Erie Insurance Exchange v. Abbott Furnace Co.

972 A.2d 1232, 2009 Pa. Super. 88, 2009 Pa. Super. LEXIS 107, 2009 WL 1315456
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 13, 2009
Docket139 WDA 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 972 A.2d 1232 (Erie Insurance Exchange v. Abbott Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erie Insurance Exchange v. Abbott Furnace Co., 972 A.2d 1232, 2009 Pa. Super. 88, 2009 Pa. Super. LEXIS 107, 2009 WL 1315456 (Pa. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION BY

POPOVICH, J.:

¶ 1 Appellant Abbott Furnace Company appeals from the December 27, 2007 judgment entered in favor of Appellee Erie Insurance Exchange. Upon review, we affirm.

¶ 2 The trial court stated the factual and procedural history as follows.

*1234 [Appellant] manufactures annealing furnaces in the United States of America. In 1999, [Appellant] entered into a contractual relationship with Innovative Magnetics, Inc. (“IMI”) to provide such a furnace for IMI’s operations. In October 2002, IMI filed a five-count Complaint against [Appellant] in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Its legal theories included breach of contract, breach of warranty, breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing, fraud, and consumer fraud. IMI twice amended its Complaint, incorporating a sixth count sounding in negli-genceJ [fn1] After each was filed, [Appellant] contacted [Appellee] to request defense and indemnification. [Appellee] denied all three requests, maintaining that none of IMI’s claims triggered coverage. ■ ■
For purposes of this action, [ ] IMI’s Second Amended Complaint (“IMI Complaint”) was the relevant pleading.1 [fn2] IMI therein alleged that it was one of only three manufacturers located in the United States that produced highly sensitive metallic magnetic lami-nations used in the ground fault industry; that its process involved a high temperature treatment completed in a continuous annealing furnace; and that to ensure the laminations’ required magnetic sensitivity, they were heated to extreme temperatures in a hydrogen atmosphere in a furnace purged with nitrogen on both ends to ensure the absence of oxygen during the heating process. IMI further alleged that during an interview with [Appellant] regarding the design,- manufacture, and installation of an annealing furnace, [Appellant’s] representative averred that [Appellant] had designed, manufactured, and installed several similar furnaces for one of IMFs primary competitors and that the competitor of IMI had never experienced any problems with a furnace employing welded flanges and had advised that IMI would never see a leak. IMI later discovered that the furnace manufactured for its primary competitor — the same design recommended to IMI — had in fact contained design defects.
Relying • in part upon [Appellant’s] positive averments, IMI ordered a [furnace from Appellant], advising the company of its manufacturing process, its specific needs and intended use, and that it was a start-up operation. [Appellant] subsequently designed, built, and installed an annealing furnace at IMI’s Trenton, New Jersey facility, and immediately upon commencing production in October 2000, IMI noticed that the furnace was not functioning properly and concluded that the furnace was receiving a delivery of “cold” hydrogen, thereby creating fluctuations in the cooling process and adversely affecting the lamina-tions. According to IMI, [Appellant] agreed with that conclusion and undei*-took to redesign and reinstall the hydrogen delivery system, which action improved the existing design defect but still left IMI unable to produce a lamination satisfying its customers’ specifications. When IMI later notified [Appel *1235 lant] that the problems resulted from oxygen leaks attributable to substandard welding performed during both the initial installation and the reinstallation, [Appellant] instructed IMI to secure a welder to repair the defects. Though it did precisely that, [ ] production ceased while another manufacturer removed and replaced the conveyor belt and the furnace’s central cavity due to extreme oxidation caused by the oxygen leaks.
According to the IMI Complaint, IMI was finally able to produce adequate laminations in December 2001 but had already sustained damages that included:
a) the cost of repairing and partially replacing the furnace;
b) the cost of running the laminations through the furnace two times (before the hydrogen delivery system was designed) so that they would approach the required specifications;
c) the cost of the damaged lamina-tions as a result of the defective furnace — ie. certain laminations belonging to IMI were destroyed by the defective furnace and had to be discarded while certain of the lami-nations were damaged and had to be resold at lower prices.
d) discounts given to IMI customers due to quality problems caused by [Appellant];
e) unfilled orders due to the delays in setting up a properly functioning furnace;
f) cash flow problems, which made it difficult for IMI to purchase raw materials and fill orders;- and
g) loss of market share and good will due to the delays and the delivery of the inferior produets[; and]
h) Most profits resulting from the defective furnace and damaged lami-nations.
IMI thereafter incorporated its prefatory factual allegations into Count VI and further averred that because it was retained to design, manufacture, and install a furnace for IMI, [Appellant] had a duty to apprise IMI of the furnace’s design defects and/or not design a furnace possessing the same defects; that [Appellant’s] conduct constituted a negligent breach of that duty; and that [Appellant] was thus liable to IMI for compensatory damages in negligence.
The underlying federal suit ended in a settlement requiring [Appellant] to compensate IMI in the ■ amount of $450,000.00. Additionally, [Appellant] contends that it incurred attorney fees, expert witness fees, and related litigation expenses in excess of $787,000.00, some or all of which it was ultimately entitled to recover from Erie.
In its Declaratory Judgment Complaint (“[Appellee] Complaint”), [Appel-lee] summarized the aforementioned federal litigation and set forth the numbers and effective dates of the relevant policies issued to [Appellant]. In Count I, [Appellee] contended that coverage under its policies was triggered only in the event of an “occurrence,” the elements of which it said were not pled in the IMI Complaint. Specifically, [Appellee] pled that the law precluded “artful pleadings” that merely attempted to recast as an alternative cause of action allegations that formed some other cause(s) of action. Because the only alleged damages claimed by IMI followed from the alleged breach of contract, no “occurrence” had been pled, continued [Appel-lee’s] Complaint, and thus [Appellee’s] policies were not triggered.
- [Appellee] further pled in Count II that [Appellant’s] claims for-a defense and indemnity were foreclosed by the policies’ exclusions, which purportedly addressed the types of injury alleged in *1236 the IMI Complaint. [Appellee] thus asked the [trial c]ourt to declare that it had no duty to defend or indemnify [Appellant] with regard to any of IMI’s Complaints or incorporated claims.

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Bluebook (online)
972 A.2d 1232, 2009 Pa. Super. 88, 2009 Pa. Super. LEXIS 107, 2009 WL 1315456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-insurance-exchange-v-abbott-furnace-co-pasuperct-2009.