Turnberry Residential Ltd. Partner v. Wilmington Trust FSB

99 A.D.3d 176, 950 N.Y.2d 362

This text of 99 A.D.3d 176 (Turnberry Residential Ltd. Partner v. Wilmington Trust FSB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnberry Residential Ltd. Partner v. Wilmington Trust FSB, 99 A.D.3d 176, 950 N.Y.2d 362 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Moskowitz, J.

This appeal presents us with the rare opportunity to analyze a completion guaranty. This sort of guaranty differs from an instrument that guarantees payment. A guarantee of payment typically guarantees a borrower’s debt. A completion guaranty guarantees the completion of a project (usually a construction project) should the borrower be unable to do so. Unlike a payment guaranty that is enforceable only after the primary obligor fails to perform, a completion guaranty is often a primary obligation of the guarantor.

In June 2007, a syndicate of lenders (the Lenders) committed to provide $1.85 billion in financing to two limited partnerships (the Borrowers) for the construction of the Fontainebleau Resort [178]*178and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada (the Project) pursuant to a Credit Agreement dated June 6, 2007. The financing under the Credit Agreement consisted of three loans: a $700 million term loan facility, a $350 million term loan delay draw facility, and an $800 million revolving loan facility (the Revolver).

Defendant Wilmington Trust FSB was the successor Administrative Agent under the Credit Agreement. Wilmington Trust was also the Successor Disbursement Agent under the project’s Master Disbursement Agreement (the MDA or Disbursement Agreement), pursuant to which, inter alia, Wilmington Trust was to disburse funds for costs related to the Project.

Plaintiff Turnberry Residential Limited Partner, L.P, is an affiliate of the developer for the Project, Fountainebleau Las Vegas Holdings, LLC (FBLV). Turnberry agreed to provide a Completion Guaranty, dated June 6, 2007, to guarantee payment of “Applicable Project Costs.” The Completion Guaranty defines “Applicable Project Costs” as “Project Costs other than Debt Service incurred to complete the Project in a manner consistent with the standards set forth on Exhibit M-2 to the Disbursement Agreement.”1 The Completion Guaranty states that capitalized terms it does not define have the meaning the Disbursement Agreement defines. Accordingly, via the Disbursement Agreement, the Completion Guaranty defined “Debt Service” as “all principal repayments, interest . . . and other amounts payable under . . . the Bank Credit Agreement.” “Project Costs,” as the Disbursement Agreement defines the term, means “all costs incurred, or to be incurred by the project entities in connection with the development, design, engineering, procurement, construction, installation, opening and completion of the Project in accordance with this Agreement.” “Project Costs” also includes Debt Service that “will accrue in respect of Indebtedness of the Companies prior to the Opening Date (but expressly excluding Debt Service in respect of the Retail Facility).”

The Preamble to the Completion Guaranty stated that it was “for the benefit of” the Lenders, and was to “induce” the Lenders to make credit extensions. To carry out its obligations under the Completion Guaranty, Turnberry arranged for a $50 million letter of credit that it then drew upon and placed into a Comple[179]*179tion Guaranty Proceeds Account (CGPA). Under certain circumstances, Turnberry was required to deposit another $50 million into the account.

Section 3 (f) (ii) of the Completion Guaranty makes clear that this guaranty is a true guaranty of completion and not a payment guaranty: “[this guaranty] is not a guaranty of indebtedness incurred by the Companies or their Affiliates under the Financing Agreements” and prohibits the use of funds “for any purpose other than the payment of Applicable Project Costs that are then due and payable.”

The various agreements governing this project provide several instances where the completion guarantor’s obligations survive beyond the life of the project. For instance, section 3 (e) of the Completion Guaranty provides that its obligations “shall not be affected by any exercise of remedies by the [Lenders],” and that the Completion Guaranty “shall continue to be enforceable against the Completion Guarantor, for so long as [the Borrowers] remain obligated to the [Lenders] under the Financing Agreements” and “notwithstanding any transfer of the ownership of [the Borrowers].” The Credit Agreement also reflects this continuing obligation. Section 8 (B) (I) of the Credit Agreement contemplated that an “Event of Default” would trigger the termination of the Commitments under the credit facilities, including the Revolving Loans, and that the Completion Guaranty could continue under these circumstances:

“(B) if such event is any other Event of Default, either or both of the following actions may be taken: (I) with the consent of . . . either the Required Lenders or the Required Facility Lenders for the respective Facility, the Administrative Agent may, or upon the request of the Required Lenders or the Required Facility Lenders for the respective Facility, the Administrative Agent shall, by notice to Borrowers, declare the Revolving Commitments and/or the Delay Draw Commitment, as the case may be, to be terminated forthwith, whereupon the applicable Commitments shall immediately terminate . . . during the continuation of an Event of Default, the Administrative Agent and the Lenders shall be entitled to exercise any and all remedies available under the Security Documents” (emphasis added).

In addition, section 8 (r) of the Credit Agreement provides that upon an Event of Default, “the Lenders shall be entitled to [180]*180exercise any and all remedies available under the Security Documents, . . . including the [Completion] Guarantee.” Thus, the parties provided for the Completion Guaranty to remain enforceable even if ownership of the project transferred to a third party and even if the borrower defaulted.

Section 4 of the Completion Guaranty stated that the Completion Guaranty was a primary obligation of the Completion Guarantor, was an absolute, unconditional and irrevocable obligation to pay and was “in no way conditioned on or contingent upon any attempt to enforce, in whole or in part the [Borrowers’] liabilities and obligations to the [Lenders].” Thus, the obligations under the Completion Guaranty were separate from those of the Borrowers.

The Completion Guaranty provides that all amounts payable “shall be applied in the manner contemplated by the Master Disbursement Agreement [MDA] for the payment of Applicable Project Costs.” The “manner” for payment of Applicable Project Costs” appears in section 2.10.1 (b) of the MDA. This section sets forth the payment priority, or “waterfall” from different funding sources as follows in relevant part:

“(b) the Current Available Resort Sources as of the Advance Date shall be applied to the Resort Request by applying the following order of priority and in each case until the relevant Resort Source is Exhausted (except to the extent otherwise limited below): . . .
“(ix) then, from funds then on deposit in the Bank Proceeds Account prior to giving effect to the requested Advance;
“(x) then, from funds available to be drawn under the Bank Proceeds Credit Facility, until the aggregate amount of the Bank Revolving Availability has been reduced to $55,000,000;
“(xi) then, only on and after the Initial Bank Advance Date, from the making of draws under the Completion Guaranties (subject to the proviso in Section 2.6.6);
“(xii) . . . ; and

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

1633 Associates v. Uris Buildings Corp.
66 A.D.2d 237 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A.D.3d 176, 950 N.Y.2d 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnberry-residential-ltd-partner-v-wilmington-trust-fsb-nyappdiv-2012.