Sale Agreement (“PSA”) with Krizman in September 2012. The PSA provided that Kriz-man would sell, and Atlas would buy, certain oil-and-gas leases in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. Within three days of executing the agreement, Atlas was to place $2,411,290 into an escrow account. Initially, the contract established that the sale would close “not later than December 15, 2012 or such other date as Buyer and the Seller mutually agree in writing.... ” (DE 1-2, PSA § 1.1, Page ID 13.)

Section 6.2 of the PSA outlined the conditions that Krizman had to meet to trigger Atlas’s obligation to purchase the leases. As relevant to this dispute, § 6.2(iv) required that Krizman be able to deliver defensible title to at least 76.85 percent of the 2,414.21 acres offered for sale. 1 If the deal failed for any reason other than those *259 contained in § 6.2, the escrowed funds went to Krizman.

Atlas assumed sole responsibility for ensuring that Krizman had good title to the oil-and-gas assets Krizman was selling. To help Atlas review those assets, the PSA allowed for a “review period,” by providing:

Between the execution of this Agreement and 5:01 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on December 15, 2012 (the “Review Period”), Seller shall make available for review by Buyer and its representatives, during normal business hours, excluding weekends and holidays, all records relating to title (including contracts, correspondence, files and pri- or title opinions) in its possession pertaining to the Leases for purposes of permitting Buyer to review Seller’s title to the Leases.

(PSA §§ 4.1 & 4.2, Page ID 19.) This was intended to provide Atlas with sufficient time to determine whether Krizman had defensible title to the requisite acreage. The PSA was twice amended to extend the time that Atlas had to review the leases. Ultimately, Atlas’s review period was extended until April 3, 2013. These amendments necessitated a corresponding extension of the closing date, which was pushed back to April 3, 2013 as well. Although the PSA stated that the review period ended at 5:01 p.m., neither it nor its amendments provided an express time on April 3 by which closing had to be complete.

Section 4.2 of the PSA provided that Atlas’s “sole remedy for any defect of title” was a reduction in the purchase price. (PSA § 4.2, Page ID 19.) The procedure for defect adjustments was contained in § 4.3. That section stated that “[o]n or before the end of the Review Period, Buyer, at its sole and absolute discretion, may determine to exclude all or any portion of a Lease for title related matters which will then have a corresponding impact on the Purchase Price....” (PSA § 4.3, Page ID 19.) Pursuant to this section, an Atlas employee sent Krizman a letter 2 stating that Atlas had “completed its title review and ha[d] adjusted the net acres for each subject lease accordingly.” (DE 58-6, Jan. 28, 2013 Letter, Page ID 2480.) The letter further stated that Atlas intended “to purchase approximately 1,861.3361 acres or 76.85% of the net acres stated in the Purchase and Sale Agreement on or before the new closing date which is proposed to be April 3, 2013.” (Id. at 2481.)

On April 2, 2013—the day before closing—Atlas sent Krizman an email, explaining the final steps Krizman needed to take regarding the remaining title defects. Specifically, Atlas asked Krizman to execute a certain modification with, and obtain a letter regarding severance tax from, the Muskingum Water Conservancy District (“MWCD”), and to take four steps regarding the Ralph Ervin lease: produce “[1 a] quit claim deed from Huntington National Bank for Croxton and Caldwell parcels totaling 118.9392 acres, [2 a] release of Ervin lease, [3] executed leases from Crox-ton and Caldwell totaling 118.9392 acres, [and 4] confirmation of payment of both leases.” (DE 58-7, April 2, 2013 Email, Page ID 2503.)

On April 2 and into the day on April 3, Krizman worked to complete these remaining requests. The parties do not dispute that most of the necessary steps were taken with regard to MWCD, and that Krizman had received the quit-claim deeds from Huntington National Bank. Krizman *260 asserts that it had nearly all of the final agreements in place so that all of Atlas’s requests could be met, although, importantly, there is a dispute about whether Krizman could have completed all of the necessary steps that day. But, at 5:52 p.m. on April 3, Atlas emailed Krizman and indicated that it was unilaterally terminating the agreement, pursuant to § 8.1, because “Seller has failed to satisfy Section 6.3 3 of the Agreement, as amended, by the close of business on April 3, 2013, as [they have] not cleared title to more than 76.85% of the cumulative acreage totals.... ” (DE 1-5, April 3,2013 Termination Letter, Page ID 68.) After receipt of this email, Kriz-man took no further action to complete the transaction. It also refused to authorize release of the escrowed funds.

On July 11, 2013, Atlas filed a one-count complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, claiming that Krizman breached the PSA by refusing to authorize the release of the escrowed funds to Atlas.

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692 F. App'x 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-noble-llc-v-krizman-enterprises-ca6-2017.