Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Berg Chilling Systems, Inc., Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Sp Industries, Inc.

369 F.3d 745
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 2004
Docket03-2977
StatusPublished

This text of 369 F.3d 745 (Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Berg Chilling Systems, Inc., Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Sp Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Berg Chilling Systems, Inc., Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. Acceptance Insurance Company v. Hull Corporation Sp Industries, Inc., D/B/A Hull Company, Defendants/third-Party v. Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Sp Industries, Inc., 369 F.3d 745 (3d Cir. 2004).

Opinion

369 F.3d 745

BERG CHILLING SYSTEMS, INC.; Acceptance Insurance Company
v.
HULL CORPORATION; SP Industries, Inc., d/b/a Hull Company, Defendants/Third-Party Plaintiffs
v.
Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Defendants
Berg Chilling Systems, Inc., Appellant
Berg Chilling Systems, Inc.; Acceptance Insurance Company
v.
Hull Corporation; SP Industries, Inc., d/b/a Hull Company, Defendants/Third-Party Plaintiffs
v.
Vicarb, Inc., Alfa Laval, Inc. Alfa Laval Vicarb, John L. Hull, Lewis W. Hull, Third Party Defendants
SP Industries, Inc., Appellant.

No. 03-2977.

No. 03-3020.

United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.

Argued April 21, 2004.

Decided May 25, 2004.

COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED John J. Soroko (argued), Patrick J. Loftus, James H. Steigerwald, Duane Morris, Philadelphia, PA, for Appellant-Appellee Berg Chilling Systems, Inc.

Michael O. Adelman (argued), Rebecca S. Rimmer, Michael P. Daly, Drinker, Biddle & Reath, Philadelphia, PA, for Appellee-Appellant SP Industries, Inc.

Before: SCIRICA, Chief Judge, and ROSENN and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter comes on before this court on appeals by Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. ("Berg") and SP Industries, Inc. ("SPI") from an order for judgment entered by the district court on June 11, 2003, following a four-day bench trial in this breach of contract action. The district court set forth its opinion in Berg Chilling Systems, Inc. v. Hull Corp., No. Civ. A. 00-5075, 2003 WL 21362805 (E.D.Pa. June 10, 2003) ("Berg"). The case, which has an unusual international character as it implicates entities from four countries on three continents, though not all as parties, arises from the failure of a freeze drying system to perform to specifications. Though there were many factual disputes at the trial, the basic circumstances of the case are clear and we set forth the facts in the light most supportive of the district court's result.1

The origin of the case may be traced to March 30, 1995, when Berg, a Canadian Corporation,2 entered into a contract with a Chinese Company named Huadu Meat Products Company ("Huadu")3 to supply the food freeze drying system ("Equipment Contract") at a cost of $2,800,000 in United States dollars. The freeze drying system contained several components which Berg intended to acquire from subcontractors and suppliers. Thus, prior to entering into the Equipment Contract, Berg ascertained which manufacturers would produce the system's various component parts.4

Berg approached the Hull Corporation ("Hull"), a Pennsylvania entity,5 and asked it to produce the freeze dryers, a critical component for the system. In the weeks prior to signing the Equipment Contract with Huadu, Berg was in constant contact with Hull regarding the freezer dryers' technical specifications.6 On April 20, 1995, Berg formally agreed to purchase two freeze dryers from Hull for the Huadu freeze drying system ("Purchase Order"). Under this Purchase Order, Hull assumed responsibility for the design, manufacture, start-up and testing of the freeze dryers.7 The freeze dryers were required to be able to process a specified volume of food at a high quality level within a 24-hour period or, in industry terms, to meet the "through-put" specifications.

After confirming the delivery date with Hull, Berg entered into an amended agreement with Huadu specifying a delivery date of June 15, 1996, for the freeze drying apparatus. Nevertheless, the freeze dryers were not shipped until October 1996 because one of their component parts was not available. Once Hull completed manufacturing the freeze dryers, their shipping to China was delayed further when the vessel on which they were to be shipped failed on the way to pick up the equipment at the port in Camden, New Jersey. Berg, who was responsible for shipping the freeze dryers, then made arrangements for their transportation on trucks across North America to Vancouver, British Columbia, for shipment by sea to China. Unfortunately, one of the trucks, while en route to Vancouver, was involved in an accident in which one of the freeze dryers was damaged.8 Berg did not repair the damaged freeze dryer prior to its shipment by sea to China. Rather, after the freeze dryers were shipped to China the damaged freeze dryer was repaired at Huadu's facility in Beijing. The equipment then was installed and prepared for trial runs.

In April 1997, at the direction of a Hull service technician, preliminary testing began on the freeze drying system. This testing revealed several deficiencies in the freeze drying equipment which led Huadu in early May 1997 to send a list of concerns regarding the functioning of the machinery to Berg which, in turn, forwarded the list to Hull. Hull then responded to those concerns. Nevertheless the Hull service technician returned to the United States prior to conducting performance tests on the machinery as required by the Equipment Contract, an action leading Huadu to refuse to accept the freeze drying system.

According to Berg, during the early summer of 1997 Hull refused to cooperate with Berg and Huadu in addressing the problems with the freeze dryers.9 Huadu obviously was dissatisfied and thus threatened to send the equipment back and cancel the contract. As a result of Hull's perceived lack of cooperation during that time period, Berg threatened to sue it. In late August, however, Berg and Hull began negotiating a compromise to solve the difficulties with the machinery. These negotiations culminated in the signing of a modified agreement on October 8, 1997, among Huadu, Berg and Hull designed to address the deficiencies in the Hull freeze dryers ("Modified Agreement").10 The Modified Agreement set forth performance-level goals for the freeze dryers and the required quality level of the product, providing that "through a cooperative effort, Hull and Berg will ensure" that these standards would be met. JA at 1074. It established the end of March 1998 as the date by which the modifications would be completed and final acceptance would take place. JA at 1074.

While Hull, Berg and Huadu were addressing the problems with the freeze dryers, Hull, on August 27, 1997, entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with SP Industries, Inc. ("SPI"), a New Jersey Corporation,11 providing for SPI to acquire Hull's Food, Drug & Chemical Division ("FDC division") which had designed and manufactured the freeze dryers for the Huadu project.

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