Cambridge Plating Co. v. Napco, Inc.

991 F.2d 20
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1993
Docket92-2242
StatusPublished

This text of 991 F.2d 20 (Cambridge Plating Co. v. Napco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cambridge Plating Co. v. Napco, Inc., 991 F.2d 20 (1st Cir. 1993).

Opinion

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Cambridge Plating Company filed this lawsuit against defendant Napco seeking damages for a defective wastewa-ter treatment system. The district court granted summary judgment for Napco, concluding as a matter of law that the statutes of limitations had run on plaintiff’s claims. On appeal, Cambridge Plating argues that the court should have let the jury decide whether Massachusetts’s “discovery” rule suspended the running of the limitations clock long enough to preserve its claims. Because we agree with plaintiff that material issues of fact remain, we reverse the summary judgment.

I.

A. Factual Background

Cambridge Plating is an electroplating business that discharges wastewater containing various metal contaminants into municipal sewers. In an effort to meet strict environmental regulations governing such discharges, the company commissioned the design and installation of a wastewater treatment system from defendant Napco. The contract price for the system was nearly $400,000. Cambridge Plating additionally needed to make substantial changes to its facility to accommodate the enormous and complex array of pipes, tanks, valves, mixers, sensors, recorders and other apparatus, pushing the total cost for the project to $2.8 million.

*23 The system began running on October 30, 1984, but it was not then fully operational, and Napco continued installation and debugging for another year. In October 1985, Cambridge Plating began to experience unsatisfactory results; testing revealed that contaminant levels in the wastewater discharges sometimes exceeded regulatory limits. Cambridge Plating’s managers believed the problems stemmed from errors by the system operators or errors in wastewater sampling. This belief was fueled by Napco representatives who, when contacted by Cambridge Plating on a number of occasions between early 1986 and 1988, suggested ways that Cambridge Plating could change its operation of the system. Napco refused further visits to Cambridge Plating to, service the system unless it was paid $1,000 per day.

Cambridge Plating took several steps to resolve the perceived operational or sampling problems. It replaced the system operators and implemented the changes suggested by Napco. In late 1986, the company asked a wastewater treatment expert, Patrick Hunt, to evaluate the system and the company’s operation of it. Although Hunt found some minor problems with the system itself, most of his recommendations were operational. Cambridge Plating adopted his suggestions, but the company continued periodically to exceed lawful contaminant levels.

On December 29, 1988, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA), the agency responsible for effluent regulation, assessed a penalty of $682,250 on Cambridge Plating for violations during 1986-88. In February 1989, Cambridge Plating commissioned another expert, Peter Moleux, to evaluate the system. Mo-leux’s lengthy inspection, which included a close comparison of Napco’s written materials with the system as it actually existed, revealed design flaws, failure to install parts specified in the plans, and substandard engineering practices. Most significantly, Moleux discovered that Napco had failed to install an important component, a static mixer, inside a pipe where system schematics provided by Napco indicated erroneously the device had been placed. Omission of the static mixer rendered the system incapable of adequately cleaning 80 percent of the wastewater.

After Moleux’s evaluation, Cambridge Plating installed a static mixer at the point called for by Napco’s plans. The system thereafter worked properly, enabling Cambridge Plating consistently to comply with the effluent limitations.

B. Procedural Background

Cambridge Plating filed this action in June 1990, alleging causes of action for breach of contract, negligence, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and violation of the Massachusetts unfair business practices act, Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 93A. Napco moved for summary judgment, arguing that all of Cambridge Plating’s claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitation. The district court agreed with Napco.

The court concluded that Cambridge Plating’s purchase of the wastewater treatment system was a sale of goods, and that its contract claim thus was governed by the four-year limitations period under the Uniform Commercial Code, Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 106, § 2-725, rather than by the general six-year contractual limitations period, Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 260, § 2. All of Cambridge Plating’s causes of action, therefore, were subject to either three- or four-year statutes of limitation. 1 These claims were time-barred, the court determined, because they accrued in late 1985, some four and one-half years before suit, when the company learned that the system was failing to bring effluent discharges within legal limits. The court rejected plaintiff’s argument that the limitations periods were tolled until Moleux’s evaluation, when Cambridge Plating first learned the cause of the system’s problems. The court concluded that, with reasonable diligence, Cambridge Plating could have discovered the defects once the system started malfunctioning.

*24 On appeal, Cambridge Plating argues that the court misconstrued the contract and the discovery rule, which serves to toll certain hard-to-discern claims, and improperly usurped the jury’s role when it decided as a matter of law that the rule did not preserve the company’s claims. Our review of the district court’s grant of summary judgment is plenary, and we read the record in the light most amicable to the party contesting summary judgment. See, e.g., Pagano v. Frank, 983 F.2d 343, 347 (1st Cir.1993).

II.

Cambridge Plating contends that the district court erred in ruling as a matter of law that the contract with Napco was a sale of goods contract within the scope of the UCC. Although determining the type of contract at issue typically may be a jury function, see United States v. City of Twin Falls, 806 F.2d 862, 870 (9th Cir.1986), we believe the facts here are sufficiently clear and undisputed that the district court was permitted to make its finding as a matter of law. Id.

Cambridge Plating asserts that the UCC is inapplicable because the equipment it purchased does not meet the Code’s definition of goods. Under the UCC, “goods” are defined as “all things ... which are movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale_” See Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 106, § 2-105.

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991 F.2d 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambridge-plating-co-v-napco-inc-ca1-1993.