Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority v. BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 27, 2017
DocketK14C-06-016 JJC
StatusPublished

This text of Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority v. BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC (Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority v. BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority v. BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

SOUTHEASTERN CHESTER : COUNTY REFUSE AUTHORITY : : Plaintiff, : K14C-06-016 JJC : In and For Kent County v. : : BFI WASTE SERVICES OF : PENNSYLVANIA, LLC : : Defendant. : :

Submitted: April 11, 2017 Decided: June 27, 2017

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment - GRANTED in Part and DENIED in Part Defendant’s Cross Motion for Summary Judgment - GRANTED in Part and DENIED in Part

Brian T.N. Jordan, Esquire, Jordan Law, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff.

Joseph C. Schoell, Esquire, Drinker, Biddle & Reath, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for the Defendant.

Clark, J. I. Introduction Before the Court are cross-motions for summary judgment filed by Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority (hereinafter “SECCRA”) and BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC (hereinafter “BFI”). BFI entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement (hereinafter “Purchase Agreement”) with Signature Waste LLC (hereinafter “Signature”) and Signature’s sole member, Brian Lockhart (hereinafter “Mr. Lockhart”). Separately, Signature allegedly owes money to SECCRA for landfill fees (hereinafter “tipping fees”). These tipping fees were an excluded liability in the Purchase Agreement. To ensure BFI did not incur losses for the SECCRA Claim, BFI and Signature, along with Mr. Lockhart, executed a modification agreement, which created “Retained Funds.” BFI accordingly retained $50,000 as security for any losses from SECCRA’s claims for the tipping fees. Upon resolution of the SECCRA claims, the funds were to be reimbursed to Signature and Mr. Lockhart. In this case, BFI and SECCRA dispute entitlement to the $50,000. SECCRA argues that it deserves this $50,000 because Signature and Mr. Lockhart’s assigned their interest in the Retained Funds to SECCRA. Alternatively, SECCRA also argues that it is entitled to the money as a third-party beneficiary to the modification agreement. In contrast, BFI argues that SECCRA has no right to the funds because the assignment was not valid and SECCRA was not a third-party beneficiary to the modification agreement. In the alternative, BFI argues that if SECCRA is entitled to the Retained Funds, the modification agreement permits BFI to offset any losses incurred as a result of the SECCRA claim before it must relinquish the remaining funds. For the reasons set forth below, SECCRA is entitled to the Retained Funds, but BFI is entitled to offset its losses (as defined in the Purchase Agreement) up to the full $50,000.

2 II. Facts and Procedural Background The facts cited herein are as stipulated by the parties and as found in the documents included within the record. In 2011, Signature utilized SECCRA’s landfill for trash disposal services. In exchange for allowing Signature to use its landfill, SECCRA charged Signature tipping fees. Signature allegedly failed to pay for some of these services incurred prior to its sale to BFI. Around June 15, 2011, BFI entered into a Purchase Agreement with Signature and Mr. Lockhart, as Signature’s sole member. The parties closed on the Purchase Agreement on July 29, 2011. In the beginning of August 2011, after the closing, SECCRA notified BFI that it claimed $315,458.14 in tipping fees and finance charges that Signature accumulated for disposal services, prior to the sale, in June and July 2011. However, under the Purchase Agreement, BFI did not assume Signature’s obligation to SECCRA. Within days of the sale, SECCRA sued Signature and Mr. Lockhart for these unpaid tipping fees in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County, Pennsylvania. To ensure that BFI did not incur losses as a result of this SECCRA dispute, BFI, Signature, and Mr. Lockhart entered into a modification of the Purchase Agreement on November 29, 2011. This modification set aside the Retained Funds. Namely, the parties agreed that BFI was entitled to retain $50,000 from the monies due “as security for any Losses that Buyer may incur in connection with the SECCRA Claim . . . .”1 The language in the provision creating the Retained Funds provides that BFI is entitled to retain this money until Signature satisfies certain conditions. 2 The conditions include that Signature must provide a copy of a written settlement agreement executed by Buyer and SECCRA that (a) fixes the amount of disposal fees due from Seller to

1 SECCRA’s Opening Brief Ex. D (November 29, 2011 Modification Agreement). 2 Id.

3 SECCRA in connection with the SECCRA Claim, and (b) includes an express acknowledgement that Buyer will not have any liability to SECCRA in connection with the SECCRA Claim. 3

Once these conditions occur, the modification agreement requires BFI to transfer the money remaining in this fund to Signature, after it offsets its losses (as defined in the Purchase Agreement).4 The Court of Common Pleas for Chester County subsequently entered judgment against Mr. Lockhart for $337,963.70. It also entered judgment in favor of Signature regarding all claims. After its judgment against Mr. Lockhart, SECCRA began garnishment proceedings in its Chester County action against BFI and pursued discovery. As a direct result of those proceedings, BFI incurred $6,637.50 in legal expenses. Then, on March 1, 2014, both Signature and Mr. Lockhart assigned their interests in the Retained Funds to SECCRA. This assignment included all of their “right, title, and interest in and to the balance of the “Holdback Funds” and to any and all claims and causes of action related thereto that they may have against BFI arising under and out of” both the Purchase Agreement and modification agreement. In exchange for this assignment, SECCRA released Signature and Mr. Lockhart “from all claims and demands, rights and causes of action of any kind that SECCRA now has or hereafter may have on account of or in any way growing out of its claim for unpaid tipping fees against the released parties.” 5 The release stated that it included a full and complete settlement of liability and a full and complete satisfaction of the judgment SECCRA obtained against Mr. Lockhart. 6

3 Id. 4 Id. 5 SECCRA’s Response to BFI’s Motion to Dismiss Ex. B (Acceptance of Assignment and Release). 6 Id.

4 However, SECCRA conditioned the release on obtaining the full $50,000 of the Retained Funds from BFI.7 After receiving this assignment, SECCRA sent BFI a copy of the assignment and a proposed settlement agreement between BFI and SECCRA. The proposed settlement agreement sought to relieve BFI from any liability for Signature’s unpaid tipping fees in exchange for the full $50,000 in Retained Funds. SECCRA believed that this agreement would satisfy the conditions found in the Retained Funds provision, and therefore, the agreement would require BFI to relinquish the money in that fund. However, BFI rejected the settlement agreement because it did not permit BFI to offset its losses. Instead, BFI sought to reduce the Retained Funds by $6,637.50, the amount of legal expenses it incurred as a result of SECCRA’s garnishment proceeding and discovery. In response, SECCRA filed this lawsuit seeking to obtain the full $50,000 in Retained Funds.

III. Standard of Review Before the Court are cross-motions for summary judgment. In reviewing a motion for summary judgment, “viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,” the moving party must demonstrate “that there are no material issues of fact still in dispute and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 8 The mere fact that both parties filed motions for summary judgment “does not act per se as a concession that there is an absence of factual issues.”9 However, “where the parties have not presented argument to the court that there is an issue of material fact, the court shall deem the motion to be the

7 Id. 8 Burkhart v.

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Bluebook (online)
Southeastern Chester County Refuse Authority v. BFI Waste Services of Pennsylvania, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeastern-chester-county-refuse-authority-v-bfi-waste-services-of-delsuperct-2017.