UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Private Jet Services Group, LLC, Plaintiff
v. Case No. 20-cv-1015-SM Opinion No. 2023 DNH 003
Tauck, Inc., Defendant
CERTIFICATION ORDER
Pursuant to Rule 34 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of
New Hampshire, the United States District Court for the District
of New Hampshire hereby certifies the following question of New
Hampshire law, which may be determinative of causes pending
before it and as to which there appears to be no controlling
precedent in the decisions of the Supreme Court:
Whether, under New Hampshire’s common law, a Force Majeure clause that protects only one party to a contract should be deemed a relinquishment of the other party’s right to interpose the common law defenses of impossibility, impracticability, or frustration of commercial purpose, on the theory that the clause represents the parties’ implicit allocation of the risks identified in the Force Majeure clause to that other (unprotected) party or, alternatively, whether the common law contract defenses of impossibility, impracticability, or frustration of commercial purpose are so fundamentally related to contract formation and purpose that they remain viable unless expressly waived. Statement of Relevant Facts
The material facts are undisputed and set forth in the
attached order in Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck,
Inc., No. 20-cv-1015, 2022 DNH 123 (Sept. 30, 2022). In short,
the relevant facts are as follows. Private Jet Services Group
(“PJS”) is a New Hampshire-based private aircraft booking agent.
It brings this breach-of-contract action against Tauck, Inc., a
Connecticut-based provider of high-end domestic and
international guided tours. In general, the parties’ contracts
contemplated that PJS would provide, and Tauck would use, a
dedicated aircraft to conduct a minimum of fifty (50) tours of
New Zealand per season. PJS alleges that Tauck breached those
contracts in each of two seasons. Only the circumstances
relating to the 2020 tour season are relevant to the question
posed.
I. The Contracts.
In 2017, Tauck was looking for an aircraft charter agent to
arrange air transportation for the New Zealand portions of its
Australia/New Zealand tours. Tauck and PJS eventually reached
an agreement and, in January of 2018, the parties executed an
“Air Charter Services Blanket Purchase Agreement” (the “BPA”)
(document no. 21-3). That contract established the general
terms under which Tauck would book and pay for air
2 transportation, as well as any charges associated with each such
booking. The contract also included an agreed-upon cancellation
policy.
Attached to the BPA is Exhibit C, which sets out the
“standard terms and conditions” of the parties’ contractual
relationship. One of those provisions – the “Force Majeure”
clause - provides that PJS is not responsible for “delays,
losses or damages of any kind caused, in whole or in part by
Force Majeure, acts of war, terrorism, adverse meteorological
conditions, mechanicals, air traffic control delays or other
unforeseeable circumstances.” Id. at 9.
The BPA also contemplated that before Tauck actually booked
any aircraft through PJS, the parties would execute one or more
“Statements of Work” which would address the details of the
parties’ relationship, payment terms, and scheduling with
respect to particular flight operations. PJS and Tauck executed
the Statement of Work (document no. 21-4) in May of 2018. Among
other things, the Statement of Work provides that “Tauck must
guarantee a minimum of 50 tours per year” and, if it operates
fewer than 50 tours, it must pay to PJS an agreed-upon sum for
each “missed” tour. The Statement of Work also amends the terms
of the Force Majeure clause in the BPA and provides as follows:
3 Force Majeure: The definition of Force Majeure in the Blanket Purchase Agreement 2017-3746 that governs this Statement of Work shall be modified to include Acts of God, events of nature, epidemics, [acts of] civil or military authority, strikes (other than with respect to Supplier) or labor disputes (other than with respect to Supplier), travel advisories of the Department of State of the United States of America, war, warlike activity, acts of terrorism and/or domestic or international violence of any nature either directly affecting the area where this Contract is to be performed or causing disruption of travel to or from the area, or due to adverse market reaction to any of the foregoing events of Force Majeure.
Id. at 3 (emphasis supplied). As an aside, the court notes that
the parties agree that the “Force Majeure” provisions of the
BPA, as amended by the Statement of Work, extend protection
exclusively to PJS should it be unable to perform its
contractual obligations due to one or more force majeure events;
those provisions do not apply to Tauck.
II. The 2020 Tour Season.
In 2020, Tauck’s ability to conduct its tours in New
Zealand was undermined by the global COVID-19 pandemic. From
January 1 through March 19, 2020, Tauck operated, and PJS
arranged air travel for, 23 tours in New Zealand. On March 20,
2020, however, New Zealand closed its borders to foreign
travelers through (and beyond) the remainder of that year. At
that point, Tauck was not permitted to operate any of its
4 remaining 2020 tours in New Zealand and all were cancelled. In
total, Tauck says it refunded nearly $5 million to customers for
those cancelled trips.
Given those circumstances, PJS and Tauck attempted, but
were unable, to resolve their differences with respect to their
relative obligations under the contracts. Nor were they able to
amend the contracts to each party’s satisfaction. On May 28,
2020, Tauck invoked the “Adverse Economic Conditions” provision
contained in the Statement of Work and cancelled the parties’
contracts in their entirety.
Under the terms of the Statement of Work, the contracts
between the parties would then terminate at the end of the 2020
tour season and, absent legal excuse, Tauck remained obligated
to pay PJS “for all flights flown” as well as all other
obligations for which “Tauck is otherwise committed to by this
Agreement.” Statement of Work, Section 6, at 3. That, says
PJS, means Tauck still must honor (and pay for) its guarantee of
a minimum of 50 tours for the 2020 season. Because Tauck
operated only 23 tours in 2020, PJS says it is entitled to
payment for the remaining 27 tours it was promised,
notwithstanding Tauck’s inability to actually operate those
tours due to New Zealand’s border closure.
5 The contract terms are weighted in favor of PJS. According
to PJS, that was both intentional and understood by the parties,
because PJS was making a significant up-front expenditure to
secure the necessary dedicated aircraft, and it needed to be
assured that it would have a guaranteed stream of income from
Tauck to cover those sunken costs. Consequently, PJS sees the
annual 50 tour minimum as, in essence, a guaranteed annual
minimum payment without which, PJS says, it would not have
entered into the contracts with Tauck.
Tauck concedes that it may not seek to escape its
contractual liability by invoking the contracts’ Force Majeure
provisions. Nevertheless, it contends that neither it nor PJS
ever contemplated the scope and duration of the pandemic’s
economic impact. Nor, more specifically, did either party
imagine that New Zealand might close its borders to all non-
citizens – a first in the country’s history. So, because the
events in question were unanticipated by the parties, and
because nothing in the parties’ contracts prevents it from
invoking common law contract defenses, Tauck says it may
properly invoke the doctrines of impossibility and frustration
of purpose to excuse performance of its obligations under the
2020 contract, including the requirement that it conduct a
minimum of 50 tours.
6 There is no New Hampshire decision directly on point. What
seems unresolved under New Hampshire common law is whether, by
agreeing to the Force Majeure clause as written, Tauck waived
its otherwise available contract defenses. That is to say, it
is not clear under New Hampshire common law whether a force
majeure clause protecting just one of the parties necessarily
(albeit by implication) allocates the risks of such force
majeure events to the other party, thereby depriving that party
of otherwise-available common law defenses, like impossibility
of performance and frustration of purpose.
As noted above, the Force Majeure clause, as specifically
worded, protects only PJS from liability should a referenced
event occur. That clause does not protect Tauck, but neither
does it expressly deprive Tauck of recognized common law
defenses like impossibility of performance or frustration of
purpose. The clause may, under New Hampshire law, implicitly
operate to deprive Tauck of those defenses, but no clear
statement on that point can be found. A critical question then
arises under New Hampshire’s common law:
[W]hether a force majeure clause should be deemed a relinquishment of a party’s right to argue impracticability or frustration, on the theory that such a clause represents the integrated expression of the parties’ desires with respect to excuses based on supervening events; or whether such a clause either in
7 general or as specifically worded in this case covers any different ground from the defenses of impossibility or frustration of purpose.
N. Indiana Pub. Serv. Co. v. Carbon County Coal Co., 799 F.2d
265, 277 (7th Cir. 1986) (Posner, J.) (cleaned up). That is,
impossibility and frustration of purpose defenses may remain
available contract defenses unless the contract documents
explicitly provide otherwise.
Whether the common law defenses of impossibility and/or
frustration of purpose remain available to Tauck under the
circumstances presented in this case is a dispositive question
of New Hampshire law, with regard to which the Supreme Court of
New Hampshire must be accorded deference by this Court.
Accordingly, the Justices of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire
are respectfully requested to settle this fundamental and
dispositive legal question according to New Hampshire law.
SO ORDERED.
____________________________ Steven J. McAuliffe United States District Judge
January 9, 2023
8 cc: Steven M. Gordon, Esq. Olivia F. Bensinger, Esq. Timothy J. McLaughlin, Esq. James J. Armillay, Jr., Esq. Jeffrey Ment, Esq. Michael F. Merra, Esq.
Attachment: Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck, Inc., 2022 WL 4613027, 2022 DNH 123 (Sept. 30, 2022)
9 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
v. Case No. 20-cv-1015-SM Opinion No. 2022 DNH 123
Tauck, Inc., Defendants
O R D E R
Private Jet Services Group (“PJS”) is a New Hampshire-based
private aircraft booking agent. It brings this breach-of-
contract action against Tauck, Inc., a Connecticut-based
provider of high-end domestic and international guided tours.
In general, the parties’ contracts contemplated that PJS would
arrange for, and Tauck would use, a dedicated aircraft to
conduct a minimum of fifty (50) tours of New Zealand per season.
PJS alleges that Tauck breached those contracts in each of two
seasons. First, during the 2019 tour season, PJS says Tauck
employed its services for only 48 tours – two fewer than the
parties’ agreed-upon minimum. Next, PJS says Tauck breached the
parties’ agreements during the 2020 tour season by using PJS’s
services for only 23 tours – 27 fewer that the 50 tour seasonal
minimum. PJS claims that it is owed roughly $265,000 in damages
10 for the 2019 tour season and nearly $1.7 million in damages for
the 2020 season.
Tauck denies that it breached either of the parties’
contracts and says that it is excused from performing under
those contracts, either because PJS breached first, or because
its performance was rendered impossible by external events.
With respect to the 2019 season, Tauck blames PJS for having
failed to provide the agreed-upon aircraft for the first eight
tours, and says that failure amounts to a material breach. With
respect to the 2020 season, Tauck says the global COVID-19
pandemic and New Zealand’s related executive decision to close
its borders to all foreign travelers precluded contract
performance.
The contracts are governed by, and must be interpreted in
accordance with, New Hampshire law. Additionally, the parties
seem to agree that at least with respect to Count Two (relating
to the 2020 tour season), there are no genuinely disputed
material facts, and that claim can be resolved as a matter of
law. Each party has moved for summary judgment – PJS solely on
Count Two of the complaint; Tauck on both counts. For the
reasons discussed, those motions are denied, albeit without
prejudice.
11 Background
arrange air transportation for the New Zealand portions of its
Australia/New Zealand tours. Tauck and PJS eventually reached
an agreement and, in January of 2018, the parties executed an
“Air Charter Services Blanket Purchase Agreement” (the “BPA”)
terms under which Tauck would book, and pay, for air
transportation, as well as any charges associated with each such
booking. The contract also included an agreed-upon cancellation
policy. The BPA makes plain that “PJS does not own or operate
aircraft.” Id. at para. 12. Instead, PJS “acts as agent for
its clients in negotiating and facilitating transportation with
licensed air carriers.” Id. (The court makes note of this
because the parties engage in a fairly lengthy debate over
whether PJS purchased or merely invested in a dedicated aircraft
for Tauck’s exclusive use in New Zealand.)
clause - provides that, “PJS is not responsible” for delays,
12 Force Majeure, acts of war, terrorism, adverse meteorological
unforeseeable circumstances. Id. at 9. Because the parties
recognized that weather, staffing, or mechanical issues might
lead to occasions on which PJS would be unable to arrange for
the dedicated aircraft at the appropriate tour location or at
the time Tauck needed it, the BPA also includes a section
entitled “Contingency Management & Interruption.” In that
section PJS declares that it is its “policy” to “have a minimum
of two contingency plans in place for every flight.” But “PJS
may arrange for alternative transportation only with the express
written authorization from [Tauck].” See BPA, Section 20.
any aircraft through PJS, the parties would execute one or more
respect to particular flight operations. PJS and Tauck executed
the Statement of Work (document no. 21-4) in May of 2018. Its
term ran from January 13, 2019, through January 14, 2023, and
applied to “2019-2022 Tauck Australia-New Zealand Grand Tour (NZ
portion only) and 2019-2022 Tauck New Zealand Spotlight Tour.”
Id. at 1. The Statement of Work describes three different
routes for which PJS would provide air transportation, all of
13 which were within New Zealand: Wellington to Blenheim; Blenheim
to Manapouri; and Queenstown to Auckland. It also obligated PJS
to provide Tauck with a dedicated Embraer 145 LR Regional Jet
with 44 passenger seats for use in Tauck’s New Zealand tours.
Id.
For purposes of this litigation, three provisions of the
Statement of Work are relevant:
Contract Minimums (Guarantee): Tauck must guarantee a minimum of 50 tours per year. In the event of a shortfall in the number of tours operated in any Season, Tauck will pay to Supplier the 5O tour minimum price for the applicable Season as set forth on Table 1 of this Agreement. By way of example, if Tauck operates 48 tours in the 2020 Season, Tauck will owe Supplier an additional payment of $125,866 (50 tour minimum less 48 tours operated = 2 tour penalty x USD $62,933 per tour = USD $125,866).
Force Majeure: PJS is not responsible for delays, losses or damages of any kind caused in whole or in part by Force Majeure, acts of war, terrorism, adverse meteorological conditions, air traffic control delays or other unforeseen circumstances.
* * *
The definition of Force Majeure in the Blank Purchase Agreement 2017-3746 that governs this Statement of Work shall be modified to include Acts of God, events of nature, epidemics, [acts of] civil or military authority, strikes (other than with respect to Supplier) or labor disputes (other than with respect to Supplier), travel advisories of the Department of State of the United States of America, war, warlike activity, acts of terrorism and/or domestic or international violence of any nature either directly affecting the area where this Contract is to be
14 performed or causing disruption of travel to or from the area, or due to adverse market reaction to any of the foregoing events of Force Majeure.
Adverse Economic Conditions: In the event that:
a. During the Term, if the Dow Jones Industrial Index as published daily by the Wall Street Journal sustains a 30% decrease within a period not to exceed 75 calendar days (a “Market Correction”); and
b. That either Party exercises its rights in this Section 6 by providing the other party with written notice within 14 days of such Market Correction;
c. Then the Agreement will automatically terminate at the later of (i) the end of the current Season and (ii) 180 calendar days from the date that written notice is received by the receiving party.
Nothing contained In this Agreement shall be construed as to relieve Tauck from its obligation to pay Supplier for all flights flown or which Tauck is otherwise committed to by this Agreement.
Id. at 3, 5 (emphasis supplied). As an aside, the court notes
that the parties agree that the “Force Majeure” provisions of
the BPA, as amended by the Statement of Work, extend protection
from Force Majeure events only to PJS; they do not apply to
Tauck.
Additionally, the BPA contains an acceleration clause which
provides that: “Upon written notice of cancellation, all flights
not yet flown will be cancelled, and PJS will immediately be due
15 any outstanding charges pursuant to this Agreement, including
all applicable cancellation fees as set forth within this
Agreement, and all other outstanding charges to flights already
flown, but not yet paid by Customer.” Id. at 1.
II. The 2019 Tour Season.
In the spring of 2018, Tauck provided PJS with its
anticipated 2019 schedule of New Zealand tours. The schedule
was ambitious. Tauck would operate 72 tours (22 more than the
minimum required), beginning on January 13, 2019. A few months
later, however, PJS informed Tauck that it was having difficulty
securing an Air Operator Certificate for the Embraer aircraft.
The parties agreed to replace that aircraft with an ATR-72
Turboprop. On December 11, 2018, PJS notified Tauck that the
required final audit (clearance) of the ATR-72 was scheduled for
January 11, just a few days before the start of Tauck’s 2019
tour season. Then, on January 3, 2019, PJS informed Tauck that
the ATR-72 aircraft had been damaged and was not expected to be
in service until at least the third week in January. As it
turned out, the aircraft audit was not completed until February
6, 2019, and inspectors did not approve the aircraft for flight
until February 7, 2019, approximately three weeks after the date
on which PJS was obligated to arrange the first scheduled flight
for Tauck.
16 Because of the mechanical issues with the ATR-72, it was
unavailable for eight of the tours operated in January.
Accordingly, Tauck availed itself of its rights under the BPA
and elected to contract with a different air carrier (Alliance
Air) to provide air transportation for those tours. It appears
that Air Alliance had provided air transportation services to
Tauck previously and Tauck simply continued (or re-established)
its relationship with Alliance into January of 2019. For its
part, PJS agreed to refund the monies Tauck already paid for
those eight tours. PJS insists, however, that those flights do
not count toward Tauck's contractual obligation to operate a
minimum of 50 tours with PJS.
Tauck notes that, “Despite PJS inability to perform, Tauck
still conducted a total of 55-57 tours during the 2019 tour
season: 48 tours with PJS, and 7-9 with Alliance Air.”
Defendant’s Memorandum in Support of Summary Judgment (document
no. 22-1) at 6-7. Thus, says Tauck, it would have met the 50
tour minimum with PJS but for PJS’s own failure to perform under
the contract by neglecting to provide the ATR-72 Turboprop for
use during those eight tours in January. According to Tauck,
PJS “breached” the parties’ agreement with respect to those
eight tours by failing to provide the specified ATR-72 Turboprop
17 in a timely manner, and Tauck cannot possibly be held liable for
any of PJS’s alleged damages arising from that failure.
PJS has a different perspective, saying that the contracts
“required” it to have a “minimum of two contingency plans in
place for every flight to quickly recover from a mechanical”
delay, which it had in place. See BPA at Section 20. Moreover,
says PJS, consistent with that obligation, it offered to “sub-
service” the January flights, either through Air Chathams or Air
New Zealand. See Deposition of Greg Raiff, Chief Executive
Officer of Private Jets Services (document no. 23-2) at 63, 66-
67. Thus, it argues, it was never in breach of the parties’
contracts. And, although Tauck decided to exercise its
contractual option to decline the alternate flight arrangements
offered by PJS and, instead, use a different air carrier while
the ATR-72 Turboprop was unavailable, PJS asserts that Tauck
remained obligated to meet the annual 50 tour minimum. Because
Tauck operated only 48 tours with PJS that season, PJS asserts
it is still entitled to payment for the two “un-booked” tours.
III. The 2020 Tour Season.
18 arranged air travel for, 23 tours in New Zealand. On March 20,
travelers through (and beyond) the remainder of that year. At
that point, Tauck was not able to operate any of its remaining
2020 tours in New Zealand and all were cancelled. Tauck
refunded pre-payments that its customers had made. In total,
Tauck says it “refunded $4,925,000 to customers for trips to New
Zealand.” Affidavit of Philip Crosby, Tauck’s Chief Financial
Officer/Treasurer (document no. 24-7) at para. 24.
Given those circumstances, PJS and Tauck attempted but were
unable to resolve their differences with respect to their
relative obligations under the contracts, nor were they able to
2020, Tauck invoked the “Adverse Economic Conditions” provision
contained in the Statement of Work and cancelled the parties’
contracts in their entirety:
Please be advised that a Market Correction has occurred and that Tauck hereby exercises its rights under Section 6 of the SOW to terminate the Agreement (including the Blanket Purchase Agreement and the SOW). This letter constitutes written notice of termination given pursuant to Section 6.b of the SOW.
Letter from Tauck to PJS dated May 28, 2020 (document no. 21-
32). Under the terms of the Statement of Work and, in
19 particular, the Adverse Economic Conditions provision, the
contracts between the parties would terminate at “the end of the
[2020] season” and, absent legal excuse, Tauck remained
obligated to pay PJS “for all flights flown” as well as all
other obligations for which “Tauck is otherwise committed to by
this Agreement.” Statement of Work, Section 6, at 3. That,
says PJS, means Tauck still must honor (and pay for) its
guarantee of a minimum of 50 tours for the 2020 season –
tours. Because Tauck operated only 23 tours in 2020, PJS says
it is entitled to payment for the remaining 27 tours it was
promised.
The contract terms appear to be weighted in favor of PJS.
According to PJS, that was both intentional and understood by
the parties, because PJS was making a significant up-front
expenditure to secure the necessary dedicated aircraft, and it
needed to be assured that it would have a guaranteed stream of
income from Tauck to cover those sunk costs. As discussed more
fully below, PJS sees the annual 50 tour minimum as, in essence,
a guaranteed annual minimum payment without which, PJS says, it
would not have entered into the contracts with Tauck.
20 Tauck concedes that it may not seek to escape its
contractual liability by invoking the contracts’ Force Majeure
provisions. See, e.g., Defendant’s Memorandum in Opposition
(document no. 24-1) at 16 (“PJS and Tauck included Force Majeure
language that protected both PJS and its air carrier . . . There
is no disagreement that there is no similar language in either
the BPA or the SOW protecting Tauck.”). Nevertheless, it
contends that neither it nor PJS ever contemplated the scope and
duration of the pandemic’s economic impact. Nor, more
specifically, did either party imagine that New Zealand might
close its borders to all non-citizens – a first in the country’s
history. Consequently, says Tauck, it may properly invoke the
common law contract doctrines of impossibility and frustration
of purpose to excuse performance of its obligations under the
2020 contract, including meeting the 50-tour minimum commitment.
Discussion
I. The 2019 Tour Season.
As noted above, Tauck (but not PJS), moves for summary
judgment on Count One of the complaint. In support that motion,
Tauck asserts that PJS’s inability to provide the ATR-72
Turboprop for the first eight trips of the 2019 tour season
amounts to a material breach of the parties’ contracts.
21 PJS breached the terms of the SOW by failing to have the aircraft ready by January 13, 2019 as required by the SOW. PJS’s breach forced Tauck to seek out another air carrier (Air Alliance) for the January 2019 tours. . . . PJS’s claim under Count I is essentially an attempt to foist upon Tauck a penalty for PJS’s own breach of the SOW. Here, PJS should not be permitted to allege that Tauck breached the contract when PJS itself was the cause of Tauck operating only 48 tours with PJS in the 2019 season.
Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (document no. 22) at 2.
Because PJS breached the Statement of Work, Tauck argues, it
cannot now seek damages for Tauck’s alleged breach.
PJS counters that its conduct did not amount to a breach of
contract and, even if it did, Tauck waived that breach by
failing to invoke the remedy provisions of those contracts in a
timely manner.
PJS does not dispute that it was unable to obtain authorization to fly the dedicated aircraft until after the first nine tours of 2019. However, the delay in receiving authorization does not constitute a material breach for two reasons. First, PJS offered to subservice the flights pursuant to Section 20 of the BPA. Second, Tauck waived the terms of Section Two and Three of the SOW — which appear to be the terms it is alleging PJS breached — by not invoking the remedies provided in those provisions.
Plaintiff’s Opposition Memorandum (document no. 23) at 15).
22 Turning to PJS’s first argument – that it did not breach
the parties’ agreements – the relevant section of the BPA
provides as follows:
Contingency Management & Interruption. PJS’ policy is always to have a minimum of two contingency plans in place for every flight to quickly recover from a mechanical, weather, or other Force Majeure. . . . When unforeseen interruptions occur, PJS’s dedicated client service team will work with Customer to analyze all contingency options available, and if necessary, to reposition the closest suitable aircraft. PJS may arrange for alternative transportation only with the express written authorization from Customer. If the aircraft is unable to complete any portion of the Itinerary due to adverse weather, operational, or mechanical reasons, Customer shall be notified immediately and PJS shall credit to Customer all proposed charges with respect to the canceled charter flight legs. Flights operated on a delayed or subcontracted basis will not be credited.
BPA, Section 20 (emphasis supplied). In short, then, if the
ATR-72 Turboprop was not available due to weather, operational,
or (as in this case) mechanical reasons, PJS represented that
its “policy” was to “work with [Tauck] to analyze all
contingency options available (including two plans it would have
in place),” but would only arrange alternate transportation
“with the express written authorization” of Tauck. “If the
aircraft is unable to complete any portion of the itinerary, PJS
shall credit [Tauck] all proposed charges with respect to the
cancelled charter flight legs.”
23 For its part, Tauck could either accept alternate
transportation proposed by PJS (and pay PJS as usual), or it
could secure its own transportation (and receive a credit from
PJS for the charges associated with the cancelled PJS flight).
PJS says it complied with the “requirements” of Section 20 by
offering Tauck an option to use a similar aircraft from either
Air Chathams or Air New Zealand. As was its apparent
contractual right, however, Tauck declined those offers and
chose, instead, to arrange flights through a different air
carrier: Air Alliance.
The parties plainly anticipated that there might be
occasions on which the ATR-72 Turboprop would not be available
and PJS would endeavor to offer options or “alternative
transportation” for Tauck’s consideration. PJS appears to have
followed its policy under Section 20 of the BPA by having two
contingency plans and offering to arrange alternative
transportation. But it does not follow either that Tauck failed
to “operate a tour” with respect to those occasions on which PJS
could not deliver the ATR-72, or that PJS is entitled to be paid
24 with respect to those operated tours for which it could not
provide the ATR-72. 1
Tauck’s argument in support of summary judgment on count
one is vague and undeveloped, providing little more than the
claim that PJS materially breached because the aircraft was not
ready on January 13, 2009, as required by the first paragraph of
the Statement of Work (“Term: January 13, 2019 – January 14,
2023”). An argument could be made – though Tauck does not make
it – that PJS breached the “Dispatch Reliability” provision of
the Statement of Work. See Id. at Section 2. But, anticipating
such an argument, PJS asserts that Tauck never timely invoked
the remedy provisions of that section and, therefore, waived any
claim that PJS breached. In response, Tauck has remained
silent.
The court is unwilling to resolve Tauck’s motion on grounds
not addressed by Tauck. See, e.g., Pollack v. Goodwin & Assocs.
1 As noted above, the Statement of Work provides that, “Tauck must guarantee a minimum of 50 tours per year. In the event of a shortfall in the number of tours operated in any Season, Tauck will pay to Supplier the 5O tour minimum price.” One unresolved question is whether that obligates Tauck to simply operate 50 “Tauck tours” (regardless of the air carrier involved, if the ATR-72 is unavailable) or whether it obligates Tauck to operate a total of 50 tours with the ATR-72 or PJS’s “alternate” services.
25 Hosp. Servs., LLC, No. 20-CV-825-SM, 2021 WL 3773408, at *5
(D.N.H. Aug. 25, 2021) (“It is not enough merely to mention a
possible argument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to
do counsel’s work, create the [framework] for the argument, and
put flesh on its bones. A litigant has an obligation to spell
out its arguments squarely and distinctly, or else forever hold
its peace. While it is conceivable that viable arguments might
support the [defendant’s] position — the court offers no opinion
on that point — at this juncture, [defendants] have failed to
develop arguments concerning most of [plaintiff’s claims].”)
(citations and internal punctuation omitted). See generally
Int’l Tape Co. v. Technicote, Inc., 2000 WL 33667076 at *3
(D.N.H. April 21, 2000) (discussing why courts should be
reluctant to embrace legal arguments that have not been
presented by the parties). See also Coons v. Indus. Knife Co.,
620 F.3d 38, 44 (1st Cir. 2010).
At this juncture, Tauck has not carried its burden to
establish either that no material facts are genuinely disputed,
or that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. At first
blush it might seem evident that PJS is not entitled to payment
for cancelled flights due to its own inability to provide the
reserved aircraft for that flight. But the decisive question
might be phrased somewhat differently: e.g., did Tauck obligate
26 itself to pay PJS for 50 tours, even if PJS could not provide
the reserved aircraft with respect to some number, or even all,
of those 50 tours, if Tauck decided to reject alternatives
offered by PJS and instead arrange its own air transport? And,
it might be argued that under these contracts Tauck contracted
to operate a minimum of 50 tours during the season using PJS,
but “operate” refers to extending to PJS the opportunity to
provide transportation for a particular tour according to the
contract terms. That is, once PJS is presented with the
opportunity, that tour “counts” toward the minimum, even if PJS
cannot perform and Tauck elects to use alternative carriers.
The parties do not adequately engage on these potentially
dispositive issues (which may involve genuinely disputed
material facts) and the record is not sufficiently developed to
permit summary judgment. See e.g. Foundation for Seacoast
Health v. HCA Health Servs. of New Hampshire, Inc., 157 N.H.
487, 501 (2008), citing N.A.P.P. Realty Trust v. CC Enterprises,
147 N.H. 137, 139 (2001) (“The language of a contract is
ambiguous if the parties to the contract could reasonably
disagree as to the meaning of that language.”). The court must,
then, necessarily deny Tauck’s motion for summary judgment on
Count One of the complaint.
27 II. The 2020 Tour Season.
Despite the closure of New Zealand’s border, one might
speculate that it was not “impossible” for Tauck to have
conducted tours within New Zealand in 2020 – albeit tours that
would have been available only to citizens of New Zealand and/or
non-citizens who were already in the country when the borders
were closed. In other words, while Tauck plainly could not
operate its tours as contemplated after the border closure, it
is not entirely clear that Tauck’s ability to conduct any tours
was rendered impossible or unlawful by the pandemic-related
border closure. See e.g. Bower v. Davis & Symonds Lumber Co.,
119 N.H. 605, 609 (1979) (“The impossibility doctrine requires
that there be complete and permanent impossibility.”) See
generally 14 Corbin on Contracts § 74.1 (2021).
In any event, on this record, Tauck’s stronger argument is
that it is excused from performance under the common law
doctrine of “frustration of purpose” or “commercial
frustration.” The New Hampshire Supreme Court has described the
doctrine as follows:
The doctrine of commercial frustration assumes the possibility of literal performance but excuses performance because supervening events have essentially destroyed the purpose for which the contract was made. Under the doctrine, a contract is to be considered subject to the implied condition that
28 the parties shall be excused in case, before breach, the state of things constituting the fundamental basis of the contract ceases to exist without default of either of the parties.
Gen. Linen Servs., Inc. v. Smirnioudis, 153 N.H. 441, 443 (2006)
(citations and internal punctuation omitted) (emphasis
supplied). See also Perry v. Champlain Oil Co., 101 N.H. 97,
98–99 (1957) (“Where the assumed possibility of a desired object
or effect to be attained by either party to a contract forms the
basis on which both parties enter into it, and this object or
effect is or shortly will be frustrated, a promisor who is
without fault in causing the frustration, and who is harmed
thereby, is discharged from the duty of performing his promise
unless a contrary intention appears.”) (quoting Restatement of
Contracts, § 288).
Generally speaking, then, the common law doctrine of
commercial frustration provides that a party is entitled to
relief from its contractual obligations when:
(1) the principal purpose in contracting has been substantially frustrated,
(2) the frustration was caused by a supervening event that was not in fact contemplated by the parties, and
(3) the risk of the event occurring was not allocated by contract or otherwise.
29 14 Corbin on Contracts § 77.3 (emphasis supplied).
A. The Contracts’ Principal Purpose.
In arguing that Tauck cannot invoke the doctrine of
commercial frustration to avoid its contractual obligations, PJS
focuses not on the overarching purpose of the contracts as a
whole, but rather on the narrower purpose of the “contract
minimum” provision set forth in section 10 of the Statement of
Work. Accordingly, PJS argues that:
[T]he purpose of the Contract Minimum provision of the Agreement has not been frustrated by COVID-19. The purpose of that provision was to provide a safety net for PJS in its purchase of the dedicated aircraft. COVID-19 has not altered the purpose of that provision. If anything, COVID-19, coupled with Tauck’s refusal to pay, has provided a greater need for that safety net.
Plaintiff’s Opposition Memorandum (document no. 23) at 23
(emphasis supplied). But, the proper focus is not on the
intended purpose of individual provisions of the contracts.
Rather, it is on the “purpose” of the contracts viewed as a
whole.
Viewed in their entirety, the contracts’ overarching
purpose is plain: PJS was to arrange air transportation services
for two of Tauck’s identified seasonal tours of New Zealand.
30 So, for example, the Statement of Work required PJS to provide a
dedicated, 44-seat Embraer 145 LR Regional Jet (later amended to
an ATR-72 Turboprop) for use in Tauck’s “Australia-New Zealand
Tour” and its “New Zealand Spotlight Tour.” Statement of Work
at 1 (emphasis supplied). It also obligated PJS to provide a
“level of service and quality consistent with the expectations
of Tauck and Tauck’s guests” and imposed on PJS the obligation
to take immediate corrective action to resolve any identified
shortcomings. Statement of Work at Section 3 (emphasis
supplied). The Statement of Work also acknowledges that “this
Aircraft, Crew, and all personnel will be dedicated to, and
specifically configured and wrapped for Tauck.” Id. at Section
7. See also Id. at Section 10 (obligating PJS to provide an
aircraft with a Tauck “full wrap aircraft decal,” aircraft
interior designed to Tauck’s specifications; “two dedicated tour
concierge and one Program Manager positioned in New Zealand”;
and in-flight catered meals for Tauck’s customers); Plaintiff’s
Opposition Memorandum (document no. 23) at 23 (acknowledging
that the overarching “purpose of the Agreement was for PJS to
provide Tauck a dedicated aircraft for its New Zealand tours.”
Id. at 23.
Given the record, the objective manifestation of the
parties’ intent, as expressed in both the BPA and Statement of
31 Work, is unmistakable: PJS was to provide Tauck with a
dedicated, “wrapped” aircraft (and attendant services) for
Tauck’s exclusive use in conducting two specified seasonal tours
within New Zealand. The principal purpose was not, as PJS
suggests, to merely provide Tauck with an aircraft that it could
use as it pleased – say to deliver air cargo. See, e.g.,
Plaintiff’s Opposition Memorandum (document no. 23) at 23.
(“Tauck could have chosen to use the aircraft PJS provided for
whatever purpose it deemed fit.”). And, the contracts’
principal purpose was plainly frustrated when New Zealand closed
its borders and Tauck was no longer permitted to bring its
touring customers into the country. Thus, Tauck has established
the first of three essential elements of the common law doctrine
of commercial frustration. It falters, however, in establishing
the remaining two.
B. Contemplation of the “Supervening Event.”
Pointing to the Force Majeure clause of the BPA (as amended
by the Statement of Work), PJS strenuously argues that the
parties anticipated the “possibility of epidemics or
governmental advisories that could prevent travel.” Plaintiff’s
Memorandum in Support of Summary Judgment (document no. 21-1) at
7. That is correct in the sense that PJS protected itself from
such risks, and Tauck did not. Given the contract language, PJS
32 at least anticipated that an epidemic (or “epidemics”) might
occur in the future, and/or that civil authorities might take
action in a manner that could materially affect its ability to
perform its contractual obligations. That is, that epidemics
and the exercise of civil authority might make it economically
inadvisable or impractical or even impossible to conduct the
contemplated tours of New Zealand. It is also apparent that, in
consultation with each other, the parties negotiated the Force
Majeure terms explicitly. PJS protected itself from risks
associated with epidemics and the exercise of civil authority,
while Tauck did not. Tauck might have protected itself as well
but, for reasons satisfactory to it, it did not. Importantly,
however, it is not unarguably clear as a matter of New Hampshire
law that the COVID-19 pandemic, or closure of the New Zealand
border were “in fact” contemplated by the parties.
C. Was the Risk Allocated by the Contracts?
Here, the terms of the amended Force Majeure clause may
have implicitly (but certainly not explicitly) assigned the risk
of adverse events materially affecting contract performance
related to epidemics, and the exercise of civil authority, to
Tauck. As noted, the language of the clause was actively
negotiated (Tauck even suggesting that PJS include protection
from “epidemic” events). Tauck could have protected itself, in
33 addition to excusing PJS's performance, if Force Majeure events
occurred. What is not clear under New Hampshire law, however,
is whether by agreeing to the Force Majeure clause as written,
Tauck waived its otherwise available contract defenses. That is
to say, it is unclear under New Hampshire common law whether a
Force Majeure clause protecting just one of the parties
necessarily allocates (by implication) the risks of such events
to the other party to the extent of depriving that party of
otherwise-available common law defenses, like impossibility of
performance or frustration of purpose.
The record discloses no obvious reason why Tauck would
assume the risk of the Force Majeure events listed. But, as
Judge Posner noted, “a promisor might want his promise to be
unconditional, not because he thought he had superhuman powers
but because he could insure against the risk of nonperformance
better than the promisee, or obtain a substitute performance
more easily than the promisee.” N. Indiana Pub. Serv. Co. v.
Carbon County Coal Co., 799 F.2d 265, 276 (7th Cir. 1986)
(citing Field Container Corp. v. ICC, 712 F.2d 250, 257 (7th
Cir. 1983) and Holmes, The Common Law 300 (1881)). And, as PJS
argues, Tauck was aware of PJS’s substantial investment risk and
perhaps was motivated to obtain PJS’s services by extending
broad protection to PJS while assuming broad risk itself.
34 Tauck suggests in passing that an “epidemic” does not a
“pandemic” make, so a Force Majeure event in the nature of a
pandemic was not a risk assumed by it, implicitly or otherwise.
But the Force Majeure clause includes a “catchall” phrase
covering “other unforeseen circumstances.” When a catchall
provision is included in a Force Majeure clause it is limited to
“things of the same kind or nature as the particular matter
mentioned.” Tommy Hilfiger Retail, Inc. v. North Conway
Outlets, LLC, 2000 WL 1480450 (D.N.H. February 14, 2000) (citing
URI Cogeneration Partners L.P. v. Bd. of Governors for Higher
Educ., 915 F. Supp. 1267, 1287 (D.R.I. 1996)). A pandemic, in
colloquial expressions, is an epidemic that travels across
multiple countries or continents — spreading over and infecting
large geographic areas. There can be little doubt that the
COVID-19 pandemic, as it threatened New Zealand, was a “thing of
the same kind or nature” as an epidemic, and within the Force
Majeure clause event described as “epidemics.” And, of course,
the exercise of civil authority by the government of New Zealand
in closing the nation's borders falls comfortably within the
event described in the clause following “epidemics”: “[acts of]
civil or military authority.” See e.g. Rudolph v. United
Airlines Holdings, 519 F. Supp. 3d 438 (N.D. Ill. 2021)
(government ordered border closure due to COVID-19 pandemic
falls comfortably within the definition of a Force Majeure event
35 and the event was the proximate cause of air carrier’s inability
to perform contract for transportation).
It seems likely, then, that a bare, conventional analysis
would result in finding Tauck liable to perform, and unable to
invoke the common law excuses of impossibility or frustration.
But the amended Force Majeure clause poses a quirksome
impediment.
worded, protects only PJS from liability should an event occur.
It does not explicitly deprive Tauck of recognized common law
statement on that point can be found in New Hampshire precedent.
A critical question then arises under New Hampshire's common
law:
whether a force majeure clause should be deemed a relinquishment of a party’s right to argue impracticability or frustration, on the theory that such a clause represents the integrated expression of the parties’ desires with respect to excuses based on supervening events; or whether such a clause either in general or as specifically worded in this case covers any different ground from [the defenses of impossibility or frustration of purpose].
36 N. Indiana Pub. Serv. Co., 799 F.2d at 277. That is,
Given the uncertainties in New Hampshire’s common law, the
court cannot rule as a matter of law in favor of either PJS or
Tauck with respect to Count 2.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, PJS’s motion for partial summary
judgment as to Count Two (document no. 21) is denied, albeit
without prejudice. Tauck’s motion for summary judgment on both
Count One and Count Two (document no. 22) is likewise denied,
without prejudice.
The court will schedule a case management hearing in the
coming weeks at which counsel will be afforded the opportunity
to be heard on whether the court should certify the following,
or other, question(s) to the New Hampshire Supreme Court:
Whether, under New Hampshire's common law, the Force Majeure clause as written (protecting only PJS) should be deemed a relinquishment of Tauck’s right to interpose the common law defenses of impossibility, impracticability, or frustration of commercial
37 purpose, on the theory that the clause represents the parties’ implicit allocation of the identified risks to Tauck.
Written memoranda of law are welcome but not required.
____________________________ Steven J. McAuliffe United States District Judge
September 30, 2022
cc: Counsel of Record