Angel v. Goodman Manufacturing Co.

617 F. Supp. 2d 1120, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49236, 2008 WL 2673353
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJune 27, 2008
Docket07-CV-0462-CVE-FHM
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 617 F. Supp. 2d 1120 (Angel v. Goodman Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angel v. Goodman Manufacturing Co., 617 F. Supp. 2d 1120, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49236, 2008 WL 2673353 (N.D. Okla. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

CLAIRE V. EAGAN, Chief Judge.

Now before the Court is Plaintiffs Amended Motion and Supporting Brief for Class Certification (Dkt.# 30) and Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support (Dkt.# 40). Plaintiff asks the Court to certify a class of all persons and entities that own or owned an air conditioner manufactured by Goodman Manufacturing Company, L.P. (“Goodman”) between March and September 2000 and to which an allegedly defective paint was applied to the aluminum fins. Dkt. # 30, at 16. Defendant asserts that it is entitled to summary judgment on the merits of plaintiffs claim for breach of express warranty and the issue of class certification is moot.

I.

Capital Assets, Inc., a property management company in Tulsa, Oklahoma, purchased a Goodman air conditioner on August 28, 2000 and installed it at an apartment complex owned by Sandra Angel. The air conditioner came with a five year warranty which stated:

Except as noted in the Exclusion Section herein, the parts of the air conditioning product(s) described on the reverse side of this certificate is (are) warranted against defects in material or workmanship under normal use and maintenance (a) for a period of five (5) years from the installation date or (b) for a period of sixty-three (63) months from the date of manufacture if the installation date cannot be verified.
We will exchange any warranted defective part upon its presentation to our distributor by a certified or licensed technician.

Dkt. #40-2, at 59. Based on the unit’s serial number, Goodman has determined that plaintiffs unit was manufactured in June 2000. Dkt. #40, Ex. B, at 2-3. Plaintiffs warranty expired in either August or September 2005 1 and plaintiff did *1122 not make a warranty claim to Goodman or anyone in the distribution chain during the warranty period. Plaintiff alleges that, during April 2006, she began having problems with her air conditioner and she claims that she has requested additional maintenance on the unit since April 2006.

In 2002, Goodman filed a lawsuit against its paint supplier, American Coatings, L.P. (“American Coatings”). Goodman alleged that it used a paint manufactured by American Coatings to paint the aluminum fins of approximately 789,000 air conditioners manufactured between March and September 2000. The paint was called “Goodman Black.” Goodman initially sought over $81 million in damages and alleged that every air conditioner manufactured between the specified dates was defective. Goodman’s expert witnesses, Darlene Brezinski, Ph.D., and Lori Streit, Ph.D, opined that Goodman Black would cause some degree of corrosion to the aluminum fins of each air conditioner to which it was applied. In her deposition, Dr. Brezinski testified that:

Q. Okay. Your statement in paragraph number 2 is that “the coating as formulated will begin the dehydro” — I’m not saying this right.
A. Halogenation.
Q. —“process as it is coming out of the bake oven.”
A. That’s my belief.
Q. Okay. And that will happen on every unit painted in this manner—
A. That is my belief.
Q. —with this coating?
A. That is my belief.
Q. And so all 830,000 units that are in the field that have been painted with the Goodman Black will fail ultimately?
A. I believe that, because there were no anticorrosive agents in that coating, yeah.
Q. Okay.
A. I really do believe that.
Q. Right. You believe that at some point and to some degree they will all fail due to this breakdown?
A. That is correct.

Dkt. # 30, Ex. C, at 2. Dr. Streit also testified that corrosion caused by Goodman Black could manifest at any time and she believed that every air conditioner painted with Goodman Black would experience some corrosion:

Q. At some point does the corrosion reaction stop, or does it just keep going with what we’ve got? We’ve got Goodman Black paint. We have got the aluminum fins.
A. And you have acid trapped in between. It will continue.
Q. It does continue.
A. It will continue, yes.
Q. And that can be exacerbated by some means of those variables we spoke about?
A. Clearly.
Q. Do you have any idea or can you calculate or measure in any way how long it takes for that acid to first emerge, first start breaking through the coating?
A. No. Again you’re getting back to dating the corrosion, and there’s really no way to do that.
Q. If we were to scour the countryside and find one of the units that didn’t show any corrosion, would it be your expectation that ultimately it will still show that corrosion at some point?
A. If it’s this formulation, I think that’s true.
*1123 Q. There’s no point of years that you will say you’ve past the point of it emerging now?
A. I don’t see that, no.

Dkt. # 40, Ex. D, at 2-3.

During the American Coatings litigation, Gary Clark, Goodman’s Vice President of Marketing, testified about procedures that Goodman employed during “catastrophic” equipment failures:

Q. What would be a catastrophic failure?
A. Let’s say a failure at greater than five [percent] — let’s just use — it’s a gray area and it varies. But let’s just say a failure rate greater than five percent, we would tend to call that catastrophic, at which point we would put service policies into place that would enhance the standard warranty in these cases where we have known defects.
Q. So when you’re in a situation where you believe there’s a problem that you’ve recognized and you believe may affect this particular unit in advance, you would tell the unit or the homeowner, whoever bought it, that in addition to the standard Goodman warranty, we know about this problem and we’ll try to help you with that as well?
A. Typically it’s not the homeowner. Typically it’s up to our distribution and our dealer base. So that when they are called out and service situations, they understand that we know that there’s a broad problem and that there is a special program to handle this broad problem.
Q. Was it already classified as a catastrophic situation when you arrived at Goodman?
A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
617 F. Supp. 2d 1120, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49236, 2008 WL 2673353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angel-v-goodman-manufacturing-co-oknd-2008.