Leaf Invenergy Co. v. Invenergy Renewables LLC

210 A.3d 688
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 2, 2019
Docket308, 2018
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 210 A.3d 688 (Leaf Invenergy Co. v. Invenergy Renewables LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leaf Invenergy Co. v. Invenergy Renewables LLC, 210 A.3d 688 (Del. 2019).

Opinion

TRAYNOR, Justice:

*690 In 2008, Invenergy Wind LLC ("Invenergy"), a wind energy developer, was raising money for a Series B investment round, and Leaf Clean Energy Company ("Leaf Parent"), an investment fund, expressed interest. After extensive negotiations, Leaf Parent invested $ 30 million in Invenergy Series B notes through a vehicle called Leaf Invenergy Company ("Leaf"). The agreement governing the Series B notes ("Series B Note Agreement") gave noteholders such as Leaf the right to convert to equity and incorporated an LLC agreement ("Series B LLCA") that the noteholders and Invenergy would execute upon conversion.

The Series B Note Agreement and the Series B LLCA also included provisions that prohibited Invenergy from conducting a "Material Partial Sale"-a defined term-without Leaf's consent unless Invenergy paid Leaf a premium called a "Target Multiple"-another defined term. Although the parties renegotiated several aspects of their agreements with one another over the next few years, the consent provisions persisted in substantially similar form into the Third Amended and Restated LLC Agreement (the "LLC Agreement"), which is the operative agreement in this dispute. Those consent provisions form the crux of this litigation.

Leaf filed suit after Invenergy closed a $ 1.8 billion asset sale-a transaction that Invenergy concedes was a Material Partial Sale-without first obtaining Leaf's consent or redeeming Leaf's interest for the Target Multiple. After a trial, the Court of Chancery concluded that, although Invenergy had breached the Material Partial Sale consent provisions, Leaf was not entitled to the Target Multiple. The court then awarded only nominal damages because, according to the court, Invenergy had engaged in an "efficient breach." 1 The Court of Chancery directed the parties to complete a buyout of Leaf's interests pursuant to another LLC Agreement provision that Invenergy had invoked after Leaf had filed suit.

We disagree with the Court of Chancery's interpretation of the consent provision and its award of nominal damages and therefore REVERSE.The consent provisions unambiguously require Invenergy to pay Leaf the Target Multiple if it conducts a Material Partial Sale without Leaf's consent, and the concept of efficient breach does not permit Invenergy to circumvent that requirement. Because Invenergy conducted a Material Partial Sale without Leaf's consent and without paying Leaf the Target Multiple, Leaf is entitled to the Target Multiple as contractual damages. We thus award Leaf the Target Multiple *691 in damages on condition that it surrenders its membership interests in Invenergy.

I. BACKGROUND 2

Founded in 2001, Invenergy is a developer and operator of wind energy facilities in North America and Europe. Leaf Parent is a publicly traded investment fund specializing in renewable energy and sustainable technologies.

A. 2008: Leaf invests in Invenergy's Series B notes

In the summer of 2008, Invenergy sought to raise additional capital by issuing convertible debt. Several investors expressed interest including Leaf Parent and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company ("Liberty Mutual"), the latter of which had invested in Invenergy during Invenergy's earlier Series A funding round. Ultimately, Leaf invested $ 30 million in Invenergy Series B convertible notes in two closings in December 2008 and February 2009. 3

The Series B Note Agreement enumerated several items that required the consent of the noteholders. Among other things, Invenergy could not conduct a "Material Partial Sale" 4 without majority noteholder consent 5 unless the noteholders received the Target Multiple at the closing of such a sale. The Target Multiple, in turn, was defined as multiples of the noteholders' initial investment that grew over time. Essentially, Invenergy could conduct a large asset sale with or without the noteholders' consent. But in exchange for the right to conduct a sale without the noteholders' consent, the noteholders were afforded the ability to cash out with a handsome agreed-upon return on their investment upon Invenergy's exercise of that right.

The Series B notes matured on December 22, 2014, but Series B noteholders could convert their Series B notes into equity before the conversion deadline, which was initially set for December 22, 2011. As a practical matter, if Invenergy did poorly, the Series B noteholders would stay in the notes and preserve their debt covenant rights. On the other hand, if Invenergy did well, the Series B noteholders would convert into equity and capture an upside on their investment.

To facilitate a conversion, the Series B Note Agreement incorporated an LLC agreement ("the Series B LLCA") that would come into effect upon conversion. The Series B LLCA gave the converted noteholder-members many rights similar to what they had as Series B noteholders. For example, like the Series B Note Agreement, the Series B LLCA provided that Invenergy could not conduct a "Material Partial Sale" 6 without the consent of members unaffiliated with management or *692 redeeming 7 unaffiliated members for the Target Multiple. As the Court of Chancery found, Leaf and Invenergy had contemporaneous understandings that these and similar clauses guaranteed that the investors would receive the Target Multiple if Invenergy engaged in Material Partial Sale without the investors' consent.

The Series B LLCA also included reciprocal call and put rights that Invenergy and the converted noteholders could exercise between December 22, 2013 and December 22, 2014. Under Section 11.09 of the Series B LLCA, converted noteholders could "require that [Invenergy] purchase all but not less than all" of its interest. 8 The same section provided that Invenergy could "redeem all but not less than all" of the converted noteholders' interests. 9 These rights collectively ensured that the Series B investors would either exit or renegotiate their investment by December 22, 2014.

B. 2011-13: Invenergy and its investors make minor changes, but Leaf preserves its Material Partial Sale consent right

In 2011, Invenergy sought to extend the maturity date of the Series B notes by two years to facilitate other refinancing transactions. The Series B noteholders, including Leaf, agreed to Invenergy's modifications and received matching extensions of two years on the conversion deadline and the put and call windows. During this process, the parties also agreed to slight modifications to the calculation of the Target Multiple.

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Bluebook (online)
210 A.3d 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leaf-invenergy-co-v-invenergy-renewables-llc-del-2019.