Skyview Finance Company, LLC v. Kearsarge Trading, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 18, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-11666
StatusUnknown

This text of Skyview Finance Company, LLC v. Kearsarge Trading, LLC (Skyview Finance Company, LLC v. Kearsarge Trading, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skyview Finance Company, LLC v. Kearsarge Trading, LLC, (D. Mass. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS ___________________________________ ) SKYVIEW FINANCE CO., LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Civil Action v. ) No. 20-cv-11666-PBS ) KEARSARGE TRADING, LLC, ) ) Defendant. ) ) ______________________________ )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER July 18, 2022 Saris, D.J. INTRODUCTION This case involves the termination of contracts between Plaintiff Skyview Finance Company, LLC (“Skyview”) and Defendant Kearsarge Trading, LLC (“Kearsarge”) for the purchase and sale of Solar Renewable Energy Credits (“SRECs”). Skyview brings this action for breach of contract (Count I) and violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A (Count III).1 Kearsarge moves for summary judgment on the Chapter 93A claim, arguing Chapter 93A does not apply to breach of contract actions except in narrow circumstances (like the presence of an ulterior motive) not present in this case.

1 This Court dismissed Count II (unjust enrichment). See Dkt. 44. After hearing, for the reasons below, the Court ALLOWS Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Dkt. 64). FACTUAL BACKGROUND I. The Three Contracts

Kearsarge and Skyview are traders of SRECs, environmental commodities traded on the open market, subject to fluctuations in price. Between January and March of 2018, the parties entered into three contracts under which Kearsarge agreed to sell Skyview SRECs at a future time at a fixed unit price of $307.50 for 2020 SRECs and $300 for 2021 SRECs, a $2,138,000 total purchase. A fourth contract, not at issue in this case, was agreed to in March 2018 with a purchase price of $620,000. The three contracts contain identical language, other than the prices, quantities, and dates. They each contained a limitation of liability clause. See, e.g., Dkt. 93-1 § 6.3. Section 4.5

entitled either party to request prompt delivery of the “most recently available annual report containing audited consolidated financial statements.” Id. § 4.5 (emphasis added). Section 6.4 provided: Should either Party have reasonable grounds to believe that the creditworthiness of the other Party has become unsatisfactory or the ability of the other Party to perform its obligations under this Agreement has become impaired, then the dissatisfied Party (the “Requesting Party”) may demand that the other Party (the “Posting Party”) provide assurance of its ability to perform its obligations hereunder in an amount determined by the Requesting Party in its commercially reasonable discretion.

Id. § 6.4. II. Negotiations for a Fifth Contract In June 2018, the parties negotiated for a fifth contract with a total purchase price of $1,067,500. When Skyview noted that it “may be reaching [its] credit limit” with Kearsarge and asked how to solve this, Kearsarge responded, “We are not looking to do any more hedging. We have a good exposure with you so we are set.” Dkt. 66-6 at 2–3. In back-and-forth emails, Kearsarge reiterated that it had “almost 3 million of exposure” with Skyview and so would require a letter of credit (“LC”) or some other collateral from Skyview for any additional contracts. Dkt. 66-7 at 8. There was “[j]ust too much risk.” Id. Kearsarge explained its new CFO felt it was exposed to the risk of needing to find another buyer to resell the SRECs if Skyview was unable to buy them, see Dkt. 66-8 at 2, and so it cancelled the new contract because it was “too exposed.” Dkt. 66-9 at 2. III. Kearsarge Requests “Latest Financials” On June 15, 2020, Kearsarge emailed Skyview, “We have a serious [sic] of 2020 SREC contracts (3 in 2020 and 1 for 2021).

Per the contract section 6.4, Could [sic] you please send us your latest financials?” Dkt. 66-10 at 4. Skyview responded, “Our financials are under review by our auditors and will be ready in the next few weeks.” Dkt. 66-10 at 4. A month later, Skyview sent the “final version” of its financial statements, which were reviewed by auditors, but were not actually audited. Kearsarge

responded, “We will get back to you tomorrow, but we will need a surety or a LC.” Id. at 2. In an internal email, Kearsarge’s CFO expressed numerous concerns based on these financial statements and expressed that he “can keeping digging if we need more points,” but “would definitely ask for collateral (surprise).” Dkt. 93-10 at 1. He also expressed that he “would not rely too much on” the financials because they were not fully audited. Id. On July 29, 2020, Kearsarge reiterated these concerns to Skyview and explained that it would require a surety to be set up within the next two weeks. IV. Kearsarge Communicates an Intent to Terminate On August 3, 2020, Kearsarge emailed Skyview that it was

exercising its termination rights under the contract “effective as of today” because Skyview had failed to deliver an adequate assurance within two business days, as required by § 6.4 of one of the contracts. Dkt. 66-15 at 6. Skyview responded by “reject[ing the] purported termination.” Id. at 5. Skyview argued that Kearsarge’s July 29 email had not met the requirements of a “demand,” that the request for a surety within two weeks was not a demand for something within two days, and that any demand was unreasonable. Id. Skyview asserted that it was credit-worthy and able to pay, particularly because it had paid in full on the fourth contract on July 29, so there was no objective and reasonable basis for the demand. Skyview summarized, “[Y]our pretextual allusions

to Skyview’s diminished ability to pay are absurd. . . . If you simply want to re-trade or get out of the deal to go transact with an investment grade counterparty, we are happy to cash settle these contracts for the current market value, which has increased by approximately $337,000 since we entered into the contracts.” Id. at 6. After some back and forth, on August 7, 2020, Kearsarge sent a default letter to Skyview expressing that the unaudited financial statements were “not satisfactory” or in the form required by § 4.5 of the contracts, and that this alone constituted an event of default under the contracts. Dkt. 66-16 at 3. The letter reiterated Kearsarge’s concerns justifying a demand for adequate assurances,

and because the July 29 email had given a two-week deadline, rather than the contractual two days, Kearsarge provided an August 12 deadline for the delivery of both satisfactory financial statements and a bond or letter of credit, or else Kearsarge would exercise its termination rights. V. Skyview Terminates the Contracts In response to the letter of default, Skyview sent its unaudited “final reviewed financial statements for 2019” and requested, pursuant to § 4.5 of the contracts, Kearsarge’s most recent financial statements. Dkt. 99 at 4. Skyview also asked for Kearsarge’s calculations of its exposure. On August 11, 2020, Kearsarge sent the calculations, but not its own financial

statements, and told Skyview that its deadline to post a letter of credit was 5:00 pm on the 12th. At 4:08 pm on the 12th, Skyview sent Kearsarge a notice of termination asserting that Kearsarge had “made objectively false claims about Kearsarge’s purported ‘insecurity’” with no objective basis. Dkt. 66-18 at 2. It explained that Kearsarge’s demands caused it to become “concerned about [Kearsarge’s] intent to honor” the contracts, particularly “because the market value of SRECs ha[d] increased, and Skyview would suffer monetary damages if Kearsarge were to default under [the] Contracts.” Id. Based on Kearsarge’s failure to provide financial statements or adequate assurances, and its “repeated [] intent to repudiate [the]

Contracts unless [Skyview] accede[d] to [its] demands for collateral posting that have no commercially reasonable basis,” Skyview terminated the contracts, effective immediately. Id.

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Skyview Finance Company, LLC v. Kearsarge Trading, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skyview-finance-company-llc-v-kearsarge-trading-llc-mad-2022.