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J-A09017-03
2003 PA Super 411

AK STEEL CORPORATION and JOHN
:
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
MANEELY COMPANY,
:
PENNSYLVANIA

Appellants
:


:

v.
:

VIACOM, INC.,
:


Appellee
:
No. 848 WDA 2002

Appeal from the Judgment Entered April 22, 2002
In the Court of Common Pleas, Civil Division
Mercer County, No. 2002-28

BEFORE: TODD, BENDER, and KELLY, JJ.

OPINION BY TODD, J.: Filed: November 3, 2003

¶ 1 In this declaratory judgment action, AK Steel Corporation ("AK Steel")
and John Maneely Corporation ("Maneely") appeal the Judgment entered
April 22, 2002 by Order of the Mercer County Court of Common Pleas
denying their post-trial motion and entering judgment in favor of Viacom,
Inc. ("Viacom"). We affirm.
¶ 2 The events which led to the filing of this declaratory judgment action
by Appellants were set forth by the trial court as follows:
By a deed dated July 23, 1986, Westinghouse Electric
Corporation ("Westinghouse") conveyed to Cyclops Corporation
certain property located in Sharon, Pennsylvania (hereinafter
"the subject property"). In the Agreement of Sale preceding this
conveyance (hereinafter "the 1986 Agreement"), "Seller" was
defined as "Westinghouse Electric Corporation," and "Purchaser"
was defined as "Sawhill Tubular Division of Cyclops Corporation."

Because the subject property had been used by Westinghouse as
an industrial site and, incident thereto, became environmentally
contaminated, Westinghouse agreed in the 1986 Agreement to
be responsible for any remediation directed by a government
agency and/or ordered by a court and, further, agreed to

J-A09017-03
indemnify the "Purchaser" against certain other environmental
liabilities.

The 1986 Agreement was only assignable to an entity that
succeeded to substantially all of the assets of the Purchaser. In
addition, the 1986 Agreement was binding upon and inured to
the benefit of the parties and their successors and assigns.

At the commencement of this lawsuit, Defendant Viacom, Inc.
("Viacom") had succeeded to the rights and obligations of
Westinghouse under the 1986 Agreement. Similarly, Plaintiff AK
Steel ("AK Steel") contends that it has succeeded to the
Purchaser's rights and obligations under the 1986 Agreement.

On December 7, 2001, Plaintiff AK Steel and Plaintiff John
Maneely Company ("Maneely") executed a letter of intent
(hereinafter "the Letter of Intent"), setting forth the basis for the
negotiations of an agreement between the two corporations for
the acquisition by Maneely of "all of the assets (except for those
specifically excluded) which comprise or are used in the business
known as the Sawhill Tubular Division of AK [Steel]." . . . The
sale of the assets contemplated by the Letter of Intent would
include the sale of the subject property. Because the subject
property is environmentally contaminated and currently subject
to a remediation order issued by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, Maneely has informed AK
Steel that it will not complete its intended purchase of the assets
of the Sawhill Tubular Division unless Viacom is obligated, by
way of the assignment of the 1986 Agreement to Maneely, to
indemnify Maneely for any liability stemming from the
environmental contamination of the subject property existing
prior to the sale in 1986 of the subject property.

Defendant Viacom contends that the 1986 Agreement is not
assignable to Maneely because, pursuant to the terms of the
Letter of Intent, Maneely would not be purchasing substantially
all of the assets of AK Steel. While admitting that to be true,
both AK Steel and Maneely contend that (1) Maneely would be
purchasing substantially all of the assets of Sawhill Tubular
Division, and (2) such a purchase would be sufficient to permit
the 1986 Agreement to be assigned to Maneely. The differing
positions held by Plaintiffs and Defendant stem from the fact that
the parties do not agree on what entity was the Purchaser in the
1986 Agreement. Defendant contends that the Purchaser was

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J-A09017-03
"Cyclops Corporation," whereas Plaintiffs contend that the
Purchaser was "Sawhill Tubular Division," an unincorporated
division of Cyclops Corporation.

On January 4, 2002, Plaintiff AK Steel commenced this action by
filing a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment against Defendant
Viacom, seeking a ruling from this Court that, pursuant to the
terms of the Letter of Intent between AK Steel and Maneely, the
1986 Agreement is assignable to Maneely. AK Steel then filed a
Motion to Expedite Pretrial Proceedings and Trial, which motion
was granted on January 22, 2002. On February 5, 2002, AK
Steel filed an Amended Complaint adding Maneely as a Plaintiff.

(Trial Court Opinion, 3/21/02, at 2-4.)

¶ 3 Following a one-day bench trial on February 27, 2002, the Honorable
Michael J. Wherry issued a Decree Nisi concluding that only Cyclops
Corporation, and not Sawhill Tubular, could have been the "Purchaser" under
the 1986 Agreement, because a division of a corporation cannot own or
possess property. Judge Wherry further concluded that because the 1986
Agreement may be assigned only to an entity that succeeds to substantially
all of the assets of the Purchaser, and it is undisputed that Maneely does not
intend to purchase substantially all of the assets of AK Steel Corporation, the
1986 Agreement is not assignable to Maneely.1
¶ 4 Plaintiffs filed a timely post-trial motion, and on April 23, 2002, the
trial court entered a final decree denying Plaintiffs' post-trial motion and

1 Section 9.04 of the 1986 Agreement provides:
Assignment. Purchaser may not assign this Agreement except to an
entity which succeeds to substantially all of the assets of Purchaser.
Any such assignment shall relieve Purchaser of all of its liabilities and
obligations hereunder to the extent assumed by such assignee.
(1986 Agreement, 4/7/86, at 13.)

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J-A09017-03
entering judgment in favor of Viacom. This appeal followed, in which
Appellants present the following issues for this Court's review:
1. Did the trial court err when it ruled, as a matter of law, that
Viacom's predecessor's promise to indemnify Sawhill Tubular
for preexisting environmental conditions could not be
assigned unless Sawhill Tubular's parent corporation, AK
Steel, sells substantially all of its assets?

2. Did the trial court err in disregarding the manifest intention
of the parties to the original Westinghouse-Sawhill Tubular
contract, which expressly provided that Westinghouse's duty
to indemnify could be assigned to any party that purchases
substantially all of Sawhill Tubular's assets?

(Appellants' Brief at 6.)
¶ 5 Preliminarily, we note that our scope of review in a declaratory
judgment action is narrow. O'Brien v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 455 Pa.
Super. 568, 573, 689 A.2d 254, 257 (1997). We review the decision of the
trial court as we would a decree in equity and set aside factual conclusions
only where they are not supported by adequate evidence. Id. We give
plenary review, however, to the trial court's legal conclusions. Id.
¶ 6 Appellants contend that the trial court disregarded the clear intent of
the parties to the 1986 Agreement, and instead relied on an irrelevant
principle of law to determine that Sawhill Tubular could not have been the
Purchaser under the 1986 Agreement. Appellants further point out that the
1986 Agreement expressly identified Sawhill Tubular as the Purchaser.
¶ 7 As our Supreme Court explained in Seven Springs Farm, Inc. v.
Croker:

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J-A09017-03
The primary objective of a court when interpreting a contract is
to ascertain the intent of the parties. When "a written contract
is clear and unequivocal, its meaning must be determined by its
contents alone." Courts are not to assume that a contract's
language was chosen carelessly or that the parties were ignorant
of the meaning of the language they utilized.

569 Pa. 202, 207-08, 801 A.2d 1212, 1215 (2002) (citations omitted).
Furthermore, "a contract incorporates the laws that exist at the time the
contract is made," and a contract will be construed according to the law of
the state, as interpreted by its courts. Reif v. Reif, 426 Pa. Super. 14, 23,
626 A.2d 169, 174 (1993).
¶ 8 Although the precise issue in the instant case appears to be one of first
impression in this jurisdiction, the United States Court of Federal Claims was
confronted with a similar issue in General Dynamics Corporation v.
United States, 47 Fed. Cl. 514 (2000). In that case, a defense contractor,
General Dynamics Corporation ("GDC") filed suit against the federal
government alleging a breach of contract for the design of a nuclear
submarine. Electric Boat Corporation ("EBC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of
GDC, subsequently filed a protective claim in response to a jurisdictional
issue raised by the government, and the claims ultimately were
consolidated. As a preliminary matter, the claims court was required to
determine which corporation ­ GDC or its subsidiary EBC ­ was the
contracting partner.
¶ 9 With regard to the relevant background in that case, in 1995, GDC had
several divisions, including Electric Boat Division ("EBD"). In September

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J-A09017-03
1995, EBD was reorganized into a wholly-owned subsidiary of GDC under the
name of Electric Boat Corporation. During the period of reorganization, the
government sent a solicitation for a contract proposal regarding the design
of a nuclear submarine to "General Dynamics/Electric Boat Division." After
EBD had been reorganized into EBC, however, a proposal was submitted to
the government on the letterhead of "General Dynamics, Electric Boat
Division." The proposal was signed by "John K. Welch, President--Electric
Boat." Mr. Welch was the president and CEO of EBC, and vice president of
GDC. In January 1996, the government awarded a letter contract2 to
"General Dynamics Corporation, Electric Boat Division" and the contract was
signed by Mr. Welch, who identified himself as "President & CEO." In May
1996, the letter contract was finalized, and again the contractor was
identified as "General Dynamics Corporation, Electric Boat Division." There
were 38 additional modifications of the letter contract, 22 of which identified
the contractor as "General Dynamics Corporation, Electric Boat Division", 12
of which identified the contractor as "Electric Boat Corporation, a General
Dynamics Company" and 4 of which identified the contractor as "Electric
Boat Corporation."
¶ 10 GDC maintained that it was the contractor because it was clearly
identified as such in the letter contract. GDC further argued that the fact

2 A letter contract is a written preliminary contractural instrument
authorizing the contractor to obtain manufacturing supplies and/or to
perform services immediately. General Dynamics, 47 Fed. Cl. at 518 n.2.

- 6 -

J-A09017-03
that "Electric Boat Division" appeared after "General Dynamics Corporation"
was legally inconsequential since an unincorporated division does not have a
legal status independent of the corporation. The government, however,
argued, inter alia, that the contract was ambiguous on its face as to the
identity of the contractor based on the fact that at the time the contract was
executed, EBD was no longer a division of GDC, and because the contract
was signed by the president and CEO of EBC, not GDC.
¶ 11 In concluding that GDC was the contracting partner, the court noted
that GDC was identified as the contractor in the space providing for the
name and address of the contractor in the letter contract and in the
subsequent finalization. The court further stated that despite the fact that
the actual entry on the contract documents was "General Dynamics
Corporation, Electric Boat Division," such a designation was erroneous in
that the Electric Boat Division no longer existed at that time. Finally, the
court concluded that because the unincorporated Electric Boat Division was
not a legal entity separate and apart from its parent GDC, "the only entry
with legal import in the `Name and Address of Contractor' box was `General
Dynamics Corporation.'" Id. at 530.
¶ 12 Consistent with the holding in General Dynamics is this Court's
holding in Babich v. Karnak, 364 Pa. Super. 558, 565, 528 A.2d 649, 653
(1987), that a division of a corporation is not a separate legal entity capable
of being sued. Moreover, in Krumbine v. Lebanon Tax Claim Bureau,

- 7 -

J-A09017-03
541 Pa. 384, 663 A.2d 158 (1995), our Supreme Court noted that an
unincorporated association is not a legal entity and has no legal existence
separate and apart from that of its individual members. Id. at 388, 663
A.2d at 160 (citations omitted). The Court further stated in Krumbine that
only an entity with a recognized legal existence may own and possess
property, and, therefore, property ownership by an unincorporated
association is impossible absent statutory authority to the contrary. Id.
(citing Sumner v. Brown, 312 Pa. 124, 128, 167 A. 315, 317 (1933)).
¶ 13 Under the cases cited above, a determination that Sawhill Tubular was
the purchaser under the 1986 Agreement would render other provisions of
the 1986 Agreement illusory. As we stated in Brown v. Cooke, 707 A.2d
231 (Pa. Super. 1998):
Clauses in a contract should not be read as independent
agreements thrown together without any consideration of their
combined effect. Indeed, the document is best read as a whole,
wherein clauses seemingly in conflict are construed, if possible,
as consistent with one another. In re Binenstock's Trust, 410
Pa. 425, 190 A.2d 288 (1963). Terms in one section of the
contract should not be interpreted in a manner which nullifies
other terms.

Id. at 233 (quoting Flatley by Flatley v. Penman, 429 Pa. Super. 517,
521, 632 A.2d 1342, 1344 (1993)).
¶ 14 Section 2.02 of the 1986 Agreement required the Purchaser to accept
title to the subject property at the closing or rescind the Agreement, and
Section 3.02 of the 1986 Agreement required the Seller to deliver to the
Purchaser at closing a deed conveying the subject property. (1986

- 8 -

J-A09017-03
Agreement, 4/6/86, at 4-5.) Additionally, Section 4.04 of the 1986
Agreement required the Purchaser to ensure that the Seller or the
Pennsylvania Department of Resources had access to the subject property in
order to maintain wells situated thereon; to refrain from interfering with the
integrity of the wells; to include certain provisions in any agreement of sale
of the subject property; and to disclose the provisions of the 1986
Agreement to any subsequent Purchaser. (Id. at 4.) Under Krumbine,
supra, Sawhill Tubular, as an unincorporated association, was incapable of
performing any of these obligations since it could not own or possess
property.3 Thus, a determination that Sawhill Tubular, as opposed to
Cyclops Corporation, was the Purchaser under the 1986 Agreement would
nullify the provisions of the agreement noted above.
¶ 15 The positions advanced on behalf of both Appellants and Appellee were
well argued by counsel. However, for all of the foregoing reasons, we agree
with Appellee and the trial court that only Cyclops Corporation, and not
Sawhill Tubular, could have been the Purchaser under the 1986 Agreement.
As it is undisputed that Maneely does not intend to purchase substantially all
of the assets of AK Steel, the successor to Cyclops Corporation, under
Section 9.04 of the 1986 Agreement, the agreement is not assignable to
Maneely.

3 Indeed, the July 26, 1986 deed conveyed the subject property to Cyclops
Corporation, not Sawhill Tubular.


- 9 -

J-A09017-03
¶ 16 Order entering judgment AFFIRMED.

- 10 -

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