XO Communications, LLC v. Level 3 Communications, Inc.

948 A.2d 1111, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 189, 2007 WL 5212038
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 2, 2007
DocketC.A. 2131-VCL
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 948 A.2d 1111 (XO Communications, LLC v. Level 3 Communications, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
XO Communications, LLC v. Level 3 Communications, Inc., 948 A.2d 1111, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 189, 2007 WL 5212038 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

LAMB, Vice Chancellor.

In 1998, two companies agreed to collaboratively develop a fiber optics network. One company agreed to lay the fiber network while a second company purchased an indefeasible right of use in part of that network. Over a period of years, they modified the original agreement and entered into new, related contracts. The dispute before this court arises from those changes, specifically a contract by which the second company agreed to purchase its “requirements for wavelength services” from company one.

The question presented is whether the second company gave up the right to use the asset it purchased by later agreeing to purchase from company one its requirements of the very goods or services capable of being produced by that asset. The court concludes that, unless the contracts themselves evince an intent to limit the second company’s right to use the asset it purchased, there is no basis for a finding that second company’s continued use of that asset constitutes bad faith or amounts to a breach of contract.

I.

Plaintiff XO Communications, LLC is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located in Reston, Virginia. XO is a national local exchange carrier that provides voice and data communications services to businesses, agents, and carriers. XO’s voice offerings include local and long distance services, collocation, and voice response systems. Its data offerings include internet access, private data, networking and network security systems, and hosting.

Defendant Level 3 Communications, Inc. is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located in Broomfield, Colorado. Level 3 is an international communications and information services company offering communication services over its broadband fiber-optic network, including internet protocol services, broadband transport, collocation services, managed modem services, and voice services.

In 1998, Level 3 was in the process of constructing approximately 19,600 route miles of optical fiber. Around the same time, Internext, LLC, the predecessor company of XO Intercity Holdings No. 2 (“XOIH2”), which is itself a subsidiary of *1114 XO Communications, LLC, 1 wished to obtain rights of use and control in a network of optical fiber. 2 Realizing they could achieve their respective goals more efficiently if they worked together, Level 3 and Internext entered into the Cost Sharing and IRU Agreement (the “CSIRU”) on July 18,1998. 3

Under the CSIRU, Level 3 agreed to lay optical fiber across North America, and construet buildings to house the equipment used to light the fiber. 4 Level 3 also agreed to provide the power necessary to run that equipment and to perform all maintenance required on the fiber. 5 In return, XO agreed to pay Level 3 $700 million for the right to use 24 conduit-protected fibers and one spare conduit in North America, 6 and to install the machines to “light” its fiber. 7 XO also agreed to pay monthly recurring charges for *1115 maintaining and operating XO’s fiber. 8

In late 2000, the telecommunications industry began encountering significant financial difficulties. As a result of these difficulties, Level 3 and XO restructured their relationship by entering into two new agreements on April 25, 2001. The first of these was the Definitive Agreement, which rescinded a previous agreement between XO and Level 3 called the Europe IRU Agreement. 9 Level 3 also agreed to purchase from XO transmission equipment that XO itself had recently purchased from Ciena Corporation. In payment, Level 3 granted to XO a credit in the same amount for the purchase of “wavelength services.” XO then immediately used much of this credit to purchase “two 10 Gbps wavelengths across Level 3’s entire North America network.” 10

The second agreement XO and Level 3 entered into on April 25, 2001 was the Master Wavelengths Agreement (the “Wavelengths Agreement”). The Wavelengths Agreement provided XO the opportunity to purchase specific wavelengths of light, or “capacity,” from lit fiber along Level 3’s networks in North America and Europe, and fixed pricing for that capacity. 11 Neither the Definitive Agreement nor the Wavelengths Agreement rescinded the CSIRU.

On October 30, 2001, XO and Level 3 executed the Workout Agreement to clarify which equipment Level 3 had purchased, and how much credit Level 3 had issued to XO. Specifically, Level 3 and XO agreed in section 3 that XO would retain Ciena transmission equipment it owned along routes in the San Francisco Bay area. In section 7 of the Workout Agreement, Level 3 granted XO an additional $3 million in credit for “future incremental Wavelengths purchases ... pursuant to the Wavelengths Agreement.” 12

*1116 XO continued to have financial difficulties, and ultimately declared bankruptcy. On August 8, 2002, in connection with XO’s bankruptcy, the parties entered into yet another agreement, the Master Agreement, to restructure their relationship. The Master Agreement was an umbrella agreement, having as exhibits four proposed amendments to the agreements outlined above to be signed after XO received Chapter 11 bankruptcy court approval. 13

Exhibit D to the Master Agreement is the First Amendment to the Workout Agreement (the “First Amendment”), executed on February 11, 2003 between XO and Level 3. The First Amendment contains the purchase requirements language that is the focus of this dispute (the “Clause”). The Clause states, in part: “XO hereby agrees to purchase all of its requirements for wavelength services ... exclusively from Level 3.” 14

In August 2003, shortly after executing the First Amendment, XO began lighting segments of fiber it had acquired under the CSIRU. In or around October 2004, Level 3 informed XO that it considered XO’s lighting of fiber acquired under the CSIRU to be improper “self-provisioning” of wavelength services, bad faith, and a breach of the Clause.

II.

On May 5, 2006, XO filed its initial complaint for declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and specific performance. XO filed an amended complaint on July 11, 2006. 15

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Bluebook (online)
948 A.2d 1111, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 189, 2007 WL 5212038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xo-communications-llc-v-level-3-communications-inc-delch-2007.