Weisfelner v. Blavatnik (In re Lyondell Chemical Co.)

567 B.R. 55
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 21, 2017
DocketCase No. 09-10023 (CGM); Adv. Pro. No. 09-01375 (MG), Adv. Pro. No. 11-01844 (MG)
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 567 B.R. 55 (Weisfelner v. Blavatnik (In re Lyondell Chemical Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisfelner v. Blavatnik (In re Lyondell Chemical Co.), 567 B.R. 55 (N.Y. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER AFTER TRIAL

MARTIN GLENN, United States Bankruptcy Judge

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. Introduction... 61

A. Blavatnik, the Companies, and the Merger ... 62

B. The Trustee Failed to Establish that Lyondell was Insolvent on Two Key Dates... 63

C. The Trustee Also Failed to Establish that an Actual Fraudulent Transfer Occurred ... 65

D. The Bulk of the Trustee’s Remaining Claims Fail.... 66

II. Procedural History.... 67

III. Jurisdiction and Venue... 68

IV. Findings of Fact... 68

A. Access and Leonard Blavatnik ...69

B. Access Acquires Basell ... 70

C. Access’s Early Interest in Merging Basell with a Refining Company.... 71

D. Access Acquires the Toehold Position and Enters into Negotiations with Lyondell.... 73

E. Lyondell Produces the Refreshed Projections... .73
F. Access Offers $48 per Share for Lyondell ... 76
G. The Merger Agreement is Executed....77
H. Post-Execution, Pre-Closing Developments ... 77
I. The Merger/LBO Financing.... 78
J. The Merger Closes ... 79
K. Post-Closing at LBI ... 81
L. The Banks’ Projections ... 87
M. Expert Testimony Regarding Lyondell’s and CMAI’s -Projections ... 91
N. Expert Testimony Regarding Solvency.. . .98
V. Legal Standards... 107
A. Constructive Fraudulent Transfer. ...107
B. Intentional Fraudulent Transfer. ...114
C. Preference.... 118
D. Breach of Contract.... 121
E. Breach of Fiduciary Duties Under Luxembourg Law.... 123
VI. Discussion.... 132
A. Constructive Fraudulent Transfer. ,..132
B. Intentional Fraudulent Transfer. ...142
C. Preference.,.. 148
D. Breach of Contract.... 149
E. Claims Under Luxembourg Law....161
VII. Conclusion.., 159
I. INTRODUCTION

Edward S. Weisfelner, as Litigation Trustee of the LB Litigation Trust1 (the [62]*62“Trustee”), seeks to recover billions of dollars from Access,2 related entities, and employees, in this litigation on behalf of LyondellBasell creditors. The Trustee’s claims arise out of the merger of Lyondell and Basell, orchestrated by Len Blavatnik’s Access.

The parties narrowed the issues to be tried upon the submission of a joint pretrial order. (EOF Doc. # 848.) The Trustee brings claims alleging: (i) actual fraudulent transfer; (ii) constructive fraudulent transfer; (iii) avoidable preference; (iv) breach of contract; and (v) breach of fiduciary duty and tort claims under Luxembourg law, with aiding and abetting under Texas law. Opening arguments took place on October 17, 2016. At trial, direct testimony was' offered, primarily by written declarations with in-court cross examination, but also through live witnesses and deposition designations. After trial, the Trustee and the Defendants submitted detailed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. (See ECF Doc. ## 906-09.) The Court heard closing arguments on February 2, 2017.

A. Blavatnik, the Companies, and the Merger

Len Blavatnik is the founder and chairman of Access, and the owner (either directly or indirectly) of 100% of Access and numerous related companies. The Access group of companies acquired Basell, a Netherlands-based petrochemicals company, in 2005. The parties disputed Basell’s exact equity value at trial, but Basell was undisputedly worth billions of dollars. Soon after acquiring Basell, Blavatnik began to pursue combining Basell with an American refining company, with the goal of developing Europe-based Basell into a global petrochemical and refining company. Blavt-nik and his associates identified Lyondell as a compelling target.

Numerous Defense witnesses testified that the “industrial logic” and “strategy” of the Basell-Lyondell merger were sound: Basell was the world’s largest supplier of polypropylene and advanced polyolefin products, and a European leader in production of polyethylene. Lyondell was the largest U.S. producer of ethylene and had recently assumed full ownership of a large oil refinery in Houston. Access and Basell considered Lyondell a good strategic fit for a combination with Basell, and anticipated significant synergies upon combining the two companies.

Access and Basell made an offer to acquire Lyondell in 2006, which was rejected. After unsuccessfully bidding on Lyondell’s competitor Huntsman in 2007, Blavatnik and Access again focused on acquiring Lyondell. On May 9, 2007, an Access affiliate acquired a toehold position in Lyondell stock in advance of a potential merger. In June 2007, Blavatnik met with Lyondell CEO Dan Smith to discuss the proposed merger; after discussions between the two executives and within Basell management, Blavatnik eventually offered $48 per share to acquire Lyondell. In July 2007, Lyondell provided non-public due diligence materials, including refreshed projections, to Access, Basell, and a group of financing banks. Over several days in July, including all-day meetings over the weekend of July 14 and 15, Access, Basell, and the Banks conducted due diligence on the potential merger and received presentations from [63]*63Lyondell management about its business and the refreshed projections. By this time, Access, Basell, and the Banks had already been monitoring Lyondell’s performance for at least a year in connection with a possible merger.

On July 16, 2007, the Merger Agreement was signed and the Banks committed to fund the merger at a price of $48 per share. Access would contribute all of Ba-sell’s equity to the Merger, and Basell and Lyondell would be combined to form Lyon-dellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. (“LBI”). In August 2007, an Access affiliate acquired additional Lyondell stock, bringing the total toehold position to 9.84% of Lyon-dell’s outstanding shares. In September 2007, several months after the signing of the deal, Lyondell disclosed that it would miss its EBITDA projections for the third and fourth quarters, primarily because of rising feedstock prices. But Access, Basell, and the Banks were all satisfied that the fundamentals of the Merger remained sound, particularly because Basell was outperforming its own projections.

The Merger closed on December 20, 2007. The Merger financing totaled $20.3 billion, and left LBI with approximately $2.3 billion of liquidity at the Closing Date.

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567 B.R. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisfelner-v-blavatnik-in-re-lyondell-chemical-co-nysb-2017.