Buchwald v. Williams Energy Marketing & Trading Co. (In Re Magnesium Corp.)

460 B.R. 360, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3928, 2011 WL 4914698
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 17, 2011
Docket19-01020
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 460 B.R. 360 (Buchwald v. Williams Energy Marketing & Trading Co. (In Re Magnesium Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchwald v. Williams Energy Marketing & Trading Co. (In Re Magnesium Corp.), 460 B.R. 360, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3928, 2011 WL 4914698 (N.Y. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

ROBERT E. GERBER, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this avoidance action adversary proceeding under the umbrella of the chapter 7 case of Magnesium Corporation of America (“MagCorp”), chapter 7 trustee Lee E. Buchwald (the “Trustee”) seeks to recover approximately $4.1 million in allegedly voidable preferential payments that had been made to the predecessor of defendant Williams Power Company, Inc. (“Williams”) for natural gas that MagCorp consumed in its magnesium processing operations.

The parties cross-move for summary judgment. The Trustee seeks judgment for the recovery of the preferential payments that MagCorp had made (net of new value Williams provided), 1 and Williams seeks summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Williams contends that it is absolved from the potential preference exposure that vendors normally have to their customers because the payments should be deemed “settlement payments” on a “commodities forward contract,” made to a “forward contract merchant,” that are subject to a safe harbor under section 546(e) of the Code.

The Trustee’s motion for plaintiff’s summary judgment requires little discussion. It raises factual issues for which a determination now is premature, and hence must be denied in any event. 2

Williams’ motion for defendant’s summary judgment, on the other hand, is *363 much more difficult, as section 546(e) of the Code (along with other Code provisions on which its application depends) is hardly a model of drafting precision. Though policy points are made by both sides (and those made by the Trustee are particularly compelling), the question of section 546(e)’s application is still one of statutory construction. It will ultimately depend most on whether Williams’ predecessor (or MagCorp, though in MagCorp’s case, the question is easily answered) was a “forward contract merchant,” as that expression is used in the Code and as its meaning can be divined, with respect to the transactions at issue here. That issue will require greater factual development, and cannot be decided as a matter of law, on summary judgment, now.

Facts

Prior to its bankruptcy filing, MagCorp operated a magnesium plant in Salt Lake City, Utah and was one of the largest producers of magnesium in the United States. Its manufacturing operations required it to consume natural gas. 3 MagCorp entered into contracts with natural gas suppliers to purchase the quantity of natural gas that it needed. 4

In August 1998, MagCorp entered into a four-year “Base Contract for Sale and Purchase of Natural Gas” (the “Base Contract”) to buy natural gas from Barrett Resources Corporation (“Barrett Resources”). 5 Barrett Resources thereafter became a part of defendant Williams.

The Base Contract was a form contract with its origins in a form produced by the Gas Industry Standards Board, which was widely used in the natural gas industry. The Base Contract did not refer to itself as a “forward contract.” According to Lee Brown, MagCorp’s representative who negotiated with Barrett Resources, the purpose of the Base Contract, from MagCorp’s perspective, was to get natural gas, which was essential to MagCorp’s production of magnesium, at the lowest cost possible. 6

Williams’ Vice President of Marketing and Trading, Bryan Hassler, explained that Williams not only produced natural gas but was also a natural gas marketer or natural gas intermediary engaged in natural gas trading activities. According to Hassler, these trading activities involved buying and selling natural gas at prices and volumes that management anticipated would yield profit due to anticipated changes in natural gas prices. 7 However, Williams has provided little evidence as to how extensive these activities were, or how much of the company’s profits were from trading activity, and to what extent the payments under the Base Contract were related to that trading business — a matter discussed in more detail below.

The Base Contract did not by itself specify the amount of gas to be sold each month or the actual price at which the gas would be sold. Rather, under the Base Contract, MagCorp would provide monthly nominations a few days prior to the first day of each month advising Barrett Re *364 sources of the volume of natural gas that it would need per day for the entirety of the next month. 8 The price for the gas to be delivered each month would be determined by the “QPC Index Plus $0.0375 Plus Other Costs,” a standard pricing method used in the natural gas industry based on a fluctuating index. 9 Based on that index, the price of natural gas for MagCorp’s purchases during the next month was fixed, for a one-month period, on a monthly basis. 10

MagCorp never resold or marketed any excess natural gas that it acquired from its suppliers. 11 Barrett Resources sold natural gas to many customers, as part of its business. Some sales were of natural gas Barrett Resources (or an affiliate) had extracted, and some were of natural gas Barrett Resources obtained as a consequence of its trading activities. But as discussed below, the percentage of Barrett Resources’ business that involved forward contracts (and the extent to which it was a merchant in forward contracts, as contrasted to being a merchant in natural gas) was not sufficiently fleshed out, nor was the nexus between the particular payments MagCorp made for the natural gas it purchased under the Base Contract and Barrett Resources’ business of entering into forward contracts as a merchant.

On May 21, 2001, June 21, 2001, and July 20, 2001, MagCorp made three payments to Williams totaling approximately $4,073 million (the “Payments”) for natural gas delivered pursuant to the Base Contract in prior months. On August 2, 2001, MagCorp filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Williams filed a proof of claim for $665,531.19 for goods and services Williams sold to MagCorp from July through August 2001.

The Trustee seeks to avoid and recover the May, June, and July 2001 Payments pursuant to sections 547 and 550 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Trustee credited Williams with that same $665,531.19 for “new value” based on its proof of claim, 12 and thus seeks recovery of $3,407,854.56.

Discussion

I.

Summary Judgment Standards

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Bluebook (online)
460 B.R. 360, 2011 Bankr. LEXIS 3928, 2011 WL 4914698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchwald-v-williams-energy-marketing-trading-co-in-re-magnesium-corp-nysb-2011.