Demag Cranes & Components Corp. v. Pinnacle Industrial Services

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 19, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-02209
StatusUnknown

This text of Demag Cranes & Components Corp. v. Pinnacle Industrial Services (Demag Cranes & Components Corp. v. Pinnacle Industrial Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demag Cranes & Components Corp. v. Pinnacle Industrial Services, (N.D. Ohio 2021).

Opinion

PEARSON, J.

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

DEMAG CRANES & COMPONENTS ) CORP., ) ) CASE NO. 1:19CV2209 Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) JUDGE BENITA Y. PEARSON ) PINNACLE INDUSTRIAL SERVICES, ) ) ORDER Defendant. ) Resolving ECF Nos. 55, 56 )

Pending before the Court are Plaintiff’s motions for Summary Judgment (ECF Nos. 55, 56), to which Defendant has responded (ECF No. 64) and Plaintiff has replied (ECF No. 65). The parties, at the Court’s invitation, provided supplemental briefing on the question of personal jurisdiction in advance of an evidentiary hearing on that topic conducted via Zoom.gov on April 7, 2021. ECF Nos. 69, 70.1

1 Defendant appended an e-mail/calendar appointment, which concededly was not produced before the close of discovery, to its supplemental briefing. ECF No. 70-1. The e-mail, dated January 9, 2018, states: “Order confirmation to be sent to us in the next day..[sic] Pinnacle has confirmed all options etc so the order confirmation should be clear. Pinancle [sic] will review and confirm accuracy verbally or by email but will not sign as this will bind us to Demag T&C’s which we did not agree to at time of order placement[.]” ECF No. 70-1 (emphasis added). At the evidentiary hearing, Plaintiff’s counsel voiced concern regarding the authenticity of the document, specifically the above-italicized text, which does not appear in any version of the document produced by either side in discovery. See ECF Nos. 70-2, 72-17, 72-18, 72-19, 72-20. While Defense counsel maintained that he believes the document is authentic, he acknowledged that the document was unlikely to be dispositive as to any issue before the Court and was untimely produced. Defense counsel withdrew the exhibit and disclaimed any reliance on it. At that hearing, the Court heard argument from counsel; accepted exhibits;2 and heard testimony from Martin Marincic, the Director of Product Support for Demag Cranes, and Joseph Wollner, the President and CEO of Pinnacle. Being fully informed, the Court concludes that there is personal jurisdiction over Defendant in the state of Ohio as to all contracts except the

spare parts contract, and grants Plaintiff’s motions for summary judgment, in part. I. Background The parties have maintained a commercial relationship related to the manufacture and sale of industrial cranes for more than 20 years. ECF No. 55-1 at PageID #: 770.3 During that time, the parties have conducted commercial transactions involving millions of dollars. Plaintiff, a crane manufacturer, is a Michigan corporation with its principal place of business in Ohio. ECF No. 1 at PageID #: 1-2.4 Defendant, a general contractor and sales representative, is a Canadian corporation with its principal place of business in Canada. Id. At the evidentiary hearing, Wollner testified that Defendant manufactures crane-related equipment and provides installation and commissioning services as a part of its “turnkey” business. Plaintiff seeks recovery from Defendant for failure to pay for a steel slab and billet

handling crane and various contracts for parts that Defendant purchased from Plaintiff in 19 separate orders. See ECF No. 1 at PageID #: 2-10. Some, but not all, of the 19 orders were for parts for the steel slab and billet handling crane.

2 Defendant’s exhibits appear at ECF No. 71, Plaintiff’s at ECF No. 72. 3 Unless otherwise indicated, the facts are undisputed. The parties are largely in agreement on the relevant events. They are in dispute, however, over the legal implications of various actions and correspondence. 4 Plaintiff was formerly known as Terex MHPS Corp. ECF No. 1 at PageID :# 1. Terex, and the “TEREX MHPS CORP COMMERCIAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS” are referenced in various relevant documents. There is no dispute that Plaintiff and Terex are the same actor/party for the purposes of this litigation. The parties have stipulated: 1. The agreed-upon purchase price for the Crane was $1,061,713.00. 2. The parties agree that the amount in dispute as to the purchase price of the Crane is $518,161.67, which Pinnacle has not paid to Demag. 3. Pinnacle’s customer EVRAZ North America paid Pinnacle in full for Pinnacle’s invoices related to the Crane. 4. Pinnacle did not submit a warranty claim to Demag with respect to the items contained in the Invoice [appearing at ECF No. 53-1]. 5. The parties agree that the amount in dispute as to the purchase price of certain parts provided by Demag, both related and unrelated to the Crane, is $326,407.23, which Pinnacle has not paid to Demag. ECF No. 53 at PageID #: 645.5 The purchase price for the crane was negotiated over multiple months in 2017 and finalized in October 2017. ECF No. 72-1. Change orders were entered between December 2017 and May 2018. ECF No. 1-4. Wollner confirmed at the hearing that the crane was delivered to Defendant around the end of September or beginning of October 2018. The orders for parts can be separated into 4 categories. While the parties have not expressly explained the origin of the stipulated figures, it appears that the figures are based on the pricing documented in the invoices appended to the Complaint.6 As explained above, the parties have stipulated that, collectively, $326,407.23, remains outstanding on the contracts for parts. That figure is equal to the total of the following outstanding balances:

5 The prices referenced in this ruling are in Canadian Dollars, which is the unit of currency used by the parties in the relevant contracts and in their briefing. The Court will address the implications of the use of a foreign currency at the end of this ruling. 6 There is no dispute that the documents appended to the Complaint are true and accurate copies of documents exchanged by the parties during the course of the relevant transactions. However, in some cases, prices differ from the prices stated in some earlier- issued purchase confirmations put before the Court for other purposes. 1. 16 orders placed through Plaintiff’s website ($15,270.27),7 ECF Nos. 1-7 at PageID #: 47-54, 67-68, 74-81, 90-91, 94-95, 100-109, 72-8; 2. An order for spare parts placed by e-mail ($283,293.84),8 ECF Nos. 1-7 at PageID #: 45-46, 55-64, 69-70, 82-89, 92-93, 96-99, 110-111, 72-13; 3. An order for a hoist and trolley placed by e-mail ($24,713.12),9 ECF Nos. 1-7 at PageID #: 71-73, 72-9; and 4. An order for end trucks placed by e-mail ($3,130.00), ECF Nos. 1-7 at PageID #: 65- 66, 72-15. There are two principle disputes between the parties. First, whether each of the contracts included Plaintiff’s standard terms and conditions, which include, inter alia, a forum selection clause10 and a choice of law clause11 both pointing to Ohio, and an exclusive remedy in the form of a warranty provision.12 The second dispute targets the merits – whether the crane was defective and required Defendant to incur significant damages to meet the needs of its customer.

7 Defendant asserts that the 16 online orders total “approximately $13,400[.]” ECF No. 64 at PageID #: 1583. It is not apparent how Defendant calculated that figure. 8 The purchase confirmations for the spare parts represent a 20% discount of the list price, whereas later-issued invoices reflect a 30% discount. Compare ECF No. 1-7 at PageID #: 45-46, 55-64, 69-70, 82-89, 92-93, 96-99, 110-111 with ECF No. 72-13. This price discrepancy is not relevant to the Court’s analysis given the evidence and argument presented, and the parties’ stipulations. 9 Defendant has already paid $47,972.52 toward the hoist and trolley, leaving $24,713.12 outstanding. ECF No. 1-7 at PageID #: 72. 10 “22. Jurisdiction.

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Demag Cranes & Components Corp. v. Pinnacle Industrial Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demag-cranes-components-corp-v-pinnacle-industrial-services-ohnd-2021.