NASDI Holdings, LLC v. North American Leasing,Inc.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 8, 2019
DocketC.A. 2017-0399-KSJM
StatusPublished

This text of NASDI Holdings, LLC v. North American Leasing,Inc. (NASDI Holdings, LLC v. North American Leasing,Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NASDI Holdings, LLC v. North American Leasing,Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

NASDI HOLDINGS, LLC, a Delaware ) limited liability company, and GREAT ) LAKES DREDGE AND DOCK ) CORPORATION, a Delaware ) Corporation, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2017-0399-KSJM ) NORTH AMERICAN LEASING, ) INC., a Michigan corporation, DORE & ) ASSOCIATES CONTRACTING, INC., ) an Indiana corporation, NASDI, LLC, a ) Delaware limited liability Company, ) and YANKEE ENVIRONMENTAL ) SERVICES, LLC, a Delaware limited ) liability Company, ARTHUR P. DORE, ) an individual, ARTHUR M. DORE, an ) individual, and RIVER FRONT, LLC, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: January 15, 2019 Date Decided: April 8, 2019 Brian C. Ralston, Mathew A. Golden, POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael Dockterman, STEPTOE & JOHNSON, LLP, Chicago, Illinois; Attorneys for Plaintiffs NASDI Holdings, LLC and Great Lakes Dredge and Dock Corporation. Joseph B. Cicero, Paul D. Brown, Stephanie H. Dallaire, CHIPMAN BROWN CICERO & COLE, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Mark L. McAlpine, Douglas W. Eyre, MCALPINE PC, Auburn Hills, Michigan; Attorneys for Defendants North American Leasing, Inc., Dore & Associates Contracting, Inc., NASDI, LLC, Yankee Environmental Services, LLC, Arthur P. Dore, Arthur M. Dore, and River Front LLC.

McCORMICK, V.C. In 2014, North American Leasing, Inc. acquired NASDI, LLC (“NASDI”), a

demolition and site-redevelopment business. As part of the sale, the purchaser took

control of NASDI’s ongoing construction projects, including work under a $20

million subcontract on the Bayonne Bridge between New York and New Jersey.

NASDI was required to obtain performance and payment bonds for the Bayonne

Bridge subcontract. Post-closing, the purchase agreement obligated the seller and

its corporate parent to maintain those bonds, secured by a letter of credit. In

exchange, the purchaser and certain affiliates agreed to indemnify the seller for any

losses incurred in connection with the bonds or the letter of credit.

In 2017, NASDI walked off the Bayonne Bridge job. As a result, the surety

drew more than $20 million on the letter of credit. The seller demanded

indemnification under the purchase agreement for this loss. The purchaser refused.

This litigation ensued.

The plaintiffs, the seller and its corporate parent, have moved for summary

judgment on their claim that the defendants breached the purchase agreement’s

indemnification provisions. In response, the defendants point to a notice provision

in the purchase agreement, which they say obligated the plaintiffs to notice any

claims for indemnification relating to the letter of credit by March 16, 2016—before

the plaintiffs incurred the losses. The language on which the defendants rely,

however, does not apply to claims for indemnification relating to the letter of credit;

1 it only applies to claims concerning representations and warranties. Accordingly,

the plaintiffs prevail under the plain language of the purchase agreement.

The plaintiffs have also moved for summary judgment on two affirmative

defenses. The defendants argue that the plaintiffs failed to mitigate damages when

they refused to cover a $5 million shortfall before NASDI walked off the project.

Although the duty to mitigate generally arises after a breach has occurred, the

defendants rely on events that occurred before the relevant breach. The plaintiffs are

therefore entitled to summary judgment on the failure-to-mitigate defense. The

defendants also assert that the plaintiffs acted with unclean hands because of alleged

accounting misrepresentations in the purchase agreement. Because the equitable

doctrine of unclean hands may not supply a defense to a purely legal claim, the

unclean-hands defense also fails.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The facts are drawn from the parties’ affidavits and exhibits attached thereto.

A. The Purchase Agreement Prior to April 23, 2014, NASDI Holdings, LLC (“Seller”) owned and operated

two companies: NASDI and Yankee Environmental Services, LLC (“Yankee”).

NASDI provided demolition and site-redevelopment services on projects throughout

2 the United States.1 On April 23, 2014, Seller sold NASDI and Yankee to North

American Leasing, Inc. (“Purchaser”) pursuant to an Ownership Interest Purchase

Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”).2 Purchaser is part of a family of entities

affiliated with Arthur P. Dore and his son, Arthur M. Dore.3

Purchaser took control of NASDI’s ongoing construction projects. Section

7.7(a) of the agreement, however, obligated Seller’s corporate parent, Great Lakes

Dredge and Dock Corporation (“Great Lakes”), to maintain existing performance

and payment bonds and letters of credit for the ongoing projects.4

Section 9.2(e) of the Purchase Agreement provides indemnification to Seller

and Great Lakes for all losses “arising out of or relating to or incurred in connection

with” the bonds and letters of credit addressed in § 7.7(a).5 Section 9.3 of the

Purchase Agreement sets out the notice requirements in the event of a claim for

indemnification.6

1 See C.A. No. 2018-0610-KSJM Docket (“Dkt.”) 1, Pl.’s Verified Compl. (“Compl.”) ¶ 12; Dkt. 34, Defs.’ Answer to Verified Compl. (“Ans.”) ¶ 12. 2 Dkt. 35, Aff. of Michael Dockterman (“Dockterman Aff.”) Ex. A (“Purchase Agr.”). 3 Id. 4 Id. § 7.7. 5 Section 9.2(e) indemnifies Seller for losses “arising out of, relating to or incurred in connection with (i) the Company Surety Bonds, (ii) the Company Surety Bond Obligations of the Parent or any Subsidiary of the Parent, (iii) the Parent Bond Guarantees, (iv) the Company LC Obligations or (v) the Letter of Credit, in each case, as a result of events occurring following the Closing . . . .” Id. § 9.2(e). 6 Id. § 9.3.

3 In addition to Purchaser, certain of its affiliates executed the Purchase

Agreement and owe indemnification obligations under Section 9.2(e): NASDI,

Yankee, the Dores, and Dore & Associates Contracting, Inc. (“Dore Inc.”) (the

“Indemnifying Defendants”).7

B. Plaintiffs’ Indemnification Claims

1. The Bayonne Bridge Claim One of NASDI’s ongoing construction projects transferred under the Purchase

Agreement involved the Bayonne Bridge. Prior to the Purchase Agreement, the Port

Authority of New York and New Jersey had hired Skanska Koch Kiewit

Infrastructure Co. (JV) (“Skanska”) to replace the main span roadway and approach

structures of the Bayonne Bridge. 8 Skanska subcontracted NASDI to perform

demolition for a total price of $20,359,375 (the “Subcontract”).9 The Subcontract

required NASDI to furnish separate performance and payment bonds in an amount

equal to the Subcontract price (the “Bonds”). 10 NASDI initially procured those

Bonds from Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland and Zurich American

7 Id. § 9.2 (“Dore, Purchaser, and the Companies shall, after the closing, jointly and severally Indemnify Seller”); id. at p. 1 (defining the “Companies” as “Yankee and NASDI”). 8 Dockterman Aff. Ex. B. 9 Id. App. A. 10 Id. § 18.

4 Insurance Company (“Zurich”). 11 As part of the sale of NASDI, however, Zurich

and the parties to the Purchase Agreement negotiated a new contractual arrangement

concerning the Bonds, which resulted in Great Lakes executing a $20 million letter

of credit in favor of Zurich (the “Letter of Credit”).12 Later, that amount was

increased to $30 million.13 The Bonds and the Letter of Credit are included among

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