Blgh Holdings LLC v. Enxco Lfg Holding, LLC

41 A.3d 410, 2012 WL 1022140, 2012 Del. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 27, 2012
Docket531, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 41 A.3d 410 (Blgh Holdings LLC v. Enxco Lfg Holding, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blgh Holdings LLC v. Enxco Lfg Holding, LLC, 41 A.3d 410, 2012 WL 1022140, 2012 Del. LEXIS 165 (Del. 2012).

Opinion

JACOBS, Justice:

In 2010, BLGH Holdings LLC, the plaintiff-below (“BLGH”), entered into an agreement with enXeo LFG Holding, LLC, the defendant-below (“enXeo”), to sell BLGH’s renewable energy business— Beacon Landfill Gas Holdings, LLC (“Beacon”) — to enXeo. The Unit Purchase Agreement that governed the sale of Beacon (the “UPA”) called for a purchase price of $12 million, plus a “bonus payment” to BLGH if certain conditions were met. The sale of Beacon took place and BLGH was paid $12 million. A dispute arose, however, over whether BLGH was also entitled to the additional bonus payment. enXeo claimed that no bonus payment was legally due. BLGH responded by filing a Superior Court action against enXeo for breach of contract. Holding that no bonus payment was owed to BLGH under the UPA, the Superior Court granted summary judgment to enXeo. BLGH appealed from that adverse ruling and *412 judgment, and for the reasons next discussed we reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

BLGH is currently a “shell” holding company based in Arlington, Virginia with no full-time employees, office space, or assets other than certain monies claimed to be owed to it by enXco. The appellee, enXco, is an energy company based in San Diego, California. BLGH and enXco are both LLCs organized under Delaware law.

The parties began negotiating enXco’s purchase of Beacon in early 2010. At that time, Beacon was operating under a contractual arrangement to sell its entire biomethane gas production to Conectiv Energy Supply, Inc. (“Conectiv”). Although the Conectiv agreement was set to expire in 2015, by 2010 BLGH viewed that contract as financially unfavorable to Beacon. Accordingly, and as a “condition precedent” to its purchasing Beacon, enX-co insisted that BLGH cause Beacon to enter into a letter of intent with Shell Energy North America, L.P. (“Shell”), whereby Shell would replace Conectiv as the purchaser of Beacon’s gas production. Beacon and Shell entered into that letter of intent (the “Shell letter of intent”) on June 14, 2010. The UPA, which documented the terms of BLGH’s sale of Beacon to enXco, was executed the following day.

As earlier noted, the UPA called for enXco to pay BLGH $12 million for Beacon, plus a “bonus payment” that would be owed if certain conditions were met. 1 Under Section 1.7 of the UPA, for BLGH to be entitled to that bonus payment two conditions would have to be satisfied— first, the Conectiv agreement must be terminated; and second, the “transaction outlined in Section 6.1(f) [of the UPA must be] consummated” — both by December 15, 2010.

Unquestionably the first condition was satisfied. What is disputed is whether the second condition was fulfilled. Regarding that question, all parties agree that a “transaction” (between enXco and Shell) was “consummated” before December 15, 2010. The only issue is whether that transaction was “[as] outlined in Section 6.1(f) [of the UPA].” That issue requires us to construe the UPA.

What complicates any analysis of that issue is that Section 6.1(f) of the UPA does not “outline” any transaction. That Section merely refers to a “letter of intent attached hereto [ie., to the UPA] as Exhibit E,” 2 which is a copy of the June 14, 2010 letter of intent between Beacon and Shell. Exhibit E, in turn, incorporates by reference its own “Exhibit A,” which is a document that is titled (and contains) “Indicative Terms for [the] Proposed Transaction.” 3

*413 Four terms in Exhibit E are relevant to this dispute: (i) the duration of the agreement with Shell would be 15 years; (ii) to purchase Beacon’s gas production, Shell would pay enXco a specified fixed price ($9.00/MMBtu), that would increase by 2% annually in the last five years of the contract; and (iii) enXco would have “flexibility” in setting its volume production obligations. Moreover, (iv) the letter of intent (Exhibit E) conditions the “consummation of the Proposed Transaction” on the “good faith negotiation ... of a definitive agreement ... containing such terms and conditions as set forth on Exhibit A (as such terms may be modified, deleted or added to in each parties’ sole discretion),” by July 31, 2010. 4

On June 16, 2010, BLGH entered into an agreement with Conectiv, entitling Beacon to terminate its contract with Conectiv for a one-time payment of $4.75 million. enX-co’s purchase of Beacon from BLGH closed the following day. Later, the dead-fine for executing the Shell transaction was extended beyond July 31, 2010, to afford more time for Shell and enXco to reach their separate agreement. That latter agreement was reached and finalized on August 9, 2010, and called for Shell to replace Conectiv as the exclusive purchaser of Beacon’s renewable biomethane gas production. Thereafter, Beacon’s “off-take” contract with Conectiv was terminated, and Conectiv was paid a $4.75 million termination fee.

After Shell and enXco entered into their final agreement, BLGH formally demanded that enXco pay the $1.25 million bonus payment that BLGH claimed was due. 5 By letter dated September 21, 2010, enXco responded that it would not pay the bonus, because the terms then contemplated for a final Shell contract were materially different from (and from enXco’s perspective, less favorable than) the terms indicated in the Shell letter of intent (Exhibit E to the UPA).

In support of its position, enXco relied upon three differences between the terms of the final enXco-Shell agreement and the terms indicated in the Shell letter of intent. Specifically, the final agreement with Shell was for a term of 10 years, not 15. Moreover, the fixed purchase price for the Beacon gas production started at $8.91/MMBtu, not $9.00/ MMBtu, and did not include guaranteed price increases. And lastly, enXco agreed to a fixed 8,000 MMBtu/day “capacity” purchase commitment and “inflexible monthly delivery requirement,” in lieu of obtaining “substantial flexibility in setting the Minimum Daily Volumes,” as described in the Shell letter of intent.

On October 18, 2010, BLGH filed this contract action, seeking damages of at least $1.25 million. On August 18, 2011, after a hearing on cross motions for summary judgment, the Superior Court held, in a bench ruling, that BLGH was not entitled to any bonus payment. The court stated that “there had to have been some room for negotiation and modification” of the indicative terms, but ruled that “the final transaction ... falls sufficiently short of the indicative terms ... [such that] it’s not reasonable to believe that the final deal justified or triggered the bonus clause in the UPA 1.7.” The court further held that although “enXco, in the end, thought that the deal was good enough to go through with ... there is still room, as a matter of law, under this contract to say that BLGH *414 is not entitled to the additional bonus payment.”

This appeal followed.

ANALYSIS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A.3d 410, 2012 WL 1022140, 2012 Del. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blgh-holdings-llc-v-enxco-lfg-holding-llc-del-2012.