Interel Environmental Technologies, Inc. v. United Jersey Bank

894 F. Supp. 623, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11720, 1995 WL 488297
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 11, 1995
DocketCV 95-2928(ADS)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 894 F. Supp. 623 (Interel Environmental Technologies, Inc. v. United Jersey Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interel Environmental Technologies, Inc. v. United Jersey Bank, 894 F. Supp. 623, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11720, 1995 WL 488297 (E.D.N.Y. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER

SPATT, District Judge:

The plaintiff INTEREL Environmental Technologies, Inc. (“Interel”) brings this diversity action on behalf of itself and as a representative of approximately twenty five other subcontractors to recover monies allegedly due for construction work performed for the defendants. Presently, before the Court is the plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction to enjoin the defendant Allstate Insurance Co. (“Allstate”) from withdrawing monies held in a fund that has been allegedly designated to pay the plaintiff and the other subcontractors for their construction costs.

*626 BACKGROUND AND COMPLAINT

1. Financing and Rehabilitating the City of Glen Cove Co-Disposal/Energy Recovery Facility.

The City of Glen Cove Co-Disposal/Energy Recovery Facility (the “Facility”), located in Glen Cove, New York, is a modern day “waste-to-energy” plant. Owned by the City of Glen Cove (“City” or “Glen Cove”), the Facility essentially recovers energy from the burning of municipal solid waste (garbage) and sewer sludge collected from the City and other towns in Nassau County. The heat from the burning is captured, transformed to electricity, and used to power the Facility, which also includes a Water Pollution Control plant for treating certain wastewaters discharged and collected by Glen Cove.

In July 1991, the Facility was temporarily shut down because it failed to meet certain air emission standards that had been set forth in a 1990 Consent Order entered into between, among others, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (“DEC”) and Glen Cove (“Consent Order”). The Consent Order required that certain improvements be made at the Facility in order to reduce the emission of air pollutants from the Facility. Glen Cove received bids for an operator of the Facility, and chose the defendant Island Recycling and Environmental Corp. (“Island Recycling”) to operate the Facility.

Glen Cove and Island Recycling entered into a management agreement on July 20, 1992 (“Management Agreement”), pursuant to which Island Recycling agreed to “operate, maintain and manage” the Facility as an independent contractor for a term of twenty years, commencing on August 1, 1992. In order to meet the requirements of the Consent Order and to otherwise comply with the environmental statutes and regulations governing the Facility, Article 10 of the Management Agreement provides that Island Recycling shall rehabilitate the Facility by reconstructing whatever is necessary to bring the Facility into conformance with the Consent Order, at its sole cost and expense. The parties call this reconstruction and any accompanying improvements the “Improvements” to the Facility. Island Recycling was also required to obtain a $2 million performance bond in favor of the City.

To finance the reconstruction at the Facility, Island Recycling borrowed funds from the defendant Glen Cove Industrial Development Agency (“Agency”), a New York public benefit agency, which raised the funds by issuing special obligation revenue bonds. According to the plaintiff, the defendant Allstate is the sole or majority bondholder. In exchange for raising the funds to finance the reconstruction, the Agency and Island Recycling entered into a lease agreement dated April 1, 1993 (“Lease Agreement”), pursuant to which title to all Improvements in the Facility are held by the Agency, and the Improvements are leased to Island Recycling in exchange for rent payments made to the Agency.

At the same time that Island Recycling and the Agency entered into the Lease Agreement, the City granted a sub-license of the Facility from Island Recycling to the Agency, and approved an assignment of certain payments Island Recycling was to receive from the City under the Management Agreement to the Agency.

The proceeds raised from the bond issue were to be used to pay for the construction costs at the Facility. Pursuant to a trust indenture between the Agency and the defendant United Jersey Bank as Trustee (“Trust Indenture”), a $12 million fund was established for the purpose of paying for the construction of Improvements at the Facility (“Fund”). According to the section 3 of the Lease Agreement and a procedure outlined by the United Jersey Bank (“Trustee” or “Bank”), requests for reimbursements of work at the Facility by subcontractors were to be first submitted to Island Recycling for approval. If approved by Island Recycling, the reimbursement request would be submitted to engineers hired by Glen Cove for approval. If approved by Glen Cove, Island Recycling would submit the reimbursement request to the Trustee, which would pay the money to Island Recycling, who in turn would pay the subcontractor.

In addition, to provide security to the Bondholder, under the terms of the Trust *627 Indenture the Agency assigned its rights to the rent payments from Island Recycling to the Bank for the benefit of the bondholders. For the benefit of the bondholder, the Trustee also perfected UCC-1 financing statements evidencing a security interest in the Fund by filing the statements with the Clerk of Nassau County, on May 7, 1993.

According to the plaintiff, on August 16, 1993 the Bank represented to Island Recycling’s subcontractors that it was ready to start making payments from the Fund to Island Recycling for payment of the reconstruction costs.

2. The Island Recycling-Interel Contract and Events Precipitating the Present Dispute.

In an agreement dated September 30,1993 (the “contract”), Island Recycling agreed to purchase and the plaintiff Interel agreed to install certain air pollution control and related equipment. The price for the job was $1,735,433.

Relying on the contract and the other agreements governing the Facility and payment for the reconstruction, namely the Management Agreement, Lease Agreement, and Trust Indenture, Interel commenced work at the Facility. From September through December, 1993, Interel submitted applications for four progress payments to Island Recycling for work performed at the Facility. Each application for payment was approved by Island Recycling, then included in a disbursement request to Glen Cove which was approved by Glen Cove’s engineers, and ultimately paid from the monies in the Fund.

In January, 1994, a new administration took office in Glen Cove. According to Interel, the new mayor, Thomas Suozzi, opposed reopening the Facility. Eventually, a dispute arose between Glen Cove and Island Recycling and the City refused to authorize the Bank to release monies from the Fund to pay Island Recycling or its subcontractors for work performed at the Facility.

On May 18, 1994, Interel submitted its fifth requisition to Island Recycling in the amount of $583,268 for work performed in January, 1995, prior to the time Glen Cove decided to stop paying for any further construction costs. The requisition was approved by Island Recycling, and sent to the Glen Cove engineers for approval. The engineers approved the requisition, and on July 29,1994 recommended to the City that Interel’s requisition be paid. Glen Cove, however, has not sought the release of Fund monies to Island Recycling so that Interel’s requisition can be paid.

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Bluebook (online)
894 F. Supp. 623, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11720, 1995 WL 488297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interel-environmental-technologies-inc-v-united-jersey-bank-nyed-1995.