Energy Future Holdings Corp v.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
Docket17-1958
StatusUnpublished

This text of Energy Future Holdings Corp v. (Energy Future Holdings Corp v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Energy Future Holdings Corp v., (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

_____________

No. 17-1958 _____________

In re: ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP. a/k/a TXU Corp. a/k./a TXU Corp a/k/a TEXAS Utilities, et al.,

Debtors

MARATHON ASSET MANAGEMENT LP; POLYGON CONVERTIBLE OPPORTUNITY MASTER FUND; POLYGON DISTRESSED OPPORTUNITIES MASTER FUND, Appellants

v.

WILMINGTON TRUST N.A. as First Lien Collateral Agent and First Lien Administrative Agent; ANGELO GORDON & CO. L.P.; APOLLO ADVISORS VII, L.P.; BROOKFIELD ASSET MANAGEMENT PRIVATE INSTITUTIONAL CAPITAL ADVISOR (CANADA) L.P.; JOHN DOE #1 THROUGH JOHN DOE #10

________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (D.C. Civil Action No. 1-16-cv-00287) District Judge: Honorable Richard G. Andrews ________________

Argued November 15, 2017

Before: AMBRO, KRAUSE, and RENDELL, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed: August 7, 2018) Philip D. Anker, Esquire George W. Shuster, Jr., Esquire (Argued) WilmerHale 7 World Trade Center 250 Greenwich Street New York, NY 10007

Benjamin W. Loveland, Esquire Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr 60 State Street Boston, MA 02109

Adam G. Landis, Esquire Matthew B. McGuire, Esquire Landis Rath & Cobb 919 Market Street Suite 1800, P.O. Box 2087 Wilmington, DE 19899

Counsel for Appellants

Michael D. DeBaecke, Esquire Blank Rome 1201 Market Street, Suite 800 Wilmington, DE 19801

Mark D. Kotwick, Esquire Seward & Kissel One Battery Park Plaza New York, NY 10004

Bradley R. Aronstam, Esquire Nicholas D. Mozal, Esquire Benjamin J. Schladweiler, Esquire Ross Aronstam & Moritz 100 South West Street, Suite 400 Wilmington, DE 19801

George A. Davis, Esquire Jonathan Rosenberg, Esquire Daniel S. Shamah, Esquire

2 Andrew Sorkin, Esquire O’Melveny & Myers 7 Times Square Times Square Tower, 33rd Floor New York, NY 10036

Peter M. Friedman, Esquire (Argued) O’Melveny & Myers 1625 I Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20006

Counsel for Appellees

Neil B. Glassman, Esquire GianClaudio Finizio, Esquire Bayard, P.A. 600 North King Street, Suite 400 Wilmington, DE 19801

Michael S. Kim, Esquire Jeremey C. Hollembeak, Esquire Kobre & Kim LLP 800 Third Avenue New York, NY 10022

Counsel for Amicus Curiae In Support of Appellants

OPINION * ________________

AMBRO, Circuit Judge

Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Company LLC (“TCEH”) filed for Chapter

11 bankruptcy relief in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent.

3 Lenders of $24.5 billion to TCEH were among its creditors. In an inter-creditor dispute,

entities now in the shoes of those who funded a letter of credit facility (collectively,

“Appellants”) seek payment of certain funds before the other lenders (the “Other

Lenders”). They appeal the dismissal by the Bankruptcy Court, affirmed by the District

Court, of their Complaint. We also affirm. In doing so, we deal with many definitions in

a complex set of documents. Thus this not-precedential opinion (it makes no new law

nor clarifies existing precedent) is longer than normal.

I. Background

A. The Loans

In 2007 a private equity group bought for $45 billion TXU Corporation, which

later became Energy Future Holdings Corp., the principal debtor in the Chapter 11

bankruptcy cases in the District of Delaware. The transaction—called a leveraged buyout

because the purchased assets secured (that is, leveraged) the loans made for the

purchase—involved in part TCEH, a TXU subsidiary, borrowing $24.5 billion in the

aggregate per three credit facilities—a term loan, a revolving line of credit arrangement,

and a deposit letter of credit facility (the last, hereinafter capitalized as a defined term, is

the subject of this appeal). The loans involved nine different lenders (collectively, with

their successors and assigns, the “Lenders”), including entities associated with Citibank,

JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, and Morgan Stanley. Though the

credit facilities had but one Credit Agreement, different (though overlapping) subgroups

of the Lenders funded each of them. Hence the Lenders, among others, entered into an

intercreditor agreement (hereinafter also capitalized as a defined term). To repeat,

4 Appellants are successors to the entities whose $1.25 billion aggregate loan funded the

Deposit Letter of Credit Facility (those entities are referred to as “Deposit L/C Lenders”).

B. The Deposit Letter of Credit Facility

A letter of credit reduces the risk of payment default. Suppose an entity purchased

gas to be extracted from the Gulf Basin a year later, promising the seller payment on

delivery. To back up its promise, the purchaser could ask a bank to agree with the seller

that, among other things, it will cover amounts in default if the company fails to pay what

it owes. That back-up support, a letter of credit, would shift the risk of nonpayment from

the purchaser to the bank, which typically is in a better position to know the former’s

creditworthiness. The bank would, after a payment on its letter of credit, seek

reimbursement from the purchaser.

As already noted, this appeal involves the Deposit Letter of Credit Facility. A

“deposit” letter of credit is backed by a cash deposit used to reimburse the letter of credit

bank (a “Deposit Letter of Credit Issuer” or “Issuer”; as noted below, here it is Citibank).

In this way, the risk of nonpayment shifts from the Issuer back to the debtor—TCEH in

our case. After the Deposit L/C Lenders furnished the $1.25 billion for the Deposit

Letter of Credit Facility, those funds were deposited into a segregated account called the

Deposit L/C Loan Collateral Account (sometimes referred to simply as the “Account”).

Essentially, the facility consisted of Citibank’s agreement to issue deposit letters of credit

for TCEH (the “Deposit Letters of Credit” or “Deposit L/Cs”) plus Citibank’s right to

have drawings reimbursed from this account. (Although the loan transactions allowed for

the addition of multiple Deposit Letter of Credit Issuers, we understand no party other

5 than Citibank signed on.) There was always enough on balance to cover the full amount

of the Deposit Letters of Credit that had been or could be issued. Moreover, Citibank

was appointed the custodian of the account (in this capacity, the “Collateral Agent”), so it

was able to release the reimbursement funds to itself for Deposit L/Cs.

Appellants seek to be paid from the remaining money in the Deposit L/C Loan

Collateral Account before the Other Lenders who participated in loaning the remaining

$23.25 billion of the overall credit facilities. They claim common sense supports their

expectation that, as the deemed funders of the Deposit L/C Loan Collateral Account, they

be accorded, when the Deposit Letter of Credit Facility ended, payment priority over the

Other Lenders who did not fund that Account. The problem, as Appellants concede, is

that, “[t]o be sure, the applicable credit documents do not expressly state [that] common-

sense conclusion . . . because, unfortunately and mistakenly, the documents do not

contain any express statement of who gets paid any leftover portion of the $1.25 billion.”

Appellants’ Br. at 4.

C.

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