Garlock Sealing Technologies, LLC v. Nak Sealing Technologies Corp.

56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 177, 148 Cal. App. 4th 937, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3825, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3017, 62 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 673, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 404
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 21, 2007
DocketC050813
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 177 (Garlock Sealing Technologies, LLC v. Nak Sealing Technologies Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garlock Sealing Technologies, LLC v. Nak Sealing Technologies Corp., 56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 177, 148 Cal. App. 4th 937, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3825, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3017, 62 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 673, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 404 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

CANTIL-SAKAUYE, J.

Reliance Electrical Industrial Company doing business as Rockwell Automation Power Systems (Rockwell) sued Garlock, Inc., predecessor of Garlock Sealing Technologies, LLC (Garlock), after industrial oil seal products Garlock sold to Rockwell caused' significant oil leakage problems in the industrial gear reducers Rockwell manufactured. After Garlock settled the lawsuit with Rockwell, Garlock filed this action against its suppliers of the oil seals, NAK Sealing Technologies Corporation, formerly Mao Shun Oil Seal Industrial Company, Ltd. (Mao Shun), and Sunrise Trading Company, LLC (Sunrise Trading). Mao Shun and Sunrise Trading each filed cross-complaints against each other.

Mao Shun appeals the trial court’s judgment awarding Garlock damages for Mao Shun’s breach of the implied warranty of merchantability and ordering Mao Shun to indemnify Sunrise Trading for its costs of defending the Garlock action. Garlock appeals the trial court’s denial of its claim for implied indemnity. We shall affirm the judgment awarding Garlock damages and ordering Mao Shun to indemnify Sunrise Trading. We shall reverse the portion of the judgment denying Garlock’s claim for implied contractual indemnity.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Garlock is a company specializing in designing, manufacturing, testing and selling industrial sealing products, including oil seals. Mao Shun, located in Taiwan, is a manufacturer of oil seals and has been in the business of selling oil seals for 20 to 30 years. Sunrise Trading is a California company engaged in the importation and sale of goods, including oil seals manufactured by Mao Shun. Garlock first placed a trial piece of business with Mao Shun through Sunrise Trading in the early 1980’s. Thereafter, Garlock ordered radial lip-type oil seals from Mao Shun and resold them to Rockwell for use in Rockwell’s gear reducer boxes, which gearboxes were in turn used for conveyor belt systems in distribution warehouses. 1

*942 In 1997 Rockwell was having problems with oil seals that were made from nitrile rubber, which Garlock was supplying to Rockwell for use in Rockwell’s gear reducer boxes. 2 The nitrile rubber was almost melting and cracking from excessive heat in the gearboxes, resulting in a 5 to 6 percent oil leakage rate for the gear reducers. At that time, Rockwell also wanted to switch from a mineral-based lubricant to a synthetic lubricant with which the nitrile material was not compatible. Rockwell and Garlock worked together to come up with a solution which would use a step case radial lip-type oil seal made from a fluoroelastomer polymer called viton instead of the nitrile rubber. The selection of a radial lip-type oil seal made from viton was an appropriate selection for the gearbox application of Rockwell based on consideration of shaft speed, size compatibility, and heat tolerance.- The operating conditions for Rockwell’s use of the seals were not unusual or excessive for viton seals. The operating conditions involved a typical application, which a viton polymer properly formulated should be able to handle easily.

Garlock did not normally make bonded oil seals and the proposed step case seals were both smaller in diameter and required higher volumes than Garlock normally made. In May of 1998 Garlock contacted Mao Shun through Sunrise Trading to see if Mao Shun could produce the proposed viton step case seals. Garlock had experience with Mao Shun’s standard brown viton compound since perhaps as early as 1992, although the volume of brown viton seals previously purchased by Garlock was extremely small. 3 Garlock provided Mao Shun with drawings and specifications for the new seals. The specifications, which would have been similar to the “RA-37” specification used for ordering the nitrile rubber seals except for the material being viton, covered the physical materials, properties and dimensions of the seals. Garlock’s manager of engineering, James Drago, did not know if Garlock specified the color of the viton to be used by Mao Shun, but he testified it was common for viton products to be colored brown to distinguish them from other rubber compounds. Drago understood Garlock’s RA-37 specification asked Mao Shun to use its standard brown viton compound. Garlock did not tell Mao Shun how to compound its viton or specify any particular iron oxide as the brown pigment for the viton. Garlock did not *943 consider it necessary to provide its own internal specification for iron oxide (for the brown viton) to Mao Shun based on its previous experience with Mao Shun and Mao Shun’s reputation as a manufacturer of oil seals.

Based on the specifications and information provided by Garlock in RA-37, Mao Shun prepared the technical drawings for the seals. Mao Shun created a new mold for a step case radial lip-type oil seal based on Garlock’s specifications and sent Garlock samples of the newly configured step case seal, including a slab of the brown viton compound from which the seals were to be made. Garlock maintains three testing facilities onsite: a chemical testing lab; a physical testing lab; and a functional testing lab. The functional testing lab can be used to duplicate the circumstances under which an oil seal is used in the field to check its performance. Garlock tested the Mao Shun samples for purposes of ensuring they were the proper configuration, dimension, and otherwise met specification requirements. Garlock did the normal tests designated by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) to check the basic physical properties of the rubber brown viton compound. The seals met specifications and passed the standard ASTM tests. Garlock did not do any functional testing of the samples. Although Garlock would normally do functional testing for a newly configured component with a new compound, Garlock considered these seals to be a standard design configuration not made with a new compound. The seals were not something on which Garlock felt compelled to do functional testing. Garlock had no reason to suspect Mao Shun’s brown viton seals contained abrasives.

Mao Shun manufactured the new step case seals with its brown viton compound molded around a steel insert. The raw viton material used by Mao Shun for these seals was provided to Mao Shun by a Taiwanese distributor for DuPont. Mao Shun then combined the viton with several fillers, pigment, processing agents and livening agents to make the compound material for the seals according to its own formula. The pigment was a red oxidized iron powder supplied by a distributor for Bayer Corporation, a reputable supplier of pigment. Mao Shun ordered Bayer’s grade 225 iron oxide. In 1998 Mao Shun’s purchasing specifications for the pigment did not include anything regarding particle size. Mao Shun did not test for particle size or sift the pigment. However, Bayer provided an inspection report and certification of its materials to Mao Shun, which Mao Shun verified by standard testing.

In the fall of 1998 Garlock placed orders for the Mao Shun brown viton step case oil seals with Sunrise Trading. Depending on the delivery time requirements, Mao Shun either shipped the manufactured brown viton oil seals to Sunrise Trading by sea, or air freighted them directly to Garlock. Oil

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56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 177, 148 Cal. App. 4th 937, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 3825, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3017, 62 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 673, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garlock-sealing-technologies-llc-v-nak-sealing-technologies-corp-calctapp-2007.