05-4985-cv
Tractebel v. AEP Po wer
1
2 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
3
4 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
5
6
7
8 August Term, 2006
9
10 (Argued: December 14, 2006 Decided: May 22, 2007)
11
12 Docket Nos. 05-4985-cv(L), 05-5136-cv(XAP)
13
14
15 TRACTEBEL ENERGY MARKETING , INC., now known as
16 SUEZ ENERGY MARKETING NA, INC. {“TEMI”}, and TRACTEBEL, S.A.,
17 now known as SUEZ-TRACTEBEL S.A. {“TSA”},
18
19 Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-
20 Appellants-Cross-Appellees,
21
22 –v.–
23
24 AEP POWER MARKETING , INC., AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY , INC.
25 and OHIO POWER COMPANY ,
26
27 Defendants-Counterclaimants-
28 Appellees-Cross-Appellants.
29
30
31
32 Before:
33 SACK , SOTOMAYOR, WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
34
35 Appeal and cross-appeal from an August 12, 2005 judgment, and March 23, 2006
36 amended judgment, of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
37 (Baer, J.) awarding damages for breach of contract but denying damages for repudiation of
38 contract. Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded to the district court for further
39 proceedings consistent with this opinion.
40
41
42
43 MICHAEL LESCH , LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP, New York, NY
1 (Theodore J. Fischkin, Randall M. Fox, Stephanie A. Wilkins, on brief)
2 for Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellants-Cross-Appellees.
3
4 STEVEN C. BENNETT , Jones Day, New York, NY (Bonnie L. Hemenway, Todd S.
5 Swatsler, Robert W. Hamilton, Michael R. Gladman, on brief), for
6 Defendants-Counterclaimants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.
7
8
9
10 WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
11 Tractebel Energy Marketing, Inc. (“TEMI”) and AEP Power Marketing, Inc. (“AEP”)
12 filed opposing complaints in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, each
13 alleging the other side breached a long-term energy contract entered into by the parties on
14 November 15, 2000. TEMI appeals a January 21, 2005 order of the district court (Baer, J.)
15 granting summary judgment for AEP on that count of TEMI’s complaint asserting that the
16 contract was unenforceable. TEMI further appeals the district court’s August 12, 2005 judgment
17 awarding AEP $122,992,857, plus prejudgment interest, for TEMI’s breach of certain provisions
18 in the contract. AEP cross-appeals the district court’s denial of damages caused by TEMI’s
19 ultimate repudiation of the contract. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further
20 proceedings.
21 BACKGROUND
22 This dispute arises from a contract for the supply of energy products over a twenty-year
23 period. The record is voluminous and complex. Fortunately, the facts have been succinctly, yet
24 comprehensively, set forth by the district court in Tractebel Energy Marketing v. AEP Power
25 Marketing, Nos. 03-6731, 03-6770, 2005 WL 1863853, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972 (S.D.N.Y.
26 Aug. 8, 2005). We therefore provide only a brief overview of the factual background here,
Page 2 of 38
1 supplementing that background in later sections of the opinion as it becomes relevant.
2 In 2001, AEP and Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”) agreed to develop a gas-fired
3 cogeneration facility (“Facility”) at the Dow complex in Plaquemine, Louisiana. “Cogeneration”
4 means that the same turbine generating units that produce electricity also produce steam used in
5 Dow’s manufacturing processes. AEP agreed to operate the Facility and committed to
6 purchasing the electricity produced.
7 The amount of energy AEP committed to take from the Facility was immense, and,
8 accordingly, prior to entering the agreement with Dow AEP sought a guaranteed buyer. On
9 November 15, 2000, AEP and TEMI entered into the contract at issue – the Power Purchase and
10 Sale Agreement (“PPSA”). AEP promised to supply energy products to TEMI from the Facility
11 and, in return, TEMI promised to take a minimum amount of those products and make associated
12 payments at prices stipulated in the contract. The collapse of the energy market in 2001-02
13 significantly diminished the value of the PPSA to TEMI, and TEMI began examining strategies
14 to free itself of its PPSA obligations. When negotiations with AEP proved unavailing, TEMI
15 began preparing for litigation.
16 The PPSA set a target commercial operation date (“target COD”) of May 1, 2003.
17 Construction at the Facility was delayed and actual commercial operation (“actual COD”) did not
18 occur until April 2, 2004. As of target COD, and continuing until actual COD, AEP billed TEMI
19 for replacement energy products pursuant to a provision in the PPSA that, in AEP’s view,
20 required TEMI to purchase a minimum amount of energy, from the Facility or external sources.
21 Having no need for replacement energy given the state of the energy market, and disputing its
22 obligation to take energy from external sources, TEMI rejected the products offered by AEP.
Page 3 of 38
1 Ultimately, TEMI repudiated the contract and the parties sought judicial resolution of their
2 dispute.
3 On September 5, 2003, the parties filed complaints against each other in the district court.
4 AEP alleged that TEMI first breached the PPSA by not paying for replacement products, and
5 then repudiated the contract altogether. AEP sought damages for replacement products and for
6 the profits it expected to make had the contract been performed. TEMI claimed that it was under
7 no obligation to pay for replacement products or to compensate AEP for repudiating the contract
8 because the contract was unenforceable. TEMI argued the PPSA was unenforceable for three
9 reasons: (1) the parties were unable to agree to an operations protocol that was expressly
10 contemplated by the PPSA; (2) AEP violated the covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (3)
11 AEP did not use “reasonable efforts” to obtain Qualified Facility (“QF”) certification from the
12 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”), as required by the PPSA. TEMI further
13 argued that, even if the PPSA were enforceable, TEMI was under no obligation to take and pay
14 for replacement energy and capacity prior to actual COD. TEMI also made a motion for a
15 primary-jurisdiction referral to FERC to determine the validity of the Facility’s QF certification.
16 After a hearing, the district court, in an order entered November 3, 2004, denied TEMI’s
17 motion for a primary-jurisdiction referral. Although the court did not explain its reasoning in the
18 order, it suggested during the hearing that the only issue before it was whether AEP had exerted
19 “reasonable efforts” to obtain QF status, a matter it was competent to decide without input from
20 FERC. On September 22, 2004, AEP made a motion for summary judgment with respect to
21 Count I of TEMI’s complaint – that the PPSA was nothing more than an unenforceable
22 agreement to agree – and, on January 21, 2005, the district court granted the motion. The district
Page 4 of 38
1 court held that the PPSA was an enforceable contract, despite the failure to reach agreement on
2 the protocol. Subsequently, the district court conducted a bench trial in March and April 2005.
3 During the trial, the court granted judgment for AEP pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
4 52(c) on the QF status issue. It concluded that AEP had exerted reasonable efforts to obtain and
5 maintain QF status because it had successfully obtained this status and had not used fraudulent
6 means to do so. At the close of trial, the court rejected TEMI’s remaining contentions, finding
7 that AEP did not act in bad faith at any point during its relationship with TEMI. The court held,
8 therefore, that TEMI was not free from obligation under the PPSA. The district court awarded
9 AEP damages for replacement products, but declined to award AEP further damages for lost
10 profits incurred as a result of TEMI’s repudiation of the contract, reasoning that such profits were
11 not determinable with a sufficient degree of certainty.
12 On appeal, TEMI asserts that the district court erred in finding that (1) the PPSA was
13 enforceable, (2) AEP did not breach the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, (3) AEP used
14 reasonable efforts to obtain QF certification, and (4) TEMI was liable for replacement products
15 in the pre-COD period. In its cross-appeal, AEP claims it is entitled to damages for TEMI’s
16 repudiation of the PPSA. For the reasons stated below, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and
17 remand to the district court.
18 DISCUSSION
19 I. Whether the PPSA is Enforceable
20 Section 9.1 of the PPSA directs the parties to enter into a “mutually agreeable”
21 Dispatch/Operations Coordination Protocol (“Protocol”) that “set[s] forth the detailed
22 requirements for notice, forecast, scheduling, dispatch, operation, maintenance, maintenance
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1 coordination, approvals and other matters related to the operations and maintenance (including
2 outages) of the Project and the sale and delivery of the Products to Buyer.” PPSA § 9.1. Count I
3 of TEMI’s complaint sought declaration that the PPSA was unenforceable because the parties
4 never agreed to a Protocol. Compl. ¶ 24. TEMI argues that the essential purpose of the PPSA –
5 the sale and delivery of energy products to TEMI – could not be accomplished without agreement
6 on the logistical details the Protocol was to address. In TEMI’s view, the details reserved for the
7 Protocol were material terms. In the absence of agreement on these terms, TEMI argues, the
8 PPSA was merely an unenforceable “preliminary agreement.”
9 The district court found that the PPSA was “comprehensive” and “incorporate[d] all
10 material terms of the 20-year power purchase agreement.” Tractebel Energy Mktg., Inc. v. AEP
11 Power Mktg., Inc., Nos. 03-6731, 03-6770, 2005 WL 146807, at *4, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 869,
12 at *12 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 21, 2005). “It contains no less than 165 defined terms, clearly specified
13 products, delivery, prices, payment, credit guaranties, as well as terms relating to the operations
14 and maintenance of the facility. Perhaps more importantly, the PPSA sets out both conditions
15 precedent and subsequent and termination rights – none of which mention[s] the failure to agree
16 upon a Protocol.” Id. The district court also noted that in three separate locations the PPSA
17 indicates that it is a binding agreement.1 Id. at *5, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 869, at *13. Upon
18 AEP’s motion, the district court granted summary judgment on Count I of TEMI’s complaint.
19 Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact and,
20 based on the undisputed facts, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Beth
1
Section 16.2.4 states that the PPSA “constitutes a legally valid and binding obligation”;
section 16.8 states that the PPSA “constitutes the entire agreement between the Parties” and is
“binding”; and section 16.15 states that the PPSA is a “legal binding instrument.”
Page 6 of 38
1 Israel Med. Ctr. v. Horizon Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Jersey, Inc., 448 F.3d 573, 579
2 (2d Cir. 2006). We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Id. On the question of
3 whether the PPSA is enforceable, neither party claims that there exists a genuine issue of
4 material fact. TEMI argues that summary judgment was inappropriate, not because factual issues
5 remain, but because the “fully developed” record establishes that the PPSA is no more than a
6 preliminary agreement to agree and is therefore not enforceable against TEMI. TEMI Br. at 44.
7 Thus, TEMI argues summary judgment was appropriate, but should have been granted in its
8 favor, rather than AEP’s. In evaluating the appropriateness of summary judgment in favor of
9 AEP, therefore, the question is whether the record establishes that the PPSA is enforceable.
10 “To create a binding contract, there must be a manifestation of mutual assent sufficiently
11 definite to assure that the parties are truly in agreement with respect to all material terms.”2
12 Express Indus. & Terminal Corp. v. N.Y. State Dep’t of Transp., 93 N.Y.2d 584, 589 (1999)
13 (citation omitted). There must be “an objective meeting of the minds sufficient to give rise to a
14 binding and enforceable contract.” Id. “[A] mere agreement to agree, in which a material term is
15 left for future negotiations, is unenforceable.” Joseph Martin, Jr., Delicatessen, Inc. v.
16 Schumacher, 52 N.Y.2d 105, 109 (1981) (citation omitted). However, “not all terms of a
17 contract need be fixed with absolute certainty.” Express Indus., 93 N.Y.2d at 589. “[A] contract
18 is not necessarily lacking in all effect merely because it expresses the idea that something is left
19 to future agreement.” May Metro. Corp. v. May Oil Burner Corp., 290 N.Y. 260, 264 (1943).
20 “[A]t some point virtually every agreement can be said to have a degree of indefiniteness,” but
2
PPSA § 16.6 provides, “This Agreement and the rights and duties of the parties
hereunder shall be governed by and construed, enforced and performed in accordance with the
laws of the State of New York . . . .”
Page 7 of 38
1 “parties . . . should be held to their promises.” Cobble Hill Nursing Home v. Henry & Warren
2 Corp., 74 N.Y.2d 475, 483 (1989).
3 We agree with the district court that both parties intended the PPSA to be legally binding,
4 and that the PPSA contained all material terms. The language of the PPSA gives every
5 indication that the parties intended it to be binding. For example, section 16.2.4 states that the
6 PPSA “constitutes a legally valid and binding obligation”; section 16.8 states that the PPSA
7 “constitutes the entire agreement between the Parties” and is “binding”; and section 16.15 states
8 that the PPSA is a “legal binding instrument.” “[A] party that does not wish to be bound . . . can
9 very easily protect itself by not accepting language that indicates a ‘firm commitment’ or
10 ‘binding agreement.’” Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n. of Am. v. Tribune Co., 670 F. Supp. 491,
11 499 (S.D.N.Y. 1987) (Leval, J.).
12 A party may also condition the enforceability of an agreement on the occurrence of one or
13 more stipulated events, as the parties did here. Section 11.2 of the PPSA lays out a number of
14 conditions precedent that were to be satisfied before AEP was obligated to sell any products to
15 TEMI. But the PPSA did not identify successful completion of Protocol negotiations as a
16 condition of the PPSA’s enforceability. As the district court stated, “It stretches credulity . . . to
17 conclude . . . that if the Protocol were the deal-breaker TEMI claims it to be, that it was omitted
18 amongst the detailed recitals and provisions of the PPSA or listed as one of the many conditions
19 precedent.”3 Tractebel, 2005 WL 146807, at *4, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 869, at *12-13.
3
TEMI argues that section 9.1 established that the PPSA was not enforceable prior to the
successful completion of Protocol negotiations. Section 9.1, however, merely states that the
parties “will enter into a mutually agreeable [Protocol], not later than June 1, 2001"; it does not
state that the parties are free from further obligation under the PPSA should the Protocol
negotiations fail. As the district court noted, if a contract is conditioned on the occurrence of a
Page 8 of 38
1 The PPSA covered all material terms. Section 9.1 contemplates future negotiation of the
2 “detailed requirements” of the following terms: “notice, forecast, scheduling, dispatch, operation,
3 maintenance, maintenance coordination, approvals and other matters related to the operations and
4 maintenance (including outages) of the Project and the sale and delivery of the Products to
5 Buyer.” Without any agreement on these terms, the PPSA might be unenforceable. However,
6 the PPSA addresses each of them. With respect to “notice” and “forecast,” sections 9.4, 9.5 and
7 9.6 delineate the parties’ respective responsibilities regarding Forecasted Availability Notice,
8 Forecasted Delivery Notice and Delivery Notice. These sections merely leave the “form” of
9 notice to be addressed by the Protocol. Section 9.9 sets forth the parties’ respective
10 responsibilities with regard to “scheduling.” Section 9.3 sets forth TEMI’s exclusive right to
11 “dispatch” products. Section 10.1 sets forth AEP’s responsibility to “operate” and “maintain” the
12 Facility. Finally, section 10.2 provides fairly detailed requirements pertaining to “maintenance
13 (including outages).” For each term listed in section 9.1, the parties’ respective obligations are
14 identified elsewhere in the PPSA. Thus, all material terms are covered by the PPSA; only certain
15 non-material details were left to future negotiations.
16 The law of New York is clear that a contract will not fail for indefiniteness unless the
17 matters left open are material. May Metro. Corp., 290 N.Y. at 264. As the details left to be
18 worked out in the Protocol are not material, and since TEMI has not suggested that any other
19 material terms are missing, the PPSA is enforceable.
particular event (such as successful negotiation of a Protocol), “[t]he language of the condition
must be explicit.” Tractebel, 2005 WL 146807, at *4, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 869, at *13
(quoting Catskill Dev., L.L.C. v. Park Place Entm’t Corp., 154 F. Supp. 2d 696, 704 (S.D.N.Y.
2001) (alteration in original)).
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1 Although we conclude that the PPSA is enforceable on its face, TEMI’s conduct in the
2 years after the PPSA was entered into bolsters this conclusion. “[E]ven where parties explicitly
3 designate a material term ‘to be mutually agreed upon’ in the future . . . courts may still find the
4 presence of a binding agreement where ‘the parties intend to enter into a binding contractual
5 relationship.’” H/R Stone, Inc. v. Phoenix Bus. Sys., Inc., 660 F. Supp. 351, 356 (S.D.N.Y. 1987)
6 (Walker, J.) (quoting Allen & Co. v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 382 F. Supp. 1052, 1057
7 (S.D.N.Y. 1974), aff’d, 519 F.2d 788 (2d Cir. 1975) (internal quotation marks omitted)). “[T]he
8 existence of a contract may be established through the conduct of the parties recognizing the
9 contract.” Apex Oil Co. v. Vanguard Oil & Serv. Co., 760 F.2d 417, 422 (2d Cir. 1985). “In
10 determining whether the parties’ conduct is consistent with the existence of a binding contract, it
11 is necessary that the totality of all acts of the parties, their relationship and their objectives be
12 considered.” H/R Stone, 660 F. Supp. at 356 (internal quotation marks, citation and brackets
13 omitted). Upon review of TEMI’s conduct in the years after it signed the PPSA, it is clear that
14 TEMI understood the PPSA to be binding and enforceable.
15 For example, on June 3, 2002, TEMI wrote to AEP noting that the expected operations
16 date for the Plaquemine facility was October 13, 2003, “some five months later than the target
17 date of May 1, 2003.” TEMI reminded AEP that under the PPSA it was “required to provide
18 replacement power to [TEMI] beginning May 1, 2003,” if the Plaquemine facility was not up and
19 running by that date. TEMI’s present claim that the PPSA is unenforceable does not square with
20 the assertion of its right to Replacement Products under the PPSA in 2003.
21 On May 7, 2003, TEMI’s Robert Stibolt sent a letter to AEP’s Frank Hilton in response to
22 the latter’s request for a increase in the credit guaranty pursuant to PPSA § 7.1.2. Stibolt’s letter
Page 10 of 38
1 takes issue only with AEP’s calculations under section 7.1.2; it makes no claim that section 7.1.2
2 is unenforceable. If TEMI did not view the PPSA as a binding commitment, it surely would have
3 disputed the fact of liability under section 7.1.2, not just the extent of liability.
4 In a June 10, 2003 letter, TEMI’s Sam Henry requested certain information from AEP’s
5 Brian Tierney. Henry writes, “As Buyer, TEMI has express contract rights pursuant to [PPSA]
6 sections 3.6 and 3.7, which will be breached if [AEP] cannot assure [TEMI] all deficiencies will
7 be promptly cured.” (emphasis added). It would seem disingenuous for TEMI to now claim that
8 the PPSA is unenforceable when previously TEMI asserted its “rights” under the contract.
9 Finally, in early 2003, more than a year and a half after the June 1, 2001 Protocol
10 deadline, the parties signed a letter agreement amending the PPSA which stated “[e]xcept to the
11 extent expressly modified by this letter agreement, all other terms and conditions of the [PPSA]
12 shall remain unmodified and continue in full force and effect.” (emphasis added). TEMI argues
13 that this language merely reaffirmed the parties’ obligation to negotiate the Protocol in good
14 faith. The letter agreement, however, states that “all other terms and conditions” of the PPSA
15 shall “continue in full force and effect,” not just section 9.1's mandate to negotiate a Protocol.
16 The letter agreement indicates that TEMI understood the terms of the PPSA to have “force and
17 effect.”
18 An agreement for a 20-year project like the one at issue here will inevitably be elaborate,
19 extensive and complex. No matter how much time and effort the parties expend working out the
20 details in advance, however, some of the practical details will require refinement as the project
21 begins to take shape. The fact that the contract anticipates that the parties will have to negotiate
22 these details in the future does not render the contract unenforceable. See May Metro. Corp., 290
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1 N.Y. at 264. Where, as here, the parties have agreed on all material terms of the contract and
2 clearly manifested their intent to be bound by those terms, but have left the practical
3 implementation of certain terms to be resolved in good faith negotiations at a future date, the
4 contract will be enforced.4
5 II. Whether AEP Acted in Good Faith
6 Under New York law, a covenant of good faith and fair dealing is implicit in all contracts
7 during the course of contract performance. Dalton v. Educ. Testing Serv., 87 N.Y.2d 384, 389
8 (1995). The covenant “embraces a pledge that neither party shall do anything which will have
4
TEMI makes much of the preliminary agreement dichotomy explained in a decision by
then-District Judge Leval. In Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America v. Tribune
Company, Judge Leval carefully identified two types of preliminary agreements that exist under
New York law. 670 F. Supp. at 498; see also Adjustrite Sys., Inc. v. GAB Bus. Servs., Inc., 145
F.3d 543, 547-48 (2d Cir. 1998) (applying the Tribune preliminary agreement framework);
Arcadian Phosphates, Inc. v. Arcadian Corp., 884 F.2d 69, 71-72 (2d Cir. 1989) (same). The
first type of preliminary agreement (“Type I”) exists “when the parties have reached complete
agreement (including the agreement to be bound) on all the issues perceived to require
negotiation,” although they may “desire a more elaborate formalization of the agreement.”
Tribune, 670 F. Supp. at 498. A Type I agreement is enforceable. Id. The second type of
preliminary agreement (“Type II”) “does not commit the parties to their ultimate contractual
objective but rather to the obligation to negotiate the open issues in good faith.” Id. TEMI
insists that the PPSA was of the second order, and, because TEMI negotiated in good faith and
was unable to reach agreement with AEP on the details of the Protocol, TEMI was never bound
by the PPSA. TEMI argues that the district court erred in concluding that the PPSA was an
enforceable Type I agreement.
In distinguishing between Type I and Type II preliminary agreements, TEMI misframes
the issue. Although the district court discussed the Type I / Type II preliminary agreement
dichotomy, ultimately the court concluded that the PPSA was not a preliminary agreement at all:
“I, however, cannot conclude that the PPSA was merely a ‘preliminary commitment’ that TEMI
can abandon . . . . The PPSA is comprehensive and incorporates all material terms of the 20-year
power purchase agreement.” Tractebel, 2005 WL 146807, at *4, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 869, at
*12. As explained above, we agree with the district court that the PPSA was not merely a
preliminary agreement but an enforceable contract. The preliminary agreement dichotomy is
inapposite.
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1 the effect of destroying or injuring the right of the other party to receive the fruits of the
2 contract.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In some cases, the covenant may
3 even require “affirmative steps to cooperate in achieving” the contract’s objective. FARNSWORTH
4 ON CONTRACTS § 7.17 (2d ed. 2001). “[S]ince there is a presumption that all parties act in good
5 faith, the burden of proving a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing is on the
6 person asserting the absence of good faith.” 23 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 63:22 (4th ed.
7 2006).
8 “In determining whether a party has breached the obligation or covenant of good faith and
9 fair dealing, a court must examine not only the express language of the parties’ contract, but also
10 any course of performance or course of dealing that may exist between the parties.” Id. “Thus,
11 whether particular conduct violates or is consistent with the duty of good faith and fair dealing
12 necessarily depends upon the facts of the particular case, and is ordinarily a question of fact to be
13 determined by the jury or other finder of fact.” Id. (citations omitted); see also Kobrin v. Univ. of
14 Minnesota, 121 F.3d 408, 415 (8th Cir. 1997); McMahon Food Corp. v. Burger Dairy Co., 103
15 F.3d 1307, 1313 (7th Cir. 1996). We may not set aside the district judge’s findings of fact during
16 a bench trial unless they are clearly erroneous. Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a); see also Anderson v. City of
17 Bessemer, 470 U.S. 564, 573 (1985).
18 TEMI relies on two instances to show that AEP violated the covenant of good faith and
19 fair dealing. The first occurred during Protocol negotiations when AEP submitted its proposed
20 changes to TEMI’s January 2003 Protocol draft. The second occurred when AEP sought a credit
21 guaranty increase pursuant to PPSA § 7.1.2 which TEMI claims was based on “planted
22 quotations.” We agree with the district court that neither instance demonstrates a breach of the
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1 covenant of good faith and fair dealing on the part of AEP.
2 A. The Protocol Negotiations
3 Although PPSA § 9.1 states that the parties were to enter into a mutually agreeable
4 Protocol no later than June 1, 2001, Protocol negotiations did not begin until May 29, 2002.
5 Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *3, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *10. On that date the
6 parties agreed to exchange Protocol outlines within four weeks. Id. AEP produced nothing by
7 the deadline; TEMI sent only a two-and-a-half page rough draft outline that the district court
8 found to be “far from a final Protocol.” Id. Both parties agreed that the Protocol negotiations
9 would be a back-and-forth process over several months. Id., 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at
10 *10-11. The following months witnessed a significant amount of foot-dragging by the parties;
11 neither seemed distressed that the deadline for negotiating the Protocol had long since passed.
12 See id., 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *11.
13 Although the parties exchanged numerous drafts during the course of negotiations, TEMI
14 argues that AEP’s April 2003 draft was a blatant attempt to frustrate the Protocol negotiations,
15 which amounted to bad faith. TEMI identifies four aspects of AEP’s April draft in support of
16 that conclusion.
17 First, although PPSA § 3.3.4.1 required the Steam Peaking Product (“SPP”)5 to be
18 available on ten-minutes-notice, AEP’s April draft provided that the SPP would only be available
19 on thirty-minutes-notice before the top of the hour, which could mean up to eighty-nine minutes.
20 TEMI agues that the short notice period was important because it made the SPP highly valuable
5
The SPP is “an amount of Capacity equal to the Capacity of [one of the Plaquemine
units] . . . and its associated Energy and Ancillary Services.” PPSA § 1.149.
Page 14 of 38
1 to customers requiring immediate delivery of additional power. AEP counters that the notice
2 provisions were based on Entergy’s6 scheduling requirements, and that TEMI’s June 2002 draft
3 Protocol made direct reference to the need “to conform to Entergy’s scheduling protocols.”
4 AEP’s Joel Jansen testified that Entergy rules require, “in the normal course,” that power be
5 properly identified and scheduled (“tagged”) before it may be placed on the Entergy power grid
6 for delivery to an end user. The district court found that this explanation for modifying SPP
7 availability was “based on reasonable concerns.” Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *8, 2005 U.S.
8 Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *27.
9 On appeal, TEMI claims that the district court “ignored undisputed evidence that AEP’s
10 excuse rested on a false premise: that tagging was required ‘in the normal course.’” TEMI Br. at
11 47. TEMI argues that Entergy rules requiring that power be identified and scheduled, which
12 necessitates a longer notice period, did not apply to the power AEP would deliver to TEMI, and,
13 thus, did not compel AEP to ask for more than ten minutes’ notice. The record suggests,
14 however, that as a general matter power was required to be tagged, requiring notice periods in
15 excess of ten minutes. When AEP submitted the April draft suggesting a longer notice period in
16 order to accord with Entergy requirements,7 the Entergy Open Access Transmission Tariff
17 required that energy be identified twenty minutes before the top of the hour for scheduling.
18 Entergy Open Access Transmission Tariff § 13.8. While an AEP executive at trial alluded to the
6
Entergy is a large utility located in the southern United States. It is the transmission
service provider in the area where the Plaquemine Facility is located. The Plaquemine Facility is
connected with the Entergy grid.
7
The PPSA directly references the need for the Protocol to accord with Entergy
scheduling requirements. See PPSA §§ 9.3, 9.6, 9.8, 9.9.
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1 possibility that in certain situations power could still be provided on ten minutes’ notice, TEMI
2 offers no evidence that the Entergy tagging requirements did not apply “in the normal course.”
3 Second, TEMI argues that while section 9.7 required AEP to make operating data
4 available on a “real-time” basis, AEP’s April draft provided that AEP would communicate
5 operating data on a “daily basis.” TEMI argues that real-time communication was essential and
6 that anything less would have “rendered the Products of little economic value, injured TEMI’s
7 relations with its customers, and subjected TEMI to large Entergy tariff penalties.”8 TEMI
8 mischaracterizes AEP’s April draft. PPSA § 9.7 states that “[r]eal-time electronic operating data
9 (including generating dispatch and outage information) shall be available to Buyer and Seller for
10 the Project.” (emphasis added). Section 1.2 of the April draft states that “[a]ll operating data,
11 including but not limited to operating limits, ramp-rates, previous day’s actuals, previous day’s
12 gas turbine starts, amount of each product available, and the status of steam turbine, will be
13 conveyed daily from Seller to Buyer,” (emphasis added) but section 1.3 of the April draft (“real-
14 time information”) provides, “[r]eal-time information, including but not limited to generating
15 dispatch and outage information, will be conveyed to the Buyer from the Seller via telemetering,
8
On this point TEMI also argues that the district court committed legal error because it
justified the way in which the April draft dealt with real-time information “primarily on the
ground that there was ‘no evidence’ AEP sought ‘to delay execution of the Protocol.’” TEMI Br.
at 48 (citation omitted). TEMI argues that the district court’s reasoning is “legally untenable,
since motive is irrelevant to whether there has been a breach of contract.” Id. (citing Koufakis v.
Carvel, 425 F.2d 892, 906 (2d Cir. 1970)). TEMI cites the law correctly but misidentifies the
issue. The question here is not whether AEP breached the express terms of the contract, but
whether AEP acted in good faith; that is an issue entirely tied to motive. See Travellers Int’l,
A.G. v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 41 F.3d 1570, 1577 (2d Cir. 1994) (finding under New York
law, that Airline breached implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing when its promotional
efforts were not based on good faith business judgments but, rather, “improper motive”); Polotti
v. Flemming, 277 F.2d 864, 868 (2d Cir. 1960) (Under New York law, “‘good faith’ connotes an
actual state of mind – a state of mind motivated by proper motive.”).
Page 16 of 38
1 with back-up via email and telephone.” (emphasis added). Thus, Section 1.3 of the April draft
2 accords perfectly with PPSA § 9.7, which requires that generating dispatch and outage
3 information be conveyed on a real-time basis.
4 Third, TEMI claims that AEP’s April draft removed from TEMI’s January draft certain
5 details pertaining to operations which, in their absence, rendered AEP’s draft “useless.” On this
6 point TEMI provides little explanation and almost no evidence that the removed details were
7 fundamental to an operative Protocol. TEMI cites only to AEP’s April draft and to conclusory
8 statements contained in an affidavit by a TEMI executive. This evidence does not establish bad
9 faith.
10 Finally, TEMI argues that AEP’s draft removed earlier references to replacement products
11 and substituted “one vague and inadequate” paragraph, thereby depriving TEMI of a useful
12 Protocol for replacement products. TEMI offers no explanation as to why the section of AEP’s
13 draft addressing replacement products was inadequate. In any event, “inadequacy” is something
14 that TEMI could have taken up with AEP in further negotiations; it is not evidence of bad faith.
15 In sum, TEMI’s evidence that AEP acted in bad faith during the Protocol negotiations fell
16 far short of its burden. Moreover, as the district court stated, “[n]o one at AEP ever represented
17 that [the April draft] was a ‘take it or leave it’ proposition, and there was always the possibility of
18 further discussions.” Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *8, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *28.
19 TEMI argues that the district court erred because “[b]y definition, a counteroffer rejects and
20 terminates the offer, so that the offer cannot thereafter be accepted so as to create a contract.”
21 Labeling the various drafts “offers” and “counteroffers” is pointless. The parties were in
22 negotiations that were specifically contemplated by the PPSA. By definition, negotiations involve
Page 17 of 38
1 the exchange of proposals until the parties reach agreement. By stating that AEP’s April draft was
2 not offered on a “take it or leave it” basis, the district court merely noted there was no evidence
3 that AEP was unwilling to continue negotiating the Protocol after it submitted the April draft.
4 This observation supports the district court’s ultimate conclusion that the April draft was not a
5 bad faith attempt to frustrate the Protocol negotiations.
6 B. The Credit Guaranty Increase Request
7 The PPSA included a Termination Payment provision that guaranteed each party’s
8 respective interest in the event of the other’s default. PPSA § 7.3. To cover the Termination
9 Payment, the parties agreed to exchange $50 million guaranties upon execution of the PPSA, and
10 either party could seek an increase in the guaranty if it had “reasonable grounds to believe” that its
11 counterpart’s exposure under the PPSA exceeded $50 million. PPSA §§ 7.1.2, 7.2.2. Exhibit
12 7.1.2 provided that, in calculating the projected Termination Payment, the market price of the
13 products sold to TEMI “shall be based on broker, dealer or exchange quotations” for the
14 subsequent five years, escalating at 3 percent per year through the remaining term of the PPSA.
15 On May 12, 2003, believing TEMI’s exposure under the PPSA to be far in excess of $50 million,
16 AEP requested that TEMI increase the guaranty to $436 million. TEMI disputed AEP’s
17 calculation, claiming its exposure under the PPSA was no more than $33 million. On June 17,
18 2003, after conducting further market research, AEP determined TEMI’s projected Termination
19 Payment to be $337 million but indicated it would accept an increase in the guaranty of $100
20 million.
21 On appeal, TEMI claims AEP acted in bad faith during the credit guaranty negotiations
22 because, in calculating TEMI’s projected Termination Payment, AEP used “two-ways” to
Page 18 of 38
1 determine the market price of the Products.9 TEMI casts aspersion on the practice of using two-
2 ways by referring to it as “quote-planting,” and asserts that it was “attempted fraud[] on a grand
3 scale.” TEMI Br. at 58. The record, however, indicates that the use of two-ways is a common
4 means of price discovery in the energy industry. Indeed, TEMI’s Director of Risk Control
5 acknowledged that even TEMI occasionally used two-ways to determine energy prices.
6 A two-way involves presenting to the market simultaneous bids and offers around an
7 estimated current market price. If a bid is above the market price, or an offer is below, it will
8 likely be acted on. On June 11, 2003, AEP’s Marcus Moreland was asked to obtain market quotes
9 for “into Entergy” on-peak and off-peak products for a period of five years beginning in 2004.
10 Moreland was to obtain quotes from the four brokers upon whom AEP and TEMI agreed in a June
11 11 telephone conversation. On June 13, 2003, Moreland presented bids and offers to the market
12 based on AEP’s forward price curves. Moreland testified that the brokers indicated that there was
13 market activity in response to AEP’s bids/offers, causing Moreland to increase the bid/offer
14 prices. Although there was some market activity, it was limited, and none of the bids or offers
15 was acted on by other traders. However, Moreland stated that, in his experience,
16 [P]articipants in the power trading markets will transact in instances
17 where they perceive an opportunity to make a profit. The fact that
18 no one transacted on my bids and offers indicated to me that those
19 bids and offers reflected prevailing market prices, such that no one
9
TEMI also claims that AEP acted in bad faith because no credit guaranty was required.
We agree with the district court, however, that TEMI also recognized that an increase was
required, given that most of its internal projections showed exposure far exceeding $50 million.
For example, on April 25, 2003, TEMI’s director of credit, Lora Kinner, reported on a
conversation she had with AEP’s director of credit, Frank Hilton, in which the latter said he
believed TEMI’s exposure to be “north of $600M.” In an email to her colleagues at TEMI,
Kinner stated that this number was “very close to the number provided by [TEMI] Risk Control,
which was calculated in accordance with the credit provisions of the contract.”
Page 19 of 38
1 believed they would profit significantly from entering into
2 transactions with AEP at the bid and offer prices I had put into the
3 market.
4
5 (Moreland Decl., J.A. 6973-74 ¶ 10).
6 The fact that AEP’s quotes were based on its own two-ways was not concealed from
7 TEMI. Scot Marshall, TEMI’s vice president responsible for power trading, testified that by
8 simply contacting the brokers the parties had agreed to use he was able to determine, during the
9 relevant period, that the only bid/offer quotes in the Long Term into Entergy market had come
10 from AEP. (Marshall Decl., J.A. 4745-46 ¶¶ 15, 16). In a June 5, 2003 letter, TEMI’s Robert
11 Stibolt warned AEP’s Frank Hilton that TEMI understood the PPSA to require that the market
12 price could only be determined by using quotes that were “executable at arms-length with third
13 parties.” Stibolt stated that “bid/offers that either AEP or TEMI have provided to a dealer or
14 broker” were unacceptable. Thus, although TEMI contested the fact that the market price could
15 be determined by using two-ways, TEMI was certainly aware that AEP obtained its quotes by that
16 method. Moreover, at no point did AEP ever represent that it did not employ two-ways to
17 determine the market price, or that it obtained its quotes from arms-length transactions.
18 It should also be noted that AEP only requested TEMI to provide the increased guaranty to
19 cover AEP’s losses if TEMI defaulted. If TEMI did not default, the guaranty would not be
20 invoked. Thus, the present case is unlike those cited by TEMI where bad faith was motivated by
21 financial gain. See, e.g., Broder v. MBNA Corp., 281 A.D.2d 369, 370-71 (N.Y. App. Div. 2001);
22 Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Chipetine, 221 A.D.2d 284, 287 (N.Y. App. Div.
23 1995). AEP did not stand to gain financially by increasing the credit guaranty; the guaranty
24 served only to insure AEP’s undisputed financial interest in the PPSA.
Page 20 of 38
1 It may be the case that, in a totally illiquid market, two-ways do not provide the most
2 accurate measure of market price. The reliability of two-ways in determining the price of
3 products in the power trading market, however, is not the question before us. Rather, the issue is
4 whether AEP’s request for an increase in the guaranty was in bad faith, given that the amount
5 requested was based on two-ways. We agree with the district court that, “[a]t worst, these facts
6 show that no one knew what to make of a non-existent marketplace.” Tractebel, 2005 WL
7 1863853, at *8, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *29. We therefore hold that the district court’s
8 finding that AEP complied with the covenant of good faith and fair dealing was not clearly
9 erroneous.
10 III. Whether AEP Is Entitled To Damages For Replacement Products
11 The PPSA contemplates the use of Replacement Products10 during certain stages of the
12 contract period. As of target COD, and for the duration of the Delivery Period,11 AEP was
13 obligated to supply energy and capacity to TEMI. See PPSA §§ 11.4, 11.5. If AEP could not
14 meet TEMI’s needs with energy/capacity from the Plaquemine Facility, AEP was obligated to
15 provide TEMI with Replacement Products. See id. Thus, in the event of an unplanned outage, or
16 if target COD preceded actual COD, AEP was nevertheless obligated to satisfy TEMI’s Delivery
17 Notices12 with “substantially equivalent” Products from other sources. See id.; PPSA § 1.133. If
10
“‘Replacement Products’ are any Capacity, Energy, or Ancillary Services from a
generation source other than the Project substantially equivalent to the Product intended to be
replaced.” PPSA § 1.133.
11
“‘Delivery Period’ means the period beginning with the first hour of Target COD and
ending at midnight, April 30, 2023 . . . .” PPSA § 1.56.
12
A “Delivery Notice” is a “Dispatch order from [TEMI] to generate electricity at the
Project in accordance with the delivery procedures set out in this Agreement directing the
Page 21 of 38
1 AEP failed to provide Replacement Products, TEMI could cover and AEP would be obligated to
2 pay TEMI the Replacement Price.13 See PPSA §§ 11.4, 11.5.
3 AEP argues that the Replacement Products provisions must be read in light of the
4 Minimum Must Take obligation (PPSA § 3.1.4.4) and the Capacity Payment obligations (PPSA
5 §§ 5.1.1, 5.2.1, 5.3.1), such that these obligations applied in the pre-COD period. Thus, according
6 to AEP, rather than affording TEMI the right to call on Replacement Products in the pre-COD
7 period, the Replacement Products provisions, in conjunction with the must-take and capacity
8 payment provisions, obligated TEMI to take and pay for Replacement Products, whether it
9 requested them or not.
10 AEP’s interpretation of the PPSA is erroneous for three reasons. First, the must-take
11 obligation did not apply prior to actual COD. Second, while the capacity payment provision
12 technically applied as of target COD, unless TEMI requested, and AEP provided, replacement
13 capacity, the Capacity Payment obligation would equate to zero dollars. Finally, the Replacement
14 Products provisions were intended to guaranty TEMI a reliable source of energy/capacity, not to
15 permit AEP to obtain Replacement Products cheaply on the collapsed energy market and force
16 TEMI to buy them at the prices specified in the PPSA.
17 A. The Minimum Must Take Obligation
18 The Plaquemine Facility is a “cogeneration” facility – the same turbine generating units
delivery of one or more Products.” PPSA § 1.55.
13
“‘Replacement Price’ is the price at which [TEMI], acting in a commercially reasonable
manner, purchases . . . a replacement for any Capacity, Energy, or Ancillary Services not
delivered by [AEP], plus any additional transmission charges, if any, reasonably incurred by
[TEMI] to the Delivery Point, not to exceed the market price at the Delivery Point for such
Capacity, Energy or Ancillary Services.” PPSA § 1.132.
Page 22 of 38
1 that produce electricity also provide steam used in Dow’s manufacturing processes. Because Dow
2 needs large quantities of steam in its operations, the units need to run, and therefore generate
3 power, almost constantly. This is not to say that all the units must run at maximum capacity at all
4 times. All four units can be turned down to produce less energy. In addition, any one of the units
5 can be turned off entirely. The remaining three units, however, have to be on line in order to
6 provide enough steam for Dow to operate its plant.
7 Even when only three units are in operation and the units are turned down, they produce a
8 certain amount of electricity. Under the deal between AEP and Dow, AEP agreed to build and
9 operate the Plaquemine Facility and committed to purchase from Dow the electricity produced.
10 To ensure that AEP would have a buyer for that electricity, AEP entered into the PPSA with
11 TEMI. The PPSA gave TEMI the exclusive right to the energy produced by the Facility, but also
12 obligated TEMI to take and pay for the minimum amount of energy produced by the operating
13 units. Section 3.1.4.4 of the PPSA provides that TEMI “must at all times during the Delivery
14 Period request, take and pay for delivery of Baseload Capacity and Baseload Energy at the sum of
15 (a) the minimum output level set forth in Exhibit 3.1.4.4 and (b) the Nomination in effect from
16 time to time.” Id. If TEMI requested less than the sum of the minimum output level and the
17 effective nomination, AEP could automatically amend TEMI’s Delivery Notice to reflect the
18 appropriate sum. Id.
19 AEP argues that TEMI’s must-take obligation commenced as of target COD, or May 1,
20 2003, despite the fact that the Facility was not then operational. AEP bases its argument on the
21 language in section 3.1.4.4, which states that the must-take clause applies “at all times during the
22 Delivery Period.” The Delivery Period is defined in the PPSA as “the period beginning with the
Page 23 of 38
1 first hour of target COD and ending at midnight, April 30, 2023 . . . .” PPSA § 1.56. AEP’s
2 interpretation of this language conflicts with the obvious purpose of the must-take clause. Once
3 the Plaquemine Facility was operational, AEP was obligated to keep three units running in order
4 to produce steam for Dow; the must-take clause ensured AEP would have a buyer for the
5 attendant energy produced by the units. Indeed, the must-take clause itself states that if AEP’s
6 obligation to supply steam to Dow ever ceased, the minimum output levels set forth in Exhibit
7 3.1.4.4, and therefore the must-take obligation, no longer applied.14 Thus, the applicability of the
8 must-take clause was contingent on AEP’s obligation to supply steam to Dow. Prior to actual
9 COD, the Facility produced neither steam nor electricity, and, therefore, AEP had no need for a
10 guaranteed purchaser of electricity.
11 AEP insists that because section 3.1.4.4 states that the must-take obligation commenced at
12 target COD, not actual COD, TEMI must have been obligated to take and pay for a minimum
13 amount of energy despite the fact that the Facility produced none. In AEP’s view, the must-take
14 clause applied even if AEP was supplying power to TEMI entirely from external sources – i.e.,
15 with Replacement Products. However, AEP fails to explain how to calculate the minimum must-
16 take amount in such circumstances. Section 3.1.4.4 indicates that the must-take obligation is the
17 sum of “(a) the minimum output level set forth in Exhibit 3.1.4.4 and (b) the Nomination in effect
18 from time to time.” AEP concedes that prior to actual COD the Nomination could never be other
19 than zero, but claims that TEMI was nevertheless obligated to take and pay for the minimum
14
The must-take clause provides, “If the Facility shall no longer be subject to operational
constraints related to [AEP’s] obligation to supply steam, the minium output level set forth in
Exhibit 3.1.4.4 shall no longer apply. [TEMI] shall either Dispatch each Unit at zero or above a
minimum operating level to be established . . . .” PPSA § 3.1.4.4.
Page 24 of 38
1 output levels set forth in Exhibit 3.1.4.4. That exhibit, however, only identifies minimum output
2 levels for the actual Plaquemine units. The two tables contained in the Exhibit identify the
3 minimum amount of energy that must be produced and purchased when either three or four
4 Plaquemine units are running. But, if no units are running, the tables are inapplicable.
5 Section 3.1.4.4 does not provide a method of calculating TEMI’s minimum must-take
6 obligation if AEP is able to provide power only from external sources. AEP’s solution to this
7 perceived lacuna in the contract was to “deem” three or four units to be running based on the
8 amount of energy TEMI requested. In doing so, AEP created a solution to a problem that did not
9 exist. The PPSA contained no provision for determining TEMI’s minimum must-take obligation
10 prior to actual COD because there was no such obligation. The must-take provision only made
11 sense once the Facility was operational and AEP was obligated to keep the units on line in order
12 to supply steam to Dow.
13 B. The Capacity Payment Provisions
14 Section 5.1.1 (“Payment for Baseload Capacity”) provides,
15 Commencing with the Target COD and for the duration of the
16 Delivery Period, [AEP] shall sell and [TEMI] shall purchase and
17 pay for the Baseload Capacity. For each calendar month during the
18 Delivery Period, [TEMI] shall pay [AEP] an amount (the “Baseload
19 Capacity Payment”) equal to the product of (a) the Baseload
20 Capacity Payment Price multiplied by (b) the Baseload Contract
21 Capacity for the applicable month multiplied by (c) the Baseload
22 Availability Adjustment. [TEMI] shall be obligated to make the
23 Baseload Capacity Payment under all circumstances without regard
24 to, inter alia, whether [AEP] shall deliver any Energy or Ancillary
25 Services associated with Baseload Capacity, whether [AEP]
26 supplies Replacement Products at any time as of Target COD or
27 during the Delivery Period[,] or whether at any time [TEMI] elects
Page 25 of 38
1 to receive less than the entire Baseload Product.15
2
3 Although 5.1.1 states that the Baseload Capacity Payment obligation commenced at target
4 COD, it is possible for the Baseload Capacity Payment to be zero dollars. Variable (c), the
5 Baseload Availability Adjustment, is calculated by reference to a formula provided in section
6 5.1.2.2. If there is no actual baseload capacity, and no replacement baseload capacity, the formula
7 results in a Baseload Availability Adjustment of zero percent. If such is the case, and variables (a)
8 and (b) are multiplied by (c), the total Baseload Capacity Payment is zero, since any number
9 multiplied by zero percent is zero. The PPSA explicitly contemplates this possibility: Section
10 5.1.2.3 (“Maximum Adjustment”) provides that “[i]n no event and under no circumstances shall
11 [TEMI’s] Baseload Capacity Payment for a given month be less than zero.” Thus, in some
12 months, the Baseload Capacity Payment might be zero.
13 This is not to say that the Baseload Availability Adjustment was necessarily zero in all
14 pre-COD months. The Baseload Availability Adjustment could be greater than zero pre-COD if
15 Replacement Power was used. See PPSA § 5.1.2.2. A letter from TEMI’s Joey Moreland to
16 AEP’s Ross Metersky, providing sample calculations for hypothetical pre-COD scenarios,
17 suggests that TEMI also held this view. In that case, however, the Payment Obligation would be
18 contingent on TEMI actually requesting, and AEP providing, Replacement Products. As
19 discussed in the next section, in the pre-COD period it was TEMI’s option to request Replacement
20 Products; TEMI was not obligated to request Replacement Products. Thus, if in the pre-COD
15
Sections 5.2.1 and 5.3.1 are identical but apply to Baseload Augmentation Capacity and
Steam Peaking Capacity, respectively. The analysis that follows applies equally to those
sections.
Page 26 of 38
1 period TEMI requested no Replacement Products, or if AEP provided none, the Baseload
2 Capacity Payment would be zero dollars.
3 C. The Replacement Products Provisions
4 Section 2.3.1 provides, “In the event [AEP] is unable to make any Product(s)16 available at
5 the Delivery Point17 in accordance with the then effective Delivery Notice, [AEP] shall have the
6 right to deliver Replacement Product(s) at the Delivery Point . . . .” Sections 2.3.3.1 (“First
7 Replacement Period”) and 2.3.3.2 (“Subsequent Periods”) indicate that AEP’s “right” to provide
8 Replacement Products in 2.3.1 was intended to apply during unplanned outages at the Plaquemine
9 Facility. Thus, TEMI could tender Delivery Notices and expect to have them fulfilled even if
10 there was an outage at the Facility, but AEP had the right to satisfy those notices with
11 Replacement Products from external sources. In addition, sections 11.4 and 11.5 explain that if
12 target COD preceded actual COD, then AEP was obligated to meet TEMI’s Delivery Notices with
13 Replacement Products, as “requested by [TEMI].” PPSA §§ 11.4, 11.5 (emphasis added). If AEP
14 failed to do so, TEMI was permitted to obtain Replacement Products from other sources and send
15 the bill to AEP.
16 What is important to note about sections 2 and 11 is that Replacement Products were only
17 to be provided upon TEMI’s request. Replacement Products could only be supplied pursuant to
18 section 2.3.1 “in accordance with the then effective Delivery Notice.” PPSA § 2.3.1. The
19 Delivery Notice was the order that TEMI was supposed to send AEP when it wanted one or more
16
“Products” are those energy products produced at the Plaquemine Facility. See PPSA
§§ 1.21, 1.30, 1.126, 1.149.
17
“Delivery Point” is “the interconnection of the Dow Chemical Complex System with
the system of the Transmission Operator .” PPSA § 4.1.
Page 27 of 38
1 energy Products to be generated. PPSA § 1.55. If there was an unplanned outage, and TEMI did
2 not need energy, there was no obligation for TEMI to take Replacement Products it did not want.
3 Similarly, Replacement Products could only be supplied pursuant to sections 11.4 and 11.5 as
4 “requested by [TEMI].” If, as in this case, actual COD was delayed, TEMI was not obligated to
5 request Replacement Products if it had no use for them.
6 The Replacement Products provisions were designed to ensure that (1) as of target COD,
7 TEMI would have a reliable source of energy from AEP, and (2) in the event of an unplanned
8 outage, or if actual COD was delayed, AEP could satisfy its obligations to supply energy to TEMI
9 with energy products from sources external to the Plaquemine Facility. The Replacement
10 Products provisions did not permit AEP to force Replacement Products on TEMI if TEMI had no
11 desire for them.
12 AEP argues that the Replacement Product provisions, in conjunction with the must-take
13 and capacity payment provisions, were designed to ensure that AEP would have a stable stream of
14 income as of target COD, from which it could recoup some of its investment in the construction
15 of the Facility, even if the Facility was not yet operational. This argument rests on a false premise
16 – that market conditions would always enable AEP to generate a profit by selling Replacement
17 Products to TEMI at the prices stated in the PPSA. AEP’s enthusiasm for selling Replacement
18 Products to TEMI in the pre-COD period is explained by the collapsed price of energy in the
19 Entergy region. AEP was able to obtain replacement energy products at significantly reduced
20 prices, or from other AEP facilities experiencing energy surpluses, and sought to sell those
21 products at the higher prices specified in the PPSA. If during the pre-COD period energy prices
22 had significantly increased rather than decreased, however, there is no doubt that AEP would have
Page 28 of 38
1 been less vehement about TEMI’s alleged obligation to take and pay for Replacement Products,
2 since supplying Replacement Products to TEMI would have left AEP with a loss.
3 The language and structure of the PPSA clearly indicate that TEMI was not under any
4 obligation to take Replacement Products in the pre-COD period. Thus, we reject AEP’s argument
5 that the PPSA was designed to assure AEP a stable stream of income as of target COD.
6 D. The $116.5 Million Award
7 The district court awarded AEP $116.5 million for Replacement Products that AEP billed
8 to TEMI because it found that the PPSA obligated TEMI to take and pay for Replacement
9 Products in the period between target and actual COD. The total award includes approximately
10 $65.8 million for replacement energy billed pursuant to the must-take clause, and $50.7 million
11 for replacement capacity billed pursuant to the capacity payment provisions. Because these
12 provisions, on their own, did not obligate TEMI to take and pay for Replacement Products, the
13 award was in error.
14 There is some indication in the record, however, that TEMI did in fact proffer Delivery
15 Notices during the pre-COD period directing AEP to provide Replacement Products.18
16 Ultimately, TEMI rejected every offer of Replacement Products on the basis that the Products
17 offered did not meet the PPSA’s test for substantial equivalency. The district court found that the
18 products offered by AEP were substantially equivalent, Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *10,
19 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS, at *21, and we see no basis in the record for declaring the district court’s
18
When asked whether he was familiar with the routine interaction between the parties
whereby TEMI would send AEP a Delivery Notice during the Replacement Period and AEP
would offer power that TEMI would ultimately reject, TEMI’s manager of the Real Time Energy
Trading Desk replied that he was, and that the routine became a daily process.
Page 29 of 38
1 finding to be clearly erroneous. While we agree with TEMI that the must-take and capacity
2 payment provisions did not obligate TEMI to take and pay for a minimum amount of energy and
3 capacity, to the extent TEMI requested energy and capacity, it is liable for whatever damages AEP
4 incurred in attempting to satisfy those requests. It is not clear from the record exactly what
5 damages AEP incurred. AEP’s Mark Jansen testified that AEP did not incur any costs whatsoever
6 for the replacement energy that it billed to TEMI. It appears that AEP did incur some costs in
7 attempting to provide TEMI with replacement capacity, however, and if such is the case TEMI is
8 liable for the amount AEP spent in reliance on TEMI’s request.
9 We therefore vacate the district court’s judgment awarding AEP damages for Replacement
10 Products, and remand for a reassessment of AEP’s damages in light of this opinion and any
11 further fact-finding the district court deems necessary and appropriate.
12 IV. Whether AEP is Entitled to Damages Pursuant To The Termination Payment Provision
13
14 AEP cross-appeals the district court’s denial of its claim for damages pursuant to the
15 PPSA’s Termination Payment provision. Section 12 of the PPSA provides that, in the event of
16 either party’s default, the non-defaulting party is entitled to any net loss the party incurs as a result
17 of the other party’s early termination of the agreement.19 AEP claims TEMI’s repudiation of the
18 PPSA will cause AEP to suffer a present value net loss of approximately $500 million.
19 The district court characterized damages pursuant to the Termination Payment provision
19
The Termination Payment provision entitles the non-breaching party to a “Settlement
Amount.” PPSA §§ 12.2, 12.3. The Settlement Amount is defined as “Losses or Gains, and
Costs . . . which [the non-defaulting] party incurs as a result of the termination of [the]
Agreement.” PPSA § 1.138. “Losses” are the “present value” of “the economic loss . . .
(exclusive of Costs) resulting from termination of [the] Agreement,” PPSA § 1.107, and “Gains”
are “the present value of the economic benefit . . . resulting from the termination of [the]
Agreement.” PPSA § 1.83.
Page 30 of 38
1 as “essentially a request for lost profits projected over the 20 year length of the contract” and
2 required AEP to prove the extent of damages to a “reasonable certainty.” Tractebel, 2005 WL
3 1863853, at *13, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *41. AEP and TEMI each presented an expert
4 witness to calculate the amount of the Termination Payment; the district court was not persuaded
5 by either. Id. at *14-16, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *44-51. Ultimately, the district court
6 concluded that AEP failed to meet its burden of proving damages to a reasonable certainty and
7 altogether declined to award damages pursuant to the Termination Payment provision. Id. at *17,
8 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *53. AEP requested that the district court reconsider, and urged
9 the court to view AEP’s claim as one for general, not consequential, damages. In its
10 reconsideration order, the district court remained steadfast in its view that AEP’s claim was
11 “appropriately characterized as one for consequential damages,” but stated that even under the
12 more flexible standard for general damages, AEP failed to meet its burden of proof. Tractebel
13 Energy Mktg., Inc. v. AEP Power Mktg., Inc., Nos. 03-6731, 03-6770, 2006 WL 147586, *2-3,
14 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1702, *9, 11-12 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 20, 2006).
15 We review a district court’s decision to deny damages for breach of contract de novo. See
16 generally Lauder v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., 284 F.3d 375, 379 (2d Cir. 2002) (holding that
17 whether the district court correctly calculated damages is a question that we review de novo).
18 A. Lost Profits As General Damages
19 We do not disagree with the district court’s characterization of AEP’s claim as “essentially
20 a request for lost profits.” AEP sought the present value of the amount it expected to profit under
21 the PPSA. The district court erroneously concluded, however, that the profits lost in this case
22 were consequential damages.
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1 Lost profits are consequential damages when, as a result of the breach, the non-breaching
2 party suffers loss of profits on collateral business arrangements. In the typical case, the ability of
3 the non-breaching party to operate his business, and thereby generate profits on collateral
4 transactions, is contingent on the performance of the primary contract. When the breaching party
5 does not perform, the non-breaching party’s business is in some way hindered, and the profits
6 from potential collateral exchanges are “lost.” Every lawyer will recall from his or her first-year
7 contracts class the paradigmatic example of Hadley v. Baxendale, where Baxendale’s failure to
8 deliver a crank shaft on time caused Hadley to lose profits from the operation of his mill. 9 Ex.
9 341, 156 Eng. Rep. 145 (1854). In New York, a party is entitled to recover this form of lost
10 profits only if (1) it is demonstrated with certainty that the damages have been caused by the
11 breach, (2) the extent of the loss is capable of proof with reasonable certainty, and (3) it is
12 established that the damages were fairly within the contemplation of the parties. See Kenford Co.
13 v. County of Erie, 67 N.Y.2d 257, 261 (1986).
14 By contrast, when the non-breaching party seeks only to recover money that the breaching
15 party agreed to pay under the contract, the damages sought are general damages. See Am. List
16 Corp. v. U.S. News & World Report, Inc., 75 N.Y.2d 38, 44 (1989). The damages may still be
17 characterized as lost profits since, had the contract been performed, the non-breaching party
18 would have profited to the extent that his cost of performance was less than the total value of the
19 breaching party’s promised payments. But, in this case, the lost profits are the direct and probable
20 consequence of the breach.20 See id. The profits are precisely what the non-breaching party
20
New York long ago clarified the distinction between profits as general or consequential
damages in Masterton & Smith v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 7 Hill 61, 68-69 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1845):
Page 32 of 38
1 bargained for, and only an award of damages equal to lost profits will put the non-breaching party
2 in the same position he would have occupied had the contract been performed.21 See id.
3 In characterizing AEP’s claim as one for consequential damages, the district court
4 confused the benefit of the bargain with speculative profits on collateral transactions. See id.; see
5 also Markowitz & Co. v. Toledo Metro. Housing Auth., 608 F.2d 699, 707 (6th Cir. 1979). AEP
6 seeks only what it bargained for – the amount it would have profited on the payments TEMI
7 promised to make for the remaining years of the contract. This is most certainly a claim for
8 general damages.
9 B. Estimating General Damages
10 It has long been established in New York that a breaching party is liable for all direct and
11 proximate damages which result from the breach. Wakeman v. Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co., 56
12 Sickels 205, 209, 4 N.E. 264, 266 (1886). The damages, however, “must be not merely
13 speculative, possible, and imaginary, but they must be reasonably certain and such only as
When the books and cases speak of the profits anticipated from a
good bargain as matters too remote and uncertain to be taken into
[] account in ascertaining the true measure of damages, they
usually have reference to dependant and collateral engagements
entered into on the faith and in expectation of the performance of
the principal contract . . . . But profits or advantages which are the
direct and immediate fruits of the contract entered into between the
parties stand upon a different footing . . . . [I]t is difficult to
comprehend why, in case one party has deprived the other of the
gains or profits of the contract by refusing to perform it, this loss
should not constitute a proper item in estimating the damages.
21
The non-breaching party is, of course, under a duty to mitigate damages to the extent
practicable, see Losei Realty Corp. v. City of New York, 254 N.Y. 41, 47 (1930), and any
proceeds generated from mitigation should be accounted for in the ultimate award of damages.
Page 33 of 38
1 actually follow or may follow from the breach of the contract.” Id. (emphasis added).
2 “Certainty,” as it pertains to general damages, refers to the fact of damage, not the amount. For
3 “when it is certain that damages have been caused by a breach of contract, and the only
4 uncertainty is as to their amount, there can rarely be good reason for refusing, on account of such
5 uncertainty, any damages whatever for the breach. A person violating his contract should not be
6 permitted entirely to escape liability because the amount of the damage which he has caused is
7 uncertain.”22 Id. “[T]he burden of uncertainty as to the amount of damage is upon the wrongdoer
8 . . . .” Contemporary Mission, Inc. v. Famous Music Corp., 557 F.2d 918, 926 (2d Cir. 1977)
9 (applying New York law). “The plaintiff need only show a ‘stable foundation for a reasonable
10 estimate’” of the damage incurred as a result of the breach. Id. (quoting Freund v. Washington
11 Square Press, Inc., 34 N.Y.2d 379, 383 (1974)). “Such an estimate necessarily requires some
12 improvisation, and the party who has caused the loss may not insist on theoretical perfection.”
22
In Story Parchment Company v. Paterson Parchment Paper Company, the United
States Supreme Court quoted the following discussion with approval:
It is sometimes said that speculative damages cannot be recovered,
because the amount is uncertain; but such remarks will generally
be found applicable to such damages as it is uncertain whether
sustained at all from the breach. . . . The general rule is, that all
damages resulting necessarily and immediately and directly from
the breach are recoverable, and not those that are contingent and
uncertain. The latter description embraces, as I think, such only as
are not the certain result of the breach, and does not embrace such
as are the certain result, but uncertain in amount.
282 U.S. 555, 562-63 (1931) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Accord New York
Trust Co. v. Island Oil & Transp. Corp., 34 F.2d 653, 654 (2d Cir. 1929) (Hand, J.) (“It is,
indeed, one of the consequences of the doctrine of anticipatory breach that, if damages are
assessed before the time of performance has expired, the court must take the chance of
forecasting the future as best it can.”); Borne Chemical Co., Inc. v. Dictrow, 85 A.D.2d 646, 651
(N.Y. App. Div. 1981).
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1 Entis v. Atl. Wire & Cable Corp., 335 F.2d 759, 763 (2d Cir. 1964).
2 While certainty of amount is not an element of general damages in New York, it is an
3 element of consequential damages. In addition to proving that the existence of damage is
4 reasonably certain, and that the damages were foreseeable and within the contemplation of both
5 parties, a party claiming consequential damages must also prove the amount of damage with
6 “reasonable certainty.” Kenford, 67 N.Y.2d at 261. Thus, there exists a higher burden for proving
7 consequential damages than for general damages. This is the burden that the district court
8 erroneously imposed on AEP.
9 The district court erred in requiring AEP to prove the extent of its damages to a reasonable
10 certainty.23 The law of New York is clear that once the fact of damage is established,24 the non-
11 breaching party need only provide a “stable foundation for a reasonable estimate [of damages]”
23
We acknowledge that in its reconsideration order the district court stated that “any
estimate of damages, even by [the general damages] standard, must be reasonable, and
uncertainty especially in a market such as this must be considered.” Tractebel, 2006 WL
147586, at *3, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1702, at *10. Based on this statement, TEMI argues that
the district court rejected AEP’s claim under either standard. We are not confident the district
court fully analyzed AEP’s claim under the standard for general damages, since both cases cited
by the district court to support its statement involve claims for consequential damages. Id. (citing
Wolff & Munier, 946 F.2d at 1010 and Isaac H. Blanchard Co. v. Rome Metallic Bedstead Co.,
184 A.D. 187, 193 (N.Y. App. Div. 1918)).
24
The district court impliedly found that AEP suffered at least some damage by TEMI’s
repudiation of the PPSA, for it rejected as illogical TEMI’s argument that AEP actually
benefitted from TEMI’s repudiation of the PPSA. Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *15, 2005
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at *47-48. The court noted that TEMI’s expert’s analysis “defies
common sense because it implies not only that the Plaquemine plant revenues (without the
PPSA) will far exceed [AEP’s expert’s] estimate, but that they are in fact much greater than the
payments TEMI would have made to AEP under the PPSA. Put another way, according to
[TEMI, it] is actually harmed by the termination of the PPSA . . . .” Id.
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1 before an award of general damages can be made. Freund, 34 N.Y.2d at 383.
2 The district court noted that “it is inherently speculative” to determine AEP’s loss over the
3 twenty-year period, and that the method offered for determining AEP’s loss “required a large
4 number of assumptions.” Tractebel, 2005 WL 1863853, at *16, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15972, at
5 *50 (internal quotation marks omitted). The court further stated:
6 In order to know what AEP’s revenues would be over the next
7 twenty years, one would have to be able to presage a vast and varied
8 body of facts. Any projection of lost profits would necessarily
9 include assumptions regarding the price of electricity and the costs
10 of operating over twenty years. One would also need to surmise
11 what competing forms of energy such as coal and nuclear energy
12 would cost over the same time period. Also factoring into this
13 calculation are the political and regulatory developments over
14 twenty years, population growth in the Entergy region, and
15 technological advances affecting the production of power and
16 related products. With so many unknown variables, these experts
17 might have done as well had they consulted tealeaves or a crystal
18 ball.
19
20 Id.
21 Not a single product or service exists for which a company’s profit margin, over time, is
22 unaffected by fluctuating supply and demand, changes in operating costs, increased competition
23 from alternatives, alterations to the relevant regulatory regime, population increases or decreases
24 in the targeted market, or technological advances. The variables identified by the district court
25 exist in every long-term contract. It is not the case that all such contracts may be breached with
26 impunity because of the difficulty of accurately calculating damages.
27 New York courts have significant flexibility in estimating general damages once the fact
28 of liability is established. Contemporary Mission, 557 F.2d at 926; New York Trust Co., 34 F.2d
Page 36 of 38
1 at 654; Randall-Smith, Inc. v. 43rd St. Estates Corp., 17 N.Y.2d 99, 105-06 (1966); Wakeman, 56
2 Sickels at 209, 4 N.E. at 266; Dictrow, 85 A.D.2d at 651. To the extent certain variables must be
3 assumed in order to arrive at a reasonable estimate, the district court may do so, unless evidence is
4 presented that undermines the basis for the assumption. For example, while changes in the
5 political and regulatory environments would likely affect AEP’s profit margin, and thus the extent
6 of AEP’s actual damages, if there is currently no evidence of an impending change the district
7 court may assume these environments will remain stable. This is precisely what the parties did
8 when they estimated the value of the PPSA prior to signing.25 The risk that the future might
9 reveal the district court’s assumptions to be false is appropriately borne by TEMI as the breaching
10 party.26 Contemporary Mission, Inc., 557 F.2d at 926.
11 We therefore vacate the district court’s judgment denying AEP damages pursuant to the
12 Termination Payment provision. We remand for reconsideration of AEP’s damages under the
13 appropriate standard, and for any further fact-finding the district court deems appropriate or
25
The record contains internal TEMI memoranda that show that, prior to entering the
PPSA, TEMI assessed the risk that certain variables might change in such a way as to adversely
affect TEMI’s financial interest in the deal. TEMI concluded that political, regulatory, and
market risks were low.
26
It is no less speculative for the district court to determine AEP’s loss over the twenty-
year period than it is was for TEMI to calculate its expected profit from the PPSA at the time it
entered into the agreement. The district court stated that the parties’ respective experts could
“have done as well had they consulted tealeaves or a crystal ball.” If it is true that projecting
profits over twenty years is so absurdly speculative that economists can do no better than fortune
tellers, it would have been imprudent for the parties to enter a contract for such a long period in
the first place. The reality, however, is that long-term contracts are entered into regularly, and a
degree of speculation is acceptable in the business community.
Page 37 of 38
1 necessary.
2 V. Other Claims
3 TEMI also argued that the district court erred in denying its primary jurisdiction motion,
4 and in finding that AEP satisfied the PPSA’s requirement that AEP use reasonable efforts to
5 obtain QF certification. We affirm the decision of the district court on these issues for
6 substantially the same reasons stated below.
7 VI. Conclusion
8 The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED on the following issues: (1) whether the
9 PPSA is enforceable; (2) whether AEP violated the covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and
10 (3) whether AEP used substantial efforts to obtain QF certification. The district court’s award of
11 damages to AEP for Replacement Products is VACATED. The district court’s denial of damages
12 to AEP pursuant to the Termination Payment provision is also VACATED. Accordingly, we
13 REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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