Miller's Bottled Gas, Inc., a Kentucky Corporation, Cross-Appellee v. Borg-Warner Corporation, a Delaware Corporation

56 F.3d 726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1995
Docket93-5281, 93-5313
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 56 F.3d 726 (Miller's Bottled Gas, Inc., a Kentucky Corporation, Cross-Appellee v. Borg-Warner Corporation, a Delaware Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller's Bottled Gas, Inc., a Kentucky Corporation, Cross-Appellee v. Borg-Warner Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, 56 F.3d 726 (6th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, Miller’s Bottled Gas, Inc., and defendant, Borg-Warner Corporation, are before this court a second time in a case involving the defendant’s sale of defective carburetors to the plaintiff. After this court remanded the case following the first appeal, a jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the plaintiffs fraud claim. Both parties appealed. The plaintiff now asks us to determine whether the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on punitive dam *729 ages. Borg-Warner raises three assignments of error: (1) whether sufficient evidence supports the jury’s award of inventory damages; (2) whether sufficient evidence supports the jury’s award of interest damages; and (3) whether the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on Borg-Warner’s agency and joint venture theories.

As to plaintiffs appeal, we conclude that the district court did not ,err in refusing to instruct the jury on punitive damages. As to Borg-Warner’s cross-appeal, we conclude that sufficient evidence supports the jury’s award for both inventory and interest damages and that the district court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury on an agency and joint venture theory.

I.

The facts were thoroughly set forth in the first published opinion. Miller’s Bottled Gas, Inc. v. Borg-Warner Corp., 955 F.2d 1043 (6th Cir.1992). We repeat them here with additional facts as necessary.

A.

In 1975, Roy Johnson, then a Borg-Warner employee, conceived an idea for a dual-fuel carburetor. He produced fourteen hand-built prototypes. According to Johnson, Borg-Warner mounted the prototypes on different vehicles throughout the country in order to gauge the carburetors’ performance. Dynamometer tests rated engines equipped with these prototype carburetors high in terms of power and efficiency.
... Overall, according to Johnson, all fourteen carburetors performed ... satisfactorily in field tests conducted all over the United States_ By Johnson’s estimate, the carburetors were driven a total of “three quarters of a million miles” during this field testing.
Next, perhaps in 1978, Borg-Warner built experimental “production prototypes” or “under-development” units ... based upon the fourteen prototypes. According to trial witnesses, abbreviated dynamome-ter tests indicated that the majority of these units “ran very well.” Borg-Warner field-tested these prototypes by installing some of them in Borg-Warner officers’ cars. According to former Borg-Warner employees, the corporation continued to test the new carburetor in the laboratory on an ongoing basis.
In late 1979 and early 1980, Borg-Warner manufactured a “pilot run” of the new carburetors. Johnson performed dyna-mometer tests [sixteen to twenty hours per day] on the pilot run carburetors, which came to be called “[A]cucarbs”.... A [Borg-Warner] witness stated “[W]e kind of rushed [the pilot-run [A]cucarbs] onto company ears.... We did this quickly because [the sales department wanted to] get it out there into the marketplace....” [The witness also testified that he believed that] ... one of the pilot-run [A]cucarbs “ran lean and had a huge backfire that caused damage to backfire vent doors and spring.”
Borg-Warner Sales Manager [James] Hollingsworth testified that in the last quarter of 1979, he “raised hell with people all the way from the vice president of engineering to the members of the [[A]cu-carb development] task force, because I didn’t think that they were following Roy Johnson’s unit which they kept telling me that they couldn’t build in production, they had to make changes.” Specifically, Holl-ingsworth complained:
[T]he typical situation would be that the doors didn’t rub on the nylon plate that was installed in the side of his unit and we had air gaps around [the] doors, both sides.... And they had [installed] a washer that you could adjust, but they were not rubbing.... [I]n production they couldn’t build them that way and the engineers would have to allow 16th of an inch or whatever for clearance. And my problem naturally was that they won’t work if they are drawing air in ..., if you can see daylight it’s no good.
A defense witness confirmed that Holl-ingsworth [communicated these concerns to the company].... According to that witness, “we [Borg-Warner employees] were all aware of the potential air leaks at *730 two places. The sides of the doors and at the seal right at the shaft, and undoubtedly I discussed that [situation] with Mr. Hollingsworth and many others....” According to another witness, Hollingsworth stated that in approximately the last quarter of 1980 “the Acucarb was untried and uncalibrated as it was released to production, it was not tested and proven enough to be sold.”
A former Borg-Warner senior project-engineer testified that ... the exhausts gas analysis was very limited because Borg-Warner [utilized] “only two working engine dynamometers with limited exhausts gas analysis and limited capabilities to measure fuel flow air flow into the engine.” The engineer testified .that “the test specifications were very informal and certainly not regimented.”
After the carburetor “went through various stages of design” as a result of testing at various stages, Borg-Warner prepared to build the first production units in January 1980. Hollingsworth testified as follows:
There had been no testing of the units other than the units ... that were on engineering department vehicles, vice president of engineering, Roy Johnson’s ear, maybe John Daum’s ear, but people in the engineering department was the only testing that had been done other than the original prototypes that Roy Johnson built. At that point in time we were faced with we either going to have to go into full test program or we are going to have to start producing units_ [Dealers said that] this market is not going to last forever. Under a normal program we would have tested units for anywhere from 90 to 120 days or longer, and they had, normally would have had to have been production units. And at the middle of January, early part of January there had been no production units built. So at that point are we going to run production units on test or are we going to build product and ship it to the customer.
... According to one witness, Borg-Warner tested the production units prior to sale by placing one on an employee’s car before the employee went for a long drive. Borg-Warner apparently also continued to perform some type of laboratory tests on the [Ajcucarb after production and distribution began.
At some point after production began, Borg-Warner placed a gasket between covers of the carburetor to remedy problems caused by air leaks between the top cover and the body joint. Such leaks did not occur in the experimental models, possibly due to a design change that occurred between the experimental and the production designs.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F.3d 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millers-bottled-gas-inc-a-kentucky-corporation-cross-appellee-v-ca6-1995.