Central Illinois Public Service Co. v. Consolidated Coal Co.

527 F. Supp. 58, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 278, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9981
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 2, 1981
DocketS-CIV-76-0114
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 527 F. Supp. 58 (Central Illinois Public Service Co. v. Consolidated Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Illinois Public Service Co. v. Consolidated Coal Co., 527 F. Supp. 58, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 278, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9981 (C.D. Ill. 1981).

Opinion

ORDER

ACKERMAN, District Judge.

Currently before the Court is a motion for a preliminary injunction, filed by petitioner-defendant Consolidated Coal Company (hereinafter referred to as Consol), to enjoin Central Illinois Public Service Com *60 pany (hereinafter referred to as CIPS) from accepting delivery of coal for use at its Coffeen Generating Station (hereinafter Coffeen Station) from any source other than Consol. Concomitantly, Consol seeks an injunction requiring CIPS to accept and pay for coal from Consol’s Hillsboro Mine (hereinafter referred to as Hillsboro Mine, or Mine).

The following facts are alleged in the Petition for Preliminary Injunction and find support in the evidence.

FACTS

In the early 1960’s CIPS, which supplies electric power to much of Central Illinois, determined that it would require a new generating station to meet the increasing demand for electric power in that region. After exploring numerous alternatives, CIPS decided to construct a generating station at Coffeen, Illinois. The Coffeen location was chosen because it was located near the center of CIPS’ customer load area, because it had a ready source of coal and because it had an available water source to be used for cooling the plant.

The coal reserves available in the Coffeen area were owned by Consol and were known as the Hillsboro reserves. Prior to CIPS’ decision to build its generating station at Coffeen, Consol supplied numerous core samples of the coal contained in the Hillsboro reserves to CIPS. CIPS obtained opinions, based upon its own analysis of the core samples, from its engineering consultants and its boiler consultants concerning the desirability of utilizing the Hillsboro reserves. In reliance upon the recommendations of its own consultants, CIPS decided to proceed with its proposed generating station at Coffeen Station.

In early 1962, Consol and CIPS negotiated the contract whereby Consol was to supply CIPS with its entire fuel requirements for the Coffeen Station. In order to save transportation costs, and thereby make the coal available to CIPS at prices well below the market price, the Coffeen Station was designed and constructed as a “mine mouth plant”. This meant that once CIPS selected the location for the Coffeen Station, Consol was obliged to locate its mine in such a manner that the coal would be hoisted from the ground in the area immediately adjacent to Coffeen Station, for convenient and economical delivery to CIPS’ stockpile via a conveyor belt. As a result of this design and construction of Consol’s mine, the coal produced there was transportable only to the Coffeen Station; the conveyor belt design precluded loading of large quantities of coal into trucks or rail cars for delivery to another user.

To further reduce the cost of the coal to CIPS, the Hillsboro Mine was designed to produce and the Coffeen Station was designed to receive and consume raw, untreated coal, eliminating any need for a costly coal preparation plant. The Coffeen Station was expressly designed for consumption of raw coal and CIPS’ boiler consultant, Babcock & Wilcox, determined that the coal in the Hillsboro reserves was of adequate quality to be burned in the boilers installed at Coffeen Station, boilers which were specially designed for precisely that purpose. In fact, the boiler could have been designed for any quality coal but the boiler in question was designed upon the core samples taken from the site. The lack of a preparation plant further tied the Hillsboro Mine to the Coffeen Station, and effectively precluded the sale of most of the Hillsboro production to any user other than the Coffeen Station.

As a result of the efforts outlined above, Consol was able to sell coal from the Hillsboro Mine to CIPS at prices below the market rate and, in fact, the Coffeen Station produced electricity at a cost per unit generally below the costs at CIPS’ other generating stations.

In return for taking the steps outlined above to provide cheaper coal to CIPS than was then otherwise available, Consol and CIPS agreed to commit to a long term agreement to sell and purchase coal from the Hillsboro Mine, to ensure that Consol would have an adequate opportunity to recoup its investment in the Mine. This was necessary because the special design of the *61 Hillsboro Mine to supply the Coffeen Station precluded the sale of the bulk of the Mine’s production to any other user.

On March 19,1962, Consol and CIPS executed the contract by which CIPS was required to purchase the entire fuel requirements of the Coffeen Station from the Hillsboro Mine and Consol was to supply those requirements, based on yearly estimates provided to Consol by CIPS. The term of the contract was fixed at thirty years after the initial operation of the Coffeen Station commenced. Both parties reserved the right to terminate the contract if performance became uneconomical or impractical, but the right of termination was exercisable only upon five years’ written notice and further exercisable only after fifteen years from the initial operation of the Coffeen Station. (Article VII)

During negotiation of the contract, CIPS submitted a proposal as follows: “Section 4. The coal to be furnished by Consol hereunder shall have a calorific value of not less than 10,000 BTU per pound, ‘as received.’ CIPS shall have the right to reject delivery of coal that does not meet this minimum calorific value.” Consol claims that because it was impossible to know for certain the quality of the coal the Mine would produce, and because both parties had formed estimates of the coal quality based on core samples, the contract did not contain any guarantee of minimum quality. The contract did estimate that the coal as delivered would average 10,235 BTU’s per pound and further provided that should the quality of the coal fall below an average of 10,000 BTU’s per pound, Consol would take corrective action to raise the quality above that level. (Article VI). The contract provided that the price paid by CIPS would depend on the actual number of BTU’s supplied by Consol, rather than on the number of tons delivered.

After the execution of the contract, CIPS proceeded to construct the Coffeen Station and Consol to build and develop the Hillsboro Mine, in accordance with the agreement between the parties. To date, Consol has invested over $23,000,000.00 in the construction and development of the Mine. CIPS has invested equally significant sums in its Coffeen Station, which began operating on December 20, 1965. Consol supplied coal to the Coffeen Station at a rate of approximately one million tons per year through 1972. The BTU level of the coal provided was below that of the estimate in the contract. Consol claims that at all times it used its best efforts to improve the coal quality. CIPS disputes this claim.

On December 4, 1970, the parties executed an agreement (hereinafter referred to as “the 1970 Contract”), that modified in some respects the 1962 agreement. In the 1970 Contract, CIPS committed to the addition of a second generating unit at the Coffeen Station, to begin operation no later than March 1,1972. The second unit was to. greatly increase the demand for coal at the Coffeen Station, and Consol was to provide the additional coal from the Hillsboro Mine.

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527 F. Supp. 58, 33 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 278, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-illinois-public-service-co-v-consolidated-coal-co-ilcd-1981.