Bank v. IBMC

USCA1 Opinion








United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
____________________



No. 96-1355

MICHAEL D. BANK, THOMAS M. DUSEL AND ROBERT J. M. O'HARE, JR.,
IN THEIR CAPACITY AS TRUSTEES OF 400 WYMAN STREET TRUST,

Plaintiffs, Appellees,

v.

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION,

Defendant, Appellant.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________
Coffin and Campbell, Senior Circuit Judges. _____________________

____________________

J. Charles Mokriski with whom Kenneth E. Werner and Jonathan I. ____________________ __________________ ___________
Handler were on brief for appellant. _______
Saul A. Schapiro with whom David W. Rosenberg was on brief for _________________ ___________________
appellees.


____________________

November 5, 1996
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COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge. The parties in this case -- ____________________

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) and the 400 Wyman

Street Trust (the Trust)1 -- comprise a partnership created for

the purpose of developing and operating an office building in

Waltham, Massachusetts. The Trust secured an opportunity for the

Partnership to reduce its debt by purchasing its own mortgage at

a substantial discount. IBM opposed the deal. The issue before

us is whether IBM's veto is absolute, or whether the dispute must

be arbitrated; under the Partnership Agreement, the answer turns

on whether the proposal involves an acquisition of "an interest

in real property" or a "refinancing." The district court deemed

it a refinancing, and granted the Trust's motion to compel

arbitration. See Bank v. International Business Machines Corp., ___ ____ _____________________________________

915 F. Supp. 491, 498 (D. Mass. 1996). The issue is close, but

we conclude that the refinancing provision is inapplicable

because the proposal that has been presented so far lacks

refinancing content. Consequently, we reverse.

I. Factual Background __________________

IBM and the Trust entered into the Partnership in October

1986. The Partnership Agreement specifies that the Partnership

would seek to finance the construction and operation of the

office building with a non-recourse loan, and a $75 million loan



____________________

1 Michael D. Bank, Thomas M. Dusel and Robert J. M. O'Hare,
Jr., are named as parties in their capacity as trustees of the
Trust. For the sake of convenience, we refer to the appellees
simply as "the Trust" throughout the opinion.

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imposing no liability on either party for repayment of the

principal was, in fact, obtained from Citicorp Real Estate, Inc.

The Trust is the managing partner of the Partnership,

holding a 51% interest. IBM has a 49% interest. Under the terms

of the Agreement, the Trust contributed the undeveloped parcel at

404 Wyman Street, valued at $19.3 million, and IBM made a $1

million capital contribution as well as a long-term lease

commitment. IBM also agreed to provide additional capital as

needed until its equity reflected its 49% share in the venture,

creating an approximately $17.5 million potential obligation for

IBM at the outset of the undertaking. None of that capital has

been contributed to date.

In 1995, the Trust attempted unsuccessfully to negotiate a

restructuring of the loan ("the Note"), whose remaining principal

balance was about $72 million. The lenders,2 however, offered to

sell the note in its entirety for about $54 million. IBM

contended the price was too high and expressed its unwillingness

to make the purchase. Because the offer would expire soon, the

Trust caused its corporate affiliate, Wyman Loan Corp. (Wyman

Loan), to buy the Note and then proposed that it be resold to the

Partnership at its cost. IBM refused to go along with the

purchase, prompting the Trust to file a demand for arbitration

with the American Arbitration Association. Two days later, on



____________________

2 By this time, the Note had been transfered to a consortium
of foreign banks, for whom Citicorp served as agent.

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June 14, 1995, IBM sent the AAA a letter stating its view that

the issue was not arbitrable under the Partnership Agreement.

The arbitrability issue is rooted in Exhibit D of the

Agreement, which is titled "Major Decisions," and which sets out

several categories of significant decisions that may be made by

the Partnership and the procedures for reaching them and

resolving disputes. Section A of the Exhibit lists five Major

Decisions, including "acquiring any land or other real property

or any interest therein . . . ." For decisions falling within

Section A,

(a) either Partner . . . may withhold its approval for
any reason, or for no reason, in its sole and complete
discretion, without regard to whether the withholding
of such approval is unreasonable or arbitrary . . . .

Major Decisions falling within Section C, by contrast, may not be

made unreasonably or unilaterally and a deadlock on one of them

will trigger the Agreement's arbitration provisions. Section

C(13) covers "refinancing of any part or all of the Project."

IBM contends that the Note purchase would constitute the

acquisition of an interest in real property, and thus that its

opposition to the deal ends the matter. The Trust, however,

insists that the purchase is part of a refinancing. Although the

letter proposing the transaction refers only to the purchase, the

Trust maintains that the proposal embraces the expectation of

added capital from IBM (consistent with the $17.5 million

obligation) and new third-party financing of the balance. As

noted, IBM's objection to a refinancing is arbitrable under the

Agreement.

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The district court was persuaded that the proposed decision

to purchase the Note should be categorized as a refinancing under

C(13) of the Agreement. It was influenced, inter alia, by the _____ ____

fact that purchase of the mortgage would not result in an

"acquisition" of property because the Partnership already owned

404 Wyman Street, and by a belief that no substantive difference

existed in this context between the proposed purchase and a

restructuring of the original Note, which IBM had conceded would

fall within C(13). See 915 F. Supp. at 496-98. ___

Though these points have force, we have concluded that the

proposal as presently articulated is not arbitrable.3 We explain

our reasoning in the following section.

II. Discussion __________

Our review of the district court's grant of the motion to

compel arbitration is de novo, as it involves the purely legal __ ____

task of interpreting the Partnership Agreement. See, e.g., ___ ____

PaineWebber Inc. v. Elahi, 87 F.3d 589, 592 (1st Cir. 1996); _________________ _____

Commercial Union Ins. Co. v. Gilbane Bldg. Co., 992 F.2d 386, 388 _________________________ _________________

(1st Cir. 1993).

One difficulty in this case is that, to a point, both

parties are right. Notwithstanding the district court's effort

to view property ownership in the "everyday" sense, there seems

no doubt that the purchase of a mortgage conveys some interest in
____________________

3 Our disposition on the refinancing question makes it
unnecessary to consider IBM's alternative argument that the Trust
is foreclosed from compelling arbitration because it breached its
fiduciary duties to the Partnership in causing its affiliate to
purchase the Note.

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the mortgaged property to the purchaser. Indeed, even the

district court acknowledged that a mortgagee has a legal interest

in the property secured by the mortgage. See 915 F. Supp. at 497 ___

("While the mortgagee may technically have legal title to the

mortgaged property, the mortgagor is considered the 'owner' of

property."). See also Maglione v. BancBoston Mortgage Corp., 29 ___ ____ ________ _________________________

Mass. App. Ct. 88, 90, 557 N.E.2d 756, 757 (1990); 7 Mass. Jur.

23:3 at 383 (1993). Thus, if it purchases the Note, the

Partnership would acquire at least a technical new interest in

the office building, and the proposal therefore could be treated

as a "Section A" major decision.

On the other hand, the proposal grew out of refinancing

negotiations. The offer by Citicorp and its associates to sell

the mortgage back to the Partnership at a substantial discount

directly stemmed from the Partnership's efforts to renegotiate

the terms of its original financing; the purchase apparently was

intended to be part of an alternative method by which the

Partnership could restructure and reduce its debt. Thus, in

context, the acquisition of a property interest arguably is a

step preliminary and subordinate to the effort to refinance.4

Indeed, IBM recognized both in a hearing before the district
____________________

4 In fact, we acknowledge the possibility that, in
designating the acquisition of an interest in property as a
Section A decision on which the partners had complete discretion,
the partners were contemplating the purchase of property other
than that which the Partnership already "owned." Unlike the
district court, however, see 915 F. Supp. at 497, we do not ___
believe the Agreement contains such a limitation and therefore do
not reject Section A as wholly inapplicable to the acquisition of
a mortgage interest.

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court and in its briefs on appeal that a refinancing proposal

that included a specified amount of increased equity probably

would fall under the refinancing provision.

We need not at this juncture determine the validity of this

proposition, for the proposal was not presented as such. Instead

of recommending a multi-step refinancing plan that begins with

purchase of the mortgage, the Trust has offered a proposal that

makes no reference to financing terms. Although certain details

of financing in so complex a business environment may need to

remain imprecise until the transaction is close to completion,

the proposal at the moment lacks any refinancing structure. ___

We acknowledge the Trust's argument that the Agreement fills

in crucial gaps through the provision that governs IBM's

obligation to contribute capital and another provision that

refers generally to the pursuit of financing from third parties

or partners. See 3.2(c), 3.3.1. Even taking the proposal ___

together with the Agreement, however, the recommendation is

without substance; it includes neither the amounts to be sought

from lenders nor any other details about possible interest rates,

the duration of a mortgage, how soon such financing could or

should be obtained, or the nature of the liability to be assumed.

We conclude that this defect renders resort to C(13) premature.

In sum, though the Trust's proposal to purchase the mortgage

foreshadows a refinancing scheme, we hold that it is as yet

without sufficient form to trigger the arbitration provision.

Because the Trust has so far proposed no more than a mortgage


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redemption -- which would result, unquestionably, in the

acquisition by the Partnership of a greater interest in real

property -- IBM has veto power under Section A of Exhibit D.

We note that, in so concluding, we have credited neither

party's assertions concerning the other's self-serving motives.

Our determination that arbitration may not be compelled at this

time is based solely on the Trust's failure to submit an actual

refinancing plan; we offer no view on the legitimacy of seeking a

capital contribution from IBM under section 3.2(c) of the

Agreement as part of such a plan.

Reversed. ________
































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