SWE & C Liquidating Trust v. Saudi Arabian Oil Co. (In Re Stone & Webster, Inc.)

373 B.R. 353, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3126, 2007 WL 2493447
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedAugust 31, 2007
Docket19-50123
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 373 B.R. 353 (SWE & C Liquidating Trust v. Saudi Arabian Oil Co. (In Re Stone & Webster, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SWE & C Liquidating Trust v. Saudi Arabian Oil Co. (In Re Stone & Webster, Inc.), 373 B.R. 353, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3126, 2007 WL 2493447 (Del. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

PETER J. WALSH, Bankruptcy Judge.

This opinion is with respect to the motion (Adv. Doc. # 61) of the Shaw Group Inc. (“Shaw”) to intervene (the “Motion”) pursuant to Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in this adversary proceeding (the “Saudi Aramco Proceeding”) between plaintiff SWE & C Liquidating Trust (the “Trust”) and defendant Saudi Arabian Oil Co. (“Saudi Aramco”). For the reasons discussed below, the Motion is denied.

BACKGROUND

I. The In-Kingdom, Contract

The complicated facts of the underlying dispute date back to June 28, 1994. On or about that date, Saudi Aramco entered into a construction contract (the “In-Kingdom Contract”) with Bugshan Stone & Webster Limited (“BS & W”) to upgrade Saudi Aramco’s oil refinery in Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia (the “Ras Tanura Project”). In this adversary proceeding the subject construction contract is variously referred to in the documents and by the parties as either the In-Kingdom Contract or the Ras Tanura Project. The In-Kingdom Contract is attached to the complaint in the Saudi Aramco Proceeding (the “Complaint”) (Adv. Doc. # 1, Ex. A.) and is more accurately identified as a Contract for Construction dated as of June 28, 1994 by and between Saudi Aramco and BS & W (designated by Saudi Aramco as Contract No. 65004/00). BS & W is a joint venture entity formed under the laws of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia by Abdullah Said Bugshan & Brothers (“Bugshan”) and Stone & Webster Engineering Corp. (“SWEC”), a debtor in the related chapter case and a subsidiary of Stone & Webster, Incorporated (“S & W”), another debtor in the related chapter case.

*357 BS & W financed the Ras Tanura Project through a loan of up to $35,000,000 from Saudi American Bank (“SAMBA”) (the “Loan”). To secure the Loan, SWEC and Bugshan agreed to each guaranty 50% of the Loan and BS & W purportedly gave SAMBA a security interest in its receivables from the Ras Tanura Project. SWEC issued its guaranty through a letter dated October 11, 1994 (the “Guaranty”) (Adv. Doc.# 61, Ex. 1, Ex. A), which it updated and reaffirmed in a January 22, 1998 letter. (Id. at Ex. 1, Ex. B.)

Disputes arose over the Res Tanura Project with BS & W claiming that Saudi Arameo had failed to pay it over $100,000,000. BS & W could not repay the Loan and therefore, on December 22,1998, SWEC and Bugshan entered into an agreement (the “Payment Letter”) to each repay half of the $31,800,000 outstanding balance of the Loan at a rate of $650,000 per month. Bugshan made all of its payments, but SWEC did not pay the full amount it agreed to.

II. Asset Purchase Agreement

On June 2, 2000 S & W, together with its subsidiaries including SWEC (collectively, the “Debtors”), filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy in this Court under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. 1 On the date of the petition SWEC owed SAMBA $6,872,979 on the Guaranty.

On July 14, 2000, the Debtors and Shaw entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement (the “APA”) wherein Shaw agreed to purchase substantially all of the Debtors’ assets and assume certain of their liabilities. (Adv. Doc. # 61, Ex. 1, Ex. D.) This Court approved the APA on the same date (Case No. 00-2142, Doc. # 340) and the closing took place shortly thereafter.

Shaw’s purchase was not simply the purchase of assets. Shaw entered into a going concern purchase transaction with the Debtors whereby Shaw acquired a large complex international engineering and construction business and assumed a large and varied block of liabilities. Shaw paid the Debtors $143,400,000 in cash and common stock. The purchased assets included real property, supplies and inventory, the interest of the Debtors in assumed contracts, permits and other governmental approvals, interest in intellectual properties, investments, general intangibles of the business, all corporate office furniture and equipment, data center hardware and equipment, accounts receivable, cash, a cold storage business, security and other deposits, prepaid expenses, retirement plans, interest in a process business, and all proceeds of the foregoing and all other property of the Debtors of every kind, character or description, tangible and intangible, known or unknown, wherever located and whether or not reflected in the financial statements or similar properties described above. Shaw did not acquire all of the Debtors’ assets. Certain assets, identified in the APA as “Excluded Assets,” were not sold to Shaw but were retained by the Debtors. (Adv. Doc. # 61, Ex. D, pp. 15-16.) Shaw assumed a myriad of liabilities, identified as obligations of the Debtors arising out of the performance of the assumed contracts, liabilities under certain mortgage loans, liabilities under the seller’s outstanding bank indebtedness, unpaid accounts payable (except for unpaid accounts payable related to contracts not assumed or excluded assets), billings in excessive cost and revenues recognized with respect to the assumed contracts, accrued liabilities relating to the assumed contracts and hired employees, liabilities for accrued taxes (subject to certain excep *358 tions), bank indebtedness and specified guarantees, and other liabilities related to the assets and the assumed contracts. (Adv. Doc. # 61, Ex. D, pp. 16-17.) According to the APA, those liabilities exceeded $400,000,000. (Adv. Doc. # 61, Ex. D, pp. 3-4.) At the sale hearing the Debtors’ counsel stated that the assumed liabilities actually amounted to $525,772,000. (Doc. # 319, p. 20.)

The Debtors’ liquidating plan was confirmed on January 16, 2004. Pursuant to the terms of the plan, certain groups of Debtors were substantively consolidated to become the Consolidated SWINC Estate and other Debtors were substantively consolidated to become the Consolidated SWE & C Estate. As of the effective date of the plan, all the assets of the Consolidated SWE & C Estate were transferred to the Trust.

III. The SAMBA Proceeding

On August 24, 2000 SAMBA filed a cure claim in SWEC’s chapter 11 case asserting a claim of $6,872,979 based on the Guaranty and the Payment Letter. The cure claim is asserted first against Shaw and alternatively against SWEC. (Adv. Pro. # 01-7766, Doc. # 1, Ex. D.) Thereafter, on October 18, 2001, SAMBA brought an adversary proceeding (the “SAMBA Proceeding”) against Shaw, SWEC and SWINC Acquisition Three, Inc. 2 Like the cure claim, the complaint alleges that through the APA Shaw assumed SWEC’s outstanding liability to SAMBA under the Guaranty and the Payment Letter or, alternatively, if there was no such assumption then SWEC remains liable. (Adv. Pro.

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Bluebook (online)
373 B.R. 353, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 3126, 2007 WL 2493447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swe-c-liquidating-trust-v-saudi-arabian-oil-co-in-re-stone-webster-deb-2007.