Fpl Energy, LLC, Fpl Energy Pecos Wind I, L.P., Fpl Energy Pecos Wind II, L.P., and Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. v. Txu Portfolio Management Company, L.P. N/K/A Luminant Energy Company, Llc

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2014
Docket11-0050
StatusPublished

This text of Fpl Energy, LLC, Fpl Energy Pecos Wind I, L.P., Fpl Energy Pecos Wind II, L.P., and Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. v. Txu Portfolio Management Company, L.P. N/K/A Luminant Energy Company, Llc (Fpl Energy, LLC, Fpl Energy Pecos Wind I, L.P., Fpl Energy Pecos Wind II, L.P., and Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. v. Txu Portfolio Management Company, L.P. N/K/A Luminant Energy Company, Llc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fpl Energy, LLC, Fpl Energy Pecos Wind I, L.P., Fpl Energy Pecos Wind II, L.P., and Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. v. Txu Portfolio Management Company, L.P. N/K/A Luminant Energy Company, Llc, (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 444444444444 NO. 11-0050 444444444444

FPL ENERGY, LLC, FPL ENERGY PECOS WIND I, L.P., FPL ENERGY PECOS WIND II, L.P., AND INDIAN MESA WIND FARM, L.P., PETITIONERS, V.

TXU PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANY, L.P. N/K/A LUMINANT ENERGY COMPANY, LLC, RESPONDENT

4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Argued October 15, 2012

JUSTICE GREEN delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this contract interpretation case, TXU Portfolio Management Company, L.P. (TXUPM)

contracted to receive electricity and renewable energy credits (RECs) from wind farms owned by

FPL Energy, LLC. FPL failed to provide the required electricity and RECs. TXUPM sued FPL for

breach of contract; FPL counterclaimed, arguing TXUPM failed to provide FPL with sufficient

transmission capacity. The trial court granted two partial summary judgments. First, it issued a

declaratory judgment that the contracts required TXUPM to provide transmission capacity. Second,

it declared the contracts’ liquidated damages provisions unenforceable. The remaining issues were tried to a jury, and the trial court entered take-nothing judgments for both parties. Both parties

appealed. The court of appeals reversed both summary judgment rulings. 328 S.W.3d 580, 591

(Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, pet. granted).

We address the following issues: (1) did TXUPM owe FPL a contractual duty to provide

adequate transmission capacity to FPL; (2) if FPL breached and TXUPM did not, do the liquidated

damages provisions apply to energy and RECs or only to RECs; and (3) are the liquidated damages

provisions in these contracts enforceable? We affirm the court of appeals’ holding that TXUPM

owed no contractual duty to provide transmission capacity. However, we hold the liquidated

damages provisions apply only to RECs and are unenforceable as a penalty. Accordingly, we

reverse the court of appeals’ judgment in part and remand the case to the court of appeals to

determine damages.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

In Texas, the electric industry consists of three main components: power generation, power

transmission, and power distribution. Electric producers own and operate generating facilities. The

Electric Reliability Council of Texas, Inc. (ERCOT), with few exceptions, manages the transmission

of electricity through an interconnected network—or grid—of transmission lines. Finally, retail

electric providers distribute electricity directly to consumers.

In 1999, the Legislature created ambitious goals for renewable energy in Texas. See Act of

May 27, 1999, 76th Leg., R.S., ch. 405, § 39, sec. 39.904, 1999 Tex. Gen. Laws 2543, 2598–99.

The Legislature charged the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC) with establishing minimum

renewable energy production requirements for all Texas electric providers. TEX. UTIL. CODE

2 § 39.904(c)(1). The Legislature also tasked the PUC with establishing a REC trading program. Id.

§ 39.904(b). A REC reflects one megawatt hour (MWh) “of renewable energy that is physically

metered and verified in Texas.” 16 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 25.173(c)(13). Electric producers thus

simultaneously create both electricity from renewable sources and the corresponding RECs, yet

producers may choose to sell the two separately. Id. § 25.173(d). The REC trading program allows

electric providers unable to satisfy the minimum renewable energy requirements to purchase and

hold RECs “in lieu of capacity from renewable energy technologies.” TEX. UTIL. CODE § 39.904(b);

see 16 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 25.173(d)(2).

TXU Electric, a retail electric provider (and a different entity than TXUPM), solicited

proposals from renewable energy producers to meet the new renewable energy production

requirements. In 2000, TXU Electric entered agreements with two wind farm subsidiaries of FPL:

Pecos Wind I, L.P. and Pecos Wind II, L.P. Also in 2000, FPL acquired a third party’s rights to a

similar contract with TXU Electric for Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. Under the contracts, FPL sells

TXU Electric RECs and the renewable electric energy used to produce those credits. TXU Electric

assigned the contracts to TXUPM, a power marketer and, importantly, not a retail electric provider.

The contracts with Pecos Wind I and II are identical. The Indian Mesa contract largely contains the

same provisions, but, as explained below, the parties point to relevant differences in support of their

claimed intent at the time of contracting. Two provisions of these contracts give rise to this dispute:

one provision governing TXUPM’s transmission responsibilities and one providing for liquidated

damages in the event that FPL fails to meet certain production requirements.

3 For approximately four years, FPL failed to produce the agreed upon electricity and RECs.

TXUPM filed suit seeking damages for FPL’s breach of the contracts. FPL counterclaimed, arguing

that it could not meet its obligations because of congestion on the ERCOT grid. When the grid lacks

capacity to transmit all energy produced in an area, ERCOT issues curtailment orders instructing

certain facilities to cease production. FPL claims it received curtailment orders from ERCOT which,

along with an unexpected lack of wind in the area, caused it to produce less energy than promised.

FPL blamed the congestion and resulting curtailment orders on TXUPM, insisting that TXUPM bore

responsibility to ensure transmission capacity for all energy FPL could produce.

Both parties filed motions for partial summary judgment. Each sought declaratory judgment

to clarify the portions of the contracts relating to transmission capacity and liquidated damages. The

trial court issued several rulings. First, the court declared that the contracts unambiguously required

TXUPM to provide all transmission services, including transmission capacity, to FPL. Second, the

court determined that the liquidated damages provisions in the contracts were not enforceable, and

thus void, because a liquidated damages amount of $50 per REC was not a realistic forecast of

damages.

Consistent with these rulings, the trial court’s instructions to the jury indicated that TXUPM

was required to provide transmission capacity and that the liquidated damages were unenforceable.

The jury found that TXUPM should receive $8.9 million in compensatory damages for FPL’s failure

to deliver renewable energy, yet the jury determined that TXUPM secured cover for the missing

electricity by acquiring substitute electricity. The jury also found that TXUPM owed no

compensatory damages to FPL for TXUPM’s alleged failure to ensure transmission capacity. The

4 trial court entered judgment on the jury’s verdict, ordering that (1) FPL take nothing on its claims;

and (2) TXUPM take nothing, despite the jury’s damage award, because TXUPM covered.

The court of appeals affirmed the take-nothing judgment for the damages claims but reversed

and rendered judgment on the issues related to declaratory relief. 328 S.W.3d at 591. The court

held that the contracts did not require TXUPM to provide the necessary transmission capacity. Id.

at 587. As to liquidated damages, the court of appeals held that the provisions were enforceable

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Fpl Energy, LLC, Fpl Energy Pecos Wind I, L.P., Fpl Energy Pecos Wind II, L.P., and Indian Mesa Wind Farm, L.P. v. Txu Portfolio Management Company, L.P. N/K/A Luminant Energy Company, Llc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fpl-energy-llc-fpl-energy-pecos-wind-i-lp-fpl-energy-pecos-wind-ii-tex-2014.