Lilly, Inc. v. Argus Technical System, Inc.

538 So. 2d 717, 1989 WL 6826
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1989
Docket88-CA-1419, 88-CA-1420
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 538 So. 2d 717 (Lilly, Inc. v. Argus Technical System, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lilly, Inc. v. Argus Technical System, Inc., 538 So. 2d 717, 1989 WL 6826 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

538 So.2d 717 (1989)

LILLY, INC.
v.
ARGUS TECHNICAL SYSTEM, INC., et al.
A & M GLASS CO.
v.
AKRAM, INC., et al.

Nos. 88-CA-1419, 88-CA-1420.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 30, 1989.
Rehearing Denied March 15, 1989.

*718 Peter S. Koeppel, Abbott, Best & Meeks, New Orleans, for PPG Industries, Inc.

Charles A. Kronlage, Jr., A Professional Law Corp., New Orleans, for Lilly, Inc. and Akrom, Inc.

Sidney M. Bach, Bach & Wasserman, Metairie, for A & M Glass Co.

Before BYRNES, LOBRANO and WARD, JJ.

WARD, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in consolidated suits arising from the manufacture, sale and installation of sealed glass window units in a Jefferson Parish building constructed in 1980-81. Lilly, Inc. owned the building. Akrom Inc., the general contractor, owned by the same person who owned Lilly, constructed the building and subcontracted with A & M Glass Company to install the window units. PPG Industries, Inc. manufactured the pre-fabricated, double-pane, sealed glass units which, following installation, developed moisture between the two panes causing fogging and streaking. Other subcontractors, Construction Architectural Products, Inc., who manufactured the aluminum frames and sills and Argus Technical System, Inc., who constructed the inner walls, have been dismissed from these lawsuits.

In August 1982 A & M sued Akrom in Jefferson Parish claiming the balance due under its subcontract which Akrom had refused to pay because it believed A & M improperly installed the units. The suit was transferred to Orleans Parish for consolidation with a suit earlier filed by Lilly against A & M and other subcontractors. Lilly later supplemented its petition naming PPG as a defendant, and after dismissal of the suits against other defendants, the focus of Lilly's suit and this appeal is PPG's *719 liability to Lilly and Akrom's liability to A & M.

The Civil District Court Commissioner to whom the cases were referred recommended judgment in favor of Lilly against PPG and in favor of A & M against Akrom. After adopting the Commissioner's findings and recommendations, the Trial Judge awarded Lilly $141,900.00 from PPG and awarded A & M $15,929.14, the amount due on its subcontract, from Akrom. PPG appeals that portion of the judgment finding it liable for all of Lilly's damages; Akrom appeals that portion of the judgment which requires it to pay A & M the balance on the subcontract. We affirm.

The Commissioner's recommendations and thereafter the Trial Court's judgment are largely based on findings of fact which concluded that PPG's window units had a manufacturing defect or that PPG failed to provide adequate installation instructions. This Court may disagree with those findings, particularly as to a manufacturing defect; but we cannot say those findings are manifestly erroneous.

A & M installed the PPG units on the second, third and fourth floors of the building. The insulated PPG units are comprised of glass panes separated by a hermetically sealed air space. An aluminum spacer separates the panes at their perimeter. The spacers are filed with a substance called desiccant to absorb moisture. The entire perimeter of the unit is sealed with a hot melt sealant substance.

Before the building was completed, four of the units failed and were replaced by PPG. Later, ten more units failed and were also replaced by PPG. By trial, 116 of the 120 units had failed. The parties do not dispute that the units failed because the seal surrounding the panes deteriorated, allowing moisture to enter the space between the double panes. The reason the seal deteriorated is in dispute.

PPG claims that the seal broke because the construction of the sill system into which the units were installed allowed water to accumulate in the "rabbet" area, the area in which the unit stood. Specifically, PPG contends that its units should have been installed in a frame having "weep holes" in the rabbet area by which any water entering the frame would be able to exit. Also, PPG claims that the natural weep system through which water could have exited had been caulked.

Lilly, on the other hand, contends that the seals failed because of a manufacturing defect for which PPG is responsible. Alternatively, Lilly contends that even if accumulated water did cause the seals to break, PPG failed to adequately warn users of its products that the units must be installed so as to guard against water accumulation in the "rabbet" area.

The dispute in the trial court and in this appeal are questions of fact, and PPG's appeal is primarily grounded on allegations of manifest error of the Commissioner and the Trial Court in findings of fact. To show that the record supports those findings of fact, the evidence is summarized below.

To test PPG's contention that the units failed because of the presence of accumulated water, Lilly's expert conducted an experiment in which he took portions of one of the windows which had the sealant attached along with fragments of glass, and immersed the samples in water for over seven months. The bond between the sealant and the glass fragments remained intact. The Trial Judge found that PPG did not logically explain why the bond had remained intact for that length of time when, according to its expert's claims, the mere presence of water for only two weeks should destroy the bond. To refute Lilly's expert PPG's expert testified that the experiment was invalid because the test failed to simulate the movement caused by the expansion and contraction of the two panes naturally occurring within the unit, movement which creates constant stress on the unit. As Lilly points out, however, the simple immersion test performed is quite similar to tests accepted by the American Society for Testing and Materials and approved by organizations upon which PPG relies. Nonetheless, even assuming PPG's complaints about the experiment are meritorious, the experiment at least raises questions *720 as to whether accumulated water was the only possible source of the failure of the seal.

Indeed, PPG's own experts testified that unit failures could result from applying the sealant at the wrong temperature, failing to put or putting too much desiccant in the spacer, using water-saturated desiccant, moving the unit too soon after applying the sealant, rotating the unit on its corner after application of the sealant, failing to apply sufficient sealant or storing the unit improperly. All of these causes would be attributable to the manufacturer, PPG.

Overall, the evidence supports the Trial Judge's finding that the sealant failure was more probable than not caused by a manufacturing defect than by any problems with the construction of the sill system or installation of the units in the sill system.

PPG also assigns error to the Trial Judge's finding that it failed to inform product users that a defect may be caused by not weeping the rabbet area to allow water to seep out, and by improper installation and caulking the natural weep which would allow water to accumulate. Because the Trial Judge found that the unit failures were caused by a manufacturing defect instead of the presence of accumulated water, his finding on PPG's failure to warn users of the need to weep the rabbet area was not essential to his judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
538 So. 2d 717, 1989 WL 6826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lilly-inc-v-argus-technical-system-inc-lactapp-1989.