Korzetz v. Amsted Industries, Inc.

472 F. Supp. 136, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15178
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 10, 1979
DocketCiv. A. 77-70889
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 472 F. Supp. 136 (Korzetz v. Amsted Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Korzetz v. Amsted Industries, Inc., 472 F. Supp. 136, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15178 (E.D. Mich. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIAN ABELE COOK, Jr., District Judge.

Regarding Defendant Amsted’s Motion for Summary Judgment

Defendant, Amsted Industries, Inc. [hereinafter Amsted] seeks to be summarily dismissed from this case. The substance of this Motion is that Amsted did not succeed to liabilities arising out of injuries sustained by presses manufactured by the Johnson Machine and Press Company [hereinafter Johnson].

In its Motion, the basic history of Amsted’s relationship to Johnson is laid out. (1) The press causing the injury to the Plaintiff was manufactured by Johnson sometime in 1950; (2) Johnson sold all of its assets to Bontrager Construction Company [hereinafter Bontrager], an Indiana Corporation, and Bontrager assumed all of its liabilities in a stock for stock transaction on September 1,1956; (3) Johnson did not dissolve but rather continued its corporate shell owning no property and having only one (1) share outstanding to maintain its corporate existence; (4) on August 29, 1962; Amsted purchased all of the assets of Bontrager (including the one share of Johnson stock) for cash, but assumed only some of the liabilities; (5) Bontrager continued to exist for almost two (2) years after the 1962 sale of assets for cash.

I. CONFLICT OF LAWS

We must first consider the conflict of laws problem that this Motion and this case present before analyzing the substantive issues which are ancillary to successor liability. Jurisdiction in this case comes to us by diversity of citizenship of the parties. 1 It has long been established that a Federal Court sitting in diversity is required to apply the conflict of laws of the forum jurisdiction. 2 As inflexible as the rule seems, the Court has recently reaffirmed the Klaxon Doctrine. 3 Therefore, Michigan conflict rules apply as the movant contends.

A. Characterization

Movant contends that the conflict rule to be applied is lex loci contractus because we are attempting to determine the rights and liabilities of a party to a contract, i. e., the 1962 purchase agreement between Bontrager and Amsted. The movant states, “[i]t is important to point out that the law which is applicable to one issue of a lawsuit need not apply to the other issues in that lawsuit. We are not discussing which theories of liability a Plaintiff may use against a particular Defendant. Abendschein v. Farrell, 382 Mich. 510, 170 N.W.2d 137 (1969).” 4 This is an interesting and novel approach. We are asked to resolve conflict issues by picking and choosing law from various jurisdictions based upon a conflict rule relevant to a given issue. Consequently, under this approach, a given case could require the application of the substantive law of one, two or several jurisdictions. Such a fragmented analysis would not only prove cumbersome 5 but seem also to contravene one of the purposes of conflict rules; to wit, to apply the substantive law of the relevant jurisdiction to the claims of a Plaintiff arising out of a given factual *139 construct. This is why the characterization of a claim as tortious, contractual or some other legal theory can be very important. 6

The Restatement (Second) of Conflicts does give some support to the issue oriented methodology which has been suggested by the movant. “The courts have long recognized that they are not bound to decide all issues under the local law of a single state.” 7 Nevertheless, the Restatement gives examples of this bifurcating mode of analysis and all deal with separating the case along, what might loosely be referred to as, procedural/substantive lines. “[A] court under traditional and prevailing practice applies its own state’s rules to issues involving process, pleadings, joinder of parties, and the administration of the trial . while deciding other issues . by reference to law selected by application of the rule stated in this chapter [§ 145].” 8 This reading of the Restatement may not, and cannot be, dispositive as to what the American Law Institute intended to do, or it would do with the conflict problem which has been presented by the successor liability issue in product cases. However, as to that precise issue, the Restatement is silent, and we are left with the task of determining if this bifurcation in characterizing the conflict problem is appropriate or permitted.

Even if the Restatement were not silent on this issue of bifurcation, as a Federal Court sitting in diversity, we would be bound to determine questions of characterization in accordance with Michigan Law. 9

Our inquiry, therefore, leads us to ask whether Michigan has characterized issues of successor liability as contractual and issues of ultimate liability as tortious, and/or if Michigan has deferred characterization questions to the forum jurisdiction as suggested by the Restatement. 10

No Michigan case has utilized the two-pronged conflict analysis which has been suggested by the movant. However, a case from the Western District of Michigan does give some support to movant’s claim. 11 There the Court applied New Jersey law because the transfer of assets and the focus of manufacturing operations occurred in New Jersey, albeit the injury occurred in' Michigan. Although we are required to give serious consideration to rulings of other U.S. District Courts, 12 Shannon is troublesome because it (a) reaches the conclusion to apply New Jersey law without conflict analysis, and (b) was decided before, and therefore, not in contemplation of, Turner v. Bituminous Casualty Co. 13

In Turner, 14 the contract which transfer-i red the assets of the predecessor to the successor corporation was apparently exe-; cuted outside of Michigan. Michigan ap-j plied (and created) its own law regarding' successor liability. However, the conflict issue of characterization was not precisely before it. The reported opinion nowhere speaks of the Defendant pleading in the Supreme Court or below the application of New York or any other state law. It is noteworthy that the Michigan Supreme Court applied its own products liability law when, had the problem been characterized as contractual, some other jurisdiction’s law *140 of successor liability may have been relevant.

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Bluebook (online)
472 F. Supp. 136, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/korzetz-v-amsted-industries-inc-mied-1979.