Buckeye Partners, L.P. v. GT USA Wilmington, LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 29, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2020-0255-JTL
StatusPublished

This text of Buckeye Partners, L.P. v. GT USA Wilmington, LLC (Buckeye Partners, L.P. v. GT USA Wilmington, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckeye Partners, L.P. v. GT USA Wilmington, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

BUCKEYE PARTNERS, L.P., and ) BUCKEYE PT TERMINALS LP, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2020-0255-JTL ) GT USA WILMINGTON, LLC, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 2, 2022 Date Decided: March 29, 2022

Jody C. Barillare, Amy M. Dudash, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael D. Blanchard, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP, Hartford, Connecticut; Julie S. Goldemberg, MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Leslie B. Spoltore, OBERMAYER REBMANN MAXWELL & HIPPEL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Nicholas Poduslenko, Matthew S. Olesh, OBERMAYER REBMANN MAXWELL & HIPPEL LLP, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

Brian E. Farnan, Michael J. Farnan, FARNAN LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Thomas J. Elliott, Frederick P. Santarelli, Jack P. Elliott, Colin J. O’Boyle, ELLIOTT GREENLEAF, P.C., Blue Bell, Pennsylvania; Attorneys for Defendant.

LASTER, V.C. Defendant GT USA Wilmington, LLC (“GT”) operates the marine terminal located

at the Port of Wilmington (the “Port” or the “Terminal”). Plaintiff Buckeye PT Terminals

LP (the “Company”) leases a dock in the Terminal that it uses to operate a terminalling

business involving the transportation and storage of liquid petroleum products.

In its role as marine terminal operator, GT has the authority to publish a tariff that

establishes rates that users of the Terminal must pay for specified activities or services. As

a user of the Terminal, the Company is subject to the tariff. The rates in the tariff only

apply if GT and the user of the Terminal do not have a specific agreement addressing the

activity or service in question.

In 2018 and 2020, GT issued tariffs that imposed “Terminal Usage Fees” on

stevedores or parties engaged in stevedoring. The Company refused to pay the Terminal

Usage Fees, contending that it was neither a stevedore nor engaged in stevedoring. The

Company also maintained that the rent it paid under the lease provided bargained-for

consideration for the activities involved in operating the terminalling business. The

Company argued that GT could not impose additional and duplicative fees for the same

activities that the Company had always engaged in under the lease.

After attempts at settlement failed, GT tried to force the Company to pay the

Terminal Usage Fees by interfering with the Company’s business. The Company’s

terminalling operation is relatively simple. When a vessel carrying liquid petroleum

product arrives at the dock, a Company employee helps connect a hose that runs from the

vessel to a manifold. The manifold connects to pipes that run under the Terminal and

connect to fuel storage tanks located on a property owned by the Company and adjacent to the Terminal (the “Tanks”). The vessel uses its pump to send the liquid petroleum product

through the hose, into the manifold, through the pipes, and into the Tanks. The Company’s

customers send tanker trucks to pick up the liquid petroleum product at the Tanks. To get

to and from the Tanks, the trucks drive through the Terminal using Sico Road and Hausel

Road (collectively, the “Disputed Roads”).

To force the Company to pay the Terminal Usage Fees, GT prevented the Company

and its customers from using the Disputed Roads. The blockade threatened to destroy the

Company’s business, and the court enjoined GT from blocking the Company’s access

during the pendency of this litigation.

This post-trial decision addresses two issues. The first is whether the Company owes

the Terminal Usage Fees. The second is whether GT can prevent the Company and its

customers from using the Disputed Roads. The Company wins on both points.

On the first issue, the Company proved that it does not owe the Terminal Usage

Fees because it was neither a stevedore nor engaged in stevedoring. The definition in the

2018 tariff plainly did not apply to the Company. The 2020 tariff redefined the term, but

the new definition was ambiguous. GT was the sole drafter of the tariff, and the doctrine

of contra proferentem calls for reading any ambiguity against GT. The Company also

established that the rent it paid under the lease already provided compensation to GT for

the Company’s right to use the services and engage in the activities necessary to conduct

its terminalling business. Because the lease already encompassed those services and

activities, the lease constituted a specific agreement that precluded the imposition of the

Terminal Usage Fees for those same services and activities. GT did not provide any

2 additional services in exchange for the Terminal Usage Fees, and the Company was not

engaging in any new or different activities that might have warranted charging the Terminal

Usage Fees.

On the second issue, the Company proved that the lease includes an implied

contractual right for the Company and its customers to use the Disputed Roads to access

the Tanks in connection with the Company’s terminalling business. The Company

presented additional theories grounded in property law which, if proven, would have

provided the Company a more durable and expansive right of access. The Company

introduced some evidence in support of its property-based theories, but it failed to carry its

burden of proving them.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Trial took place over three days. The parties introduced 354 exhibits, including the

deposition transcripts of seven individuals. Four fact witnesses and four experts testified

live.1

1 In the pre-trial order, the parties only agreed to twenty-five stipulations of fact. This decision relies on them when applicable. Citations in the form “PTO ¶ —” refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order. Dkt. 199. Citations in the form “[Last Name] Tr.” refer to witness testimony from the trial transcript. Citations in the form “[Last Name] Dep.” refer to witness testimony from a deposition transcript. Citations in the form “JX — at —” refer to a trial exhibit with the page designated by the last three digits of the control or JX number or, if the document lacked a control or JX number, by the internal page number. If a trial exhibit used paragraph numbers, then references are by paragraph. Citations in the form “[Last Name] Dem.” refer to demonstratives used by experts at trial.

3 The facts set forth in this decision were proven by a preponderance of the evidence.

The Company’s attempt to prove it had an easement required a showing of clear and

convincing evidence, and the Company failed to meet that standard.2

A. The Company And Its Terminalling Business

Buckeye Partners, L.P. (“Buckeye Parent”) provides logistics services for liquid

petroleum products across the United States and the Caribbean. The Company is a wholly

owned subsidiary of Buckeye Parent.3

For decades, the Company or its predecessors have engaged in essentially the same

business. The Company receives liquid petroleum product from a vessel at the dock. The

vessel uses its pump to cause the liquid petroleum product to flow through a hose and into

2 See K&G Concord, LLC v. Charcap, LLC, 2017 WL 3268183, at *6 (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 2017) (requiring clear and convincing evidence to establish an easement by prescription and an easement by estoppel); 25 Am. Jur. 2d Easements & Licenses § 14, Westlaw (database updated Feb.

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Buckeye Partners, L.P. v. GT USA Wilmington, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckeye-partners-lp-v-gt-usa-wilmington-llc-delch-2022.