Carhartt, Inc. v. Innovative Textiles, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 24, 2020
Docket5:17-cv-13604
StatusUnknown

This text of Carhartt, Inc. v. Innovative Textiles, Inc. (Carhartt, Inc. v. Innovative Textiles, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carhartt, Inc. v. Innovative Textiles, Inc., (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

Carhartt, Inc.,

Plaintiff, Case No. 17-13604

v. Judith E. Levy United States District Judge Innovative Textiles, Inc., and Innovative Textiles, LLC, Mag. Judge R. Steven Whalen

Defendants/ Third-Party Plaintiffs, v.

Gentry Mills, Inc.,

Third-Party Defendant.

________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART INNOVATIVE TEXTILES, LLC’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [141] AND DENYING IN PART CARHARTT, INC.’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [151]

Carhartt Inc. sued Innovative Textiles, Inc. and Innovative Textiles, LLC alleging seven counts: (1) breach of contract, (2) breach of express and implied warranties, (3) negligence, (4) fraud, (5) silent fraud, (6) innocent misrepresentation, (7) false advertising under the Lanham Act, and (8) successor liability against Innovative Textiles, LLC.1 (ECF

No. 82.) Innovative’s summary judgment motion is granted as to Carhartt’s negligence claim, fraud claims, and Lanham Act claim. Carhartt’s cross motion for summary judgment is denied as to its

negligence claim for the reasons set forth below.2 I. Background This case involves fabric that Carhartt uses to make garments that

it markets as flame-resistant. (ECF No. 151, PageID.68.) Innovative develops flame-resistant fabrics that contain modacrylic fibers, which are acrylic fibers with flame-resistant properties. (ECF No. 141,

PageID.5732–33.) Carhartt contracted with Innovative for development of a flame-resistant fleece fabric known as Style 2015, which is the fabric at issue in this case. (ECF No. 151, PageID.6196.)

1 Innovative Textiles, Inc. transferred its assets to Innovative Textiles, LLC in 2015. (ECF No. 157, PageID.6839.) Innovative asserts that, “the distinction between these companies is not relevant to the issues addressed in this motion.” (Id.) Accordingly, both Innovative Textiles, Inc. and Innovative Textiles, LLC will be referred to as “Innovative.”

2 Carhartt and Innovative’s cross-summary judgment motions on Carhartt’s breach of contract and breach of warranty claims, and Gentry Mills’ summary judgment motion on Innovative’s breach of contract claim, will be addressed in a separate opinion and order. (ECF Nos. 141, 148, 151.) Innovative does not manufacture the fabric it designs. (ECF No.

141, PageID.5733.) Rather, it hires knitters to knit yarn into fabric and finishers to finish the fabric. (Id.) Fabric “finishing” in this case includes the process of taking the fabric from the knitter, dying the fabric,

applying additional chemicals such as a product known as “durable water repellant,” and curing those chemicals. (ECF No. 148, PageID.5962-63, 5966–67.) For Style 2015, Innovative contracted with Gentry Mills to

perform the finishing. (ECF No. 141, PageID.5733.) Carhartt relied on Innovative to conduct flame-resistance testing before shipping finished Style 2015 fabric to Carhartt.3 (ECF No. 141-11,

PageID.5817.) Innovative had Gentry Mills send a portion of the finished fabric for testing to a third-party lab called Diversified Testing before shipping the fabric to Carhartt. (ECF No. 141 PageID.5734.) Beginning

in 2012, Innovative also obtained certification from Underwriters Laboratories, known as UL, which conducted extensive testing to satisfy

3 Innovative asserts that Carhartt always retained the right and ability to conduct its own tests for flame-resistance once it received finished Style 2015 fabric. (ECF No. 141.) Carhartt disputes that it would have “caught the latent defect” even if it had conducted the tests at the time it received the fabric. (ECF No. 167, PageID.7302.) the National Fire Protection Association Standard 2112. (ECF No.141,

PageID.5744; ECF No. 167, PageID.7302–03.) On or around June 2016, however, Carhartt tested finished pieces of Style 2015 and discovered the pieces did not meet its specifications.

(ECF No. 141-11, PageID.5818.) Carhartt notified Innovative, which then tested samples of Style 2015 fabrics dating back to 2014, and found that the samples did not pass. (ECF No. 167, PageID.7305.) Carhartt issued

a “voluntary product notification,” essentially a voluntary recall, of the garments that had been made from Style 2015. (ECF No.141 PageID.5736.) No one reported any injuries from the products made from

Style 2015. (Id.) During the parties’ 2016 investigation of the root cause for the testing failures, Carhartt contends it discovered that in approximately

2013, Innovative switched from a modacrylic fiber called Protex-C to a different fiber called F-12. (ECF No.167, PageID.7303.) Carhartt attributes the fire resistance test failures to Innovative’s fiber change.

(Id. at 7304.) It alleges that Innovative breached the parties’ contract by switching fabrics and failing to disclose the change to Carhartt. (Id.) Innovative disagrees and alleges that it “occasionally mentioned”

the fabric switch. (ECF No. 141, PageID.5733.) Innovative contends that its contact with Carhartt required only that it use modacrylic fiber, “but did not specify a particular kind of modacrylic fiber.” (Id.) Innovative

also argues that there “was no difference” between the new and the old fabric. (ECF No. 141, PageID.5736.) Carhartt additionally argues that, unbeknownst to it, Style 2015

failed its annual UL certification testing in 2014 and “obtained numerous test results showing failures” in 2015 and 2016, in breach of their contract. (ECF No.167, PageID.7304.) Innovative argues that Carhartt’s

specifications “do[] not require Innovative Textiles to guarantee that its products will comply with Carhartt’s specifications in perpetuity.” (ECF No. 141, PageID.5744.) Innovative also claims that the fabric did “satisfy

those specifications when originally delivered to Carhartt,” and that the failures well after-the-fact were due to aging, improper storage, and other factors not attributable to Innovative. (Id.)

Innovative further argues that the testing failures were the fault of Gentry Mills’ improper finishing. Specifically, Innovative argues that Gentry Mills’ application of durable water repellant, improper curing, and machinery problems caused Style 2015 to fail the flammability tests.

(ECF No. 157, PageID.6839–44.) Gentry Mills argues that Innovative selected the durable water repellant chemical composition and controlled the finishing

specifications, which Gentry Mills followed exactly. (ECF No. 148, PageID.5966–67.) It also argues that it never knew the test failure results, nor had any notice of performance issues, until 2016 because lab

results went directly to Innovative, and not to Gentry Mills. (Id.) Carhartt sued Innovative in November 2017. (ECF No. 1.) Innovative then brought a third-party complaint against Gentry Mills.

(ECF No. 8.) The only remaining claim against Gentry Mills is Innovative’s breach of contract claim. (ECF No. 53.) For the reasons set forth below, Innovative’s motion for summary judgment is granted in

part (ECF No. 141) and Carhartt’s motion for summary judgment is denied in part. II. Legal Standard

Summary judgment is proper when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The Court may not grant summary judgment if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury

could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986).

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Carhartt, Inc. v. Innovative Textiles, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carhartt-inc-v-innovative-textiles-inc-mied-2020.