International Financial Services, Inc. v. Franz

515 N.W.2d 379, 1994 WL 160357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 29, 1994
DocketC5-93-1550
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 515 N.W.2d 379 (International Financial Services, Inc. v. Franz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Financial Services, Inc. v. Franz, 515 N.W.2d 379, 1994 WL 160357 (Mich. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDERSON, Chief Judge.

Respondent Franz Engineering Reproductions, Inc. (Franz Engineering) sued appellant Gerber Scientific Instrument Company (Gerber), seeking damages for breach of warranties and violations of the Minnesota Con *382 sumer Fraud Act. The trial court dismissed Franz Engineering’s consumer fraud claims, but denied Gerber summary judgment on the breach of warranty claims. The court also denied Gerber’s motions to exclude certain evidence.

Before submitting the matter to the jury, the trial court ruled that Gerber and Franz Engineering’s contract excludes consequential damages as a matter of law. By special verdict, the jury found (1) Gerber did not breach the express warranty; (2) Gerber did breach the implied warranty of merchantability; (3) Gerber faded to remedy the breach of warranty by repair or replacement as promised in the contract; and (4) the remedy failed of its essential purpose. Pursuant to the jury’s special verdict, the court ordered Gerber to pay Franz Engineering $216,000 in difference-in-value damages for the breach, $618,000 in incidental damages for purchase-related costs, and prejudgment interest. The court denied Gerber’s motions for JNOV or a new trial, but granted in part its motion to amend the prejudgment interest award. The court then entered judgment on the jury verdict.

Gerber appeals. In addition, Franz Engineering and its president, respondent Allen Franz, seek review of the trial court’s determination that consequential damages were unavailable as a matter of law. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

FACTS

Franz Engineering is a Minnesota corporation that reproduces engineering drawings used in the manufacture of electrical circuit boards. The company was founded in 1965 by Allen Franz who is its president and sole shareholder. In 1984, just prior to the events leading to this lawsuit, Franz Engineering was a profitable company with 28 employees.

Gerber is a Connecticut corporation qualified to do business in Minnesota. Gerber manufactures photoplotting equipment. Photoplotting systems create reproductions — “plots”—on film or glass to be used to manufacture circuit boards.

In late 1984 and again in 1985, Gerber approached Franz Engineering about purchasing photoplotting equipment. Franz Engineering purchased the Gerber 3235 system, which Gerber warranted would produce the high-quality photoplots Franz Engineering customers required. Franz Engineering maintains that the Gerber 3235 system failed to perform as warranted, causing Franz Engineering to suffer such severe financial loss that both Franz Engineering and Allen Franz were required to file for protection under the bankruptcy code. We must now decide whether Gerber breached its warranties and, if so, if it is liable for all or part of the financial losses suffered by Franz Engineering and Allen Franz.

When Gerber approached Franz Engineering about buying a photoplotting system, it provided literature containing pricing information and hypothetical cost and profitability calculations for its 3235 system. Gerber’s literature stated that the operation of the 3235 system would yield a monthly profit of over $17,000. This information was based on various assumptions regarding the amount of time the system was operated and hourly billing rates. Furthermore, Gerber sales representatives assured Franz Engineering that the system could be operated 24 hours per day, a factor not considered in the monthly profit estimate.

At the time of purchase, Gerber stated that the industry was demanding high-tolerance work. It further stated the 3235 system had the capability to perform high-tolerance work, that is, it reproduced with a tolerance of two ten-thousandths of an inch in accuracy. The billing rate for high-tolerance plotting was approximately three times the rate for low-tolerance work. Franz Engineering bought the 3235 system because it would be better able to meet industry demand and to generate greater revenues with this system than with a system only capable of performing low-tolerance work. It financed the purchase by entering a lease agreement with International Financial Services Corporation (IFSC). Allen Franz personally guaranteed the financing.

The contract for the purchase provided that Franz Engineering had responsibility *383 for preparing the installation site in accordance with Gerber’s specifications. Franz Engineering constructed a “clean room” to house the system; it claims it paid $154,-616.26 for materials, labor, and equipment related to the room’s construction and operation.

On November 14,1985, Gerber shipped the 3235 system to Franz Engineering. Franz Engineering was not ready to receive the shipment. In response to pressure from Gerber, Franz Engineering had acceded to Gerber’s request to accept delivery earlier than the parties had agreed. Franz Engineering stored the system until Gerber installed it in March 1986. Gerber installation technician Daniel Levesque testified that the installation took abnormally long, that it was a problem installation, and that these problems rendered the installation unacceptable.

Chris Trusinsky operated the 3235 system •for Franz Engineering from March until June of 1986. He testified that during that time the system never consistently produced plots that met Gerber’s or customers’ high-tolerance specifications. The system did produce low-tolerance plots, but customers seeking high-tolerance plots rejected the plots produced by the system because they were unreliable and inaccurate.

The parties’ contract contains a repair-or-replace remedy. Although Franz Engineering expert, Dale Yingling, testified that pursuant to this remedy, Gerber made “Herculean” efforts to make the system operational, the system still could not produce high-tolerance plots. Gerber serviced the system 19 different times and the system was inoperable somewhere between 16 to 25 percent of the nine months Franz Engineering tried to operate it.

It is disputed whether temperature and humidity caused “minor” shifts that rendered the plots unreliable and inaccurate. Gerber’s expert, Ronald Larsen, opined that environmental conditions such as temperature and humidity probably caused the shifts. But he also testified that Franz Engineering’s clean room was better than many and that he had seen Gerber systems operating successfully in worse conditions. Gerber technician David Waldoch, who did most of the repair work, never noted on his service reports any temperature variations affecting the system’s performance. He testified that he was trained to note temperatures on those reports if he believed a problem was related to temperature.

Yingling testified that in his opinion, the system did not perform in accordance with Gerber’s specifications. He opined that power surges very likely caused the minor shifts. But he further testified that even considering environmental and electrical factors, the system required an unusual amount of service and the system’s “down” time was unacceptable.

Due to these problems, in November 1986, nine months after the installation, respondent Allen Franz requested that Gerber take the system back. Gerber refused. . In December 1986, Franz Engineering deactivated the system. The system had not generated revenues to cover its expenses, restricting Franz Engineering’s cash flow.

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Bluebook (online)
515 N.W.2d 379, 1994 WL 160357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-financial-services-inc-v-franz-minnctapp-1994.