Daesang Corp. v. NutraSweet Co.

CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 2017
Docket2017 NYSlipOp 50646(U)
StatusPublished

This text of Daesang Corp. v. NutraSweet Co. (Daesang Corp. v. NutraSweet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daesang Corp. v. NutraSweet Co., (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion



Daesang Corporation, Petitioner,

against

The NutraSweet Company, NutraSweet IP Holdings, Inc., and Sweeteners Holdings Korea Ltd., Respondents.




655019/2016

For petitioner: John J. Janiec, Esq.

For respondent: Paul D. Sarkozi, Esq., of Tannenbaum Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt LLP
Charles E. Ramos, J.

Petitioner Daesang Corporation ("Daesang") petitions and moves to confirm the final arbitration award ("Final Award") entered by the International Chamber of Commerce ("ICC"), pursuant to CPLR 7510 and 7514(a), and 9 USC § 207.

Respondents, the NutraSweet Company, NutraSweet IP Holdings, Inc., and Sweeteners Holdings Korea LTD. ("NSCKorea") (collectively "NutraSweet") move, in sequence 01, to vacate the partial final award and the Final Award (together, Awards) of the ICC, pursuant to 9 USC §§ 10, 201 and 207, and CPLR 7511.

The motions are consolidated for disposition.

Background

The parties' dispute arises out of Daesang's sale of its aspartame business to NutraSweet. The parties entered into a series of agreements (the transaction), including a joint defense and confidentiality agreement ("JDA"), an asset purchase agreement ("APA"), and a processing agreement ("Processing Agreement").

NutraSweet possessed the contractual right to rescind the transaction within five years in the event that a customer purchasing a large volume of aspartame commenced an action alleging antitrust violations. This contractual right to rescission was set forth in section 10 of the JDA, and states:

"In the case of a Proceeding brought by...any customer with annual worldwide aspartame requirements in excess of [*2]1,000,000 pounds, a complaint has been filed against NutraSweet in court or in a similar administrative proceeding alleging that the Transaction was completed in violation of the antitrust laws...
(Sarkozi Aff., Ex. C, § 10).

The purchase price of the transaction was $79,250,000, which was to be paid by NutraSweet through a $5,000,000 payment at closing, with the balance paid in installments over a five-year period (Sarkozi Aff., Ex. A, p. 16). In the contractual documents, Daesang made a number of representations and warranties, including that it was in compliance with all applicable laws, and had the capacity to produce aspartame in accordance with strict contract specifications.

The parties agreed to arbitrate all disputes under the rules of the ICC (APA, § 10 [o], Pacella Aff., Ex. 4, § 10[o]; Processing Agreement, Article 17.2, Ex. 3A, ¶ 53).

Three years after entering into the transaction, NutraSweet and Daesang were sued by a class of aspartame purchasers in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania for violation of federal antitrust laws, captioned In Re Aspartame Antitrust Litigation ("Antitrust Action") (Ex. D, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.).

On March 20, 2007, NutraSweet notified Daesang that, pursuant to section 10 of the JDA, it was exercising its right to rescind the transaction based on the Antitrust Action, and sought the return of all payments made to Daesang (Ex. F, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.). Daesang rejected NutraSweet's attempt to cancel the transaction, and instead, declared an event of default and purported to exercise its contractual right to accelerate the remaining purchase price obligations (Sarkozi Aff., Ex. A, p. 18).

On June 4, 2008, Daesang filed a request for arbitration with the ICC, asserting claims against NutraSweet for breaches of the APA and the Processing Agreement and seeking the balance of the purchase price installments (Ex. I, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.).

In its terms of reference and pleadings, NutraSweet asserted the following counterclaims and defenses: rescission based upon section 10 of the JDA; equitable rescission; fraud seeking recsissionary and consequential damages; breach of contract alleging that Daesang breached multiple provisions of the agreements, including sections 3, and 6 of the APA, and Articles 2.5, 2.10, 3.2, 4 and Exhibits 4.2 (a) and 4.2 [c] of the Processing Agreement pertaining to production capacity, quality of purchased inventory, product specifications, customer claims and complaints, the quality of raw materials, the covenant not to compete and confidentiality (Exs. I, N at ¶¶ 26, 30 annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.). In its breach of contract counterclaim, [*3]NutraSweet sought the return of $15 million already paid to Daesang and consequential damages in an amount greater than $8 million, or in the alternative, a set-off of the purchase price in an amount greater than $14,200,000 and consequential damages in an amount greater than $8 million (Ex. I at ¶ 26, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.). NutraSweet also reserved its right to revise its summary of counterclaims as the case progressed (Id.).

On February 2, 2009, the parties stipulated to the jurisdiction of the ICC arbitral tribunal (the "Tribunal") to determine their disputes (Id., at ¶ 13).

The parties conducted discovery and made numerous written applications and submissions to the Tribunal, including pre and post hearing memoranda, pre hearing reply memorandum, and post-hearing summaries (Verified Petition, ¶ 14). In July 2011, the Tribunal held hearings in New York, where they heard and considered evidence, including witness statements and live testimony (Ex. B, M, N, O annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.).

In support of its counterclaim that Daesang fraudulently induced NutraSweet to enter into the transaction by misrepresenting its compliance with laws in the operation of its aspartame business, NutraSweet submitted an affidavit to the Tribunal (Ex. B, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff., NutraSweet Post Hearing Summaries § II), which was previously produced in the Antitrust Action, in which the president of Daesang, Dae Yeob Park, admitted in detail the manner in which Daesang and other large producers of aspartame conspired to coordinate their market behavior for the purpose of reducing competition, maintaining or increasing aspartame prices and protecting each other's pricing from encroachment by other producers, for at least ten years prior to entering into the transaction (Ex. H, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff.). NutraSweet also alleged that Daesang misrepresented its assets, operation, and the quality of its product to induce NutraSweet to enter into the transaction.

In support of its counterclaim for breach of contract, NutraSweet submitted evidence that Daesang failed to consistently and reliably produce aspartame that satisfied contractual specifications for production capacity, odor, microbial contamination, drying, diketopiperazine, and type IIA crystals, and also failed to remove foreign particle contamination, including metal shards, amongst others (NutraSweet's Terms of Reference, Ex, I; NutraSweet's Pre-hearing Memorandum, Ex. M, NutraSweet Post-Hearing Submissions, Ex. B, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff., at III and IV). NutraSweet submitted evidence to the Tribunal in the form of live testimony from five witnesses, eight witness statements, expert reports, and numerous exhibits in an effort to demonstrate that in 2003, 50% of the aspartame failed to meet contractual specifications, and in 2004, 29% of the aspartame Daesang sent failed to meet contractual [*4]specifications, causing NutraSweet to spend an additional $7,549,815 in capital expenditures, to resupply its customers with quality aspartame, and lost profits in the amount of $13,857,782.33 (NutraSweet's Post-Hearing Submissions, Ex. B, annexed to the Sarkozi Aff., at III and IV).

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