Coastal Power International, Ltd. v. Transcontinental Capital Corp.

10 F. Supp. 2d 345, 1998 WL 341022
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1998
Docket96 Civ. 4057(LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 10 F. Supp. 2d 345 (Coastal Power International, Ltd. v. Transcontinental Capital Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coastal Power International, Ltd. v. Transcontinental Capital Corp., 10 F. Supp. 2d 345, 1998 WL 341022 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

*347 OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Facts. .347

Parties .347

The La Isabela Project.

Structure.

Mooring Design.

The Insurance and Initial LSA Review.".

The Purchase Agreement and Coastal’s Due Diligence.

The LSA Problem Grows.

LSA Refuses to Approve the Mooring.

Coastal’s Knowledge of the Issue.

The Closing.

Post-Closing Developments.

Prior Proceedings .

Discussion c cc

The Warranty Claims.360

The Alleged Breaches.360

The Effect of Coastal’s Decision to Close Given its Knowledge of the LSA Problem. 360

The Contract Claims.•..363

Liability.:.363

Causation and Damages.364

Waiver .369

Mitigation.370

Attorney’s Fees.370

Prejudgment Interest_’.371

Conclusion. 372

A multimillion dollar transaction between huge corporations staffed by able managers and engineers, assisted by experts, and represented by able counsel — though appropriately affected by the tugs of conflicting interests — ought to be a model of competence and fair dealing. Regrettably, the deal that gave rise to this action, the acquisition by the plaintiffs for $70 million of a floating power plant in the Dominican Republic, appears to have been a model of neither.

The crux of the problem is that the windstorm insurance on the plant — a coverage of no mean significance in view of the facility’s hurricane-prone location — was canceled on the day following the closing. Plaintiffs here claim that they were forced to spend almost $2 million on modifications to the plant’s mooring in order to reinstate the insurance. They contend that the defendants should bear the cost on fraud and contract theories. Defendants deny liability. They contend among other things that plaintiffs were well aware of the insurance issue and the need for modifications prior to closing. They assert, moreover, that the plaintiffs have seized on what at most was a technical breach of warranty to seek to shift to the defendants the cost of modifications far more elaborate and costly than were required. As one might expect, there is a certain amount of truth on each side.

Facts

Parties 1

Plaintiff Coastal Power International, Ltd. (“Coastal”) is a Cayman Islands corporation and an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of The Coastal Corporation, a publicly held Fortune 500 company. Plaintiff Commonwealth Development Corporation (“CDC”) is a statutory corporation organized under the laws of the United Kingdom for the purpose of assisting overseas countries in the development of their economies. Coastal and CDC, as a result of the transaction at issue in this case, own approximately 96 percent of the issued *348 and outstanding capital stock of Compania De Electricidad De Puerto Plata, S.A. (“CEPP”), which in turn owns the power generating facility at issue in this case. The facility now is operated by an affiliate of Coastal.

Defendant Wartsila Power Development, Inc., formerly known as Wartsila Diesel Development Corporation (“Wartsila Power”), is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Maryland. It is an affiliate of a large Finnish company, Wartsila Diesel International OY (‘Wartsila OY”). Wartsila OY, through affiliates including Wartsila Power and Wartsila Diesel, Inc. (“Wartsila Diesel”), is in the business, among others, of manufacturing “turnkey” power plants. Wartsila Power’s role frequently is to identify a prospective project and customer and to arrange financing in order to facilitate the sale of a plant. While Wartsila Power sometimes operates power plants on an interim basis, its objective here was to develop the project and then to dispose of its interest. 1 Thus, it served principally a development and financing role.

The remaining defendant, Transcontinental Capital Corporation (“TCC”), is a New York corporation with its principal place of business in Greenwich, Connecticut. It owned the equity in CEPP, although its position was very much subordinate to that of Wartsila Power. 2

The La Isabela Project

Structure

CEPP owns two power generating facilities at Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic, one a 16 megawatt land based generating plant completed prior to 1992 and the other the 50 megawatt barge-based plant, known as La Isabela I, that is the subject of this litigation.

The genesis of the La Isabela I project is not entirely clear from the record, but it appears that Wartsila 3 identified CEPP or TCC as a prospective customer for such a facility and, as is typical in such transactions, played an important role in structuring a transaction in which Wartsila would design and build, and CEPP would purchase, the plant. Accordingly, Wartsila contracted with CEPP to design and build the plant and the mooring to which it would be affixed in Puer-to Plata harbor, receiving in exchange a hen and security interest in TCC’s CEPP stock and various other interests in CEPP and its assets.

Mooring Design

The mooring was designed beginning in or about February 1994 under the supervision of James Gray of Wartsila Diesel, who initially was assisted by the engineering firm of Aker Omega, Inc. (“AOI”). Gray met with Hans Treu of AOI on February 4, 1994 to discuss the project and provided him with, among other things, a report concerning the strength of the soil in the proposed mooring area, important information because the soil strength would have a direct bearing on the loads that the mooring could withstand. 4

On February 18, 1994, AOI rendered a preliminary report in which it assumed that the storm surge and maximum water depth at the location of the barge in a 50-100 year hurricane would be 10 feet and 28 feet, respectively, and based its advice on maximum wind speed of 118 mph. 5 It recommended a mooring consisting of a number of piles to which the port side of the barge would be moored by pile guide frames that would fit over the piles, thus allowing the barge to rise and fall with the water level. 6 The report noted, however, that the soil strength information provided to AOI by Wartsila Diesel was not adequate to complete the mooring design. 7

*349 Gray spoke with Treu a few days later concerning the preliminary report. Baséd on information from another consultant, a Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 2d 345, 1998 WL 341022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coastal-power-international-ltd-v-transcontinental-capital-corp-nysd-1998.