A. T. S. Laboratories, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraftt Co.

391 N.E.2d 1041, 59 Ohio App. 2d 15
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 22, 1978
Docket8561
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 391 N.E.2d 1041 (A. T. S. Laboratories, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraftt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. T. S. Laboratories, Inc. v. Cessna Aircraftt Co., 391 N.E.2d 1041, 59 Ohio App. 2d 15 (Ohio Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

Bell, J.

The facts leading to the instant appeal, being of import to our decision, are stated briefly as follows:

The Cessna Aircrift Co. (Cessna) was the manufacturer of a certain company type 182 aircraft, certification No. N91199. That product was sold originally by Cessna to defendants Freedom Field, Inc. (Freedom) and Bobert M. Freed (Freed) who, in turn, sold the plane a year later to plaintiff, A . T. S. Laboratories, Inc. (A. T. S.). A. T. S. experienced difficulty with the plane and- thereafter filed a suit against- Freedgm, Freed and Cessna claiming that all three defendants expressly and impliedly warranted to A. T. S. the condition and merchantability of the unit. Additionally, A. T. S. alleged that defendants were negligent in *16 failing to discover and disclose defects in -the plane prior to the sale thereof.

Various pleadings and counterpleadings followed to the eventual end that: (1) A. T. S. withdrew its negligence claims against all defendants; (2) A. T. S. withdrew its claims based on violations of express warranty against defendant Cessna but continued its claims founded on violations of implied warranty, and (3) A. T. S. dismissed entirely its case against Freed and continued its claims against defendant Freedom on the basis of breach of both express and implied warranty. Freedom filed a counterclaim against A. T. S.

At trial, the jury found in favor of A. T. S. against defendant Cessna and in favor of Freedom against A. T. S. on the counterclaim. The claim of A. T. S. against Freedom was not the subject of a verdict by the trial jury. Thereafter, in response to plaintiff’s motion filed under Civ. B. 50(B) the trial court ruled that Freedom had breached its warranty to A. T. S., found in favor of the latter, and awarded a nominal damage amount. The record indicates that the judgment order in this cause omitted the value of the verdicts rendered and a corrected order was placed to record. The verdicts rendered and interrogatories answered by the jury complete the record of the trial proceedings.

Cessna now appeals that judgment and claims four assignments of error which are discussed individually hereafter.

I.

Assignment of Error

“A manufacturer of a product cannot be liable in damages on a theory of breach of implied warranty [or strict liability in tort] to a purchaser of the product for damages to the product itself when the product was purchased in a used condition from a third party not the manufacturer.”

Beginning with its decision in Rogers v. Toni Home Permanent Co. (1958), 167 Ohio St. 244, the Ohio Supreme Court began a continuing legal consideration of *17 the subject of liabilities imposed upon parties placing manufactured products into the stream of commerce. The scope of such liability, historically, has been broadened and extended by the court. In Rogers, supra, a retail purchaser was allowed damages from the manufacturer when the purchaser used the manufacturer’s product and suffered personal injury by virtue of the use thereof. The court, stating that the representations concerning the product were made by the manufacturer to the buying public, allowed the purchaser to recover on the theory of a violation of express warranty even though direct privity between plaintiff and defendant did not exist. We note that this matter involved personal injury to the purchaser and not damage to the subject of purchase, the item itself.

Seven years later in Inglis v. American Motors Corp. (1965) 3 Ohio St. 2d 132, the secondary purchaser recovered damages on the basis of a violation of an express warranty against an automobile manufacturer. The facts in Inglis, supra, show, again, no proof of direct privity between plaintiff and defendant, and again the court hinged its opinion on the reliance of the purchaser on representations made by the seller in its national advertising material. In Inglis, damage to the product itself was in contention. The court affirmed damages awarded for the “diminution of value of the automobile attributable to latent defects not ascertainable at the time of purchase.” Inglis advanced the cause undertaken by the court in Rogers, supra. Inglis, in large, appears to be based on the reasoning of the New Jersey Supreme Court in Santor v. A. & M. Karagheusian, Inc. (1965), 44 N. J. 52, 207 A. 2d 305. Because of its definitive impact on the emerging product liability law in Ohio, we quote a portion of the Santor opinion cited in Inglis, supra, at 139-140:

“The Appellate Division stated its conception of the law in this language:
“ ‘It is clear to us that as of this writing, absent personal injury or damage to health consequent upon use of the product in question, there is no action in this state on the part of a purchaser of goods for breach of warranty in *18 respect of their quality or fitness for use except as against the party from whom he has purchased them.’ 82 1ST. J. Super, at page 322. However the Supreme Court of New Jersey disagreed and stated the law as follows:
‘There is no doubt that the great mass of warranty cases imposing liability on the manufacturer regardless of lack of privity were concerned with personal injuries to the ultimate consumer. * * * But we see no just cause for recognition of the existence of an implied warranty of merchantability and a right to recovery for breach thereof regardless of the lack of privity of the claimant in the one case and exclusion of recovery in other simply because loss of value of the article sold is the only damage resulting from the breach.
“ ‘The manufacturer is the father of the transaction. He makes the article and puts it in the channels of trade for sale to the public. No one questions the justice of a rule which holds him liable for defects arising out of the design or manufacture, or other causes while the product is under Ms control. After completion the article may pass through a series of hands, * # *. For these reasons in the recent past the courts of many jurisdictions, in an endeav- or to achieve justice for the ultimate consumer, have imposed an implied warranty of reasonable fitness on the person responsible for the existence of the article and the origin of the marketing process. From the standpoint of principle we perceive no sound reason why the implication of reasonable fitness should be attached to the transaction and be actionable against the manufacturer where the defectively made product has caused personal injury and not actionable when inadequate manufacture has pnt a worthless article in the hands of an innocent purchaser who has paid the required price for it. * * *’ ”

Both Rogers and Inglis base their theory of liability on a violation of express warranties by the manufacturers. Thus, the question of whether the doctrines of these eases could be further extended to circumstances lacking both privity between the parties and express warranties brought about by substantial advertising remained unresolved.

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Bluebook (online)
391 N.E.2d 1041, 59 Ohio App. 2d 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-t-s-laboratories-inc-v-cessna-aircraftt-co-ohioctapp-1978.