Calpine Corp. v. Bank of New York

895 A.2d 880, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 182, 2005 WL 3111956
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 22, 2005
DocketC.A. 1669-N
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 895 A.2d 880 (Calpine Corp. v. Bank of New York) 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
Calpine Corp. v. Bank of New York, 895 A.2d 880, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 182, 2005 WL 3111956 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

This is the post-trial opinion in an expedited case involving a dispute between noteholders (through an Indenture Trustee for two different series of notes, the “First” and “Second Lien Notes”) and the issuer of the Notes, Calpine Corporation (“Calpine”). Calpine operates natural gas-fueled power plants that generate electricity. This litigation centers on Calpine’s plans for the use of approximately $852 million in net proceeds from the sale of substantially all of its oil and natural gas assets to Rosetta Resources, Inc. on July 7, 2005 (the “Rosetta Sale”). The “Rosetta Assets” that Calpine sold were “Designated Assets” under important instruments protecting its Noteholders. When the Rosetta Assets were sold, the “Rosetta Proceeds” therefore were placed into a control account and could only be used for certain purposes.

Calpine hoped to use the bulk of the $852 million in the Rosetta Proceeds to retire all of its First Lien Notes through a tender offer offering to pay the First Lien Noteholders par plus accrued interest. This use was mandated contractually by the indenture governing Calpine’s first lien series of notes (the “First Lien Indenture”). Rather than receiving tenders from all of the First Lien Noteholders, only $139 million of the $785 million in First Lien Notes were tendered, 1 all of which Calpine repurchased. This left Cal-pine holding $709 million in Rosetta Proceeds.

Calpine then embarked on purchases of natural gas for burning in its power plants. To accomplish those purchases, Calpine used the form contract typically used by sellers and purchasers of extracted natural gas — the Base Contract for the Purchase and Sale of Natural Gas promulgated by the North American Energy Standards Board (“NAESB”) — as its foundational document (a “NAESB form contract”). 2 In variance with its prior practice, however, Calpine modified its approach to purchasing natural gas by drafting the contracts so that it would pay an immediate price for the gas it purchased, take title upon that payment, and keep that gas in storage until it (or gas of similar quality) was delivered to Calpine within the brief contract term. The price that Calpine ultimately paid typically was to be determined by price movements in the spot market during the period up to delivery; moreover, if the seller failed to deliver all the purchased gas, Calpine’s remedy was simply a cash payment in the amount necessary to cover through other gas purchases. Calpine had no right to insist on a remedy involving the actual delivery of the precise amount of gas to which it supposedly held title.

Calpine structured the contracts in this manner in order to argue that its purchase of natural gas constituted a purchase of Designated Assets, a permissible use of the Rosetta Proceeds under the indentures for the Second Lien Noteholders (taken together, the “Second Lien Indenture”) once Calpine had made a qualifying tender offer to the First Lien Noteholders. The term Designated Assets in the First and *883 Second Lien Indentures broadly refers to “all geothermal energy assets ... and all ... Gas Reserves ... but excluding (i) any geothermal energy assets that are both unproven and undeveloped and (ii) contracts for the purchase or sale of natural gas and natural gas supplied under such contracts.” After the tender offer closed, Calpine spent $313 million of the Rosetta Proceeds on natural gas for burning in its power plants and certified to The Bank of New York (“BONY”), the relevant “Collateral Trustee,” that these purchases were of Designated Assets.

Eventually, the Noteholders caught wind of Calpine’s purchases and complained to BONY that Calpine’s use of the Rosetta Proceeds to buy natural gas was impermissible because it involved the use of the Rosetta Proceeds for “contracts for the purchase or sale of natural gas and natural gas supplied under such contracts,” and thus did not involve the purchase of Designated Assets. After that objection surfaced, BONY refused to further release any more of the Rosetta Proceeds to Calpine for purchases of natural gas. Calpine therefore brought this action against BONY, as Collateral Trustee, and the Wilmington Trust Company, as indenture trustee for both the First and Second Lien Noteholders (collectively, the “Indenture Trustees”), seeking a declaration that its past and proposed use of the Rosetta Proceeds to buy natural gas constitute permissible purchases of Designated Assets.

In this opinion, I conclude that Cal-pine’s proffered interpretation of the relevant exclusion from the term Designated Assets is erroneous. By any measure, Calpine is using Rosetta Proceeds to buy “natural gas supplied under ... [a] contract! ] for the sale or purchase of natural gas.... ” The term used in the exclusion is an obvious reference to a common industry term for the contracts used to buy and sell already-extracted natural gas. Calpine itself appears to have proposed this exclusion, in order to exclude from the definition of Designated Assets the trading activities of one of its subsidiaries. Notably, this subsidiary, Calpine Energy Services (“CES”), was the unit that made regular, large purchases of natural gas for burning in Calpine’s power plants, and by this exclusion, Calpine therefore placed the gas received under those contracts outside the reach of Designated Assets.

The contracts that Calpine has entered with the Rosetta Proceeds are materially indistinct from the prior contracts its subsidiaries used to acquire natural gas for burning. Calpine has never considered these prior contracts, or the natural gas acquired under them, to be Designated Assets. The mere fact that Calpine restructured the recent contracts in order to take “title” to the purchased gas upon contracting and before delivery does not suffice to make those contracts anything other than what they are plainly labeled and obviously are: “contracts for the sale or purchase of natural gas and the gas supplied under such contracts.” Calpine’s use of the Rosetta Proceeds for this purpose was therefore impermissible and it may not proceed to make further purchases of this kind. Because the correct party to challenge the past purchases — the Second Lien Noteholders — did not seek redress for the past purchases until after discovery had closed and trial was imminent, I defer on the question of the appropriate remedy for Calpine’s inappropriate use of $313 million of the Rosetta Proceeds although it is clear a fitting and reasonably prompt restorative remedy is in order.

I. Factual Background

A. The Notes

In July and November 2003, Calpine issued $2.95 billion of Second Lien Notes, *884 governed by four substantially identical note indentures, collectively, the Second Lien Indenture. The Second Lien Notes issued July 16, 2003, included $500 million floating rate notes due 2007; $1.15 billion of 8.5% notes due 2010; and $900 million of 8.75% notes due 2013. 3 On November 18, 2003, Calpine issued the remaining Second Lien Notes, which were $400 million of 9.875% notes due 2011.

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895 A.2d 880, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 182, 2005 WL 3111956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calpine-corp-v-bank-of-new-york-delch-2005.