C & S Acquisitions v. Northwest Aircraft

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1998
Docket96-4081
StatusPublished

This text of C & S Acquisitions v. Northwest Aircraft (C & S Acquisitions v. Northwest Aircraft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C & S Acquisitions v. Northwest Aircraft, (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT _____________

No. 96-4081 _____________

C & S Acquisitions Corp., * Successor by assignment of CIS * Corporation, * * Appellant, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the District v. * of Minnesota. * Northwest Aircraft, Inc., a Delaware * corporation, * * Appellee. * _____________

Submitted: October 23, 1997 Filed: August 13, 1998 _____________

Before McMILLIAN, FLOYD R. GIBSON, and BEAM, Circuit Judges. _____________

FLOYD R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

C & S Acquisitions Corp. ("C & S") appeals the district court's1 grant of summary judgment to Northwest Aircraft, Inc. ("Northwest") in C & S's action for alleged breaches of four aircraft lease agreements. C & S also appeals the district

1 The HONORABLE ANN D. MONTGOMERY, United States District Court Judge for the District of Minnesota. court's2 order which compelled the parties to arbitrate the three claims pertaining to the condition of the aircrafts' airframes and engines. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Pursuant to four lease agreements dated July 12, 1988, Northwest leased four non-advanced Boeing 727-200 aircraft from C & S.3 Although each of the four leases concerned a separate aircraft, the lease provisions at issue are essentially identical. Each lease contained a section 9.23 in which the parties agreed to submit certain disputes to arbitration. Section 9.23 provides that:

Any dispute between [C & S] and [Northwest] regarding the condition of the Airframe or any Engine arising under Section 8 or 9 hereof shall be referred to and determined by the manufacturer of (respectively) the Airframe or Engine.

Appellant's App. at 111. Each lease also contained a section 14 entitled "Remedies." Section 14(e) stated that:

To the extent permitted by Applicable Law, [Northwest] hereby waives any rights now or hereafter conferred by statute or otherwise which may require [C & S], otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this Section 14, to sell, lease or otherwise use the Airframe or any Engine in

2 The HONORABLE RICHARD H. KYLE, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota. 3 Although CIS Corporation negotiated the lease agreements with Northwest, C & S later became the lessor as CIS Corporation's successor-in-interest after CIS Corporation went bankrupt during the lease terms and C & S purchased the aircraft out of the bankruptcy.

-2- mitigation of [C & S's] damages or which may otherwise limit or modify any of [C & S's] rights or remedies under this Section 14.

Id. at 125 (emphasis added). Finally, the leases contained a section 17.1 entitled "Renewal Option" which provided that:

(a) [Northwest] shall have the right, subject to the provisions set forth herein, to extend this Lease up to a maximum of three years in one or more successive periods of not less than one year and not more than three years (each such period being hereafter referred to as a "Renewal Term"), the first Renewal Term commencing at the end of the Basic Term and each of the following Renewal Terms (if any) commencing at the end of the immediately preceding Renewal Term. . . . The rental payable during any Renewal Term shall be the lesser of the Fair Market Rental Value for the Aircraft or $93,500 per month. . . . (b) [Northwest] shall not renew any lease of a 727-200 aircraft so that the term of such lease would be extended into the period of time which would be covered by a Renewal Term hereunder without first providing written notice thereof to [C & S] and negotiating with [C & S] in good faith with respect to [Northwest] electing to extend this Lease pursuant to Section 17.1.

Id. at 133-34 (emphasis added).

After the leases expired, Northwest returned the four aircraft to C & S. Upon inspecting the aircraft, C & S commenced this action against Northwest. The first three counts alleged deficiencies in the condition of the airframes and engines.4 In Count IV,

4 Specifically, in Count 1, citing section 9.18 of the leases, C & S alleged that Northwest failed to return certain manuals and technical records concerning the aircrafts' engines and airframes. In Count II, citing section 9.2, C & S alleged that the condition of one returned engine did not meet the required return standards. In Count III, citing sections 8.7, 8.11, and 9.4, C & S alleged that Northwest failed to make the necessary modifications and repairs to the aircraft and their engines.

-3- C & S sought to enforce section 17.1(b). Section 17.1(b) allegedly prohibited Northwest from renewing "any leases of Boeing 727-200 aircraft which it had under lease from other [l]essors which would extend the terms of those leases into a period of time which would be covered by a Renewal Term under any of the [l]eases" with C & S without first providing C & S with written notice and negotiating in good faith with C & S for the renewal of C & S's four aircraft leases. Id. at 9-10. C & S contends that Northwest extended leases on other Boeing 727-200 aircraft during the renewal terms of its leases and deprived C & S of its opportunity to negotiate in good faith with Northwest to obtain the benefit of the lease renewals.

Invoking the arbitration provisions contained in the four leases, Northwest demanded that C & S arbitrate Counts I, II and III. After C & S refused to arbitrate, the district court, pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § § 1-16 (1994), granted Northwest's motion to compel binding arbitration of those counts, finding that Counts I-III fell within the scope of the arbitration agreement contained in section 9.23 of the leases. Because the arbitrators5 named in the arbitration agreements declined to preside over the arbitration and the parties failed to agree on a replacement arbitrator, the district court appointed the Honorable Robert E. Bowen, a retired judge of the Hennepin County District Court, to serve as arbitrator. In issuing his decision on Counts I-III, Judge Bowen did not award C & S any recovery on these claims.

Thereafter, Northwest moved the district court for confirmation of the arbitrator's award on Counts I-III and for summary judgment on Count IV. On October 23, 1996, the district court granted both motions. Regarding Counts I-III, the district court stated that C & S, who filed no opposition to Northwest's motion to confirm the arbitrator's

5 In the arbitration agreements, the parties selected Boeing Commercial Airplane Company to arbitrate disputes regarding the condition of the aircrafts' airframes and Pratt & Whitney Aircraft to arbitrate disputes over the condition of the aircrafts' engines.

-4- award, failed to demonstrate any reason why the court should not enter the confirmation order. In addition, the district court found that Count IV concerned a lease provision which merely required Northwest to negotiate in good faith in the future and was unenforceable as a matter of Minnesota law.

On November 22, 1996, C & S filed its Notice of Appeal "from the summary judgment entered on October 24, 1996." Appellee's Add. at 7. With its Notice of Appeal, C & S also filed its Appeal Information Form which stated that the issue on appeal concerned: "[w]hether a contractual provision to negotiate in good faith upon notice of a subsequent action is enforceable under Minnesota law regardless of the actions of the parties after the agreement is signed." Appellee's Mot. to Dismiss at Ex. F. On December 2, 1996, after the thirty days allowed for filing a notice of appeal had elapsed, C & S filed a Statement of Issues on Appeal, pursuant to Fed. R. App. P.

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