Hillside Enterprises v. Carlisle Corp.

69 F.3d 1410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 1995
DocketNos. 94-2420, 94-2636
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 F.3d 1410 (Hillside Enterprises v. Carlisle Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hillside Enterprises v. Carlisle Corp., 69 F.3d 1410 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

DIANA E. MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

Hillside Vineyards, Inc. (Hillside) entered into a contract with Continental Carlisle, Inc. (Continental) to manufacture disposable plastic wine glasses for a new product Hillside planned to put on the market. Hillside was disappointed in the way its new business venture developed and sued Continental for breach of contract and misrepresentation. Continental counterclaimed for payment for glasses accepted by Hillside and for interest. [1413]*1413The case was tried to a jury which returned verdicts for Hillside in the amount of $465,-000 on its claims and for Continental in the amount of $164,948.17 on its counterclaim. Both parties appeal from the judgment entered by the district court.1 Hillside seeks a new trial on damages because of what it views as erroneous evidentiary rulings at trial, and Continental seeks entry of judgment in its favor on Hillside’s claims, prejudgment and postjudgment interest, and costs on its counterclaim.

I.

William Murray, president of Hillside, conceived of selling wine in disposable plastic wine glasses with fliptop lids. Murray wanted to market the wine in cardboard carriers containing four glasses. Apparently no one had ever packaged wine in this way, and Murray expected the product to fill a market niche. In order to get the product on the market it was necessary either to modify existing products or to design and manufacture the glass, the carrier, and the lid. Murray chose an existing cap and carrier and found a plastic glass made by Rubbermaid to serve as a model. He could not use that glass, however, because the plastic did not meet government regulations.

Murray approached several companies, including Continental, about manufacturing the glasses. The project presented several unique challenges. First, the glasses needed to be able to form a vacuum seal with the lid. Second, they needed to be made from one of two plastics approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the sale of wine. Murray eventually chose PET plastic, which is clearer than the alternative but is considered difficult to mold, especially using the injection process required by Hillside to provide the necessary thickness in the walls of the glasses. Throughout several months of discussion, Continental expressed some confidence that it would be able to overcome these technical obstacles and meet Hillside’s ambitious production schedule.

On August 18, 1988, Continental and Hillside executed a purchase agreement in which Hillside agreed to purchase not fewer than 100 million glasses over a two-and-one-half year period. Continental was required to pay all development costs for the glasses and “to employ its expertise and best efforts to manufacture said product in such quantities as may be required by Hillside.” On the same day, Hillside submitted its first purchase order for five million glasses. On August 22, 1988, a Continental vice president responded in writing:

We also acknowledge receipt of your Purchase Order #34951 for five million (5,000,-000) PET wine glasses at seventeen cents (17<f) each to be shipped as follows:
1,000,000 units from October 15 to November 15
2,000,000 units from November 15 to December 15
2,000,000 units from December 15 to January 15, 1989
If we can be of further assistance, please do not hesitate to call.

In fact, Continental shipped fewer than 250,000 glasses by January 1, 1989 and none until November 22. Hillside had a number of problems with its product. Some of the glasses leaked, either because there were holes in the base or because imperfections in the lip prevented a tight seal with the lid. Poor vacuum seals also caused the wine in the glasses to oxidize, ruining the taste. Small plastic ridges on the lips of some glasses made the tops difficult to remove. In addition, Continental changed the shape of the glasses somewhat during development so they did not fit tightly in the cardboard carriers Hillside had purchased.

Hillside therefore had problems filling its first large order. A Texas distribution group had placed an order for Hillside’s first 30,000 cases of wine, intending to capitalize on the holiday season market. By the end of November, Hillside had shipped only 4,000 cases, and the leaking and spoiling prevented many of those cases from being sold. Cus[1414]*1414tomer dissatisfaction caused the product to fail within several months, and Hillside ceased operations.

Hillside filed suit against Continental (and its parent corporation) in November 1989, alleging that it had breached the purchase agreement and had misrepresented its ability to make the glasses without first producing a prototype.2 Continental counterclaimed to recover the amount due for glasses accepted by Hillside before the product failed.

II.

Hillside claims the district court erred in several respects in its evidentiary rulings on damage evidence: by excluding much of its evidence on lost profits and its evidence on the cost to resume business and by striking certain testimony of an expert it had retained. The district court allowed Hillside to present lost profits evidence relating to its inability to fill the Texas order and to amounts it owed distributors who received substandard wine and other creditors, but it excluded as too speculative evidence of lost profits on wine that had not yet been ordered.

Hillside argues that it should have been permitted to present evidence projecting future sales of its wine-in-a-glass. Oklahoma law applies to this claim by the terms of the contract. Especially where a new product and business are involved, however, lost profits are highly speculative and are generally not allowed as damages. Carpenters’ Local 1686 v. Wallis, 205 Okla. 285, 237 P.2d 905, 908 (1951). Hillside argues that the general rule does not apply in this case. Because it had a firm order in Texas for 30,000 cases, it argues that it should be able to offer evidence of any other lost profits. It claims that it would have made millions of dollars in profits but for Continental’s failure to fulfill its obligations.

While the amount of lost profits need not be shown to a high degree of certainty under Oklahoma law, a party must demonstrate their existence. Ferrell Construction Co. v. Russell Creek Coal Co., 645 P.2d 1005, 1009-10 (Okla.1982). In Ferrell, the owner of a coal mining lease entered into a contract permitting mining by another who sued for lost profits when the owner cancelled the contract. The miner’s prospective profits were not too speculative because the amount of coal in question was known to the parties and was “reasonably accurate.” Id. at 1010. Hillside’s Texas order is analogous to the mining contract in Ferrell because the amount of wine to be sold can be fixed with some precision, just as the amount of coal to be mined. We do not read Ferrell or the cases cited by Hillside as mandating the introduction of all evidence regarding lost profits, no matter how speculative.3

To assume that the Texas order would have led to others in Texas and around the country is only speculative. Hillside’s product could have failed for reasons independent of the problems with the glasses.

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69 F.3d 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillside-enterprises-v-carlisle-corp-ca8-1995.