Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental Energy Services, Inc., And Illinova Generating Company v. Ponderosa Pine Energy, Llc

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 2014
Docket12-0789
StatusPublished

This text of Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental Energy Services, Inc., And Illinova Generating Company v. Ponderosa Pine Energy, Llc (Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental Energy Services, Inc., And Illinova Generating Company v. Ponderosa Pine Energy, Llc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental Energy Services, Inc., And Illinova Generating Company v. Ponderosa Pine Energy, Llc, (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 444444444444 NO. 12-0789 444444444444

TENASKA ENERGY, INC., TENASKA ENERGY HOLDINGS, LLC, TENASKA CLEBURNE, LLC, CONTINENTAL ENERGY SERVICES, INC., AND ILLINOVA GENERATING COMPANY, PETITIONERS, v.

PONDEROSA PINE ENERGY, LLC, RESPONDENT 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Argued January 7, 2014

JUSTICE GUZMAN delivered the opinion of the Court.

Evident partiality of an arbitrator is a ground for vacating an arbitration award under both

the Federal Arbitration Act and the Texas Arbitration Act. Adhering to United States Supreme

Court precedent, we held almost two decades ago that a neutral arbitrator is evidently partial if she

fails to disclose facts that might, to an objective observer, create a reasonable impression of her

partiality. And we have held that a party does not waive an evident partiality challenge if it proceeds

to arbitrate without knowledge of the undisclosed facts.

Today, we are asked to evaluate these standards in light of a partial disclosure. Here, the

neutral arbitrator in question disclosed that the law firm representing one party to the arbitration had recommended him as an arbitrator in three other arbitrations. He also disclosed that he was a

director of a litigation services company and attended a meeting at the law firm, but there was no

indication the firm and company would ever do business. The trial court found the arbitrator failed

to disclose that all of his contacts at the 700-lawyer firm were with the two lawyers that represented

the party to the arbitration at issue; he owned stock in the litigation services company that was

pursuing business opportunities with the firm; he served as the president of the company’s United

States subsidiary; he conducted significant marketing in the United States for the company; he had

additional meetings or contacts with the two lawyers in question to solicit business from the firm

for the company; and he allowed one of the two lawyers to edit his disclosures to minimize the

contact. The trial court vacated the arbitration award, but the court of appeals reversed, concluding

the party waived its evident partiality claim by failing to object or inquire further when the

disclosures occurred. We hold the failure to disclose this additional information might yield a

reasonable impression of the arbitrator’s partiality to an objective observer. We further hold that

because the party making the evident partiality challenge was unaware of the undisclosed

information, it did not waive the claim. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and

reinstate the trial court’s order vacating the award and requiring a new arbitration.

I. Background

Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental

Energy Services, Inc., and Illinova Generating Co. (collectively Tenaska) sold their interests in a

power plant in Cleburne, Texas to Ponderosa Pine Energy, LLC (Ponderosa). The purchase

agreement contained a broad arbitration clause requiring the parties to arbitrate any dispute arising

2 from or related to the agreement. The clause provided for a three-arbitrator panel, with each party

selecting one arbitrator and those two arbitrators selecting the third. The parties conceded in the

court of appeals that all three arbitrators were required to be neutral, which follows the current

default protocol in arbitration. 376 S.W.3d 358, 361. The clause called for arbitration under the

American Arbitration Association (AAA) rules but without AAA administration. It also contained

a “baseball arbitration” provision, in which each party would submit a proposed settlement and the

panel was bound to select one of the two proposals.

After the transaction closed, the parties disputed whether the agreement required Tenaska

to indemnify Ponderosa for breaching certain representations and warranties in the agreement.

Ponderosa demanded arbitration and sought more than $200 million in indemnity rights. Lawyers

from Nixon Peabody LLP’s New York office represented Ponderosa, which designated Samuel A.

Stern as its arbitrator. Stern’s curriculum vitae was attached to his designation, which indicated he

was a director of twelve closely held companies with third-world involvement—including a

company in India named LexSite.1

At the time, the AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules provided:

Any person appointed or to be appointed as an arbitrator shall disclose . . . any circumstance likely to give rise to justifiable doubt as to the arbitrator’s impartiality or independence, including any bias or any financial or personal interest in the result of the arbitration or any past or present relationship with the parties or their representatives. Such obligation shall remain in effect throughout the arbitration.

1 Stern later testified that he served on LexSite’s advisory board but was not a director, as his curriculum vitae indicated.

3 Stern disclosed that Nixon Peabody had designated him as an arbitrator in three other

proceedings, and that he—on behalf of LexSite—had a discussion at Nixon Peabody’s offices about

Nixon Peabody outsourcing litigation discovery tasks to LexSite. But the disclosures noted that

“Nixon-Peabody and Lexsite have done no business, and it is not clear that Nixon-Peabody would

ever have any business to give Lexsite.” In response, Tenaska asked if Stern had a relationship with

any of the sixteen bank entities that own Ponderosa, and Stern replied that he had no such

relationships.

Tenaska designated Thomas S. Fraser as its arbitrator, and Fraser and Stern selected James

A. Baker2 as the third arbitrator. Tenaska asked Baker the same question it asked Stern, and Baker

replied that his firm had represented some of the banks that own Ponderosa. At Baker’s suggestion,

the panel issued a scheduling order that contained a provision stating the parties had made full

disclosures of actual and potential conflicts and knowingly waived actual and potential conflicts of

interest. After extensive discovery, Ponderosa proposed a $125 million settlement and Tenaska

proposed a $1.25 million settlement. A divided panel composed of Baker and Stern selected

Ponderosa’s $125 million settlement amount.

Ponderosa moved to confirm the award in state district court, and Tenaska moved to vacate

it, asserting that Stern was neither impartial nor free from bias. After extensive discovery, the trial

court held a hearing on the motions, where the parties admitted almost 500 exhibits. Those exhibits

included the depositions of Stern, as well as Frank Penski and Constance Boland—the two lawyers

at Nixon Peabody who represented Ponderosa.

2 The late James A. Baker formerly served as a Justice on this Court.

4 The evidence showed that Stern was on the advisory board for LexSite, a legal outsourcing

company in India that was seeking to obtain business from law firms in the United States. Stern

gave LexSite business and legal advice, and owned 3,000 shares of LexSite stock. He was given

options for an additional 10,000 shares, which he had not exercised. Stern contacted Penski in April

2006 to discuss the possibility of Nixon Peabody using LexSite’s services. Stern arranged for

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Bluebook (online)
Tenaska Energy, Inc., Tenaska Energy Holdings, LLC, Tenaska Cleburne, LLC, Continental Energy Services, Inc., And Illinova Generating Company v. Ponderosa Pine Energy, Llc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenaska-energy-inc-tenaska-energy-holdings-llc-tenaska-cleburne-llc-tex-2014.