In Re G-I Holdings, Inc. , 755 F.3d 195 ( 2014 )


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  •                                   PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ______
    Nos. 13-3335 and 13-3336
    ______
    IN RE: G-I HOLDINGS, INC.,
    formerly known as GAF Corporation,
    Debtor
    UNITED STATES GYPSUM COMPANY,
    Appellant No. 13-3335
    QUIGLEY COMPANY, INC.,
    Appellant No. 13-3336
    ______
    On Appeal from United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D. N.J. No. 2-12-cv-6933)
    District Judge: Dennis M. Cavanaugh
    ______
    Argued April 8, 2014
    Before: FISHER and SCIRICA, Circuit Judges, and
    MARIANI,* District Judge.
    (Filed: June 17, 2014)
    Rachel S. Bloomekatz, Esq. ARGUED
    Jones Day
    Suite 600
    325 John H. McConnell Boulevard
    Suite 600, P.O. Box 165017
    Columbus, OH 43215
    Brad B. Erens, Esq.
    Brian J. Murray, Esq.
    Jones Day
    77 West Wacker Drive
    Suite 3500
    Chicago, IL 60601
    Counsel for Appellant United States Gypsum Co.
    John P. DiIorio, Esq.
    Shapiro Croland
    411 Hackensack Avenue
    Hackensack, NJ 07601
    *
    The Honorable Robert D. Mariani, District Judge for
    the United States District Court for the Middle District of
    Pennsylvania, sitting by designation.
    2
    Stephen D. Hoffman, I, Esq. ARGUED
    Wilk Auslander
    1515 Broadway
    43rd Floor
    New York, NY 10036
    Counsel for Appellant Quigley Co. Inc.
    Mark E. Hall, Esq.
    Dennis J. O'Grady, Esq.
    Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti
    One Speedwell Avenue
    Headquarters Plaza
    Morristown, NJ 07962-0000
    Andrew J. Rossman, Esq. ARGUED
    Scott C. Shelley, Esq.
    Jacob J. Waldman, Esq.
    Quinn, Emanuel, Urquhart & Sullivan
    51 Madison Avenue
    22nd Floor
    New York, NY 10010
    Counsel for Appellees
    ______
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______
    3
    FISHER, Circuit Judge.
    Due to the rising number of asbestos-related personal
    injury lawsuits filed in the 1980s, a group of producers of
    asbestos and asbestos-containing products (“Members” or
    “Participating Producers”) joined together and formed the
    Center for Claims Resolution (the “Center”) to administer
    asbestos personal injury claims on behalf of the Members.
    The Members negotiated and signed the Producer Agreement
    Concerning Center for Claims Resolution (the “Producer
    Agreement”), which established and set forth the mechanics
    of the Center and the obligations of the Members. Appellants
    United States Gypsum Company (“U.S. Gypsum”) and
    Quigley Company, Inc. (“Quigley”) and the predecessor-in-
    interest of Appellee G-I Holdings, Inc. (“G-I”) were among
    the roughly twenty asbestos producers who signed the
    Producer Agreement, thereby becoming Members of the
    Center.
    After G-I failed to pay its contractually-calculated
    share due to pay out personal injury settlements and cover
    Center expenses, U.S. Gypsum and Quigley were obligated to
    pay additional sums to cover G-I’s payment obligations. G-I
    filed for bankruptcy and the Center, U.S. Gypsum, and
    Quigley each filed a proof of claim in the Bankruptcy Court
    seeking to recover for G-I’s nonpayment under the Producer
    Agreement. The Center eventually settled its claim with G-I.
    Although arising in the context of a bankruptcy
    proceeding, this case concerns claims for breach of contract
    under Delaware law. We are asked to decide whether, under
    the Producer Agreement, U.S. Gypsum and Quigley
    (together, the “Former Members”) may maintain a breach of
    contract action against G-I. We hold that the Producer
    Agreement permits the Former Members to pursue a breach
    of contract action against G-I for its failure to pay
    4
    contractually-obligated sums due to the Center, in light of the
    Former Members’ payment of G-I’s share. We therefore
    vacate the District Court’s order affirming the Bankruptcy
    Court’s grant of summary judgment in G-I’s favor.
    I.
    A.
    Facing a growing number of asbestos-related personal
    injury lawsuits, a group of producers of asbestos and
    asbestos-containing products joined together to form the
    Center in order to more effectively defend against and resolve
    the lawsuits. The Center was incorporated as a non-profit,
    non-stock Delaware corporation in September 1988 to
    “administer and arrange for the evaluation, settlement,
    payment, and defense of asbestos-related bodily injury
    claims.” (A-684).
    The Producer Agreement sets forth the Members’
    purposes in entering the agreement and establishing the
    Center. The Members stated that they “believe it is important
    to establish an organization that will, on behalf of all
    Participating Producers, resolve meritorious asbestos-related
    claims in a fair and expeditious manner and, where necessary,
    defend asbestos-related claims efficiently and economically.”
    (A-715). They also sought to “enter into a constructive
    relationship with one another and to resolve any cross or
    counter claims that they may have against each other.” (Id.).
    The Center was governed by a five-person Board of
    Directors. A producer became a Member of the Center by
    signing the Producer Agreement, and membership could be
    terminated by a Member’s written notice, by a Member’s
    bankruptcy, or by resolution of the Board of Directors.
    However, even after termination of membership, the former
    Member would “continue to have and to honor all of the
    obligations incurred by it [under the Producer Agreement] or
    5
    on its behalf as a member prior to the effective date of its
    membership termination.” (A-720).
    The Producer Agreement designates the Center as each
    Member’s “sole agent to
    administer and arrange on its behalf for the evaluation,
    settlement, payment or defense of all asbestos-related claims
    against such Participating Producer.” (A-721). The Producer
    Agreement defines “asbestos-related claims” as “claims or
    lawsuits against any Participating Producers or the Center . . .
    seeking monetary relief . . . for bodily injury, sickness,
    disease or death, alleged to have been caused in whole or in
    part by any asbestos or asbestos-containing product.” (A-
    716). After settling or otherwise resolving claims on behalf
    of the Members, the Center would bill and collect each
    Member’s allocated share of liability payments and expenses
    based upon a formula set forth in an attachment to the
    Producer Agreement.
    If a Member failed to pay its share of liability
    payments or expenses in a timely manner, the Producer
    Agreement provides that “the Center’s Board of Directors
    may direct the Center to institute an ADR on behalf of the
    Center’s Participating Producers against such Participating
    Producer to enforce payment of such obligations.” (A-731-
    32). With respect to claims between Members, the Producer
    Agreement provides that “[s]o long as it is a member of the
    Center each Participating Producer shall forego with respect
    to asbestos-related claims for contribution or indemnity (other
    than for contribution or indemnity assumed under written
    agreement) against all other Participating Producers that are
    members of the Center.” (A-730-31).
    Finally, the Producer Agreement sets forth that it is
    “not intended to confer any rights or benefits upon any other
    persons” aside from Members, the Center, and some of the
    6
    Members’ insurers. (A-727). Other than the Center, a
    signatory Member, or a Member’s insurer, “[n]o person . . .
    shall have any legally enforceable rights under the
    Agreement.” (Id.). “All rights of action for any breach of
    this Agreement by any signatory hereto are hereby reserved to
    the Center, Participating Producers and to Supporting Insurers
    that are paying unallocated expenses incurred by the Center.”
    (Id.).
    G-I is the successor-in-interest to GAF Corporation,
    which was named in a large number of asbestos-related
    lawsuits. G-I’s membership in the Center was terminated by
    the Center’s Board of Directors after the Board determined
    that G-I had breached the Producer Agreement by failing to
    pay its share of settlements and expenses. G-I’s termination
    was effective January 17, 2000. Shortly after the termination
    of G-I’s membership, the Center notified G-I that it owed the
    Center almost $300 million and commenced an ADR for
    payment. The ADR was stayed once G-I filed for bankruptcy
    in January of 2001. The Center sought additional payments
    from the remaining Members to satisfy G-I’s share of
    settlements and expenses.
    U.S. Gypsum and Quigley were Members of the
    Center at the same time as G-I. On February 1, 2001, Quigley
    withdrew from the Center, thereby terminating its
    membership. On June 25, 2001, U.S. Gypsum filed for
    Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which terminated its membership.
    U.S. Gypsum and Quigley assert that they made payments to
    the Center to cover the shortfall caused by G-I’s failure to
    pay.
    B.
    G-I filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on January 5,
    2001. The Bankruptcy Court fixed October 15, 2008 as the
    date by which all proofs of claim against any interest in the
    7
    debtor had to be filed. On October 9, 2008, the Center filed a
    proof of claim alleging that G-I was liable to the Center for a
    total of $254.7 million due to its breach of the Producer
    Agreement.1 The Center alleged that it paid out $29.5 million
    to asbestos claimants on G-I’s behalf before it stopped paying
    out G-I’s share of the settlements to asbestos claimants. It
    also asserted that G-I owed it $2.6 million for G-I’s share of
    the Center’s expenses. Finally, the Center claimed damages
    for settlement agreements that asbestos claimants had voided
    after G-I’s membership terminated. Although the Center had
    not paid out any of these settlements, it claimed that G-I owed
    it $222.6 million as damages for the settlements that would
    not have been voided but for G-I’s breach. In its proof of
    claim, the Center did not state whether it had sought
    reimbursement from the remaining Members of the Center for
    the $29.5 million it paid on G-I’s behalf.
    Both of the Former Members filed a separate proof of
    claim seeking to recover sums paid to the Center to cover G-
    1
    The amount of the Center’s claim as of the date of G-
    I’s bankruptcy filing differs from the amount of the claim as
    of the date of filing the proof of claim. See A-775 (“As of
    January 6, 2001 (the “Petition Date”), the [Center] had a
    claim against G-I Holdings, Inc. (the “Debtor”) in the
    aggregate principal amount of $299,510,764 plus interest and
    attorneys’ fees. As of the date of the filing of this Proof of
    Claim, the [Center] has a claim against the Debtor in the
    aggregate principal amount of $254,705,373 plus interest,
    fees, and expenses.”). The Center had sought the $299.5
    million figure from G-I shortly after its membership
    terminated. We use the $254.7 million figure because that is
    the amount stated as presently owed in the proof of claim that
    G-I and the Center eventually settled.
    8
    I’s obligations. U.S. Gypsum filed its proof of claim on
    October 15, 2008, asserting a breach of contract claim. U.S.
    Gypsum maintained that in November 2000, the Center
    sought reimbursement from the remaining Members of the
    Center, including U.S. Gypsum, for the Center’s payment of
    $30 million to asbestos claimants on G-I’s behalf. U.S.
    Gypsum paid roughly $6.3 million to the Center to reimburse
    the Center for the payments made on G-I’s behalf. Quigley
    filed a proof of claim on October 13, 2008 seeking
    unliquidated damages for G-I’s breach of the Producer
    Agreement. G-I filed objections to the proofs of claim.
    The Center and G-I settled the Center’s claim against
    G-I seeking $254.7 million for a cash payment of $9.9
    million. On September 4, 2009, G-I moved for approval of
    the Settlement Agreement in the Bankruptcy Court. The
    Former Members objected to the settlement and sought
    clarification that the Settlement Agreement would not affect
    or release their claims against G-I. The Bankruptcy Court
    added language to the Order approving the Settlement
    Agreement, which was entered on September 24, 2009,
    providing that the Settlement Agreement was “binding on all
    entities asserting claims against G-I that derive from [the
    Center] or depend upon [the Center’s] rights.” (A-476).
    However, “[f]or the avoidance of doubt, nothing in this Order
    or the [] Settlement Agreement shall release, prejudice,
    compromise or otherwise affect the claims, if any, that
    Former Members . . . have or may have against the G-I Plan
    Parties . . . .” (Id.).
    The District Court and Bankruptcy Court approved G-
    I’s Eighth Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization on
    November 12, 2009. In the Eighth Amended Plan, G-I
    maintained that the Former Members’ claims were derivative
    of the Center’s settled claim, and should therefore be
    9
    considered settled. But the Plan set forth that to the extent
    that the Former Members’ claims would be allowed, they
    would receive cash equal to 8.6% of the allowed claim
    amount.
    G-I filed for summary judgment on the Former
    Members’ claims on July 15, 2010. After briefing, the
    Bankruptcy Court issued an opinion on August 13, 2012
    granting the motion for summary judgment in G-I’s favor.
    The Bankruptcy Court concluded that the Center was
    authorized to resolve G-I’s breach by nonpayment, and the
    Producer Agreement barred the Former Members from
    pursuing claims, including for breach of contract, against G-I.
    The Bankruptcy Court also determined that the Former
    Members’ claims were derivative of the Center’s claim,
    which provided an additional reason that Former Members
    could not maintain their claims against G-I.
    U.S. Gypsum and Quigley appealed to the District
    Court, which affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s decision on
    June 26, 2013.       The District Court agreed with the
    Bankruptcy Court that the Former Members were
    contractually barred from pursuing an independent breach of
    contract action against G-I, reasoning that the Producer
    Agreement sought to avoid all litigation between Members.
    The District Court explained that, when read in the context of
    Section X’s title (“Third-Party Rights”) and the rest of the
    Producer Agreement, language reserving rights of action for
    breach to the Members did not create a right to bring breach
    of contract claims. It also concluded that the section
    permitting the Center to bring an ADR for a Member’s failure
    to pay did not “leav[e] open the option for independent
    members to bypass the sole authority of the [Center] to
    remedy [the breach] on their own.” (A-7). The District Court
    did not reach the issue of whether the Former Members’
    10
    claims were direct or derivative. U.S. Gypsum and Quigley
    both filed a timely notice of appeal.
    II.
    The Bankruptcy Court had jurisdiction over this core
    matter in G-I’s bankruptcy proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    § 1334(b) and 28 U.S.C. § 157. The Former Members timely
    appealed the Bankruptcy Court’s final order to the District
    Court, which exercised its jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    § 158(a)(1) and Bankruptcy Rule 8001(a).              We have
    jurisdiction to review the District Court’s final order under 28
    U.S.C. § 158(d)(1) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    “We review a district court’s grant of summary
    judgment de novo, applying the same standard the district
    court applied.” Viera v. Life Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    642 F.3d 407
    ,
    413 (3d Cir. 2011). “We also review the legal interpretation
    of contractual language de novo.” 
    Id. Summary judgment
    is proper “if the movant shows
    that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(a). “An issue is genuine only if there is a sufficient
    evidentiary basis on which a reasonable jury could find for
    the non-moving party, and a factual dispute is material only if
    it might affect the outcome of the suit under governing law.”
    Kaucher v. Cnty. of Bucks, 
    455 F.3d 418
    , 423 (3d Cir. 2006)
    (citing Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248
    (1986)). In conducting our review, we view the record in the
    light most favorable to the non-moving party and draw all
    reasonable inferences in that party’s favor. Bowers v. Nat’l
    Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, 
    475 F.3d 524
    , 535 (3d Cir. 2007).
    A motion for summary judgment is properly denied if “a fair-
    minded jury could return a verdict for the plaintiff on the
    evidence presented.” 
    Anderson, 477 U.S. at 252
    .
    III.
    11
    The Former Members argue that the District Court
    erred in holding that the Producer Agreement bars them from
    pursuing a breach of contract claim against G-I. They also
    urge us not to adopt the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusions that
    the Former Members’ claims are derivative of the Center’s
    claim and that allowing Former Members’ claims would lead
    to a double recovery. We will address each issue in turn.
    A.
    In determining whether the Former Members may
    maintain a breach of contract action against G-I under the
    Producer Agreement, we must heed the guidance of the
    Delaware courts2 and “give priority to the parties’ intentions
    as reflected in the four corners of the agreement.” GMG
    Capital Invs., LLC v. Athenian Venture Partners I, L.P., 
    36 A.3d 776
    , 779 (Del. 2012). “In upholding the intentions of
    the parties, a court must construe the agreement as a whole,
    giving effect to all provisions therein.” E.I. du Pont de
    Nemours & Co., Inc. v. Shell Oil Co., 
    498 A.2d 1108
    , 1113
    (Del. 1985). A court should interpret the contract “in such a
    way as to not render any of its provisions illusory or
    meaningless.”        Sonitrol Holding Co. v. Marceau
    Investissements, 
    607 A.2d 1177
    , 1183 (Del. 1992). “[C]lear
    and unambiguous terms” in a contract are interpreted
    according to their ordinary meaning. GMG Capital 
    Invs., 36 A.3d at 780
    . However, “the meaning which arises from a
    particular portion of an agreement cannot control the meaning
    of the entire agreement where such inference runs counter to
    the agreement’s overall scheme or plan.” E.I. du Pont de
    
    Nemours, 498 A.2d at 1113
    .
    2
    The parties agree that the law of the state of
    Delaware governs the Producer Agreement.
    12
    We also must keep in mind the elements that a plaintiff
    must prove for breach of contract. For a successful breach of
    contract claim, a party must prove: “1) a contractual
    obligation; 2) a breach of that obligation by the defendant;
    and 3) a resulting damage to the plaintiff.” H-M Wexford
    LLC v. Encorp, Inc., 
    832 A.2d 129
    , 140 (Del. Ch. 2003).
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the terms of
    the Producer Agreement. We will first address the language
    that is most relevant to Former Members’ ability to sue G-I
    for its breach by nonpayment, which is found in Section X.
    We will then address whether allowing Former Members to
    bring a breach of contract action under Section X is consistent
    with the purpose of the Producer Agreement and with its
    other provisions and overall scheme.
    The third sentence of Section X provides: “All rights
    of action for any breach of this Agreement by any signatory
    hereto are hereby reserved to the Center, Participating
    Producers and to Supporting Insurers . . . .” (A-727). G-I and
    Former Members were signatories to the Agreement and
    Participating Producers at the time of G-I’s alleged breach.
    For the purposes of this appeal, we will assume that G-I did
    breach the Producer Agreement by failing to make required
    payments.3 If this case involved only G-I’s nonpayment of its
    3
    The District Court ruled on summary judgment that
    the Agreement barred Former Members from bringing a
    breach of contract action against G-I as a matter of law. It did
    not reach the merits of the breach of contract claim – i.e.
    whether G-I failed to make required payments and thereby
    breached the Producer Agreement. G-I disputes the breach;
    however, as Former Members are the non-moving parties, we
    will construe the facts in their favor and assume G-I’s breach
    through nonpayment.
    13
    obligations to the Center, the Former Members would be
    unable to maintain a breach of contract action against G-I
    because they would not yet have suffered damages. But once
    the Former Members were required to make additional
    payments to cover the shortfall caused by G-I’s nonpayment,
    they suffered damages and accrued a cause of action for
    breach of contract. Section X reserves the right of the Former
    Members – Participating Producers at the time of G-I’s
    breach – to maintain an action for breach of the Producer
    Agreement against G-I – a signatory.
    Section X makes explicit a basic contract law
    principle. “It is axiomatic that either party to an agreement
    may enforce its terms for breach thereof.” Triple C Railcar
    Serv., Inc. v. City of Wilmington, 
    630 A.2d 629
    , 633 (Del.
    1993) (citing Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts, § 1:1
    (4th ed. 1990)). Section X expands the universe of entities
    that may bring a breach of contract action under the Producer
    Agreement beyond the Members (who were the only
    signatories to the Producer Agreement) to include the Center
    and some of the Members’ insurers. It was not necessary for
    the Producer Agreement to acknowledge the Members’
    ability to sue for breach because such an ability is inherent in
    contract law. But because the Producer Agreement does
    clearly provide for such a suit, we should not lightly overlook
    Section X as it is the most relevant provision to the issue at
    hand.
    G-I argues – and both the Bankruptcy and District
    Courts agreed – that this language merely limits third party
    rights under the Producer Agreement. Section X is titled
    “Third-Party Rights.” But we will not discount the plain
    language of the third sentence of that section merely because
    of the title. A court “may examine the [contract] heading ‘as
    additional evidence tending to support the contract’s
    14
    substantive provisions.’” Fulkerson v. MHC Operating Ltd.,
    01C-07-020, 
    2002 WL 32067510
    , at *5 (Del Super. Ct. Sept.
    24, 2002) (emphasis added) (quoting Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P.
    v. Cantor, 
    724 A.2d 571
    , 582 n.35 (Del. Ch. 1998)). The title
    of a section cannot contradict or rewrite the plain language of
    the contractual provisions within that section. “Contract
    headings do not constitute controlling evidence of a contract’s
    substantive meaning.” 
    Id. G-I also
    relies upon the other provisions in Section X
    to write off the third sentence. The first two sentences of
    Section X make it clear that the Producer Agreement does not
    confer rights or benefits upon third parties, and that the only
    entities with legally enforceable rights under the Agreement
    are the Center, signatories to the Producer Agreement, and
    certain insurers. G-I would read the third sentence to merely
    reiterate what the first two already make express – that
    unnamed parties are prevented from enforcing the contract. 4
    But this reading would drain the third sentence of meaning
    and would “render a provision or term” – i.e., the language
    reserving rights of action for breach of contract –
    “meaningless or illusory.” Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp,
    
    991 A.2d 1153
    , 1159 (Del. 2010) (internal quotation marks
    4
    G-I also takes a different tack by arguing that even if
    the third sentence can be read as allowing Participating
    Producers to bring breach of contract actions, it need not be
    read to allow actions for nonpayment, and instead should be
    read as reserving the right to remedy breaches other than for
    nonpayment. But this runs counter to the plain language of
    the provision, which specifically reserves “all” rights to bring
    actions for “any” breach of the Agreement. (A-727). These
    words imply that actions for breach due to nonpayment are
    included.
    15
    omitted).      This would violate the rule of contract
    interpretation that we must “give each provision and term
    effect, so as not to render any part of the contract mere
    surplusage.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting
    Kuhn Constr., Inc. v. Diamond State Port Corp., 
    990 A.2d 393
    , 396-97 (Del. 2010)). We therefore decline G-I’s
    invitation to read the third sentence of Section X as a
    reiteration of or further clarification on the preclusion of third
    party rights under the Producer Agreement. Unless the
    language of Section X regarding breach of contract actions is
    irreconcilably inconsistent with the Producer Agreement’s
    purpose, other provisions, or overall contractual scheme, we
    should give effect to the “clear and unambiguous” language
    reserving the Former Members’ right to bring a breach of
    contract action against G-I. GMG Capital 
    Invs., 36 A.3d at 780
    .
    We believe that the plain language of Section X is
    perfectly consistent with the overall purpose of the Producer
    Agreement. We consider the purpose of the Producer
    Agreement because we must “give priority to the parties’
    intentions,” 
    id. at 779,
    and because we do not allow the
    meaning of a particular provision in an agreement to control
    the meaning of the agreement as a whole where that meaning
    “runs counter to the agreement’s overall scheme or plan.”
    E.I. du Pont de 
    Nemours, 498 A.2d at 1113
    .
    The introductory statements to the Producer
    Agreement set forth its purposes. One statement provides
    that the Members “desire to enter into a constructive
    relationship with one another and to resolve any cross or
    counter claims that they may have against each other.” (A-
    715). The courts below relied in part upon this statement in
    concluding that the purpose of the Producer Agreement was
    to prevent “internecine” litigation – i.e. all litigation
    16
    occurring between Members. (A-5, A-51). This goes too far
    and assumes intent to avoid a lawsuit such as this one where
    no such intent was expressed. The Producer Agreement
    states that the Members sought to resolve cross and
    counterclaims that they might have against one another.
    Cross and counterclaims refer to claims that Members could
    have against one another in the thousands of asbestos-related
    personal injury lawsuits that were the main concern of the
    Producer Agreement.            The words crossclaim and
    counterclaim presume the existence of an underlying claim
    already being litigated. See Black’s Law Dict. 433 (9th ed.
    2009) (defining crossclaim as “[a] claim asserted between
    codefendants or coplaintiffs in a case and that relates to the
    subject of the original claim or counterclaim”); Black’s Law
    Dict. 402 (9th ed. 2009) (defining counterclaim as “[a] claim
    for relief asserted against an opposing party after an original
    claim has been made”). If the Members sought to avoid all
    litigation – as the courts below concluded – they could have
    drafted the Producer Agreement to provide that they sought to
    resolve any claims that they might have against each other,
    instead of any cross or counterclaims. “[C]ourts should be
    most chary about implying a contractual protection when the
    contract could easily have been drafted to expressly provide
    for it.” Allied Capital Corp. v. GC-Sun Holdings, L.P., 
    910 A.2d 1020
    , 1035 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    Unlike the courts below, we cannot say that allowing
    Former Members to pursue a breach of contract action against
    G-I for its nonpayment is inconsistent with the overall
    purpose of the Producer Agreement.               The Producer
    Agreement sought to avoid litigation over the allocation of
    liability in the thousands of asbestos-related personal injury
    suits that inspired the creation of the Center in the first place.
    The desire to resolve these cross and counterclaims says
    17
    nothing about the type of claim here – a claim among
    Members for breach of contract, unrelated to any individual
    asbestos-related claim. The expansive reading of purpose
    endorsed by the courts below – preventing internecine
    litigation – colored their analysis of the entire Producer
    Agreement, leading them to conclude that the Former
    Members’ suit against G-I was barred. We will not adopt
    such a broad interpretation and instead conclude that the
    Former Members’ right to bring a breach of contract action is
    consistent with the purpose of the Producer Agreement.
    We turn now to consider whether allowing the Former
    Members to sue G-I for its breach under Section X is
    consistent with the other provisions of the Producer
    Agreement. “In upholding the intentions of the parties, a
    court must construe the agreement as a whole, giving effect to
    all provisions therein.” E.I. du Pont de 
    Nemours, 498 A.2d at 1113
    . If a meaning that arises from one portion of the
    agreement conflicts with the agreement’s “overall scheme or
    plan,” it cannot control. 
    Id. In interpreting
    the entire
    agreement, “[s]pecific language in a contract controls over
    general language, and where specific and general provisions
    conflict, the specific provision ordinarily qualifies the
    meaning of the general one.” DCV Holdings, Inc. v.
    ConAgra, Inc., 
    889 A.2d 954
    , 961 (Del. 2005). Section X is a
    general provision, broadly setting forth the right to bring a
    breach of contract action. If this provision conflicts with a
    more specific provision elsewhere in the Producer Agreement
    or with its overall scheme or plan, we should not allow
    Section X to control.
    We turn first to Section IV’s designation of the Center
    as the Members’ “sole agent.” By signing the agreement,
    “each Participating Producer hereby designates the Center as
    its sole agent to administer and arrange on its behalf for the
    18
    evaluation, settlement, payment or defense of all asbestos-
    related claims against such Participating Producer.” (A-720-
    21). This provision does not conflict with Former Members’
    ability to bring a breach of contract claim against G-I,
    because the Center’s role as “sole agent” applies only to
    “asbestos-related claims.” “Asbestos-related claims” are
    specifically defined in the Producer Agreement as lawsuits
    against Participating Producers or the Center “seeking
    monetary relief . . . for bodily injury, sickness, disease or
    death, alleged to have been caused in whole or in part by any
    asbestos or asbestos-containing product.” (A-716). The
    Former Members’ claims are breach of contract claims made
    by one party to an agreement against another party seeking
    remuneration for the breaching party’s failure to pay its
    contractually-allocated share of payments to settle asbestos-
    related claims. Their claims are not themselves “asbestos-
    related claims.” Allowing the Former Members to sue G-I for
    its nonpayment does not interfere with the Center’s role as
    “sole agent” for the purposes of administering and settling
    these asbestos personal injury claims.
    Next we turn to the first paragraph of Section XIV
    (“Section XIV.1”), which provides that during its
    membership, “each Participating Producer shall forego with
    respect to asbestos-related claims for contribution or
    indemnity (other than for contribution or indemnity assumed
    under written agreement) against all other Participating
    Producers that are members of the Center.” (A-730-31).
    Like the “sole agent” provision in Section IV discussed
    above, because Section XIV.1 qualifies its application to
    “asbestos-related claims” only, it does not conflict with
    Section X. In limiting suits for contribution and indemnity in
    asbestos personal injury lawsuits, this provision implements
    the Producer Agreement’s stated purpose of resolving cross
    19
    and counterclaims among the Members. Asbestos-related
    claims for contribution or indemnity seek to reapportion
    damages based upon each tortfeasor’s proportionate share of
    liability in the underlying personal injury lawsuits. See e.g.,
    Black’s Law Dict. 378 (9th ed. 2009) (defining contribution
    as “[o]ne tortfeasor’s right to collect from joint tortfeasors
    when – and to the extent that – the tortfeasor has paid more
    than his or her proportionate share to the injured party, the
    shares being determined as percentages of causal fault”). The
    Former Members’ breach of contract actions seek to recover a
    set amount of money that they paid to cover G-I’s obligation
    as calculated under a contractual formula. These claims are
    not based upon G-I’s share of the “fault” in the asbestos
    personal injury actions; rather, they are based upon the
    Producer Agreement. We cannot read Section XIV.1, which
    limits suits for contribution and indemnity for asbestos-
    related claims, as being in conflict with the Former Members’
    ability to bring suit for breach of the Producer Agreement
    under Section X.
    Finally, we turn to the fourth paragraph of Section
    XIV (“Section XIV.4”), which addresses a Member’s
    nonpayment. This section provides: “In the event that any
    Participating Producer’s percentage shares of liability
    payments or allocated expenses are not paid in a timely
    manner, the Center’s Board of Directors may direct the
    Center to institute an ADR on behalf of the Center’s
    Participating Producers against such Participating Producer to
    enforce payment of such obligations.” (A-731-32). Allowing
    Former Members to maintain their breach of contract actions
    against G-I does not conflict with this provision for several
    reasons. Most notably, Section XIV.4 provides that in the
    event of nonpayment, the Center’s Board may direct the
    Center to institute an ADR. This language is permissive, not
    20
    mandatory or exclusive. Language in Section IV clearly
    articulates the Center’s “exclusive authority” and role as the
    Members’ “sole agent” in administering asbestos-related
    claims brought against Members. The drafting parties
    therefore knew how to draft a provision giving the Center
    “sole” or “exclusive” authority. In concluding that the Center
    had the exclusive right to bring an action for G-I’s
    nonpayment, the courts below changed “may” into
    “exclusively has the authority to.” We will not read
    “exclusive authority” into the contract “when the contract
    could easily have been drafted to expressly provide for it.”
    Allied Capital 
    Corp., 910 A.2d at 1035
    .
    Consideration of the third element of a breach of
    contract claim – damages – is the key to understanding why
    the Former Members’ right to pursue a breach of contract
    action is consistent with Section XIV.4. The Former
    Members suffered damages once they were required to make
    additional payments to cover the shortfall caused by G-I’s
    breach. Before the Former Members were required to cover
    the shortfall, the harm G-I caused fell upon the Center, as the
    Center was unable to collect payments and therefore fulfill its
    settlement obligations to asbestos plaintiffs. In such a
    situation, the Center would rely upon Section XIV.4 to
    enforce the nonpaying Member’s obligations. But once the
    other Members paid G-I’s share, the harm to the Center was
    remedied – the Center fulfilled its obligations to asbestos
    plaintiffs – and became a harm to the Members who paid
    more than their share due under the Producer Agreement.
    Sections X and XIV.4 are particularly consistent with one
    another when viewed in light of the timing considerations
    outlined above. Section XIV.4 allows the Center to “enforce
    payment” before the Center has required others to cover the
    breaching signatory’s share, when the Center is responsible
    21
    for the money due to asbestos plaintiffs. Section X allows
    Members to bring a breach of contract action after the Center
    has required them to cover and pay the breaching signatory’s
    share, when the Center has fulfilled its obligations to asbestos
    plaintiffs and the damage caused by the breach has shifted
    onto those Members.5
    5
    If the Center were to bring and carry through to
    judgment an ADR on behalf of all Members harmed by one
    Member’s breach, it is possible that Section XIV.4 would
    foreclose those Members’ ability to sue under Section X even
    if the non-breaching Members had covered and paid the
    breaching Member’s share. Under these circumstances, the
    Center would have recovered on behalf of all Members who
    covered and paid, and their right to recovery would be
    foreclosed as their injury would have been remedied by the
    Center, acting on their behalf. Since the Center would have
    obtained this recovery, perhaps adjustments would be made to
    these Members’ future obligations to the Center.
    But that is not what happened here. While the Center
    did institute an ADR in 2000, that ADR was stayed after G-I
    declared bankruptcy. Ultimately, the Center resolved its own
    claims and claims on behalf of present members of the Center
    in 2009 through a settlement approved by the Bankruptcy
    Court. As further discussed below, this settlement did not
    include Former Members’ claims – it explicitly stated that the
    settlement covered only the Center’s claims and the claims of
    eight listed “Members,” not including U.S. Gypsum or
    Quigley. Therefore, the Center’s ADR right under Section
    XIV.4 and the Former Members’ right to bring a breach of
    contract action under Section X do not conflict under the
    events that have transpired here.
    22
    We therefore conclude that the Former Members’ right
    to bring a breach of contract action for G-I’s nonpayment
    under Section X does not conflict with “the agreement’s
    overall scheme or plan.” E.I. du Pont de 
    Nemours, 498 A.2d at 1113
    . Indeed, reading the Producer Agreement to allow
    such an action when one Member pays another Member’s
    share is the only way to give all of its provisions meaning.
    The way that the courts below read the Producer Agreement
    renders meaningless the third sentence in Section X, writes
    out the qualifying phrase “with respect to asbestos-related
    claims” in Section XIV.1, and turns “may” into “exclusively
    has the authority to” in Section XIV.4. We eschew their
    reading in favor of one that “gives effect to every term of the
    instrument.” Council of Dorset Condo. Apartments v.
    Gordon, 
    801 A.2d 1
    , 7 (Del. 2002). We will therefore vacate
    the District Court’s order affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s
    order granting summary judgment to G-I, as the Producer
    Agreement allows Former Members to pursue a breach of
    contract action against G-I.
    B.
    We will briefly address the argument that the Former
    Members cannot pursue their breach of contract action
    against G-I because their claims are not direct claims, but are
    instead derivative of the Center’s claim. The District Court
    did not reach this argument, but the Bankruptcy Court did,
    holding in the alternative that even if the Producer Agreement
    did not prevent the Former Members’ claims, they were
    barred due to their derivative nature.
    Generally, if a cause of action belongs to a
    corporation, only the corporation may bring that action.
    Under some circumstances, a shareholder may bring a
    “derivative” claim on behalf of a corporation for harm done
    to the corporation with recovery going to the corporation.
    23
    Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, 
    845 A.2d 1031
    , 1036
    (Del. 2004). When a shareholder is injured in a way that
    affects his or her legal rights as a shareholder, however, the
    shareholder retains the right to bring a “direct” claim, with
    recovery going directly to shareholders. 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court of Delaware has set forth a standard – the Tooley
    standard – to use in determining whether a shareholder’s
    claim is direct or derivative. The inquiry “turn[s] solely on
    the following questions: (1) who suffered the alleged harm
    (the corporation or the suing stockholders, individually); and
    (2) who would receive the benefit of any recovery or other
    remedy (the corporation or the stockholders, individually)?”
    
    Id. at 1033.
            We can see no reason why the direct/derivative inquiry
    should apply in this situation. Under the case law, the
    distinction applies to claims brought by shareholders in a
    corporation. See 
    id. (“We set
    forth in this Opinion the law to
    be applied henceforth in determining whether a stockholder’s
    claim is derivative or direct.”). G-I and the Former Members
    were not shareholders or investors in the Center, which, as a
    non-profit, non-stock corporation, has no shareholders. G-I
    has not brought to light any cases bearing any similarity to the
    situation here. Cases applying the distinction elsewhere in
    corporate and partnership law – such as to limited
    partnerships and LLCs – are inapplicable, as the Center’s
    structure and relationship with its Members is not similar to
    those corporate forms. See, e.g., Metro. Life Ins. Co. v.
    Tremont Grp. Holdings, Inc., No. 7092, 
    2012 WL 6632681
    ,
    at *9 (Del. Ch. Dec. 20, 2012) (holding that claims brought
    by partners and investors in a limited partnership were
    derivative where the injury was suffered by the limited
    partnership); Matthew v. Laudamiel, No. 5957, 
    2012 WL 605589
    , at *21 (Del. Ch. Feb. 21, 2012) (holding that claims
    24
    brought by LLC members were still derivative even after the
    dissolution of the LLC).
    The Former Members and G-I are in contractual
    privity with one another but not with the Center via the
    Producer Agreement. It seems illogical to inquire whether
    one contract signatory’s breach of contract claim against
    another signatory is derivative of a non-signatory’s claim.
    While the Center was granted rights under the Producer
    Agreement, this does not make the Former Members’ claims
    derivative. Once the Former Members were required to make
    additional payments to cover the shortfall in amounts due to
    asbestos plaintiffs caused by G-I’s nonpayment, the Former
    Members suffered damages and had a straightforward breach
    of contract claim.
    Even if we were to consider whether the Former
    Members’ claims are derivative or direct under the Tooley
    rubric, it is clear that their claims are direct. As to the first
    question, the Former Members, not the Center, suffered the
    harm caused by G-I’s breach. The Former Members, and any
    other Members who were required to pay additional amounts
    to cover for G-I’s nonpayment, suffered a harm when they
    paid amounts beyond what was contractually required. The
    Center, on the other hand, suffered no harm once it required
    the other Members to cover for G-I’s nonpayment and made
    the payments due to asbestos plaintiffs. As to the second
    question, the Former Members would receive the benefit of
    any recovery in the breach of contract action between two
    signatories to the contract. The Bankruptcy Court erred in
    concluding that the Former Members’ claims are derivative of
    the Center’s claim, and we conclude that this issue does not
    present a barrier to the Former Members’ actions for breach
    of contract against G-I.
    C.
    25
    The Bankruptcy Court further concluded that
    permitting the Former Members to recover on claims that the
    Center had already asserted and resolved under the Settlement
    Agreement would allow “an impermissible double recovery”
    against G-I. (A-70). The District Court declined to reach this
    issue.    G-I asserts that it “understood the [Center’s]
    Settlement Agreement to govern all [Center]-related claims,
    and the payment amount was the exclusive source of recovery
    for such claims.” (G-I Br., at 39). But such a belief is in
    direct conflict with the explicit terms of both the Order and
    the Settlement Agreement. We reject G-I’s argument and the
    Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion for several reasons.
    The Order approving the Settlement Agreement
    between the Center and G-I provided: “For the avoidance of
    doubt, nothing in this Order or the [Center’s] Settlement
    Agreement shall release, prejudice, compromise or otherwise
    affect the claims, if any, that Former Members . . . have or
    may have against the G-I Plan Parties.” (A-476). This
    language clearly reserves the Former Members’ right to bring
    a breach of contract action and suggests that the Settlement
    Agreement did not cover the Former Members’ claims.
    Indeed, the terms of the Settlement Agreement itself
    show that the Former Members’ claims were not a part of the
    Center’s settlement recovery. The Settlement Agreement
    provides that the settlement payment that G-I pays to the
    Center represents “G-I’s entire liability to the [Center] for its
    share of liability payments and allocated expenses under the
    terms of the Producer Agreement and Attachment A thereto.”
    (A-428) (emphasis added). The Settlement Agreement states
    that upon the Center’s receipt of the settlement payment, the
    Center and “the Members” release all claims and causes of
    action that they had or may have against G-I, including claims
    for any alleged breach of the Producer Agreement. (A-430).
    26
    The Settlement Agreement defines “Members” as “the
    present members of [the Center],” listing eight companies
    specifically. (A-423). The Former Members are not included
    in the eight companies listed as “Members” under the
    Settlement Agreement, nor were they “present members of
    [the Center]” on the date of the Settlement Agreement.
    The Center had its own claim for damages based upon
    the settlement agreements worth $222 million that were
    voided due to G-I’s breach. And the Former Members were
    not the only Members of the Center required to pay additional
    sums to cover G-I’s share of asbestos settlements. To the
    extent that some of these companies are still Members of the
    Center, the Center could bring these claims against G-I on
    their behalf. Under the terms of the Settlement Agreement
    and the Order approving it, these were the claims that the
    Settlement Agreement resolved, not the Former Members’
    claims.
    Further, the issue of “impermissible double recovery”
    goes to apportionment of liability, not to the Former
    Members’ right to bring a cause of action under the Producer
    Agreement. G-I seems to recognize this point, by arguing
    that the Center’s agreement to indemnify G-I against the
    Former Members’ breach of contract claims, memorialized in
    the Settlement Agreement, has no bearing on the construction
    of the Producer Agreement. While we maintain that the
    Former Members’ claims were not included in the Settlement
    Agreement, even if they were, this would not affect our
    reading of the Former Members’ ability to bring a breach of
    contract action against G-I, because the terms of a settlement
    agreement to which the Former Members were not parties
    cannot change the construction of the Producer Agreement.
    In conclusion, we are not concerned, as the Bankruptcy Court
    was, that allowing the Former Members to assert breach of
    27
    contract claims against G-I would lead to an impermissible
    double recovery. The Center’s recovery for its own claims
    and claims it brought on behalf of present Members of the
    Center have no bearing on the Former Members’ claims,
    particularly when they were explicitly excluded from the
    Settlement Agreement between the Center and G-I.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the District
    Court’s order affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s grant of
    summary judgment in G-I’s favor and remand to the District
    Court. The District Court should vacate its opinion and
    remand to the Bankruptcy Court for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion. We have determined that the
    Producer Agreement does not prohibit the Former Members’
    breach of contract actions against G-I. The merits of the
    Former Members’ claims – whether G-I breached the
    Producer Agreement, whether they can show damages, and
    whether G-I has any valid defenses – are not before this Court
    and we make no comment on their likelihood of success. On
    remand, the Bankruptcy Court may allow discovery and
    additional summary judgment motions on the merits of these
    claims or proceed to trial.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-3335, 13-3336

Citation Numbers: 755 F.3d 195, 2014 WL 2724129, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 11233, 59 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 170

Judges: Fisher, Scirica, Mariani

Filed Date: 6/17/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (15)

DCV Holdings, Inc. v. ConAgra, Inc. , 2005 Del. LEXIS 537 ( 2005 )

E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Shell Oil Co. , 1985 Del. LEXIS 570 ( 1985 )

Triple C Railcar Service, Inc. v. City of Wilmington , 1993 Del. LEXIS 342 ( 1993 )

COUNCIL OF DORSET CONDOMINIUM v. Gordon , 801 A.2d 1 ( 2002 )

Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. , 106 S. Ct. 2505 ( 1986 )

kathleen-bowers-no-05-2269-v-the-national-collegiate-athletic , 475 F.3d 524 ( 2007 )

Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. v. Cantor , 1998 Del. Ch. LEXIS 120 ( 1998 )

H-M Wexford LLC v. Encorp, Inc. , 2003 Del. Ch. LEXIS 54 ( 2003 )

john-kaucher-dawn-kaucher-hw-v-county-of-bucks-michael-fitzpatrick , 455 F.3d 418 ( 2006 )

Allied Capital Corp. v. GC-Sun Holdings, L.P. , 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 198 ( 2006 )

Viera v. Life Insurance Co. of North America , 642 F.3d 407 ( 2011 )

Sonitrol Holding Co. v. Marceau Investissements , 1992 Del. LEXIS 184 ( 1992 )

Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin, & Jenrette, Inc. , 2004 Del. LEXIS 161 ( 2004 )

Kuhn Construction, Inc. v. Diamond State Port Corp. , 2010 Del. LEXIS 98 ( 2010 )

Estate of Osborn Ex Rel. Osborn v. Kemp , 2010 Del. LEXIS 135 ( 2010 )

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