Brickman-Joy Corporation and Connecticut Galvanizing Corp. v. National Annealing Box Company

459 F.2d 133, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 539, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 10315
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1972
Docket545, Docket 71-1454
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 459 F.2d 133 (Brickman-Joy Corporation and Connecticut Galvanizing Corp. v. National Annealing Box Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brickman-Joy Corporation and Connecticut Galvanizing Corp. v. National Annealing Box Company, 459 F.2d 133, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 539, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 10315 (2d Cir. 1972).

Opinion

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

This diversity action under Connecticut law, involving the failure of a galvanizing kettle, was submitted to the jury on the basis of an implied warranty of merchantability, Conn.Gen.Stat. § 42a-2-314 (1958) (Uniform Commercial Code), and judgment was rendered for plaintiffs. Defendant brought this appeal from Judge Blumenfeld’s denial of its alternative motion for judgment n.o. v. or a new trial under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b). We affirm.

Plaintiffs-appellees, Connecticut corporations, ordered a $7,000 galvanizing kettle 1 from defendant-appellant, a Pennsylvania corporation. This was to be manufactured by defendant-appellant in accordance with the inside dimensions determined by appellees but the specifications prepared by appellant and accepted by appellees. On delivery of the kettle at appellees’ Glastonbury, Connecticut, plant, they placed it in their furnace setting, a recessed pit. On the kettle’s maiden run, however, while packed with zinc and heated to approximately 820° F., it cracked open in or near a weld between the bottom and side plates. Needless to say, the molten zinc within dribbled out.

The wounded kettle was then hosed with water' — in the trade, “frozen” — to solidify the bleeding zinc and inhibit further leakage. Vermiculite was also spread on the top layer of zinc in the kettle to prevent the remaining zinc from losing too much heat. After deliberating several hours, appellees’ managers concluded that to salvage the remaining zinc, the best course would be to reheat the kettle to melt the zinc so that it could be pumped out of the kettle. Upon reheating, however, the crack in the kettle apparently lengthened, the bottom of the kettle dropped out, and the molten zinc spilled all over the pit. 2 *135 Appellees sustained over $80,000 in damages in retrieving the zinc and replacing the kettle.

The court below found, as appellees claimed, that there was an implied warranty of merchantability as a matter of law. The case was then submitted to the jury only on the question whether there was a breach of that implied warranty. Appellant contests the propriety of the court’s instructions, claiming that the charge should have been based, if on any warranty, on the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose [Conn.Gen.Stat.Ann. § 42a-2-315 (1958)].

Appellant’s specific argument is that the warranted product — the kettle— could have been used in galvanizing operations only in conjunction with numerous other components and design variables over which appellant had had no control. Therefore, the argument runs, the case fell outside the realm of simple merchantability, which appellant interprets as being limited to products suitable for general use without modification or adaptation to particular circumstances. 3

Inasmuch as the elements necessary to support a warranty of merchantability were present in the kettle transaction, 4 and since within the component system, only the kettle precipitated the damage, appellant’s position is untenable. Appellees purchased a galvanizing kettle from a kettle merchant and were entitled to presume the kettle was of merchantable quality. Fitness for a particular purpose need not be reached here, for as Judge Blumenfeld concluded, “[I]n the instant case, the *136 general purpose and the particular purpose of the item sold were one and the same — galvanizing. [T]hat the kettle was manufactured to meet the requirements of plaintiffs’ galvanizing operation rather than someone else’s galvanizing operation does not make inapplicable the warranty of merchantability.” Ruling on Motion for Judgment N.O.V. or for a New Trial at 2, Brickman-Joy Corp. v. National Annealing Box Co., Civil No. 12,965 (D.Conn., filed Feb. 26, 1971) (hereinafter cited as Judgment). See Crotty v. Shartenberg’s-New Haven, Inc., 147 Conn. 460, 464, 162 A.2d 513, 515 (1960).

Appellant additionally seeks to convince us that the trial court erred in instructing the jury as to what would constitute misuse of the warranted product by the buyers, thus defeating the merchantability claim. At the trial, appellant’s principal allegation was that the kettle failed because plaintiffs neglected to brace it in their furnace setting with side supports. That omission, appellant claims, was a misuse of the kettle which ought to relieve appellant of liability.

Judge Blumenfeld instructed the jury that the plaintiffs had the burden of proving that the kettle was not fit for normal use and that plaintiffs’ use was not misuse. He further charged, with respect to the standard for determining misuse:

If the manner in which the plaintiff used the kettle was in accord with practices employed by an appreciable number of galvanizers in April of 1968, when this occurred, you may then find that the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of the warranty of merchantability and is entitled to recover, even if not all galvanizers would have used the kettle as the plaintiff did.
. That does not mean that in order to avoid being charged with misuse he would have to use the kettle in the best way that galvanizers use it. He wouldn’t have to use it in the way that most galvanizers use it. He wouldn’t have to use it in the way that it’s regarded as the best practice. If he used it in a way that’s used by an appreciable number of galvanizers, people in this industry, then that warranty stands; that was not a misuse of the kettle. [Emphasis supplied.]

Taking exception to the “appreciable number” standard, appellant urges that under Silverman v. Swift & Co., 141 Conn. 450, 107 A.2d 277 (1954), the Connecticut test for misuse is whether the plaintiffs followed “commonly used precautions” when using the kettle in their galvanizing operation. The undisputed proof that plaintiffs did not provide side supports, the theory obviously follows, would lead the jury to bar recovery if they were convinced that such supports were a commonly used precaution in the galvanizing industry.

The “appreciable number” standard was fashioned by Judge Blumenfeld, in the absence of more definitive Connecticut law, from Crotty v. Shartenberg’sNew Haven, Inc., supra, a hair remover warranty case. There the court said that while the plaintiff could not recover if the injury were caused “by reason of his own improper use of the article warranted,” id. at 467, 162 A.2d at 517, citing Silverman v. Swift & Co., supra, the warranty of merchantability would stand if plaintiff could show that the product “can affect injuriously an appreciable number of persons.” 147 Conn. at 467, 162 A.2d at 516. See also Corneliuson v.

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Bluebook (online)
459 F.2d 133, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 539, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 10315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brickman-joy-corporation-and-connecticut-galvanizing-corp-v-national-ca2-1972.