Atlan Industries, Inc. v. O.E.M., Inc.

555 F. Supp. 184, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 795, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20203
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 7, 1983
DocketCiv. A. CIV-82-853-W
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 555 F. Supp. 184 (Atlan Industries, Inc. v. O.E.M., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlan Industries, Inc. v. O.E.M., Inc., 555 F. Supp. 184, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 795, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20203 (W.D. Okla. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SAFFELS, District Judge, Sitting by Designation.

This case involves a complaint for the price of goods sold by plaintiff to defendant. Defendant denies liability for the price of the goods, and contends that the goods contained a latent defect which caused them to be unacceptable and out of conformity with the specifications in the sales contract between plaintiff and defendant.

Plaintiff is a prime supplier of reground plastic and wide specification machinery in the plastics industry. The goods in dispute between defendant and plaintiff are nine hundred thirty-five pounds (935 lbs.) of “Noryl-R-Beige FN 215” at eighty-five cents (85$) per pound, as described in plaintiff’s invoice No. 16886; nine thousand nine hundred fifty pounds (9,950 lbs.) of “NorylR-Grey FN 215” at eighty-five cents (85$) per pound, as described on plaintiff’s invoice No. 17114; and seventeen thousand two hundred ninety-five pounds (17,295 lbs.) of “Noryl-R-Grey FN 215” at eighty-five cents (85$) per pound, as described on plaintiff’s invoice No. 17449.

FN 215 is a high dehsity, very hard plastic used primarily in the computer industry for making computer cabinets. There are two types of FN 215 on the market. “Virgin” FN 215 is plastic material which has never been molded and is manufactured only by General Electric. FN 215 “regrind” is plastic which has been molded once or more in its life, has been scrapped and has been ground for use again in a molding process. Defendant is a company which molds plastic into various parts and sells them to the computer industry. Defendant was under contract to a computer company, Magnetic Peripherals, Inc. (hereinafter MPI), to mold a number of computer cabinet parts from FN 215. Plaintiff agreed to supply defendant with raw FN 215 for this molding job. Plaintiff did not know the end use of the FN 215 it was supplying to defendant, and the name of the user was kept secret.

After agreeing to supply defendant with FN 215, plaintiff contacted a supplier about a supply of reground FN 215. Plaintiff tested the FN 215 for contamination and foreign matter, and forwarded a 935-pound sample of the FN 215 to defendant for testing.

*187 In the plastics industry, it is a common practice for a supplier of raw plastic to forward a sample to the molder for testing. The purpose of the test is to see if the plastic material will mold well. No injection molder has facilities to do any other test. The reason for testing regrind material is that some regrind is badly contaminated with metal, which clogs the injection molding equipment and requires the molding machine to be shut down and cleaned. “Regrind” is plastic which has been molded once, and then is ground into pellets to be re-used. The regrinding process sometimes leaves small pieces of metal and metal chips in the plastic.

FN 215 is an expensive • plastic which is specially compounded for use in office machines and computers. FN 215 is heat sensitive, but is able to withstand temperatures of at least two hundred five degrees (205°). Because the material is generally used in office machines and computers, it is almost always painted after molding to improve its cosmetic appearance. Defendant does not paint the parts it molds; they forward them to the ultimate user, who paints them.

The particular shipments involved in this lawsuit were molded by defendant and forwarded to their ultimate user, MPI. MPI painted the parts and heated them in an infrared oven to dry the paint. The parts molded from FN 215 “regrind” supplied by plaintiff warped when exposed to the temperature of the infrared heat ovens. The computer parts were warping when exposed to temperatures of between one hundred thirty degrees (130°) and one hundred seventy degrees (170°). Noryl FN 215 will not warp at this temperature range. Defendant molded the entire shipment of Noryl FN 215 into computer parts and tendered them to MPI before the problem surfaced. MPI immediately rejected the goods as defective and non-conforming because of the warping problem. Defendant immediately notified plaintiff that MPI had rejected the goods because of warpage, and that the material supplied by plaintiff was defective and non-conforming.

Defendant was instructed by plaintiff sometime in March, 1982, to return the material to plaintiff. Subsequently, all but four thousand pounds (4,000 lbs.) of the material supplied by plaintiff was returned to plaintiff by defendant in substantially the same condition. Plaintiff was unable to furnish Noryl FN 215 from another source. Due to plaintiff’s inability to furnish conforming FN 215, defendant purchased forty thousand pounds (40,000 lbs.) of FN 215 from General Electric at forty-two cents (42$) per pound higher than plaintiff’s price. Defendant invested eighty (80) hours of labor at Ten Dollars ($10) per hour to inspect and regrind the non-conforming FN 215 back to its original state to return to plaintiff. The material was reground because it would therefore be cheaper to ship and easier for plaintiff to resell. In addition, plaintiff agreed that it would be better to regrind the material.

This lawsuit is governed by Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The court finds that there was a contract for sale of goods between plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff agreed to sell to defendant a known quantity of Noryl FN 215. It is undisputed that Noryl FN 215 does not warp at one hundred fifty degrees (150°), and it is undisputed that parts made from the Noryl FN 215 supplied by plaintiff did warp when exposed to temperatures of one hundred fifty degrees (150°). Therefore, we find that the goods tendered by plaintiff failed to conform to the contract. Pursuant to Okla.Stat. 12A, § 2-601, if goods fail in any respect to conform to a contract, the buyer may reject all of them or accept all of them.

Acceptance of goods occurs when the buyer, after a reasonable opportunity to inspect them, signifies to the seller that the goods are conforming or that he will take them despite their non-conformity, or where the buyer fails to make an effective rejection, or does any act inconsistent with the seller’s ownership. Okla.Stat. 12A, § 2-606(1). A buyer is deemed to have accepted goods when, without making any effort to reject them, he receives the goods, *188 processes them, and sells the finished product to a third-person. A & G Construction Co., Inc. v. Reid Brothers Logging Co., Inc., 547 P.2d 1207 (Alaska 1976). Such actions on the part of the buyer are clearly inconsistent with ownership by the seller. Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code, § 2-606:31 (1971). The court finds defendant accepted the goods.

A buyer must pay at the contract rate for any goods he has accepted. Okla. Stat. 12A, § 2-607(1). However, a buyer may revoke his acceptance of goods whose non-conformity substantially impairs their value to him if he has accepted those goods without discovery of the non-conformity where his acceptance was reasonably induced by the difficulty of discovery before acceptance. Okla.Stat. 12A, § 2-608(l)(b). As a condition precedent to revoking acceptance, the buyer must show that the goods are both non-conforming and that the non-conformance substantially impairs the value of the goods to the buyer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
555 F. Supp. 184, 35 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 795, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlan-industries-inc-v-oem-inc-okwd-1983.