Oil Equipment Company Inc. v. Modern Welding Company of Georgia Inc.

661 F. App'x 646
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 2016
Docket16-11326
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 661 F. App'x 646 (Oil Equipment Company Inc. v. Modern Welding Company of Georgia Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oil Equipment Company Inc. v. Modern Welding Company of Georgia Inc., 661 F. App'x 646 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is a products-liability case about an allegedly defective underground storage tank that began to leak. Plaintiff-Appellant Oil Equipment Company Inc. (“OEC”) purchased the tank from the manufacturer, Defendant-Appellee Modern Welding Company of Georgia, Inc. (“Modern Welding”), 1 and later demanded a replacement under a limited warranty when testing revealed a breach in the tank. Upon investigation, Modern Welding determined that the warranty did not apply because it appeared that the tank’s problems were caused by OEC’s improper installation of the tank. More precisely, Modern Welding believed that the cause was the bedding material on which the tank sat. After OEC *648 sent a demand letter raising the possibility of litigation, Modern Welding responded by asking OEC to notify it of when OEC planned to dig up and replace the tank so that Modem Welding could witness the exhumation and inspect the tank.

OEC, however, decided to remove and replace the tank without notifying Modern Welding. By replacing the tank, OEC destroyed any evidence that Modern Welding could have obtained from the bedding, although OEC took steps during the removal process to gather evidence showing that the tank was properly installed. Then, after removing the tank, OEC took no action to preserve it, and instead left the tank exposed to the elements for over a year before filing suit in state court. Finally, while litigation was ongoing, OEC had destructive testing performed on the tank without notifying Modern Welding.

At summary judgment, the district court found that OEC destroyed critical evidence in bad faith. Using its inherent powers, the court dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice as a sanction for OEC’s spoliation of evidence, finding that no lesser sanction would suffice. OEC appeals, arguing that there was no spoliation and no bad faith, and that, even if some sanction was appropriate, dismissal was more severe than warranted under the circumstances. After careful review, we conclude, based on this Court’s decision in Flury v. Daimler Chrysler Corp., 427 F.3d 939 (11th Cir. 2005), that the district court acted within its discretion by dismissing the case with prejudice.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

OEC is in the business of selling, servicing, and installing petroleum equipment. In April 2010, OEC purchased a 12,000-gallon “Glasteel II” underground storage tank (“Glasteel II tank” or the “tank”) from Modern Welding, the manufacturer, for $12,460.00. OEC planned to install the tank for another company at a gas station in Montgomery, Alabama. The tank would later hold both gasoline and diesel fuel.

The Glasteel II tank has three main components. First, an inner steel tank holds the product (the “steel tank” or “primary tank”). The steel tank in this case was divided by a steel bulkhead wall into separate compartments of 4,000 gallons and 8,000 gallons. Second, an outer shell made of fiberglass and polyester resin encases the tank (the “fiberglass shell” or “secondary tank”). Third, an empty space sits between the steel tank and the fiberglass shell (the “interstitial space”). A monitoring tube that runs through the steel tank allows the interstitial space to be checked for fluids, which, if present, may indicate a leak in either the steel tank or the fiberglass shell, depending on the type of fluid present.

Modern Welding delivered the tank to the site in late May 2010. Upon delivery, the interstitial space was checked and found to be able to maintain a vacuum, indicating no leakage. OEC’s Superintendent visually inspected the tank before installation and saw no damage to its fiberglass shell. OEC installed the tank on June 9, 2010.

In general terms, a tank is installed by placing it on top of bedding material (here, sand) in an excavated pit, filling in the pit around the tank with backfill material (again, sand, in this case), and then paving over the area with concrete, so that, for example, cars can drive over the area. While the .term “backfill” in the record can refer to the material both underneath and surrounding the tank, we use the terms “bedding” or “bedding material,” when possible, to refer specifically to the materi *649 al directly underneath and supporting the tank.

OEC’s Superintendent supervised the installation process and completed an installation checklist provided by Modern Welding. The Superintendent testified that OEC fully complied with the installation instructions. However, the installation checklist reflects no response to the following question: “Has special care been used to ensure backfill compaction along the tank’s bottom quadrant?” The installation instructions explain in slightly more detail that “[s]pecial care should be used to ensure that the backfill is properly installed to evenly support the bottom quadrant of the tank.”

In August 2012, OEC reported finding diesel fuel in the interstitial space. Modern Welding came out to inspect the tank and could not get the interstitial space to hold a vacuum, indicating a leak. 2 On August 21, 2012, a third-party company, National Tank Monitor, inspected the tank at OEC’s request and found a leak in the primary tank, according to OEC President Geoffrey Smith. Modern Welding also had the tank inspected. In early September 2012, C&S Petroleum removed the fuel in the tank, cut an access opening, and entered the tank. Inside, C&S Petroleum found what it described as a two-foot by seven-foot “flat spot” on the bottom of the 8,000-gallon compartment near the bulkhead wall. Later that month, Superior Services inspected the tank and, while it could detect no breach in the primary tank, it detected a breach in the fiberglass shell.

OEC requested a replacement tank from Modern Welding under the limited warranty covering the tank, which warranted that the tank would be “free from defects in materials and workmanship.” Under the warranty, Modern Welding had discretion to repair or replace the tank or to refund the original purchase price. Critically, the warranty applied only if the tank was “installed in accordance with the installation instructions ... as evidenced by the return of the completed installation checklist.”

On October 2, 2012, after informal attempts at resolution failed, OEC’s counsel sent a letter to Modern Welding demanding a replacement tank or a refund under the warranty because there was “clear evidence of a defect in the manufacture and construction” of the tank. The letter stated that OEC planned to “cover the costs of rectifying this situation,” including the costs of obtaining and installing a new tank, and that, if Modern Welding did not comply with OEC’s demand, “Oil Equipment will seek recovery of all of its costs from Modern Welding.” Id. Clearly, at this point, OEC knew that litigation was a possibility.

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Bluebook (online)
661 F. App'x 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oil-equipment-company-inc-v-modern-welding-company-of-georgia-inc-ca11-2016.