PDC-El Paso Meriden, LLC v. Alstom Power, Inc.

14 Mass. L. Rptr. 643
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedMay 31, 2002
DocketNo. 996016BLS
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 643 (PDC-El Paso Meriden, LLC v. Alstom Power, Inc.) 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
PDC-El Paso Meriden, LLC v. Alstom Power, Inc., 14 Mass. L. Rptr. 643 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

van Gestel, J.

This matter comes before the Court on two motions, each seeking to have the second amended complaint dismissed pursuant to Mass.R.Civ.P. Rule 12(b)(2) for lack of jurisdiction over the movants. The first filed motion is by the defendant ABB Ltd.3 The second filed motion is by the defendant Alstom Power N.V.

BACKGROUND

To some extent, the identity of the parties and their relationships to one another are vastly more complicated than the underlying contractual and related issues. Much of this background is taken, as it should be at this time and for purposes of these motions, from the second amended complaint, although some comes from outside sources properly provided by the parties.

The Parties

The plaintiff PDC-EI Paso Meriden, LLC is a Connecticut limited liability company with a usual place of business in Boston, Massachusetts. At all times material, it was engaged in the business of energy project development, power plant design and construction, and power plant operation. It consists of El Paso Meriden Power I Company, a Delaware corporation with a usual place of business in Houston, Texas; El Paso Meriden Power II Company, also a Delaware corporation with a usual place of business in Houston, Texas; and plaintiff Power Development Company, LLC (“PDC”), a Delaware limited liability company with a usual place of business in Boston, Massachusetts.

The plaintiff El Paso Merchant Energy-Gas Company is a Delaware corporation with its usual place of business in Houston, Texas. Along with El Paso Meriden Power I Company and El Paso Meriden Power II Company, it is engaged internationally in the business of providing specialized services in fuel supply, power marketing, energy trading, asset restructuring and energy product development.

In the second amended complaint the plaintiffs are referred to, and will be here, collectively as “Meriden Power.”

The defendant Alstom Power, Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its usual place of business in Windsor, Connecticut. It is the successor in interest to ABB Power Generation, Inc., a Delaware corporation with its usual place of business in Midlothian, Virginia. In the second amended complaint, and here, ABB Power Generation, Inc. and Alstom Power, Inc. are referred to collectively as “ABB/Alstom US.”

For a very brief period in 1999, ABB / Alstom US was an indirect subsidiary of ABB Ltd.4 ABB Ltd. is a Swiss corporation with its principal place of business in Zurich, Switzerland. It is described in the complaint as a global company that was engaged in the business of providing, among other things, technology and services in the fields of power generation, transmission and distribution. It is further alleged to have manufactured and sold, throughout the world, gas turbines for electric generating plants. ABB Ltd. is said to have maintained subsidiaries and to have conducted oper[644]*644ations in a number of jurisdictions, including Massachusetts and Connecticut.5

In 1999, ABB Ltd. transferred its gas turbine power segment (including ABB/Alstom US) to ABB Alstom Power N.V. ABB Alstom Power N.V. was a joint venture corporation alleged to be organized under the laws of Belgium6 with a principal place of business in Brussels, Belgium. Between mid-1999 and early 2000, ABB Alstom Power N.V. was controlled and managed jointly by ABB Ltd. and by Alstom S.A., a French corporation with its principal place of business in Paris, France.

In early 2000, ABB Ltd. transferred to Alstom S.A. its one-half interest in ABB Alstom Power N.V. Alstom Power N.V. then became the new name for the joint venture previously known as ABB Alstom Power NV. In the Alstom Annual Report 1999/2000 the former joint venture is described as “a joint company” in which Alstom became “the sole owner of the power company” nine months later, in March 2000. Significantly to this Court, Alstom did not describe what it now wholly owned, Alstom Power N.V., as a group of separate corporate entities or anything else other than a single, large, and world-market-dominating enterprise.

Alstom Power N.V. and the joint venture corporation which previously was called ABB Alstom Power N.V. are referred to collectively in the second amended complaint as “Alstom Europe.” This Court chooses not to do so here.

The defendant Black & Veatch Construction, Inc. (“Black & Veatch”) is a Missouri corporation with its usual place of business in Kansas City, Missouri.

The defendant Black & Veatch and ABB /Alstom US are referred to collectively in the second amended complaint, and will be here, as “the Consortium.”

Jurisdiction and Venue

The second amended complaint asserts jurisdiction over all defendants pursuant to G.L.c. 223A, Sec. 3, and asserts that venue is proper pursuant to G.L.c. 223, Sec. 8.

Electric Industry Restructuring

In 1998, consistent with other New England states, Connecticut enacted legislation providing for the restructuring of the electric industry. The purpose of the legislation was to encourage and allow for a sufficient number of in-state power generating facilities to ensure a reliable supply of electric power and the development of a competitive electrical market for the benefit of the area. This restructuring legislation ushered in a new competitive marketplace for power generation. It provided non-utility power producers with an immediate incentive to construct power plants in the region.

The Meriden Project

By the Spring of 1998, Meriden Power was formed and, among other projects, was in the process of developing a 544 MW electric generating facility to be located on a 36-acre parcel in Meriden, Connecticut (the “Meriden Project”).

Between April 1998 and July 1998, the Consortium of ABB/Alstom US and Black & Veatch provided extensive technical assistance to Meriden Power in connection with the Meriden Project. Through their participation in the permitting work, the Consortium knew that the Meriden Project was scheduled to achieve commercial operation as early as June 2001.

After negotiations during June and July 1998, it is alleged in the second amended complaint that the Consortium and Meriden Power “signed an agreement for the Meriden Project in Boston, Massachusetts on July 22, 1998 (the ‘Meriden Contract’), by which the Consortium agreed to design and build the Meriden Project for Meriden Power at the turnkey price of $217 million (which included two ABB GT-24 turbines), plus site-specific costs and escalation.”7

The second amended complaint does not indicate the source of the two “ABB GT-24 turbines.” Attached as Exhibit E to the Affidavit of Debra K. Mayfield, however, is “a true and correct copy of portions of Appendix 7 of the Combined Cycle Power Plant Engineer, Procure and Construct Contract for the Milford Project, Draft 2, dated June 18, 1998.” The attached document bears the heading “GT 24 Single Shaft Technical Book.” In Section 2.1 of the Technical Book is what purports to be “a general outline of the material equipment and services to be furnished by ABB.” The particular “ABB” referred to is the ABB/Alstom US that was part of the Consortium.

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Related

PDC-El Paso Meriden, LLC v. Alstom Power, Inc.
18 Mass. L. Rptr. 14 (Massachusetts Superior Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Mass. L. Rptr. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pdc-el-paso-meriden-llc-v-alstom-power-inc-masssuperct-2002.