DBHL, Inc. and Dearborn HL, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Moen Incorporated and Moen Sonora S.A. De C v.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2009
Docket01-08-00046-CV
StatusPublished

This text of DBHL, Inc. and Dearborn HL, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Moen Incorporated and Moen Sonora S.A. De C v. (DBHL, Inc. and Dearborn HL, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Moen Incorporated and Moen Sonora S.A. De C v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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DBHL, Inc. and Dearborn HL, S. De R.L. De C v. v. Moen Incorporated and Moen Sonora S.A. De C v., (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 25, 2009

Opinion issued June 25, 2009

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

 

NOS.          01-08-00046-CV


DBHL, INC. and DEARBORN HL, S. de R.L. de C.V., Appellants

V.

MOEN INCORPORATED and MOEN SONORA S.A. de C.V., Appellees


On Appeal from the 295th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2004-71621


O P I N I O N

After DBHL, Inc. and Dearborn HL, S. de R.L. de C.V. (DBHL) settled numerous product liability claims for damages resulting from a defective plumbing part, it sued Moen Incorporated and Moen Sonora S.A. de C.V. (Moen) for indemnification based on a Texas statute and a provision of an asset purchase agreement (APA) under which DBHL acquired a prototype of a defective part.  Moen counterclaimed for indemnity for attorney’s fees that it expended in connection with the underlying claims.  The trial court granted summary judgment against DBHL on its statutory indemnification claim, and, after a bench trial, entered a take-nothing judgment against both DBHL and Moen on the remaining indemnification claims.  DBHL appeals, contending that the evidence is not legally or factually sufficient to support the trial court’s findings and conclusions that (1) DBHL’s losses did not result from or arise out of Moen’s conduct and (2) DBHL was wholly responsible for its liability arising from the defective part, and consequently, Moen owes no contractual indemnity to DBHL.  DBHL further contends that the trial court erred in dismissing DBHL’s claim for statutory indemnification on summary judgment because Moen satisfies the statute’s definition of “manufacturer.”  Finding no error, we affirm.

Background

          In December 2002, DBHL acquired Moen’s specialty plumbing parts business.  In addition to Moen’s existing product lines, DBHL acquired prototypes of products in development, including a toilet tank part known as a “fill valve” or a “ballcock,” built with a polypropylene shank rather than with the polyvinyl chloride (PVC) shank Moen primarily used to make ballcocks in its existing products. 

Moen considered the change from PVC to polypropylene to be significant and, accordingly, treated the polypropylene ballcock as a new product under its standard development and testing procedures.  This meant that Moen would not release ballcocks with a polypropylene shank for sale to the public until they passed rigorous testing.  Before the sale to DBHL, Moen’s reliability engineer devised a three-stage test plan for the polypropylene ballcock project.  Moen conducted the first stage, which involved prototype testing, with custom-made samples of the product, using different tooling and manufacture methods but not the methods used to mass-produce products sold to the public. 

The second and third stages of the test plan involved production part approval process (PPAP) testing—which included installation torque testing to evaluate the strength of the mounting nut—and product verification testing.[1]  These two stages use samples of the product made with the same equipment and by the same method that would be used to mass produce the products for sale to the public, assuming satisfactory results.  Moen, however, did not complete these testing stages before the sale to DBHL because it had not obtained the required production equipment modifications.  Before the parties executed the APA, DBHL knew that the propylene ballcocks and design changes were not complete and that, before DBHL could consider releasing the polypropylene ballcocks to the public, it would have to, among other things, obtain production tooling, conduct production part approval process testing on actual samples, and pass all required code compliance testing. 

As part of the sale of the business, Moen gave DBHL its files containing the test plan.  At that point, DBHL assumed sole responsibility and control for going forward with the polypropylene ballcock project Moen had initiated.  DBHL decided to proceed with development and commercial production without reviewing any of the testing results Moen had previously provided to it.  From the December 2002 sale closing date until August 2003, DBHL continued to sell the PVC ballcocks that Moen had been selling, but continued to develop the polypropylene ballcocks, without input from Moen, including making its own design decisions and obtaining and approving production tooling.  DBHL deviated from Moen’s testing protocol: it released the polypropylene ballcocks for commercial sale in September 2003 without having conducted any of the planned installation torque testing on them.

DBHL sold the ballcocks primarily to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs).  By December 2003, DBHL began to receive reports from one of the OEMs that its polypropylene ballcocks were failing in unprecedented numbers, and specifically, that the new shank attached to the ballcock was breaking during assembly.

Based on these reports, DBHL decided to immediately modify the ballcocks by thickening the shank, but did not remove the product from the market.  By early March 2004, however, DBHL began to receive more reports that the polypropylene ballcocks were failing in the field.  Such a failure was catastrophic in the sense that it caused water to overflow from the toilet, potentially resulting in substantial damage to the end users’ property. 

DBHL removed the polypropylene ballcocks from the market in May 2004, after it had sold approximately 1.6 million of them. 

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