JNV Aviation, L.L.C. v. Flight Options, L.L.C. , 495 F. App'x 525 ( 2012 )


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  •      Case: 11-10958     Document: 00512037269         Page: 1     Date Filed: 10/30/2012
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    October 30, 2012
    No. 11-10958                        Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    JNV AVIATION, L.L.C.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    FLIGHT OPTIONS, L.L.C.,
    Defendant-Appellant Cross-Appellee.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 1:10-CV-69
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and DeMOSS and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Defendant-Appellant Cross-Appellee Flight Options, L.L.C. (“Flight
    Options”) appeals from the district court’s ruling on summary judgment that
    Flight Options breached its contracts with Plaintiff-Appellee Cross-Appellant
    JNV Aviation L.L.C. (“JNV”) relating to fractional interests in two aircraft.
    Flight Options also appeals the district court’s determination of the valuation
    date for assessing the Interest Repurchase Value of the fractional interests.
    JNV cross-appeals from the district court’s determination of the Interest
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
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    No. 11-10958
    Repurchase Value and the district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees to JNV. We
    AFFIRM IN PART and VACATE AND REMAND IN PART.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.      The Operative Agreements
    This case involves two transactions whereby Flight Options sold fractional
    interests in two aircraft to JNV.        The transactions are governed by “a
    coordinated group of agreements,” which consists of two sets of Purchase
    Agreements, Management Agreements, Master Interchange Agreements, and
    Owners Agreements (collectively, the “Operative Agreements”). Our discussion
    focuses on the Purchase Agreements and the Management Agreements.
    1.    General Transaction Terms and the Flight Program
    On or about April 18, 2002, non-party AVJ Exploration Corporation
    (“AVJ”) entered into the first Purchase Agreement with Flight Options, whereby
    AVJ purchased an 18.75% interest in a 1998 Cessna Citation Jet/525 aircraft
    bearing FAA Registration Number N253CW, which Flight Options owned. On
    or about May 1, 2002, AVJ entered into the second Purchase Agreement with
    Flight Options, purchasing a 6.25% interest in a 1991 Cessna Citation V-560
    aircraft bearing FAA Registration Number N583CW, which Flight Options
    owned. The substantive provisions of the Purchase Agreements are the same.
    On or about October 1, 2004, AVJ transferred all of its interests in the Purchase
    Agreements to JNV pursuant to an Assignment and Assumption Agreement,
    with the approval of Flight Options. The original Citation Jet and Citation V are
    collectively referred to as “the Original Aircraft,” and JNV’s fractional interests
    in the Original Aircraft are referred to as the “Interests.”
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    The Purchase Agreements also provide in Section 4.2(j) that Flight
    Options could require JNV to exchange its Interests in the Original Aircraft for
    interests in other aircraft (“Exchange Aircraft”) of the same make and model.1
    As a result of its fractional Interests in the Original Aircraft, JNV had the
    right to operate the two aircraft, or comparable alternative aircraft, for a set
    number of total hours per year. The Management Agreements govern the
    responsibilities of the parties under this flight program. Specifically, Section 5.1
    of the Management Agreements states that Flight Options shall provide JNV
    with use of the Original Aircraft, or comparable alternative aircraft, for JNV’s
    total number of allocated hours during the term of the agreements, subject to
    certain restrictions. Other provisions of the Management Agreements address
    various aspects of the flight program such as management fees, insurance, and
    maintenance of the aircraft.
    Ohio law governs the Operative Agreements, and Flight Options drafted
    the agreements.
    2.     Provision for Flight Options’ Repurchase of JNV’s Interests
    Section 4 of the Purchase Agreements provides several scenarios under
    which Flight Options could repurchase JNV’s Interests, one of which is relevant
    to the disposition of this appeal. Section 4.2(d) of the Purchase Agreements
    states:
    At any time after 60 months from the Closing, [Flight
    Options] may at its discretion elect to terminate that
    portion of its fractional aircraft ownership program
    which involves aircraft of the same make and model as
    the Aircraft. In such event [Flight Options] shall have
    1
    Pursuant to Section 4.2(j), JNV entered into various Exchange Agreements with
    Flight Options whereby the parties exchanged JNV’s Interests in the Original Aircraft for
    interests in Exchange Aircraft. As the Interest Repurchase Value is based on the value of the
    Original Aircraft, these exchanges are not material to this appeal. Therefore, we refer to
    JNV’s Interests in the “Original Aircraft” herein for simplicity even where, technically, JNV
    held interests in Exchange Aircraft.
    3
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    the option to repurchase the Interest upon 90 days’
    notice to [JNV] for the Interest Repurchase Value, less
    a 7 percent remarketing fee.
    Thus, Section 4.2(d) permits Flight Options to terminate JNV’s participation in
    the program and repurchase JNV’s Interests in the aircraft.
    3.    Provision Regarding Determination of the Interest Repurchase Value
    In the event that Flight Options repurchases the Interests, Section 4.1 of
    the Purchase Agreements delineates how the parties shall determine the
    monetary value of JNV’s Interests, which the Purchase Agreements refer to as
    the “Interest Repurchase Value”:
    For purposes of any repurchase transaction under this
    Purchase Agreement, the “Interest Repurchase Value”
    shall be calculated in the manner set forth in this
    Section 4.1. There shall first be determined the then-
    prevailing average fair market value (“Aircraft Value”)
    of the Aircraft. Aircraft Value shall be determined by
    mutual agreement of [JNV] and [Flight Options], or
    absent such agreement, by an independent appraiser
    mutually agreed upon by the parties, or absent
    agreement upon such appraiser, by a majority of three
    independent appraisers, one selected and paid for by
    [JNV], one selected and paid for by [Flight Options],
    and the third selected by the other two appraisers and
    paid in [sic] equally by [JNV] and [Flight Options]. . . .
    Such determination of Aircraft Value shall be made
    promptly enough to avoid delaying the closing of any
    repurchase transaction hereunder.
    Thus, the Purchase Agreements provide that, in the event of repurchase, the
    parties shall mutually agree on the Interests’ value or appoint one or more
    appraisers to determine the value.
    4.    Termination Provision of the Management Agreements
    Section 2 of the Management Agreements contains the following
    termination provision:
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    The term of this Management Agreement . . . shall
    terminate (i) on the date [Flight Options] repurchases
    the Interest from [JNV] or the Interest is otherwise
    transferred from [JNV] in accordance with the terms of
    the Purchase Agreement, (ii) upon termination by
    [JNV] due to [Flight Options’] default, or (iii) upon not
    less than 90 days [sic] written notice by [JNV] to [Flight
    Options] of termination under this clause if during the
    90-day period prior to the termination date specified in
    such notice the Additional Interest Owners2 have also
    given notice to [Flight Options] of such termination.
    Accordingly, the Management Agreements provide that they terminate, inter
    alia, when Flight Options repurchases JNV’s Interests.
    B.      Flight Options Invokes its Option to Purchase JNV’s Interests and
    the Subsequent Correspondence Between the Parties
    By letters dated February 15, 2007, Flight Options notified JNV that it
    intended to terminate JNV’s ownership interests in the Original Aircraft and
    that Flight Options was repurchasing JNV’s ownership interests (“February
    15th letters”):
    [W]e have decided to redeem your fractional aircraft
    interest (the “Interest”) in the aircraft . . . . Flight
    Options hereby provides notice to you effective three
    days from the date of this letter that we are exercising
    our option to repurchase the Interest under Section
    4.2(d) of your Purchase Agreement on ninety days’
    notice.
    The February 15th letters also notified JNV that, pursuant to the
    Purchase Agreements, JNV’s flying privileges would be suspended “on the
    earlier of ninety days from the effective date of this notice or such earlier date
    as may be determined by Flight Options for the closing under the Repurchase
    2
    The Management Agreements define “Additional Interest Owners” as other parties
    who own or lease the remaining undivided interests in the aircraft.
    5
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    Agreement[s].”3      Along with the February 15th letters, Flight Options
    transmitted proposed Repurchase Agreements for the fractional interests in the
    aircraft. These proposed Repurchase Agreements offered to repurchase the
    aircraft interests for the terms contained therein. The February 15th letters
    explained that Flight Options decided to repurchase the Interests in order to
    modernize its fleet by selling off its oldest aircraft as buyers’ interests in these
    aircraft expired. JNV did not sign the proposed Repurchase Agreements.
    Flight Options’ February 15th letters and repurchase offers began an
    exchange of correspondence between the parties. On February 23, 2007, Flight
    Options informed JNV that the sale of one aircraft was pending, and that the
    Repurchase Agreements could be funded within thirty days instead of ninety
    days if JNV executed the Repurchase Agreements. Then, on April 12, 2007,
    Flight Options agreed to extend JNV’s flying privileges to August 1, 2007.
    The parties never agreed on repurchase terms. On April 20, 2007, Flight
    Options advised JNV of its rights to initiate the appraisal process. On June 11,
    2007, JNV advised Flight Options that JNV was “going to be going to Appraisal”
    and that JNV would “be in contact with [Flight Options] once [JNV had] all of
    [its] paperwork ready.” On September 5, 2007, Flight Options e-mailed JNV,
    noting that “it has been some time since Flight Options has received any
    communication with regard to JNV Aviation’s intent to commit to Repurchase
    or move forward with an appraisal remedy to determine Fair Market Value,” and
    requested that JNV reply. On October 12, 2007, Flight Options sent JNV a new
    proposal, $543,754 minus applicable deductions, and offered “to go to appraisal
    if we have reached an impasse.” On March 4, 2008, Flight Options sent updated
    Repurchase Agreements, along with a request that JNV advise Flight Options
    3
    Pursuant to Section 9.4 of the Purchase Agreements, the notices became “effective
    on the earlier of three days following its sending or the time of actual receipt.”
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    of its position regarding repurchase. On September 19, 2008, Flight Options e-
    mailed JNV another proposal for $519,324 minus applicable deductions.
    Throughout the course of this correspondence, neither party ever formally
    initiated the appraisal process.
    On February 23, 2010, JNV’s counsel sent a letter to Flight Options
    demanding that it acquire JNV’s Interests with a valuation date of August 1,
    2007. When Flight Options refused to do so, JNV brought this suit in Texas
    state court on April 6, 2010. On April 21, 2010, Flight Options removed the
    action to federal court.
    Following cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held
    that Flight Options breached the Purchase Agreements by exercising its option
    to repurchase JNV’s Interests and then failing to follow through on the
    repurchase process by not invoking the appraisal remedy contained in the
    agreements. The district court further held that the proper valuation date for
    JNV’s Interests was August 1, 2007, the date that JNV’s flying privileges
    expired. The district court then reasoned that Flight Options’ repurchase offer
    price dated October 12, 2007, as the offer closest in time to August 1, 2007, was
    the best measure of the Interest Repurchase Value. Thus, the district court
    determined the Interest Repurchase Value to be $543,754 minus applicable
    deductions, based on the October 12th offer, and it awarded prejudgment and
    postjudgment interest on this amount. The district court also ruled that JNV
    failed to show that it was entitled to attorneys’ fees under Ohio law because both
    parties, not just Flight Options, were at fault for not completing the transaction.
    Finally, the district court dismissed with prejudice Flight Options’ breach of
    contract counterclaim, and, at JNV’s request, the court dismissed without
    prejudice JNV’s claims for fraudulent inducement and violations of Texas’s
    Deceptive Trade Practices–Consumer Protection Act (“DTPA”), Tex. Bus. & Com.
    Code § 17.50(a)(1)(A).
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    II. DISCUSSION
    Flight Options appeals: 1) the district court’s ruling that it breached the
    agreements; and 2) the district court’s ruling that August 1, 2007 was the proper
    date for the valuation of JNV’s Interests. JNV cross-appeals: 1) the district
    court’s determination of the Interest Repurchase Value of JNV’s Interests; and
    2) the district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees to JNV.
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Garcia
    v. LumaCorp, Inc., 
    429 F.3d 549
    , 553 (5th Cir. 2005). “The court shall grant
    summary judgment 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). We also review a district court’s conclusions of law,
    including contractual interpretations, de novo. Garcia, 429 F.3d at 553. These
    standards apply to all of the issues on appeal.
    A.      Flight Options’ Breach of Contract
    The Purchase Agreements provide that Ohio substantive law governs the
    breach-of-contract claims. Under Ohio law, the elements of a breach-of-contract
    claim are offer, acceptance, consideration, breach, and damages. See, e.g., Lucio
    v. Safe Auto Ins. Co., 
    919 N.E.2d 260
    , 267 (Ohio Ct. App. 2009). The central
    element that is in dispute is whether Flight Options’ February 15th notice to
    JNV was a valid acceptance of an offer.
    Under Ohio law, “a contract is to be read as a whole and the intent of each
    part gathered from a consideration of the whole.” Saunders v. Mortensen, 
    801 N.E.2d 452
    , 455 (Ohio 2004). “If it is reasonable to do so, we must give effect to
    each provision of the contract.” Id. “Common words appearing in a written
    instrument will be given their ordinary meaning unless manifest absurdity
    results, or unless some other meaning is clearly evidenced from the face or
    overall contents of the instrument.” Foster Wheeler Enviresponse, Inc. v.
    Franklin Cnty. Convention Facilities Auth., 
    678 N.E.2d 519
    , 526 (Ohio 1997)
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    (citations omitted). Further, “writings executed as part of the same transaction,
    will be read as a whole, and the intent of each part will be gathered from a
    consideration of the whole.” Id. (citations omitted). Finally, a court should
    construe a contract strictly against the drafter and in favor of the nondrafting
    party. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am. v. White, 
    913 N.E.2d 426
    , 430-31 (Ohio 2009).
    We agree with the district court that Flight Options breached the
    Purchase Agreements when it failed to repurchase JNV’s Interests after
    exercising its right to do so and contemporaneously terminating JNV’s flying
    privileges. The central dispute between the parties here is whether Section
    4.2(d) of the Purchase Agreements contained a unilateral offer that, when Flight
    Options notified JNV that it was “exercising [its] option to repurchase” JNV’s
    Interests, created a binding contract between the parties. JNV asserts that
    Flight Options’ notice represented Flight Options’ acceptance of JNV’s unilateral
    offer to sell back the Interests, thereby creating a binding contract. Flight
    Options contends that the exercise of its option to repurchase JNV’s Interests
    was contingent upon JNV’s acceptance of the prices Flight Options proposed to
    pay. Flight Options also argues that it was able to change its mind about
    exercising its option to repurchase because of the absence of a binding contract.
    However, Flight Options’ interpretation of the agreements contradicts well-
    established principles relating to option contracts.
    Under Ohio law, an option becomes effective as a contract once it is
    accepted. See Moss et al. v. Olson, 
    76 N.E.2d 875
    , 878 (Ohio 1947) (holding that,
    where a lease provided that the lessee shall have the right to renew and extend
    such lease for a term of three years upon the giving of specified notice, the
    lessee’s giving of such notice automatically extended the lease for three years);
    Plickerd v. Mongeluzzo, 
    596 N.E.2d 601
    , 606 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992) (citation
    omitted) (“[T]he party having the option is of course not bound to exercise it; he
    can withdraw from it at any time prior to the exercise thereof[.]”); see also
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    generally 17 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d Contracts § 30 (“An option becomes effective
    as a contract upon acceptance thereof[.]”).
    In light of the foregoing principles, it is clear to us that the Purchase
    Agreements contained JNV’s unilateral offer to sell back its Interests to Flight
    Options, an offer which Flight Options accepted in the February 15th letters.
    Flight Options’ own internal communications and sworn testimony relating to
    this litigation support this conclusion. Thus, once Flight Options initiated the
    repurchase, it was obligated to follow the process that the Purchase Agreements
    prescribed for determining the value of the Interests–either mutual agreement
    on a price or, if mutual agreement was not possible, the appraisal remedy.
    Flight Options breached the agreements by failing to do so. We therefore affirm
    the district court’s grant of summary judgment to JNV on its breach of contract
    claim and the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Flight Options on
    its breach of contract counterclaim.
    B.      Valuation Date for the Repurchase
    We also agree with the district court that the proper valuation date for
    assessing JNV’s Interests is August 1, 2007, when JNV’s flight privileges
    expired. The parties dispute whether Flight Options could terminate JNV’s
    flying privileges without also repurchasing JNV’s Interests under the Operative
    Agreements.
    As noted already, the Management Agreements terminate, inter alia, “on
    the date [Flight Options] repurchases the Interest from [JNV].”4 In our de novo
    review, we are convinced by JNV’s argument that these agreements, and thus
    JNV’s flying privileges, would not terminate until Flight Options repurchased
    JNV’s Interests. By terminating JNV’s flying privileges on August 1, 2007,
    4
    We note that the Management Agreements provide other triggering events for
    termination of the agreements; however, repurchase of JNV’s Interests is the only one relevant
    to this appeal.
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    Flight Options was obligated to repurchase JNV’s Interests as of that date.
    Moreover, Flight Options has not refuted JNV’s contention that Flight Options
    implicitly acknowledges August 1, 2007 as the proper valuation date when Flight
    Options argues that its October 12, 2007 offer price is the appropriate value of
    the Interests because it is closest in time to August 1, 2007. Accordingly, we
    affirm the district court’s summary judgment ruling that August 1, 2007 is the
    proper date for determining the Interest Repurchase Value.
    C.      Interest Repurchase Value and Attorneys’ Fees
    JNV argues that the district court erred by determining the Interest
    Repurchase Value and by ruling that JNV was not entitled to attorneys’ fees
    because neither party moved for summary judgment on these issues. We agree.
    Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides:
    After giving notice and a reasonable time to respond, the
    court may: (1) grant summary judgment for a
    nonmovant; (2) grant the motion on grounds not raised
    by a party; or (3) consider summary judgment on its
    own after identifying for the parties material facts that
    may not be genuinely in dispute.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(f) (emphasis added).
    “[W]e have vacated summary judgments and remanded for further
    proceedings where the district court provided no notice prior to granting
    summary judgment sua sponte, even where summary judgment may have been
    proper on the merits.” Tolbert ex rel. Tolbert v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of
    Pittsburgh, Pa., 
    657 F.3d 262
    , 271 (5th Cir. 2011) (citations omitted). “[D]istrict
    courts are widely acknowledged to possess the power to enter summary
    judgments sua sponte, so long as the losing party was on notice that she had to
    come forward with all of her evidence.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    ,
    326 (1986); see also Tolbert, 657 F.3d at 271. We also have held that a district
    court’s failure to provide such notice is reviewed for harmless error. Leatherman
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    v. Tarrant Cnty. Narcotics Intelligence & Coordination Unit, 
    28 F.3d 1388
    , 1398
    (5th Cir. 1994). The error is harmless “if the nonmoving party admits that he
    has no additional evidence anyway or if . . . the appellate court evaluates all of
    the nonmoving party’s additional evidence and finds no genuine issue of material
    fact.”       Id. (citations omitted); see also Mannesman Demag Corp. v. M/V
    CONCERT EXPRESS, 
    225 F.3d 587
    , 595 (5th Cir. 2000) (reversing district
    court’s sua sponte grant of summary judgment where it provided no notice to the
    parties and the error was not harmless).5
    Regarding the Interest Repurchase Value, neither party moved for
    summary judgment on this issue, and the district court did not provide notice to
    the parties that it intended to determine this value on summary judgment sua
    sponte. Thus, it was error for the district court to determine this issue on
    summary judgment without providing such notice. Moreover, the error was not
    harmless because the summary judgment record demonstrates that there is a
    genuine dispute between the parties regarding the value of JNV’s Interests on
    August 1, 2007: the parties have proffered vastly different measures of this value
    and were prepared to offer expert testimony on this issue at trial. We therefore
    vacate and remand the district court’s summary judgment determining the
    Interest Repurchase Value.
    Similarly, the district court erred by deciding that JNV is not entitled to
    attorneys’ fees based on Flight Options’ alleged bad faith. Ohio law permits the
    recovery of attorneys’ fees in a breach of contract action where: 1) the contract
    expressly provides for them; 2) a statute entitles the plaintiff to attorneys’ fees;
    or 3) where the plaintiff demonstrates that the defendant acted in bad faith.
    5
    We recognize that Leatherman and Mannesman interpreted the former version of Fed.
    R. Civ. P. Rule 56(c), which required that a district court provide a nonmovant with ten days’
    notice prior to granting summary judgment sua sponte. The current version of Rule 56 does
    not contain this specific ten-day requirement, but it does require notice and a reasonable time
    to respond. Accordingly, the harmless error analysis still applies.
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    Sturm v. Sturm, 
    590 N.E.2d 1214
    , 1217 (Ohio 1992). Whether a party is entitled
    to attorneys’ fees is a question of fact. See id. (citation omitted) (acknowledging
    that attorneys’ fees are allowed where defendant’s conduct is “in bad faith,
    vexatious, wanton, obdurate or oppressive”).
    Neither party moved for summary judgment on the issue of attorneys’ fees,
    and the district court did not notify the parties that it intended to rule on this
    issue beforehand. Thus, the district court erred by deciding this issue on
    summary judgment sua sponte. Moreover, Flight Options and JNV dispute the
    facts underlying the parties’ conduct relevant to the bad faith inquiry.
    Therefore, because JNV’s entitlement to attorneys’ fees is a question of fact,
    there are material facts in dispute, and the parties did not have an opportunity
    to come forward with all of their evidence on this issue, the district court’s sua
    sponte summary judgment denying JNV attorneys’ fees was not harmless error.
    Accordingly, we vacate and remand the district court’s ruling that JNV is not
    entitled to attorneys’ fees.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s summary
    judgment rulings on the parties’ breach of contract claims and the valuation date
    for determining the Interest Repurchase Value. We VACATE the district court’s
    determination of the Interest Repurchase Value and its denial of attorneys’ fees
    to JNV, and we REMAND for further proceedings.
    13