NGL Energy Partners LP v. LCT Capital, LLC

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docket265, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of NGL Energy Partners LP v. LCT Capital, LLC (NGL Energy Partners LP v. LCT Capital, 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
NGL Energy Partners LP v. LCT Capital, LLC, (Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

NGL ENERGY PARTNERS LP and § NGL ENERGY HOLDINGS LLC, § No. 265, 2023 § Appellants/Cross-Appellees, § Court Below—Superior Court Defendants Below, § of the State of Delaware § v. § C.A. No. N15C-08-109 § LCT CAPITAL, LLC, § § Appellee/Cross-Appellant, § Plaintiff Below. §

Submitted: February 7, 2024 Decided: May 28, 2024

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, and GRIFFITHS, Justices, and FIORAVANTI, Vice Chancellor1 constituting the Court en banc.

Upon appeal from the Superior Court. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, REMANDED.

Steven T. Margolin, Esquire (argued), Lisa M. Zwally, Esquire, Samuel L. Moultrie, Esquire, Bryan T. Reed, Esquire, GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Hal S. Shaftel, Esquire (argued), Daniel Friedman, Esquire, GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, New York, New York, for Appellants/Cross- Appellees NGL Energy Partners LP and NGL Energy Holdings LLC.

John L. Reed, Esquire (argued), Peter H. Kyle, Esquire, Daniel P. Klusman, Esquire, DLA PIPER LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Benjamin D. Schuman, Esquire, DLA PIPER LLP, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant LCT Capital, LLC.

1 Sitting by designation under Del. Const. art. IV, § 12 and Supreme Court Rules 2(a) and 4(a) to complete the quorum. TRAYNOR, Justice:

In this appeal, the appellants/cross-appellees (together, “NGL”) challenge a

$36 million final judgment and a set of evidentiary rulings that, in their view, led to

it. In turn, LCT Capital LLC (“LCT”) cross-appealed, contesting the Superior

Court’s methodology for computing post-judgment interest.2 Specifically, LCT

contends that the court erroneously refused to include prejudgment interest in the

judgment upon which post-judgment interest is to accrue.

We find no error or abuse of discretion in the Superior Court’s evidentiary

rulings. We disagree, however, with the court’s post-judgment interest

determination. Under 6 Del. C. § 2301(a), a “judgment . . . shall, from the date of

the judgment, bear post-judgment interest of 5% over the Federal Reserve Discount

rate . . . .” Prejudgment interest is part of the “judgment” and, as such, should be

included in the amount on which post-judgment interest accrues. We therefore

reverse the Superior Court as to this issue.

I

NGL consists of Delaware entities occupied in the energy sector. The

appellee/cross-appellant, LCT Capital LLC (“LCT”) provides financial advisory

services. After LCT, without the benefit of an agreement as to its compensation,

2 LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 2023 WL 4102666 (Del. Super. June 20, 2023) (the “Costs and Interest Opinion”). 2 provided services in connection with NGL’s 2014 acquisition of TransMontaigne

Inc. (the “Transaction”), the parties failed to agree to payment terms. LCT filed suit

in 2015, alleging four claims: (i) fraud, (ii) breach of contract, (iii) unjust

enrichment, and (iv) quantum meruit.

Following the Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment on the breach-of-

contract and unjust-enrichment claims in favor of NGL, the court held a jury trial in

July 2018. The jury awarded LCT $4 million for the quantum meruit claim and $29

million for the fraud claim. Post-trial briefing ensued. The Superior Court set aside

the awards, ordering a new trial on damages. The parties then filed interlocutory

appeals.

We accepted the appeals and, in a 2021 opinion, reversed in part and affirmed

in part. We held, among other things, that the court abused its discretion in ordering

a new trial on the fraud claim because, under its unitary theory of damages at trial,

LCT did not provide independent support for the claim.3 But we affirmed the court’s

decision to order a new trial solely on damages under LCT’s quantum meruit theory.4

On remand, the parties disagreed as to how to measure quantum meruit

damages, which resulted in each moving in limine to block portions of the other

3 LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 249 A.3d 77, 98 (Del. 2021). 4 Id. at 101. 3 side’s evidence, including expert testimony.5 In a December 2022 opinion, the

Superior Court granted in part and denied in part these motions (“December

Opinion”).6 In a follow-up order issued by a judge who was newly assigned to the

case, the Superior Court revisited the December Opinion, making adjustments that

permitted certain evidence to be presented at trial (“January Order”).7

After hearing evidence over the course of several days in February 2023, the

jury rendered a $36 million verdict in LCT’s favor.8 The court entered judgment

against NGL in the amount of this award, plus $19,945,726.02 in prejudgment

interest, together with post-judgment interest at the legal rate of 9.75%, which

translates to $9,616.44 per diem.9 The court calculated the post-judgment interest

amount by applying the 9.75% interest rate solely to the $36 million award—that is,

the court did not calculate post-judgment interest on the sum of the $36 million

award and the $19,945,726.02 prejudgment interest.10

Although NGL’s notice of appeal listed several written decisions and bench

rulings for review,11 NGL focuses largely on the January Order, raising two

5 See generally LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 2022 WL 17851423 (Del. Super. Dec. 22, 2022). 6 Id. at *16. 7 See LCT Capital, LLC v. NGL Energy Partners LP, 2023 WL 1115628, at *2–4 (Del. Super. Jan. 30, 2023). 8 App. to Opening Br. at A7–8 (D.I. 626), A1085. 9 Costs and Interest Opinion at *1–2. 10 See id. 11 App. to Opening Br. at A1089–90. 4 arguments.12 First, NGL claims that the Superior Court erred by admitting evidence

and arguments about “the value/benefit supposedly gained by NGL” in the

Transaction, asserting that such evidence is prejudicial and irrelevant to a quantum

meruit claim.13 Second, NGL argues that the Superior Court erred by admitting

evidence of benefit-of-the-bargain or expectancy damages when assessing the

quantum meruit value of LCT’s services.14 We review legal conclusions de novo,

and we review evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.15

II

In the body of its opening brief, instead of identifying specific testimony and

exhibits that were improperly admitted at trial, NGL refers in sweeping terms to “a

flood of inadmissible testimony and documents through which LCT was permitted

to reframe the trial into a speculative exercise about how much value/benefit NGL

might ultimately have gained from the Transaction[.]”16 Then, in the brief’s

conclusion, NGL lists—without any meaningful discussion—ten exhibits and

twenty trial-testimony excerpts that it claims should have been excluded. Despite

this unorthodox framing of NGL’s evidentiary objections, we have reviewed the

cited exhibits and testimony; having done so, we affirm the Superior Court’s

12 See, e.g., Opening Br. at 18, 25, 32, 48. 13 See, e.g., id. at 16–23. 14 See id. at 29–49. 15 See XL Ins. Am., Inc. v. Noranda Aluminum Hldg. Corp., 239 A.3d 390, 399 (Del. 2020). 16 Opening Br. at 22. 5 evidentiary rulings on the basis of and for the reasons stated in the court’s January

Order. In so holding, we note further that the court’s jury instruction on the

appropriate measure of quantum meruit damages expressly warned the jury that

the value of LCT’s services under quantum meruit is not measured by reference to any value created after NGL’s acquisition of TransMontaigne.

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