Enron Mail

From:jklauber@llgm.com
To:elizabeth.sager@enron.com
Subject:Fwd: Power Marketing Alliances
Cc:szisman@ect.enron.com, kay.mann@enron.com
Bcc:szisman@ect.enron.com, kay.mann@enron.com
Date:Wed, 7 Mar 2001 09:22:00 -0800 (PST)

Elizabeth: here is one of the old e-mails. I'll see if I can find the one
regarding the PECO/Great Bay marketing dispute. John

"This e-mail, including attachments, contains information that is
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John Klauberg
LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, L.L.P.
212 424-8125
jklauber@llgm.com
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1998 14:31:51 -0500
From: "JOHN G KLAUBERG" <JKLAUBER@LLGM.COM<
To: esager2@ect.enron.com
cc: stweed@ect.enron.com, MOLEARY@LLGM.COM
Subject: Power Marketing Alliances
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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Elizabeth:

Following up on our conversations late last week, I reviewed the initial
research undertaken by one of our junior associates dealing with the
fiduciary duty issues in the context of a power marketing arrangement entered
into by ECT to market the output of another party's ("Counterparty's)
merchant power plants. My general thoughts are as follows:

1. Significance of Parties' Business and Economic Arrangements. As you
know, the precise nature of the business and economic relationship between
ECT and Counterparty likely will affect the legal analysis; thus, it will be
necessary to keep a close on that issue as the negotiations proceed. It
would appear that ECT generally would press for an agency relationship since
the law is somewhat more favorable with respect to the ability to carve out
areas where the agent does not owe a fiduciary duty to its principal.
However, depending on the business and economic negotiations, there may
ultimately be some risk that ECT could be deemed to be in a "partner" role
vis-a-vis the Counterparty. We assume, for example, that ECT would possess
the power to bind the Counterparty to power sales contracts with third
parties (subject, most likely, to specified parameters), at least with
respect to spot market type deals. (This likely will be the case even if the
Counterparty has the right to terminate the agreement at anytime -- which
termination effectively would be prospective in nature since any existing
deals would continue to binding on Counterparty). The risk of deemed partner
status probably will exist regardless of whether the governing agreement
specifically provides that the arrangement is not intended to create a
partnership.

A further indicia of partner status would be if ECT's compensation is tied to
net profits, particularly if ECT also shared in losses to some extent (e.g.,
perhaps in the nature of an overall "netting" or "tracking" account pursuant
to which, for example, profits previously paid out to ECT would be recaptured
with future losses (but never go below zero)). Another factor running in
favor of partner status will be the length of the agreement; a longer
agreement often suggests more of a partnership arrangement.

2. The Choice of Governing Law may be Significant. For example, in states
that have adopted the Uniform Partnership Act ("UPA") (e.g., New York,
Delaware, Pennsylvania), there is more of a concern that a court would impose
a higher fiduciary duty standard on ECT. This result is less likely in
states that have adopted the Revised Uniform Partnership Act ("RUPA") (20
states, including Texas, California and Montana), pursuant to which the
parties can exclude specific categories of activities that are not subject to
the partner's fiduciary duty obligation (if the carve outs are not manifestly
unreasonable). Although ECT presumably will always take the position that it
is not a partner of Counterparty, in analyzing these issues, ECT should try
to apply those tougher standards to its relationship in the event a court
ever determined that those standards should apply. The bottom line may be
that the definitive agreements will need to specifically state that the
parties recognize that ECT is in the business of buying and selling power and
that it will be in competition with Counterparty, ECT is not obligated to
bring Counterparty the best deals, Counterparty can terminate if it is
dissatisfied, etc. It will be advisable to list specific activities where it
is clear ECT and Counterparty may be in competition, rather than rely on a
general waiver of fiduciary duties; the courts clearly do not like advance
disclaimers of all fiduciary duties (particularly where, like here, the
arrangement is likely to be an exclusive one). Where ECT will need to be
particularly careful will be with respect to ensuring against the use of
confidential information from the Counterparty and its facilities in its
stand alone power trading operations.

3. Other Considerations. One additional consideration to keep in mind. The
potential Counterparty you mentioned on the phone intends to project finance,
on a nonrecourse or limited recourse basis, many of the plants it proposes to
acquire. Like any merchant plant financing arrangement that is being put in
place in today's "deregulating" power markets, the project lender will be
very involved in any arrangement dealing with the marketing of the power from
those plants since, obviously, that is the source of repayment for their
loan. The lender(s) could drive, for example, such items as the governing
law for the definitive agreements, the term of the agreement, etc. In
addition, the lender will be very interested in any economic arrangement that
could result in "performance" or similar types of bonuses being payable by
the Counterparty to the agent, as well as any "clawback" of previously paid
amounts in the event of subsequently incurred negative results. In one
similar arrangement with which have been involved, the lender has been very
active in the negotiations of a similar type of agreement. My guess is that
undoubtedly will be the case in the situation you raised. Thus, ECT's
commercial negotiators likely will be encountering multiple parties "on the
other side."

4. PECO/Great Bay Dispute. I put on the fax to you again another copy of
the previous summary I had put together on the PECO/Great Bay contract
dispute for your quick reference. As we discussed, there are a number of
provisions in that contract that ECT's originators would find of interest
from a commercial perspective -- with the clear caveat that some of them
obviously are what lead to the litigation. The allegations in the complaint
clearly are, to some extent, of the fiduciary duty type (implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing). Interestingly, there is a lack of language in
that agreement trying to carve out PECO's obligations to Great Bay with
respect to PECO's own trading operations.

I hope the foregoing is at least somewhat useful to you, although the "rules"
in this area are fairly blurry. Please call me if you have any questions.

John