Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 9, 2023
Docket1:20-cv-01015
StatusUnknown

This text of Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck, Inc. (Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Private Jet Services Group, LLC v. Tauck, Inc., (D.N.H. 2023).

Opinion

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 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: 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 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. 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.

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