Matter of the Petition of Md. Bio Energy

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 3, 2024
Docket0251/23
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of the Petition of Md. Bio Energy (Matter of the Petition of Md. Bio Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of the Petition of Md. Bio Energy, (Md. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Matter of the Petition of Maryland Bio Energy LLC, et al., No. 251, Sept. Term, 2023. Opinion filed on September 3, 2024, by Albright, J.

MARYLAND STATE PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS – PARTIES TO A CONTRACT – RESPONSIBLE OFFEROR VERSUS SIGNATORY TO CONTRACT

Pursuant to Maryland Code, State Finance and Procurement § 13-104(f), when the State of Maryland awards a procurement contract, the party who signs the contract should be the same party who responded to the State’s Request for Proposals and who was awarded the contract. Using a subsidiary to perform the contract is permissible, but the contract can only be awarded to the offeror who was responsible for the proposal selected by the State.

MARYLAND STATE PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS – PARTIES TO A CONTRACT – INTENT TO BE BOUND

When a party has not signed a contract, has removed its signature block from a contract, and has said they are not a party to the contract, that party has not manifested an intent to be bound by the contract. Thus, they are not a party to the contract.

STANDARD OF REVIEW – APPELLATE REVIEW OF AGENCY DECISION

Appellate courts only affirm an agency’s decision on the basis of the grounds on which agency decided the case. Appellate courts will not uphold an agency order unless it is sustainable on the agency’s findings and for the reasons stated by the agency.

MARYLAND STATE PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS – VOID CONTRACT – STATUTORY DAMAGES – MARYLAND CODE, STATE FINANCE AND PROCUREMENT § 11-204(b)(2)

When a State procurement contract is found void because of a violation of Division II of Maryland Code, State Finance and Procurement, a party may obtain statutory damages from the State pursuant to Maryland Code, State Finance and Procurement § 11- 204(b)(2), but that party must prove they acted in good faith, did not directly contribute to the violation, and had no knowledge of the violation before the procurement contract was awarded.

MARYLAND STATE PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS – VOID CONTRACT – STATUTORY DAMAGES – DIRECTLY CONTRIBUTE – MARYLAND CODE, STATE FINANCE AND PROCUREMENT § 11-204(b)(2) Under Maryland Code, State Finance and Procurement § 11-204(b)(2), “directly contribute” means to be an important step in or help to cause the violation in a direct way or manner.

MARYLAND STATE PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS – VOID CONTRACT – STATUTORY DAMAGES – DIRECTLY CONTRIBUTE – MARYLAND CODE, STATE FINANCE AND PROCUREMENT § 11-204(b)(2)

Where a party has negotiated a procurement contract with the State and the party has asked for a change in the contract that ultimately voided the contract, that party has directly contributed to the violation that voided the contract under Maryland Code, State Finance and Procurement § 11-204(b)(2). Circuit Court for Baltimore City Case No. 24-C-22-004419

REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 251

September Term, 2023 ______________________________________

IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF MARYLAND BIO ENERGY LLC, ET AL.

______________________________________

Reed, Albright, Raker, Irma S. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Albright, J. ______________________________________

Filed: September 3, 2024

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2024.09.03 15:15:09 -04'00' Gregory Hilton, Clerk This appeal, concerning a government procurement contract, comes to us from the

Circuit Court for Baltimore City after a series of disputes at the administrative and circuit

court levels. Maryland’s award of procurement contracts is governed by the Maryland

Code, State Finance & Procurement (“SF&P”), and Title 21 of the Code of Maryland

Regulations (“COMAR”). These laws ensure fair and equitable treatment of contractors

and provide safeguards for maintaining quality and integrity in the procurement process.

See SF&P § 11-201(a) (enumerating various purposes and policies of the SF&P). To that

end, when it awards a procurement contract, the Maryland Department of General

Services (“DGS,” Appellant) requires that the contract be awarded to someone that bid on

it (the “responsible offeror”), among other requirements. SF&P § 13-104(f); see also

COMAR 21.05.03.03.

In this appeal, DGS voided a procurement contract because the contractor and the

bidder were not the same entity. The contractor, Maryland Bio Energy, LLC (“MBE”),

and the bidder, Green Planet Power Solutions, Inc. (“GPPS, Inc.”), both Appellees here,

appealed DGS’s decision to the Maryland State Board of Contract Appeals (“MSBCA”)

and added a claim for breach of contract. The MSBCA agreed with DGS and held that

the procurement contract was void. GPPS, Inc. and MBE then petitioned for judicial

review of the MSBCA’s decision in the circuit court, contending that GPPS, Inc. and

MBE were one and the same entity. The circuit court agreed with GPPS, Inc. and MBE,

reversed the MSBCA’s decision, and remanded to the MSBCA for further proceedings.

This is the State’s appeal from the circuit court’s decision. We reverse the circuit court, affirm the decisions of the MSBCA, and remand to the circuit court with instructions to

affirm the MSBCA’s decisions.

The contract here is a Power Purchase Agreement (“PPA”) that DGS awarded to

GPPS, Inc. in 2013 for the procurement of clean, renewable energy produced from

animal waste. Shortly after being awarded the contract, GPPS, Inc. formed Maryland Bio

Energy, LLC (“MBE”) as a special purpose entity 1 to carry out the PPA. The parties

negotiated the PPA over several months. During negotiations, GPPS, Inc. asked DGS to

substitute MBE for it in the PPA; DGS did so. Thereafter, the parties to the PPA were

defined as MBE and DGS. Just before the PPA was signed, GPPS, Inc. underwent a

corporate reorganization, and ownership of MBE was transferred to Green Planet Power

Solutions, LLC (“GPPS, LLC”)—a subsidiary of GPPS, Inc. The PPA was then finalized

between MBE and DGS. Two years later, after discovering the details of the corporate

reorganization, DGS terminated the PPA for convenience.

Today, we decide three questions, consolidated and rephrased from DGS’s brief: 2

1 A special purpose entity, or special purpose vehicle, is “a subsidiary created by a parent company to isolate financial risk.” Adam Hayes, What Is a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), and Why Do Companies Form Them?, Investopedia (June 25, 2024), https://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/spv.asp. MBE’s expert explained in his report before the MSBCA for the merits hearing that the use of special purpose entities is “common practice in the energy industry.” He explained that some of the benefits of special purpose entities are that they offer a degree of bankruptcy remoteness, ease of management among the entities, legal separation from the affairs of the parent entity, and ease of sale or termination. 2 DGS’s questions as presented in its brief were as follows:

2 1. In its August 2019 Decision, did the MSBCA err in concluding that GPPS, Inc. was not a party to the PPA and the PPA was thus void?

2. In its September 2022 Decision, did the MSBCA correctly interpret the meaning of “directly contribute” in SF&P § 11- 204(b)(2)?

3. In the MSBCA’s September 2022 Decision, was there substantial evidence to support the MSBCA’s finding that MBE failed to prove that it did not directly contribute to the violation of the SF&P § 13-104(f)?

MSBCA’s March 2019 Decision

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Matter of the Petition of Md. Bio Energy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-the-petition-of-md-bio-energy-mdctspecapp-2024.