Equistar Chemicals, LP v. Dresser-Rand Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket14-02-00874-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Equistar Chemicals, LP v. Dresser-Rand Company (Equistar Chemicals, LP v. Dresser-Rand Company) 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.

Bluebook
Equistar Chemicals, LP v. Dresser-Rand Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part and Reversed and Remanded in Part and Opinion filed November 13, 2003

Affirmed in Part and Reversed and Remanded in Part and Opinion filed November 13, 2003.                                                           

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-02-00874-CV 

EQUISTAR CHEMICALS, L.P., Appellant

V.

DRESSER-RAND COMPANY, HALLIBURTON COMPANY, AND INGERSOLL-RAND COMPANY, Appellees


On Appeal from the 11th District Court

                                                           Harris County, Texas                      

Trial Court Cause No.  00-37203


O P I N I O N

            Equistar Chemicals, L.P. sued Dresser-Rand Company[1] for damages resulting from the failure of two impellers, integral components in two large compressors Dresser sold to Equistar’s predecessor in 1975.[2]  The trial court denied Dresser’s motions for summary judgment and judgment notwithstanding the verdict based on limitations.  At trial, a jury found Dresser liable (under strict liability, negligence, and breach of warranty theories), assessed damages at more than $3.6 million, and apportioned 80% of fault to Dresser.  Finding all but a minor part of Equistar’s claims barred by limitations, we reverse.

Background

            Equistar’s Channelview olefins plant uses two charge gas compressors in the production of ethylene and propylene, chemicals used in the production of antifreeze and plastics.  As part of that process, each of the Dresser units compresses a gas stream using an impeller—a rotor around which seventeen large blades spin.  Both the compressors and impellers were intended to run constantly at high rates of speed for many years.

            After many years of successful operation, Equistar’s predecessor decided to boost production in 1989 by installing larger impellers, which were also bought from Dresser.   In July 1991, again in December 1993, and a third time in March 1995, part of an impeller broke off, damaging and shutting down a compressor.  Consultants suggested at least three possible causes: corrosion (from chemicals in the gas stream), welding defects, and resonance.[3]

            To address this recurring problem, the impellers were reduced to their original size in 1996, and specially treated to reduce corrosion and strengthen their welds.[4]  However, the reduction in size required an increase in operating speed in order to maintain production levels.  On April 1, 1999, one of the impellers failed again.  The unit was returned to service May 1 with a newly installed impeller, but two weeks later that one failed as well. 

            Equistar filed suit in 2000, seeking more than $40 million for extensive damage to one of the compressors and consequential damages from the interruption of production.  This suit involves only the 1999 failures—apparently Equistar’s predecessor filed no claims regarding the earlier ones.

Limitations and the Economic Loss Rule

            Dresser contends all Equistar’s claims are barred as a matter of law by statutes of limitation and repose.  The latter,[5] though pleaded, was apparently never raised by any motion in the trial court; we agree with Equistar that raising it for the first time on appeal was too late.[6]  But the former—limitations—was asserted by unsuccessful motions both before and after trial. 

            The accrual of a cause of action, and hence the running of the statute, is a matter of law for the court.[7]  The statute of limitations for Equistar’s tort claims (product-liability actions asserting both negligence and strict liability) is two years from the date of injury.[8]  By contrast, the statute of limitations for Equistar’s contract claim (breach of an implied warranty of fitness) is four years from the date of sale, regardless of when the buyer learned of the breach.[9]  Thus, we must first decide whether this is a tort or contract claim before we can decide whether either has run.[10]

            Equistar obtained favorable verdicts on both tort and warranty theories, but Texas law does not allow it the option of pursuing both in these circumstances.  By adopting the economic loss rule in 1977, the Supreme Court of Texas drew a bright line between warranty and product-liability claims.[11]  In transactions between commercial buyers and sellers, if damage occurs only to the product that passed between them, the claim is one for economic loss and must be brought on the parties’ contract; conversely, if there is physical injury to persons or “other property” (that is, property other than the product itself), those claims may be brought in tort.

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Equistar Chemicals, LP v. Dresser-Rand Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equistar-chemicals-lp-v-dresser-rand-company-texapp-2003.