Kerr v. Hunter Division

32 Va. Cir. 497, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 97
CourtHenrico County Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1981
DocketCase No. 78-L-491; Case No. 78-L-492
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 Va. Cir. 497 (Kerr v. Hunter Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Henrico County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. Hunter Division, 32 Va. Cir. 497, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 97 (Va. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

By Judge E. Ballard Baker

These cases arise out of a fire in the home of Kathryn Kerr on February 23, 1978, during which Maynie Fisher, the mother of Kathryn Kerr, died, and the home of Mrs. Kerr was badly damaged. The contention of the plaintiffs was that an electric baseboard heater, manufactured by Hunter Division and sold by Electrical Equipment Co., the defendants, was defective and that this caused the fire.

On May 23, 1980, jury verdicts against both defendants were returned. In 78-L-491, the jury assessed damages of $100,000.00 for the [498]*498death of Maynie Fisher of which $40,000.00 was distributed to Kathryn Kerr, $40,000.00 to a son of Mrs. Fisher, and $20,000.00 to a granddaughter. In 78-L-492, Kathryn Kerr was given a verdict of $50,000.00 for damages to her real and personal property. Motions to set the verdicts aside were timely made, memoranda filed, and argument heard on October 17, 1980.

Briefly, the motions raise the following issues:

1. Notice required under § 8.2-607(3)(a) of the Uniform Commercial Code.

2. Sufficiency of the evidence to permit a finding that the baseboard heater was unreasonably dangerous for its intended use.

3. Admissibility of evidence relating to allegedly dissimilar and unrelated heater problems.

4. Statements by the Court to the jury when the jury reported it was hung.

5. After-discovered evidence relating to the notice requirement.

6. Refusal of Court to grant instructions on assumption of the risk.

There are some undisputed facts, and recital of some of them gives a background for discussion of the issues.

In January, 1976, six electric baseboard heaters were purchased from Electrical Equipment Co. and installed in the home of Kathryn Kerr, the purchase and the installation being done by her cousin, Milton Hess.

From installation until February 23, 1978, the heaters worked satisfactorily. Whether one of them performed satisfactorily on February 23 is an issue.

On the morning of February 23, after Kathryn Kerr had gone to work, there was a fire in her home which resulted in the death of Maynie Fisher, the only person in the home at the time, and damage to the home and other property of Kathryn Kerr.

On December 5, 1978, these two law suits were commenced against these two defendants. Each suit contained two counts, one in negligence, one in warranty. The cases eventually came down to the issue of warranty alone.

Considerable evidence was received directed at the notice requirement, in addition to a great amount on the warranty issue.

On the notice issue, the parties stipulated that neither defendant was given notice of the alleged breach of warranty relating to the base[499]*499board heater until the suit was filed, the notice being the Motion for Judgment.

I. The Notice

Section 8.2-607(3)(a) provides that after goods have been accepted:

The buyer must within a reasonable time after he discovered or should have discovered any breach notify the seller of breach or be barred from any remedy ....

Both defendants in the Grounds of Defense in each case contended the plaintiff failed to comply with the notice provision. The contention was renewed when the plaintiffs rested (Tr. pp. 418, 427) and again when all the evidence was in. (Tr. pp, 689, 691.) The motions were overruled with objections noted. In 78-L-491, the death case, the Court took the position that Maynie Fisher, the deceased, was not the buyer and that the notice requirement was not applicable. No instruction relating to or requiring proof of notice was given in that case.

In the property damage case, 78-L-492, the jury was told that Kathryn Kerr had to prove a breach of warranty and that she gave notice in a reasonable time. Instruction 10, limited to 78-L-492, told the jury that she must prove, among other things, that she:

notified the defendants within a reasonable time after she discovered or should have discovered any breach ....

Instruction 11, in Case 78-L-492, told the jury that the requirement that Kathryn Kerr give notice:

is a requirement for the exercise of good faith by a buyer who has a claim based on a breach, and whether notice is given within a reasonable time is to be considered in the light of all the surrounding circumstances.

No quarrel is presented as to the wording of Instruction 11.

The U.C.C. provision involved here is not a statute of limitations, as is § 8.2-725.

The notice issue raises the following question.

(1) Is either plaintiff required to give notice, and, if so, to whom?

Section 8.2-607(3)(a) states “the buyer . . . must notify the seller . . .” Buyer and seller are both defined as persons who contract to buy or sell goods. Section 8.2-103(a), (d). While there is some suggestion by plaintiffs that Milton Hess was the buyer, he being the person [500]*500named in the invoices and sales order of January 20, 1976 (Pit. Ex. 1, 2), whatever Hess did he did for Kathryn Kerr, his cousin.

It would take a strained and technical view to hold that Kathryn Kerr was not the buyer. The purchase was for her, the heaters were installed in her home, and she paid for them. (Tr. pp. 70, 71, 74). No case is cited nor found by the Court even discussing the possibility that Kathryn Kerr is not the buyer under these circumstances.

Counsel for the plaintiffs, though suggesting that Hess is technically the buyer, does not rely on that point. While instructions 10 and 11 use the word “buyer” rather than name Kathryn Kerr, instruction No. 1 as applicable to the property damage case told the jury that the burden was on Kathryn Kerr to give notice. Case 78-L-492 was tried on the basis that Kathryn Kerr was the buyer.

The statutory notice provision applies to the claim of Kathryn Kerr. How about the death case in which she is the executrix and a statutory beneficiary along with a son and granddaughter of Maynie Fisher?

There is an absence of authority on the precise point.

Under § 8.2-318, a person whom the manufacturer or seller may reasonably expect to be affected by an article is not barred from bringing an action based on breach of warranty. Lack of privity is no defense. Maynie Fisher could bring an action based on breach of warranty.

The Official Comment to § 8.2-607 speaks of beneficiaries given rights for injuries under the U.C.C. for breach of warranty and says:

the reason of this section does extend to requiring the beneficiary to notify the seller that an injury has occurred . . . even a beneficiary can be properly held to the use of good faith in notifying, once he has had time to become aware of the legal situation.

The Official Comment cannot be used to expand the scope of a code section where contrary to the section. Leake v. Meredith, 221 Va. 14 (1980).

In 2 Anderson, U.C.C. (2d ed.) at § 2-607.14, the following is stated:

A person not in privity with the defendant, assuming that he is permitted to sue the defendant, is not barred for having failed to give notice to the defendant .... (p. 211.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Va. Cir. 497, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-hunter-division-vacchenrico-1981.