Sea Land Ser Inc v. Gen Elec Co ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1998 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    1-15-1998
    Sea Land Ser Inc v. Gen Elec Co
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 96-5331
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    Recommended Citation
    "Sea Land Ser Inc v. Gen Elec Co" (1998). 1998 Decisions. Paper 11.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1998/11
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    Filed January 15, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 96-5331 & 97-5287
    SEA-LAND SERVICE, INC.
    v.
    GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
    Sea-Land Service, Inc.
    ("Sea-Land"),
    Appellant.
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. Civil Action No. 95-cv-01378)
    Argued December 12, 1997
    Before: GREENBERG, ROTH, and SEITZ, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: January 15, 1998)
    Jeffrey L. Reiner, Esquire (Argued)
    Geralyn A. Boccher, Esquire
    Reiner & Koles, P.C.
    30 Park Place, Suite 301
    Morristown, NJ 07960
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Nicholas S. Brindisi, Esquire
    1200 Route 46 West
    Clifton, NJ 07013
    Edward C. DeVivo, Esquire (Argued)
    Edward Griffith, Esquire
    Raymond L. Mariani, Esquire
    Dombroff & Gilmore
    40 Broad Street
    Suite 2000
    New York, NY 10004-2382
    Attorneys for Appellee
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ROTH, Circuit Judge:
    Appellant Sea-Land Service, Inc. (Sea-Land) has appealed
    the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of
    General Electric Company (GE) on Sea-Land's tort claims in
    admiralty for economic loss. The district court dismissed
    the case based on the holding of the Supreme Court in East
    River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc., 
    106 S. Ct. 2295
     (1986), that under maritime law no claim lies for
    either negligence or strict products liability when a
    commercial party alleges injury only to a product itself,
    resulting in purely economic loss. Id. at 2302.
    In this appeal, we must decide 1) whether a defective
    part, a connecting rod, that caused damage to its
    surrounding engine was separate property from the engine
    or was merely a component of the engine; 2) whether East
    River bars a tort claim for post-sale duty to warn under a
    negligence theory when the damage is purely economic; and
    3) whether East River bars a tort claim for negligent repair
    when the damage is purely economic. The district court
    held 1) that the rod was not separate property from the
    engine, within the meaning of East River, and that East
    River precluded tort recovery for economic loss as a result
    of a product damaging itself; 2) that even when the injury
    is only economic, there is a post-sale duty-to-warn claim if
    a defendant-manufacturer had actual knowledge that the
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    product was defective, but that GE did not have actual
    knowledge of the defective part prior to Sea-Land's injury;
    and 3) that East River bars a tort claim for negligent repair
    when the damage is purely economic.
    I. Facts
    Sea-Land is a bareboat charterer of many vessels
    including the Sea-Land Enterprise. The Enterprise was
    constructed in 1980, and Sea-Land purchased it in 1988
    from U.S. Lines. The Enterprise has two ship's service
    generators, a ship's service turbine generator and a ship's
    service diesel generator (SSDG). The Enterprise's SSDG is
    powered by a GE diesel engine. The diesel engine is made
    up of "life-cycle" parts, which a vessel operator would not
    expect to replace, and "renewable" parts, which must be
    replaced periodically. In December, 1990, Sea-Land
    overhauled the Enterprise's diesel engine, procuring 105 GE
    parts including eight GE master connecting rods. On
    February 26, 1991, after only 47 hours of operation by the
    overhauled diesel engine, it broke down, causing damage to
    the engine and the engine casing.
    The cause of the failure, as admitted by GE, was one of
    the 8 connecting rods. The rod had failed because the
    meloniting process, used to harden it, was faulty. GE
    replaced all the suspect connecting rods and repaired the
    engine free of charge. Coincidentally, on February 8, 1991,
    eighteen days before the Enterprise engine failure, a similar
    defective connecting rod had caused a diesel engine on the
    United States Navy Ship Albert Meyer to break down. It
    later occurred that in November 1994 the Enterprise
    suffered a further breakdown of the SSDG. Sea-Land
    alleges that the 1994 engine failure was at the same
    location as GE's 1991 engine block repair and was due to
    negligent repair by GE.
    Sea-Land brought suit against GE to recover for the
    losses caused by the two engine failures. In Count I, Sea-
    Land alleges that the GE connecting rod was defective and
    claims the profits it lost while the ship was inoperable until
    the 1991 repairs had been completed. In Count II, Sea-
    Land asserts that GE negligently failed to warn Sea-Land of
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    a potentially defective connecting rod of which it had
    knowledge by virtue of the Albert Meyer engine failure. In
    Count IV, Sea-Land contends that GE breached its duty of
    care to Sea-Land by negligently performing the 1991 repair.
    As a result, Sea-Land claims the cost of repair of the engine
    in 1994 and the profits it lost while the ship was once again
    inoperable.
    On April 26, 1996, the district court granted summary
    judgment to GE on Count I, finding that the defective GE
    rod was the proximate cause of injury to Sea Land but that
    East River barred a tort claim for lost profits. On April 17,
    1997, the district court granted summary judgment to GE
    on all other counts, including failure to warn and negligent
    repair. This consolidated appeal followed.
    The district court had jurisdiction over this civil case in
    admiralty. 28 U.S.C. S 1333. We have appellate jurisdiction
    from final decisions of district courts. 28 U.S.C.S 1291.
    Our review of a grant of summary judgment is plenary.
    Public Interest Research of N.J. v. Powell Duffryn Terminals,
    Inc., 
    913 F.2d 64
    , 71 (3d Cir. 1990).
    II. Is The Product the Rod Or The Engine
    We address first Sea-Land's tort claim for economic loss
    due to a dangerously defective part manufactured by GE.
    The Supreme Court in East River Steamship Corp. v.
    Transamerica Delaval, Inc., 
    106 S. Ct. 2295
     (1986), held
    that, under admiralty law, a cause of action in tort does not
    lie "when a defective product, purchased in a commercial
    transaction malfunctions, injuring only the product itself
    and causing purely economic loss." Id. at 2296. Thus, a
    "manufacturer in a commercial relationship has no duty
    under either a negligence or strict products-liability theory
    to prevent a product from injuring itself." Id. at 2302. If
    such a product is defective, the purchaser will generally
    have a contract claim for breach of warranty.
    In the instant case, one of the engine components, a
    connecting rod, was defective and damaged other parts of
    the engine. The question we must answer is "What is the
    product?" If the product, within the meaning of East River,
    is "a properly functioning engine," the product only caused
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    economic damage, i.e., damage to itself and lost profits. If
    the product is the rod, plaintiffs allege that it caused
    damage to "other property," i.e., to the engine. Should this
    be the case, then under East River a tort claim may lie and
    the district court's grant of summary judgment on Count I
    in favor of GE was erroneous.
    In East River, the defendant manufactured engine
    turbines, installed in cargo ships. The turbine (or a
    component thereof) failed, causing damage to the turbine
    itself. Plaintiff sued in tort for recovery of the cost of repair
    and the lost income for the period in which the ship was
    out of service. The Court explained the policy
    considerations underlying tort and contract liability. Tort
    liability protects people from dangerous products. In
    particular, the tort theory of products liability arose from a
    concern that the public needed more protection from
    dangerous products than contracts or warranties could
    provide. Id. at 2299-300. The tort concern with safety is
    reduced, however, when a product injures only itself, id. at
    2302, but does not injure persons or "other" property. The
    damages then are only the loss of the value of the product
    itself and the profits lost when it cannot be used. In such
    a case, because there is no duty to the public in general, it
    is not inequitable to limit the remedy between the parties to
    what they have bargained for. The parties can agree
    between themselves on the limits of their obligations and
    liabilities. They can take appropriate steps through contract
    provisions and/or insurance to protect themselves from
    foreseeable risks. Based on these policy considerations, the
    Court concluded that, when a product (the turbine)
    damages only itself, there is no tort recovery; only warranty
    recovery. Id. at 2303.
    The present case differs from East River in that Sea-Land
    claims that the connecting rod did not just damage itself, it
    damaged other property, i.e., the diesel engine and its
    casing. We must determine whether this is a difference with
    a significance.
    The Supreme Court has partially clarified the East River
    property/other property dichotomy in Saratoga Fishing Co.
    v. J.M. Martinac & Co., 
    117 S. Ct. 1783
     (1997). In Saratoga,
    a primary purchaser of a ship had added to it a skiff, a
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    fishing net, and spare parts. The vessel, with the added
    equipment as a part of it, was subsequently sold to a
    secondary purchaser, Saratoga. An engine room fire led to
    the sinking of the ship, and a faulty hydraulic system was
    determined to be a significant cause of the sinking.
    Saratoga sued the manufacturer of the hydraulic system
    and the company that built the vessel. The issue was
    whether the added equipment was "other property" under
    East River so that Saratoga might recover damages for its
    destruction. The Court held that the added equipment was
    "other property":
    When a Manufacturer places an item in the stream of
    commerce by selling it to an Initial User, that item is
    the "product itself " under East River. Items added to
    the product by the Initial User are therefore "other
    property," and the Initial User's sale of the product to
    a Subsequent User does not change these
    characterizations.
    Id. at 1786. Accord Nicor Supply Ships Assocs. v. General
    Motors Corp., 
    876 F.2d 501
     (5th Cir. 1989) (holding that a
    ship charterer, who adds expensive seismic equipment to
    the ship, may recover for its loss in a fire caused by a
    defective engine).
    The manufacturer in Saratoga had argued that"if a
    [subsequent purchaser] can recover for damage that a
    defectively manufactured product causes to property added
    by the [initial user], than a user might recover for damage
    a defective component causes the manufactured product,
    other than the component itself." Id. at 1788. The Court
    explicitly rejected this position, holding that it is not the
    various component parts, but the vessel itself as placed in
    the stream of commerce by the manufacturer and
    distributor that is the "product." Id. citing Shipco 2295, Inc.
    v. Avondale Shipyards, Inc., 
    825 F.2d 925
    , 928 (5th Cir.
    1987). Citing East River, the Court concluded that, because
    almost all machines are made up of components, to define
    "other property" differently would "require a finding of
    `property damage' in virtually every case where a product
    damages itself. Such a holding would eliminate the
    distinction between warranty and strict products liability."
    117 S.Ct. at 1788, quoting 106 S.Ct. at 2300.
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    In this expansion of East River, the Court drew a
    distinction between components added to a product by a
    manufacturer before the product's sale to a user, see, e.g.,
    King v. Hilton-Davis, 
    855 F.2d 1047
     (3d Cir. 1988)
    (Pennsylvania law), Shipco 2295, Inc. v. Avondale
    Shipyards, Inc., 
    825 F.2d 925
     (5th Cir. 1987) (federal
    maritime law); Exxon Shipping Co. v. Pacific Resources, Inc.,
    
    835 F. Supp. 1195
    , 1201 (D. Haw. 1993) (admiralty law)
    (dubbing the rule in these cases, the "integrated product"
    rule), and those items added by a subsequent user to the
    manufactured product, see, e.g., Nicor Supply Ships Assocs.
    v. General Motors Corp., 
    876 F.2d 501
     (5th Cir. 1989).
    Saratoga 117 S.Ct. at 1788.
    This distinction is consistent with the "object of the
    bargain" test, applied by this Circuit. King v. Hilton-Davis.
    
    855 F.2d 1047
    , 1051 (3d Cir. 1988). One looks to the
    "object of the bargain" -- the object purchased or bargained
    for by the plaintiff, in determining whether additions
    constitute "other property." Saratoga, 117 S.Ct. at 1791
    (Scalia, J., dissenting) citing King, 855 F.2d at 1051
    (character of plaintiff's loss may determine the nature of
    available remedies thus when loss is solely the benefit of
    the bargain, a contract remedy is sufficient), American
    Eagle Ins. Co. v. United Technologies Corp., 
    48 F.3d 142
    ,
    145 (5th Cir. 1995) (Texas law), Shipco, 825 F.2d at 928.
    We conclude then that every component that was the
    benefit of the bargain should be integrated into the product;
    consequently, there is no "other property." However, we
    distinguish from the product additional parts that are not
    encompassed in the original bargain but are subsequently
    acquired. These should not be integrated.
    The question here is whether replacement parts should
    be integrated into the engine whole or not. In 1980, U.S.
    Lines, the prior owner of the Enterprise, contracted for a
    fully-functioning diesel engine. The commercial parties were
    well aware that a diesel engine contains components that
    are renewable, i.e., that must be replaced within the life of
    the engine. Thus, the benefit of U.S. Lines' bargain in 1980
    was a fully-functioning engine, but with the knowledge that
    certain parts would have to be replaced after a certain time.
    In 1988, when Sea-Land purchased the ship, the product it
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    purchased was the same -- a functioning engine containing
    certain parts that would have to be replaced. See Saratoga,
    117 S.Ct. at 1788 (holding that a subsequent purchase
    does not change the nature of the original product).
    Sea-Land asserts, however, that upon its 1990 purchase
    of the connecting rod, it already owned the engine as pre-
    existing property, purchased in 1988. The 1990 property,
    the rod, caused damage to the 1988 property, the engine,
    and thus East River does not bar tort recovery. To support
    this position, Sea-Land depends on a single district court
    case, Lease Navajo, Inc. v. Cap Aviation, Inc., 
    760 F. Supp. 455
    , 459 (E.D. Pa. 1991) (holding that component part
    procured to be installed during overhaul of plaintiff's
    engine was separate property from plaintiff 's engine).
    Under Sea-Land's reading of the "benefit of the bargain"
    analysis, it bargained in 1988 for a properly functioning
    engine, and it got it. In 1990, it bargained for a properly
    functioning connecting rod. It didn't get it. Each bargain
    was a separate transaction, relating to separate property.
    The fact that GE happened to be the manufacturer of these
    two products is irrelevant. Thus, Sea-Land asserts that the
    district court's conclusion that the "essential object of the
    bargain was for a functional GE engine," April 29, 1996
    opinion at 12-13, was erroneous.
    Sea-Land has not convinced us, however, that there is
    any rational reason to deviate from the integrated product
    rule simply because the defective component happens to be
    a replacement part instead of the part originally supplied
    with the product. The law is clear that if a commercial
    party purchases all of the components at one time,
    regardless of who assembles them, they are integrated into
    one product. Saratoga, 117 S.Ct. at 1788. Since all
    commercial parties are aware that replacement parts will be
    necessary, the integrated product should encompass those
    replacement parts when they are installed in the engine.
    See Exxon, 835 F.Supp. at 1201 (rejecting the distinction
    between a separately purchased replacement part and the
    originally supplied components as irrelevant to determining
    whether "other property" has been damaged).
    Sea-Land would, however, have us believe that the
    difference in timing is dispositive. Sea-Land asserts that,
    8
    even though component parts may be integrated into the
    end, bargained-for product, as the propeller and rudder
    components were integrated into the completed vessel in
    Shipco, 825 F.2d at 928-29, the later addition of
    replacement parts is a new product.
    We disagree. It is a common commercial practice for the
    parties to a transaction to contemplate the integration of
    replacement parts subsequent to a purchase. In the instant
    case, it was expected that all the replacement parts would
    be eventually have to be integrated into the engine. The GE
    connecting rod was purchased to be installed and to
    become integrated with the GE engine. It is a component of
    that engine; it has no use to Sea-Land otherwise. Moreover,
    in purchasing and installing replacement parts, the parties
    can, as with the original purchase, negotiate the terms of
    the sale and of any warranties.
    Sea-Land, nevertheless, interprets the "object of the
    bargain" test under a contract-based paradigm -- because
    the engine and the rod were purchased in separate
    contractual transactions (each with its own potential
    warranty), they should be treated as separate property. For
    purposes of contract law, and consequently a breach of
    warranty claim, Sea-Land is correct -- the engine and the
    rod are separate property, each subject to the terms of its
    respective contract. However, the use of separate contracts
    as an indicator of "other property" for purposes of invoking
    tort law, has been rejected by the Supreme Court. East
    River, 106 S.Ct. at 2300 (explaining that a single integrated
    machine can have many components, implicitly each
    procured in separate transactions); Saratoga, 117 S.Ct. at
    1788 (citing Shipco with approval); see also, American Home
    Assur. Co. v. Major Tool & Mach., Inc., 
    767 F.2d 446
    , 448
    (8th Cir. 1995) (entire turbine was "single product
    fabricated under a series of subcontracts"); Exxon, 835
    F.Supp. at 1201 ( "spare and replacement parts may . . . be
    part of the `object of the bargain' regardless of whether or
    not they are purchased under the same contract").
    Additionally, the harm that Sea-Land seeks to recover --
    economic loss -- is the exact type of injury that East River
    explains should be the subject of a contract-based warranty
    suit, not a tort suit. 106 S.Ct. at 2300. Tort law is intended
    9
    to compensate individuals where the harm goes beyond
    failed expectations into personal and other property injury.
    Id. The timing of the purchase of the component part may
    be relevant, but it is not dispositive.
    For all these reasons, we agree with the district court
    that tort law is not applicable as a basis here to recover for
    damage to the diesel engine. We will affirm the district
    court's holding that there was no damage to "other
    property." Id. at 2302.
    III. Duty To Warn
    We next address the question whether Sea-Land can
    make a claim in negligence against GE on the basis of a
    post-sale duty to warn of a defective product. In McConnell
    v. Caterpillar Tractor Co., 
    646 F. Supp. 1520
     (D.N.J. 1986),
    a district court attempted to carve out such an exception to
    East River. Plaintiffs in McConnell suffered economic loss:
    lost profits and damage to their engine because of a
    defective engine crankshaft. They asserted not that
    defendants negligently manufactured the crankshaft but
    that "defendants negligently failed to warn of a known
    defect in the crankshaft." Id. at 1526. The district court in
    the instant case endorsed this exception to East River and
    held that there may be tort liability for post-sale failure to
    warn, even if the damage is only economic, when the seller
    has actual knowledge of the defect. The district court
    granted summary judgment in favor of GE because it found
    that GE did not have actual knowledge of the defect. We
    disagree with the reasoning of the district court, but we will
    affirm the grant of summary judgment on this claim.
    The Court in East River enunciated an unconditional bar
    of all tort recovery for economic loss arising out of a
    defective product.
    We . . . hold that a manufacturer in a commercial
    relationship has no duty under either a negligence or
    strict product-liability theory to prevent a product from
    injuring itself.
    East River, 106 S.Ct. at 2302. The Court further explained,
    "whether stated in negligence or strict liability, no products
    10
    liability claim lies in admiralty when the only injury claimed
    is economic loss." East River, 106 S.Ct at 2304.
    As we have set out in Section II above, the reason for this
    rule is that the parties to such a bargain can set the terms
    of their expectations through negotiations, contract
    provisions, price adjustments, and insurance. If either
    party deems it advisable to require warning of a known
    defect in order to protect the product, that party can
    negotiate for such a provision or can protect against a
    defect through insurance. The rule in East River is directly
    applicable.
    In rejecting this duty to warn claim, we are not, however,
    discounting the duty of a manufacturer to warn of a defect
    in order to protect the persons using the product or the
    public in general. We agree that we, as a society, should
    attempt to provide every incentive for a manufacturer with
    knowledge that a defective product is on the market to
    warn its customers. If the damage, resulting from a defect
    is other than mere economic loss, East River leaves intact
    all tort-based theories of recovery including, but not limited
    to, duty to warn.
    Where, however, damage from a defect is only to the
    product itself and is only economic, there is no tort
    recovery. The policy of economic loss is better adjusted by
    contract rules than by tort principles. This conclusion is as
    true for strict liability and negligence cases as it is for
    failure to warn cases. Thus, a manufacturer may be
    culpable of a failure to warn, but if the damage is solely to
    the product itself and is solely economic, there is no tort
    recovery. See East River, 106 S.Ct. at 2300. Accordingly, we
    reject the holding in McConnell. We will, however, for the
    reasons stated above affirm the district court's granting of
    summary judgment to GE on the duty to warn claim.
    IV. Negligent Repair
    We address, third and finally, Sea-Land's claim for
    negligent repair of the damaged engine. Following failure of
    the connecting rod, GE repaired the damaged engine. In
    November 1994, the engine failed again. The failure was
    found to be at the location of the 1991 engine block repair.
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    Sea-Land asserts that GE negligently performed the repair
    and thus breached a duty of care. The damage Sea-Land
    suffered in 1994 was once again solely economic.
    Sea-Land attempts to distinguish its negligent repair case
    from East River, by arguing that GE was not acting as a
    "manufacturer" and did not supply a "product" which
    injured itself. We are not persuaded. GE repaired the
    engine free of charge in 1991 because of the defect in the
    replacement connecting rod. The district court dismissed
    the negligent repair claim because the sole damages alleged
    were economic. It held that, pursuant to East River, "no
    products-liability claim lies in admiralty when the only
    injury claimed is economic loss." April 17, 1997 opinion at
    13, citing East River, 106 S.Ct. at 2304. The district court
    found that plaintiff's remedy lay in contract, not tort. For
    the reasons we expressed in Sections II and III above, we
    agree. Despite any negligence or culpability on the part of
    a manufacturer, where damage is only to the product itself
    and where the only loss is economic, there is no basis for
    tort recovery. The parties must seek their remedy under
    contract and warranty law.
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment of
    the district court.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    12