Masspower v. Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co.

28 Mass. L. Rptr. 51
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 2011
DocketNo. 073243BLS2
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 51 (Masspower v. Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Masspower v. Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co., 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 51 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Neel, Stephen E., J.

Plaintiff MASSPOWER and defendant Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company (MMWEC) entered into a long-term power purchase agreement (PPA) in 1990, pursuant to which MMWEC purchased electric power generated by MASSPOWER’s Springfield, Massachusetts, facility. By 2004, deregulation of the New England power supply market, and changes in the operation of that market, had made the PPA economically disadvantageous in MMWEC’s view, and the parties attempted to negotiate a buyout of the PPA.

This lawsuit arises out of the failure of that negotiation, MMWEC’s demand that MASSPOWER seek to operate the facility under the “must-run” provision of the PPA, MASSPOWER’S refusal, and MMWEC’s subsequent termination of the PPA. MASSPOWER sues for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, violation of G.L.c. 93A, and abuse of process (arising out of an earlier action which MMWEC brought against MASSPOWER).

The case was tried without jury over eighteen days in February and March 2010, followed by closing arguments on July 14, 2010.

PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

The prior proceedings in this case are particularly important to the determination of the matters now before the Court because they bear on what issues were, and were not, to be tried. In 2008 the Appeals Court affirmed judgment for MASSPOWER in the earlier case brought by MMWEC, and reversed a grant of summary judgment for MMWEC in this case. In 2009 this Court ruled on subsequent dispositive motions. Before addressing the parties’ contentions regarding the import of those rulings for this case, it is necessary to set out in some detail what the Appeals Court, andthemotionjudge, decided.

In 2005 MMWEC sued MASSPOWER and others, alleging that MASSPOWER had breached the PPA, breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and violated G.L.c. 93A. See MMWEC v. Northern Star Generation LLC et al.1 SUCV #05-2710-BLS-l (MMWEC Action, or 2005 Action). Following a jury-waived trial, the Court (van Gestel, J.) entered findings and rulings, and ordered judgment for defendants.

In 2007 MASSPOWER sued MMWEC in the present case. The Court (Gants, J.) subsequently allowed summary judgment for MMWEC.

Appeals were taken in both cases and were consolidated before the Appeals Court, which issued a re-script (“Memorandum and Order Pursuant to Rule 1:28”) on November 7, 2008 (Appeals Court decision). The Appeals Court decision affirmed the trial court’s judgment against MMWEC in the MMWEC Action, vacated summary judgment for MMWEC in this case, and remanded this case “for further proceedings consistent with the memorandum and order of the Appeals Court.” Id. at 24.

The Appeals Court notes at the outset that “(b]oth cases involve the interpretation of [the PPA], . . . pursuant to which MMWEC contracted to purchase 7.86 percent of the output from MASSPOWER’S energy generating facility for a term of twenty years.” Id. at 1. The court continues:

For these appeals, we rely on the facts as found by the Superior Court trial judge in his February 20, 2007 “Findings of Fact, Rulings of Law and Order for Judgment,” and on the undisputed facts set out in a second judge’s January 29, 2008 “Memorandum of Decision and Order on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment,” supplemented where necessary by uncontroverted facts in the trial record and summary judgment materials.

Id. at 1-2 (emphasis supplied).

Accordingly, this Court summarizes below the Appeals Court’s recitation of the pertinent facts found in the MMWEC case, and of the undisputed facts set out in the motion judge’s Memorandum on summaryjudgment in this case, as the starting point for its own findings.2

MMWEC filed its complaint against MASSPOWER on June 30, 2005 “in response to a reduction in the frequency with which Masspower’s facility was being selected for dispatch,” i.e., selected to provide power to the New England pool (see discussion below). Id. at 2. The PPA was a contract between “sophisticated and well-represented parties!;] the integration [53]*53clause in the agreement’s final section prohibited alteration or expansion of matters specifically addressed therein.” Id. Because the facility was “consistently maintained so as to be available for dispatch at all times,” MASSPOWER “did not breach the PPA when the frequency with which the facility was selected for dispatch fell off dramatically after 2005.” Id., 4-5.

The Appeals Court defined and distinguished “economic dispatch,” which was at the heart of the MMWEC Action, from “must-run,” at the heart of the present action, as follows:

The judge properly interpreted “economic dispatch” [under section 4.3 of the PPA] to mean that Masspower was obligated to maintain the facility to be available for dispatch in accordance with the NEPOOL3 rules for economic dispatch. Pursuant to NEPOOL rules, facilities were selected for economic dispatch by a central system operator, according to the price at which they could generate energy, so that facilities offering cheaper prices for energy on a given day would be selected for dispatch before more expensive units. Under the terms of the PPA, Masspower’s facility was one that would be selected to operate based on its costs. In this manner, the contract distinguished the mode of the facility’s operation from that of a must-run facility, a type of facility that operated at all times regardless of costs.

Id. at 6. Addressing one of the central issues in the MMWEC Action appeal, the court concluded: “We are in full accord with the judge’s conclusion that Masspower’s failure to price its energy so that it would be selected for dispatch on a nearly continuous basis did not constitute a breach of contract [under the ’’economic dispatch" provisions of the PPA]." Id. at 8.

As for the present case, the court summarized the issues decided by Judge Gants on summary judgment as follows:

On May 4, 2007, MMWEC demanded that Masspower seek to have the facility declared a must-run operation, pursuant to section 4.3 of the PPA. Masspower refused, and MMWEC terminated the PPA . . . The must-run provision, in section 4.3 of the PPA, states: “In the event that the [flacility is dispatched at a capacity factor of less than [sixty percent] over a two year period, [sjeller agrees to cooperate with [b]uyer and the other [pjurchasers if they decide to seek to have the [flacility declared ‘must-run’ by NEPOOL.” Termination under the PPA is governed by section 7.1, which gives MMWEC the right to terminate the PPA if Masspower “shall fail in any material respect to comply with, observe, perform or shall default in any material respects upon any obligation under the [agreement, . . . and such failure materially and adversely ]e]ffects4” MMWEC. The judge ruled [first5] that because there were no other purchasers, as that term was used in the PPA, as of 2007, MMWEC had the unilateral right to seek Masspower’s cooperation in having the facility declared must-run. The judge also ruled [second] that Masspower’s failure to do so constituted a material breach of a material obligation, and [third] that such breach satisfied the “materially and adversely [e]ffects” prong of the PPA’s termination provision, without further proof of harm.

Id. at 12-13.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Mass. L. Rptr. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masspower-v-massachusetts-municipal-wholesale-electric-co-masssuperct-2011.