Kinlaw v. Long Mfg. N.C., Inc.

259 S.E.2d 552, 298 N.C. 494, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 638, 1979 N.C. LEXIS 1379
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 6, 1979
Docket33
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 259 S.E.2d 552 (Kinlaw v. Long Mfg. N.C., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinlaw v. Long Mfg. N.C., Inc., 259 S.E.2d 552, 298 N.C. 494, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 638, 1979 N.C. LEXIS 1379 (N.C. 1979).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

This is an action to recover damages allegedly incurred by plaintiff-purchaser as a result of defendant-manufacturer’s breach of an express warranty of a tractor. The sole question presented is whether the absence of contractual privity between the parties in the sale of the tractor bars the claim. We hold that it does not.

Plaintiff alleges that in November, 1975, he purchased a new farm tractor and attachments from Sessions Farm Machinery, Inc., an authorized dealer of defendant-manufacturer. An owner’s manual issued by defendant and delivered to plaintiff with the *495 new tractor expressly warranted to the new owner that each tractor sold by defendant’s authorized dealers would be free from defects in material and workmanship. 1 Plaintiff alleges that the tractor began “breaking down” when put to farm use immediately after delivery; that various parts of the tractor were defective, inoperative, or missing; that the defective parts were duly returned to defendant’s Tarboro factory for repairs or replacement; and that defendant failed or refused to repair or replace the parts. Plaintiff prays for $100,000 damages allegedly attributable to various economic losses occasioned by breach of the warranty. Defendant filed answer setting up various defenses including a so-called “disclaimer” contained in the warranty and incorporated in the complaint. 2 Simultaneously he moved to dismiss for failure of the complaint to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The motion was grounded entirely upon the complaint’s failure “to allege facts to establish privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant manufacturer.” The trial court allowed the motion on this ground alone. 3 The Court of Appeals affirmed, Judge Parker dissenting. We reverse.

For the purposes of this appeal the parties have stipulated that “There was not privity of contract between the plaintiff and defendant.” A majority of the Court of Appeals agreed with the trial court that the absence of privity barred the claim. Finding *496 the requirement of privity in warranty actions such as this one too well established in the decisions of this Court to be ignored or overruled, the Court of Appeals concluded that “our law requires that only a person in privity with the warrantor may recover on the warranty for mechanical devices.” We disagree. We find reason and authority to support our holding that privity in the sale of goods is not necessary to a purchaser’s action on an express warranty relating to the goods.

The oft-cited general principle of the privity requirement is given in Service Co. v. Sales Co., 261 N.C. 660, 668, 136 S.E. 2d 56, 62 (1964), as follows:

“A warranty is an element in a contract of sale and, whether express or implied, is contractual in nature. Only a person in privity with the warrantor may recover on the warranty; the warranty extends only to the parties to the contract of sale. Murray v. Aircraft Corp., 259 N.C. 638, 131 S.E. 2d 367; Prince v. Smith, 254 N.C. 768, 119 S.E. 2d 923; Wyatt v. Equipment Co., 253 N.C. 355, 117 S.E. 2d 21.”

The apparent simplicity of this principle belies its difficult history.

Although warranty’s more recent guise is contract, its heritage began in tort. Aggrieved purchasers of an earlier age were afforded relief through an action on the case in the nature of deceit, a forerunner of the modern tort of misrepresentation. Toward the latter part of the 18th Century pleading procedures wedded the action with that of assumpsit, producing the “curious hybrid” of warranty, “born of the illicit intercourse of tort and contract, unique in the law.” Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts, p. 634 (4th Ed. 1971). See also Terry v. Bottling Co., 263 N.C. 1, 9, 138 S.E. 2d 753, 758 (1964) (Sharp, J., later C.J., concurring); Ames, The History of Assumpsit, 2 Harv. L. Rev. 1 (1888). That a buyer of a defective product had a cause of action “quasi ex contractu,” and could choose between a suit on a contract of warranty or a declaration in tort for a false warranty, was well recognized in our earlier cases. See, e.g., Ashe v. Gray, 88 N.C. 190 (1883); Bullinger v. Marshall, 70 N.C. 520 (1874); Scott v. Brown, 48 N.C. (3 Jones) 541 (1856).

*497 Privity is a child of contract law, delivered by the courts to limit the responsibilities of contracting parties to those persons consensually involved in the primary transaction. It was originally felt that without such a limitation on liability, “the most absurd and outrageous consequences” would ensue in litigation caused by a flood of spurious claims. Winterbottom v. Wright, 10 M&W 109, 114, 152 Eng. Rep. 402, 405 (Exch. 1842). The Winterbottom rationale is justified in warranty cases, however, only to the extent that the warranty sued on is inherently an element of a true contract. Regarding the tort aspects of a false warranty claim, the rule of privity has itself produced absurd consequences and has no real application. Courts have long struggled to contrive ingenious “exceptions” to avoid unjust results in particular cases. See Gillam, Products Liability in a Nutshell, 37 Ore. L. Rev. 119, 153-155 (1958). In many states today these exceptions have so swallowed the rule as to lead to the total abandonment, whether by judicial fiat or legislative decree, of the privity requirement in warranty actions. 4 The erosion of the doctrine is by now familiar and well documented history. See Frumer and Friedman, Products Liability § 16.03 (1979); Prosser, The Fall of the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer), 50 Minn. L. Rev. 791 (1966); Prosser, The Assault Upon the Citadel (Strict Liability to the Consumer), 69 Yale L.J. 1099 (1960).

Our jurisdiction’s allegiance to the principle of privity has, at best, wavered. After holding that an absence of a contractual relationship between the parties precluded a personally injured purchaser from maintaining an action on implied warranty against a remote manufacturer, Thomason v. Ballard and Ballard Co., 208 *498 N.C. 1, 179 S.E. 30 (1935), this Court in Simpson v. Oil Co., 217 N.C. 542, 8 S.E. 2d 813 (1940), held that express assurances addressed by the manufacturer to the purchaser could give rise to a warranty claim against the manufacturer notwithstanding lack of privity. The express warranty in Simpson derived from the manufacturer’s statement on a label on a can of spray insecticide that the product was nonpoisonous to humans. The plaintiff purchaser in that case suffered severe reactions when the spray came into contact with her skin. We held that the original manufacturer had warranted his product in such a way as to make a breach of that warranty actionable:

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.E.2d 552, 298 N.C. 494, 28 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 638, 1979 N.C. LEXIS 1379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinlaw-v-long-mfg-nc-inc-nc-1979.