Burnshire Development, LLC v. Cliffs Reduced Iron Corp.

198 F. App'x 425
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2006
Docket04-4383
StatusUnpublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 198 F. App'x 425 (Burnshire Development, LLC v. Cliffs Reduced Iron Corp.) 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
Burnshire Development, LLC v. Cliffs Reduced Iron Corp., 198 F. App'x 425 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Burnshire Development (“Burnshire”) sued defendants Cliffs Reduced Iron Corp. (“Cliffs”) and Lurgi Metallurgie GmbH (“Lurgi”), who together own all of the stock in Cliffs and Associates, Limited (“CAL”). Burnshire entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement (“SPA”) with Lurgi and Cliffs giving Burnshire the right to purchase all of the CAL stock. Lurgi and Cliffs terminated the agreement before closing occurred and Burnshire now claims that this termination violated the SPA. The district court granted Lurgi’s motion for dismissal pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2) due to lack of specific personal jurisdiction. The court separately granted Cliffs’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the termination was effective under the terms of the SPA. Burnshire appeals both the district court’s jurisdictional and merits holdings. For the following reasons, we affirm both orders.

I.

Cliffs, an Ohio-based, wholly-owned subsidiary of Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc., and Lurgi, a German company, established CAL to use Lurgi’s production technology, Cir-cored, to build and operate a hot briquet-ted iron production facility in Trinidad. Cliffs owned 82 percent of the CAL shares, and Lurgi owned the remainder. CAL completed the facility in 1998 and operated it intermittently until October 2001, when the facility was closed down.

Cliffs and Lurgi sought to sell CAL in January 2003. CAL created a data room to contain corporate documents in Cleveland in connection with the sale; it is unclear whether Lurgi played any role in the creation of the room. Several potential buyers visited the data room, including representatives from Kinder Morgan C02, a firm based in Texas. After Kinder Morgan declined to purchase CAL, James Wuerth, a Kinder Morgan employee, founded Burnshire in order to attempt to purchase CAL. In July 2003, Burnshire, Lurgi, and Cliffs entered into the SPA, which provided that, after all preconditions to closing were met, Burnshire would purchase all outstanding CAL shares in exchange for $10,389.00, continued royalty payments, and payments for carrying costs between the signing of the SPA and the closing. Section 3.1 of the SPA provided:

[T]he closing of the transactions contemplated hereby (the “Closing”) will take place at the offices of Jones Day, ... Cleveland, Ohio on the second Business Day following the satisfaction or waiver of each of the conditions set forth in Article VIII (other than those conditions that are to be satisfied at the Closing), or on such other date or at such other *428 time and place as the parties mutually agree in writing (the “Closing Daté’).

The remainder of Article III noted the deliveries required to be made at closing. Among these deliveries were a Licensing Agreement between Lurgi and Burnshire for Burnshire’s global use of Circored technology, §§ 3.2(1), 3.3(c), and a Technical Services Agreement (“TSA”), §§ 3.2(m), 3.3(b), spelling out Burnshire’s continued royalty obligations related to the operation of the Trinidad facility.

Article VIII established the conditions to closing for each party. In addition to various conditions that could be satisfied “at or prior to” closing (including third-party consents or waivers and evidence of Burnshire’s ability to finance $2.5 million of the funds required to restart the CAL facility), sections 8.2(b) and 8.3(b) required the parties to perform “[e]ach of the agreements and covenants” required by the contract to be performed “prior to the Closing Date.” One precondition to closing is especially relevant to this appeal: the SPA incorporated a draft TSA that required that the parties enter into a final TSA “prior to the Closing Date.” Finalization of the License Agreement between Lurgi and Burnshire was also contemplated prior to closing, but unlike the TSA, no draft of the licensing agreement was incorporated into the SPA.

The SPA was terminable according to Section 9.1, which provided:

[T]his agreement may be terminated at any time prior to the Closing Date:
# * #
(b) by buyer or the Stockholders, upon written notice to the other party, if the transactions contemplated by this Agreement have not been consummated on or prior to July 31, 2003.

The parties did not close by July 31, due at least in part to Burnshire’s difficulty in obtaining the financing necessary to restart the CAL facility. Burnshire provides evidence via affidavit that it could meet the requirement of $2.5 million available financing but has conceded that $2.5 million was insufficient to restart the facility and that it had difficulty obtaining the $10 million that it deemed actually necessary to reopen the facility. Other potential buyers resurfaced in October 2003, and Wuerth responded by notifying Cliffs and Lurgi during a conference call on November 14, 2003, that Burnshire was “ready, willing, and able” to close. In a November 21, 2003, letter referencing the other potential purchasers, Wuerth reaffirmed Burnshire’s readiness to close in early December. Lurgi and Cliffs initially agreed that closing could be effected by December 5, 2003. On November 26, however, Cliffs discovered that, for tax reasons, the transaction as structured in the SPA would result in a multimillion dollar loss to Cleveland-Cliffs, Cliffs’s corporate parent. As a result, both Cliffs and Lurgi (via its attorney-in-fact, Charles Banino) signed a written termination notice on the same day and transmitted it by facsimile to Wuerth. The parties thereafter began negotiating an asset sale in lieu of an SPA. The asset sale, however, was not concluded, and the CAL facility was sold to another company, International Steel Group.

Burnshire then sued Cliffs and Lurgi in United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, alleging breach of the SPA and seeking specific performance of the contract, a preliminary injunction to foreclose sale to International Steel Group, and damages. On February 20, 2004, the court denied Burnshire’s motion for a preliminary injunction because Burn-shire could not show a sufficient likelihood of success on the merits. It subsequently denied Burnshire’s motion to reconsider or to certify an interlocutory appeal.

The court then turned to the dispositive motions. Arguing that it lacked the mini *429 mum contacts necessary to permit personal jurisdiction in Ohio, Lurgi moved for dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). 1 Without holding an evidentiary hearing, the court granted the motion on July 24, 2004, holding that neither the Ohio long-arm statute nor the United States Constitution permitted it to assert personal jurisdiction over Lurgi.

Cliffs moved for summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. The court granted the motion on September 29, 2004, holding that Cliffs was within its contractual rights to terminate the SPA because the preconditions for closing were not met at the time of termination.

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