Alternative Aviation Services, Inc. v. Meggitt (UK) Ltd.

207 F. App'x 506
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 2006
Docket05-2334
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 F. App'x 506 (Alternative Aviation Services, Inc. v. Meggitt (UK) Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alternative Aviation Services, Inc. v. Meggitt (UK) Ltd., 207 F. App'x 506 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Alternative Aviation Services, Inc., a Michigan-based aviation equipment installation company, brought suit against defendants Meggitt [UK] Ltd. (a British-based company doing business as Meggitt Avionics), Meggitt PLC, and Vibro-Meter, Inc. (formerly known as Meggitt Aviation, Inc). The suit against Meggitt PLC was subsequently dismissed. Alternative alleged breach of express and implied warranty, fraud, and revocation of acceptance in connection with equipment it purchased from Meggitt. Meggitt counterclaimed for breach of contract in order to receive the remaining amount owed on the equipment. Meggitt moved for summary judgment on all of Alternative’s claims. Alternative moved for partial summary judgment on its breach of express and implied warranty claims. The district court granted Meggitt’s motion for summary judgment, denied Alternative’s partial motion for summary judgment, and granted summary judgment as to Meggitt’s counterclaim. For the reasons below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I

A. Background

On January 20, 2005, the Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”) implemented its Reduced Vertical Separation Minimum (“RVSM”) program. RVSM regulations had been in effect in other parts of the world for several years prior to 2005. 1 Pre-RVSM, airplanes were required to fly with at least 2,000 feet vertical separation from one another. However, aircraft approved for flight within RVSM airspace may fly 1,000 feet apart. The purpose of RVSM regulations is to allow a larger number of aircraft to fly at fuel-efficient altitudes (approximately 29,000 to 41,000 feet) at the same time. Although newer *508 aircraft are being built with RVSM-compliant altimeters, 2 older aircraft must be retrofitted with more precise altimeters in order to achieve RVSM compliance. Aircraft that are not properly equipped are not allowed to fly in RVSM airspace. See 14 C.F.R. § 91, app. G.

Looking toward 2005, Alternative hoped to be one of the first North American companies to retrofit its customers’ transport aircraft 3 with altimetry systems that would be FAA-approved for flight in RVSM airspace. To this end, Alternative contracted with Meggitt to purchase altimeters that would serve as components in Alternative’s retrofitted systems. As the installer, it was Alternative’s responsibility, not Meggitt’s, to present these systems to the FAA and obtain approval in the form of a Supplemental Type Certificate (“STC”). See 14 C.F.R. § 21.113 (“Any person who alters a product by introducing a major change in type design, not great enough to require a new application for a type certificate under § 21.19, shall apply to the Administrator for a supplemental type certificate____”). An STC is required in order to flight certify an aircraft that is retrofitted with a new altimetry system. Two kinds of STCs from the FAA are required: a hardware STC, which is the STC for the equipment itself, and a performance STC, which is based on the performance of the installed equipment in use. Ultimately, Alternative obtained the performance STC but not the hardware STC. This failure to obtain approval rendered the system useless.

B. The Alternative-Meggitt Contract

Alternative began preparing to retrofit aircraft for RVSM compliance several years before the FAA’s RVSM program was to take effect. On December 2, 1997, Alternative’s John Shirk contacted Meggitt’s Bryan Bullen, inquiring about Meggitt’s “line of RVSM instruments” because Alternative was “working on a Lockheed Jetstar II RVSM solution.” Joint App’x at 83. Bullen responded via fax on December 18 with “preliminary data regarding the Meggitt Avionics solution to the RVSM requirements.” Id. at 85. Bullen’s fax stated, in pertinent part,

the Altimeter and Air Data Unit have the applicable FAA TSO approval, 4 are flight certified and in full production for both civil and military transport applications in the UK and USA as follows:—
UK RAF VC 10 aircraft 5 — RVSM requirement (Altimeter / Alerter / Air Data Unit)
Raytheon / Beech 1900D 6 — Altimeter *509 replacement (Altimeter).

Id. Bullen then faxed Alternative’s Tod Wulff additional information, including brochures describing the technical aspects of the components. This information referred to Meggitt’s product as “the Meggitt Avionics RVSM system.” Id. at 104. In fact, one brochure described the system as “meeting RVSM requirements,” 7 and suited for “New or Retrofit Programmes,” for “[a]ny Commercial or Military fixed wing or rotary wing aircraft,” including “transport aircraft” — the specific type that Alternative sought to retrofit. Id. at 113-15. Alternative claims it relied upon this language to mean that Meggitt was promising that its components would be approved by the FAA.

Negotiations between Alternative and Meggitt continued over the next couple of years. On October 26, 1999, Meggitt’s John Perry emailed Alternative’s Wulff with a correction to an earlier misstatement made in the December 18, 1997 fax. Perry informed Wulff that in fact, the RVSM system “proposed to Alternative Avionics does not currently have FAA TSO approval....” Id. at 181.® Three days later, Perry followed up with Wulff, stating that the proposed design intended for Alternative was in service with the UK’s VC-10 aircraft, and that in order to deliver the product, Meggitt would need to apply for FAA TSO approval. Meggitt informed Alternative on November 16, 1999, that it could deliver its altimeters no earlier than September 2000. On February 16, 2000, Meggitt sent a proposal to Alternative for the sale of “RVSM compliant Altimetry systems.” On March 22, 2000, Alternative ordered ten RVSM Air-data System Shipsets 8 9 from Meggitt for $53,190 apiece.

Meggitt finally obtained TSO approval for the equipment incorporated in Alternative’s “RVSM Solution” in March 2001. Delivery began in April 2001. Between April 4, 2001, and August 31, 2001, Alternative installed eight shipsets of equipment on eight customers’ Part 25 aircraft. On September 21, 2001, Alternative ordered another ten shipsets of Meggitt’s equipment. It appears that Alternative first applied for a hardware STC on October 17, 2001. Thus, Alternative had installed eight shipsets and ordered ten more before applying for the hardware STC.

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Bluebook (online)
207 F. App'x 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alternative-aviation-services-inc-v-meggitt-uk-ltd-ca6-2006.