Nebraska Public Power District v. Borg-Warner Corp.

621 F.2d 282, 5 Fed. R. Serv. 1221
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1980
DocketNos. 79-1662, 79-1698
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 621 F.2d 282 (Nebraska Public Power District v. Borg-Warner 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
Nebraska Public Power District v. Borg-Warner Corp., 621 F.2d 282, 5 Fed. R. Serv. 1221 (8th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

Nebraska Public Power District (the District) brought this action for breach of contracts against Borg-Warner Corporation (B-W) and recovered a judgment in the net amount of $420,452.53 without prejudgment interest. B-W appeals, asserting that the trial court1 erred in excluding certain evidence (No. 79-1662). The District cross-appeals, seeking prejudgment interest on all or part of the award (No. 79-1698). We affirm on both appeals.

In 1968, the District awarded contracts to B-W to manufacture and install circulating water pumps and condensate pumps for the Cooper Nuclear Station on the Missouri River, near Brownsville, Missouri. In these contracts, B-W warranted the fitness of the equipment and materials and guaranteed to remedy all defects free of expense to the District.

Problems with the circulating water pumps arose when, after installation, an unanticipated amount of mud and silt collected in the water storage bays beneath the four pumps. The District, with the alleged approval of B-W, backflushed2 the water pumping system in an attempt to remove the debris from the bays. In the process, the vortex eliminators3 mounted to the base of each bay were torn from their mountings, and the circulating pumps themselves were damaged.

The District brought this action, alleging that B-W breached its warranties covering the circulating water pump system. In addition, the District claimed a breach of war[284]*284ranty for certain defects in the condensate pump system.4 B-W counterclaimed for additional expenses it incurred in complying with special requests made by the District. The jury found for the District on its claims and dismissed the B-W counterclaim. The district court entered judgment on the jury verdict without prejudgment interest. These appeals followed.

I. The Trial Court’s Evidentiary Ruling (No. 79-1662).

B-W appeals the trial court’s exclusion of two exhibits from evidence: exhibit 537, B-W’s original design drawing of the vortex eliminators; and exhibit 538, a transmittal letter from the District’s project engineers, Burns and Roe, Inc., proposing changes in exhibit 537. Before B-W offered the questioned exhibits, two witnesses for the District testified that B-W alone had prepared the final design drawings for the vortex eliminators. These final drawings were identified as exhibit 291.

B-W presented evidence from its own engineer, Erick Fiske, that exhibit 291 represented a modification of B-W’s original drawings of the vortex eliminators with mountings. Fiske testified that. Burns and Roe, Inc., the project engineers, proposed changes in the mountings. The changes called for the vortex eliminators to be welded to embedded plates secured to the concrete floor by anchor bolts. The prior B-W design called for embedding the edges of vertical • splitter plates into the concrete floor of the bays after welding them to reinforcing bars, also embedded in concrete. B-W modified its drawings in accordance with the Burns and Roe proposal.

Initially, the court admitted into evidence without objection the original drawings, represented by exhibit 537. When B-W sought to supplement the record with exhibit 538, the letter transmitting changes from the project engineers to B-W, the court struck both exhibits on the ground that those documents had not been listed in the pretrial order, as required by Local Rule 25B of the District of Nebraska. That local rule requires the parties to list all exhibits to be used at trial, except those “to be used solely for impeachment purposes.” Clearly, Local Rule 25B justified exclusion of the exhibit as substantive evidence.

B-W claims the exhibits should have been admitted to impeach testimony that B-W alone had prepared the final design. The trial court observed that B-W offered the evidence as rebuttal. The trial court also commented that the District’s witness, Mr. Severino, who identified exhibit 291 as B-W’s design, had travelled a long distance to testify at the trial and had been excused as a witness. The trial court observed that witness Severino “was not accorded an opportunity to confront the [impeaching] document * * *.”5

B-W further claims that for impeachment purposes it did not have to afford Severino an opportunity to confront these exhibits because these items constituted adoptive admissions of a party-opponent through the District’s agent, Burns and Roe. See Fed.R.Evid. 613(b) and 801(d)(2)(D).6

Assuming that the questioned exhibits should have been admitted in evidence for impeachment, the alleged error in denying their admission cannot be deemed prejudicial. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 61. B-W’s witness and employee, Erick Fiske, described exhibit 537 in detail and explained its relationship to exhibit 291. The trial court refused to strike this testimony. Moreover, that initial design represented by exhibit 537 is only tangentially relevant to the issues presented to the jury, because B-W war[285]*285ranted the final design in which it adopted the Burns and Roe modifications. Finally, with knowledge of that design, B-W’s representative expressly authorized the back-flushing.

Accordingly, B-W’s appeal must be rejected.

II. Prejudgment Interest (No. 79-1698).

The District asserts that under Neb.Rev. Stat. § 45-104 (Reissue of 1978)7 it is entitled to interest from a date six months after it served a demand letter upon B-W. The May 2, 1975, demand letter claimed damages of $498,800, of which $417,200 applied to the circulating water pumps and $86,000 applied to the condensate pumps. The District later reduced its demand for breach of warranty in installing the condensate pumps to $81,600, correcting a mathematical error.

After receiving instructions calling for reasonable compensation and requiring reasonable certainty in awarding damages, the jury returned a verdict effectively equivalent to the exact amount of the claims for damages to the water pumps in the sum of $417,200 (computed by adding the jury verdict of $389,152.53 to withheld retainage on the contract of $28,047.47). On the condensate pump claim, the jury disallowed an item of $50,300 for installing a condensate pump recirculating system but did award the District the sum of $31,300, which equals the cost of repairs and replacement of only the pump impeller.

The trial court denied the District’s claim for prejudgment interest despite the substantial coincidence in the amounts awarded by the jury, proven as damages, and asserted in the demand letter. The trial court noted that the complaint sought damages in excess of those in the demand letter plus “an amount yet to be determined.” The trial court also referred to its instructions calling for the jury to estimate damages with a reasonable degree of certainty and to award reasonable compensation to the District. Finally, in holding that the District’s claims were not liquidated, the trial court concluded that these claims did not “fit the mold of the Nebraska rule on prejudgment interest.”8

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621 F.2d 282, 5 Fed. R. Serv. 1221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-public-power-district-v-borg-warner-corp-ca8-1980.