Marvin Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1996
Docket95-1355
StatusPublished

This text of Marvin Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp. (Marvin Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marvin Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp., (8th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

_____________

No. 95-1355 _____________

Marvin Klehr and Mary Klehr; * * Plaintiffs-Appellants, * * William G. Olson, * * Intervenor, * Appeal from the United States * District Court for the v. * District of Minnesota. * A.O. Smith Corporation; * A.O. Smith Harvestore Products, * Inc., Jointly and Severally, * * Defendants-Appellees. *

___________________________

MVBA Harvestore Systems,

Movant.

Submitted: October 18, 1995

Filed: June 6, 1996 _____________

Before FAGG, HEANEY, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges. _____________

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Marvin Klehr and Mary Klehr (Klehrs) appeal from the district court's1 entry of summary judgment against them on their various Minnesota state law and Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt

1 The Honorable Michael J. Davis, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota. Organizations Act ("RICO") claims. These claims are premised upon alleged misrepresentations made by defendant A.O. Smith Harvestore Products, Inc., a subsidiary of defendant A.O. Smith Corporation (collectively "AOSHPI"), and AOSHPI's authorized local dealer, MVBA Harvestore Systems, concerning a Harvestore silo that the Klehrs purchased. The district court ruled that the Klehrs' claims were barred by the statute of limitations. Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp., 875 F. Supp. 1342 (D. Minn. 1995). We affirm.

I.

The Klehrs operate a dairy farm in Minnesota. In approximately 1974, they purchased a Harvestore silo manufactured and marketed by AOSHPI and sold by MVBA. Richard Deutsch, a salesman for MVBA, provided the Klehrs with information about Harvestore silos before and after the Klehrs purchased the Harvestore, and he also served as their local contact when they had problems with the unit.

The fulcrum for the Klehrs' claims relates to certain representations made by AOSHPI concerning a Harvestore silo's unique "oxygen limiting" feature. Marvin Klehr was an experienced dairy farmer and knew that mold and spoilage in livestock feed are caused due to the feed's exposure to oxygen, and that moldy and spoiled feed would be harmful to his dairy herd if fed to it. According to the Klehrs, AOSHPI represented that because the Harvestore silos were sealed, feed stored in the unit would have almost no exposure to oxygen, thereby virtually eliminating problems with moldy or spoiled feed.2 This would result in higher feed quality, which in turn would eliminate the need to add protein supplements to the herd's daily feed ration. It would also improve

2 Some of AOSHPI's promotional materials apparently likened a Harvestore silo to a giant sealed fruit jar.

-2- the health of the herd and increase milk production at a rate of three to five pounds of milk per cow per day. All of these purported benefits would ultimately increase the profitability of the Klehrs' dairy operation. Although a Harvestore silo was considerably more expensive than a conventional stave silo, which the Klehrs also considered purchasing, it was explained to the Klehrs that Harvestore's unique "oxygen limiting" feature justified the higher cost of the unit and that the unit would pay for itself in four to five years. The Klehrs recognized, however, that all of the promised virtues of a Harvestore unit hinged upon the efficacy of the structure's "oxygen-limiting" feature.

Despite AOSHPI's representations, the Klehrs experienced a myriad of problems after the Harvestore unit was installed. In July and August of 1976, Marvin Klehr observed white chunks of mold in the haylage3 he removed from the unit. He contacted Deutsch, who assured him that the mold was normal and simply the product of a minute quantity of oxygen that entered the top hatch of the unit when it was being filled.4 Deutsch explained that the Klehrs could expect a thin layer of mold each time the Harvestore was filled because of the small amount of oxygen that would flow into the unit during the filling process. The Klehrs accepted this explanation.

In the spring of 1977, Marvin Klehr again noticed chunks of mold in the feed and also observed that the feed had become unusually dark brown and smelled musty. Marvin Klehr loaded the spoiled feed into a manure spreader and dumped it on one of his

3 "Haylage" in the context of this case refers to chopped alfalfa silage stored in a silo at a designated moisture content to promote fermentation. 4 A Harvestore silo is filled through an open hatch at the top of the structure and unloaded by way of a chain-type unloader at the bottom of the unit. During the unloading process, so- called "breather bags" at the top of the silo expand to prevent oxygen from entering.

-3- fields. Marvin Klehr made the same observations in the spring of 1978 and undertook the same action. This process was repeated each spring, with the amount of moldy or spoiled feed always ranging from one to two manure spreader loads.5

The Klehrs' dairy herd also began suffering from various health problems after the Klehrs started feeding the herd haylage stored in the structure. Some of the health problems had not previously afflicted the herd, while other maladies began occurring with much greater frequency. These ailments included: displaced abomasums or "twisted stomachs," "foot problems," swelling and bruises around the joints in the cows' hind legs, cows "going off feed," unusually thin and unthrifty cows, cows having rough hair coats and dull eyes, a higher rate of uterine infections, and more diarrhea and digestive problems than normal. Further, the Klehrs' herd began having certain breeding and reproductive problems, such as poor conception rates, longer calving intervals, and spontaneous abortions.

Additionally, the Klehrs never realized the numerous benefits AOSHPI represented the Harvestore unit would provide, namely, an increase in milk production, elimination of protein supplements, and ultimately, an increase in profitability of the dairy operation. In fact, although their dairy operation had been profitable prior to their purchase of the Harvestore, the Klehrs

5 The only exception to this process was that in approximately the spring of 1982, Marvin Klehr noticed a much greater quantity of moldy and spoiled feed than he had previously observed. The feed was much darker brown and contained significantly more and larger chunks of mold. He immediately ceased feeding his dairy herd feed from the Harvestore unit and subsequently emptied approximately 12 manure spreader loads of spoiled feed from the unit. Deutsch and AOSHPI officials later made repairs to the unit. Thereafter, the process returned to what it had previously been -- one to two manure spreader loads of spoiled or moldy feed emptied from the unit each spring.

-4- experienced financial hardship after they started using the Harvestore. Despite all of this, the Klehrs never questioned Deutsch about the inability to eliminate protein supplements or the lack of increase in milk production or profitability until 1990. The Klehrs did consult a number of nutritionists and veterinarians during the years after they purchased the Harvestore concerning several of the herd's health and reproductive problems, but they never asked these consultants whether the Harvestore could have been the source of the problems. Finally, the Klehrs did not examine records which they possessed which would have illustrated to them that their herd's milk production was below that of other local herds and that the herd's milk production and the profitability of the dairy operation had not increased since the Harvestore was installed.

In 1991, Marvin Klehr saw an article in a Minneapolis, Minnesota, newspaper regarding a claim concerning a Harvestore unit that had been made against AOSHPI in Minnesota state court.

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