Olathe Manufacturing, Inc. v. Browning Manufacturing

915 P.2d 86, 259 Kan. 735, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 495, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 19, 1996
DocketNo. 72,890
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 915 P.2d 86 (Olathe Manufacturing, Inc. v. Browning Manufacturing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olathe Manufacturing, Inc. v. Browning Manufacturing, 915 P.2d 86, 259 Kan. 735, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 495, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 65 (kan 1996).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

The plaintiff in this case is Olathe Manufacturing, Inc. (Olathe). The remaining defendant is Browning Manufacturing, Inc., (Browning), a division of Emerson Power Transmission Corporation. Olathe designs, manufactures, and sells cutters, chippers, and tub grinders. Browning manufactures bearings and sells the bearings to distributors, including Bearing Headquarters Company (BHQ). Olathe purchased Browning bearings from BHQ as a component part for a new product which Olathe designed and sold, the 866 Tub Grinder. The bearings failed, causing the tub grinders to malfunction.

Olathe sued Browning and BHQ for breach of express warranty, breach of implied warranty of merchantability, and breach of implied warranty for a particular purpose. BHQ settled for $100,000 before the trial began. Browning answered and raised affirmative defenses, including failure to state a claim, warranty disclaimers, and limitation of remedies.

The trial court found, as a matter of law, that even though Browning was not in privity with Olathe, Browning could still be liable to Olathe for breach of implied warranties. The trial court also held, as a matter of law, that Browning’s warranty disclaimer and limitation of remedy provisions were not binding on Olathe, finding that the defenses could not be presented to a jury and removing them from the case. Further, the trial court excluded evidence which Olathe attempted to offer in order to prove lost profits which it allegedly suffered.

After a 5-week trial, the jury found that all three warranties had been breached and returned a verdict in Olathe’s favor for $812,289. However, the trial court reduced the jury’s damages award by $100,000, the amount of Olathe’s pretrial settlement with defendant BHQ, and entered judgment in die amount of $712,289.

[737]*737Browning appeals from the trial court’s ruling which removed its affirmative defenses from the case as not applicable to Olathe and from the accompanying jury verdict. Olathe cross-appeals, challenging the trial court’s lost profit ruling.

I. BROWNING’S LIMITATION OF REMEDY PROVISION.

Browning does not appeal the trial court’s presentation of the express warranty question to the juiy or the jury’s finding that Browning breached express warranties. Browning contends, however, that the damages awarded to Olathe for breach of such express warranty should have been restricted by its limitation of remedy provision found in the Browning catalog.

The trial court found as a matter of law that this remedy limitation did not apply to Olathe and that any damages which the jury might award to Olathe for breach of warranty should not be limited by the remedy limitation because Olathe had no knowledge of and had not assented to the remedy limitation. Browning contends that the trial court was in error to remove this defense from the case.

Browning also contends that the trial court was in error to present the implied warranty issue to the jury because Browning could not convey or breach implied warranties to Olathe as it did not have privity of contract with Olathe, and Olathe suffered only economic loss. Further, Browning objects to the trial court’s removal of its warranty disclaimer from the case.

However, the remedy limitation provision is the only warranty issue in the case which needs to be analyzed. The implied warranty claim does not need to be addressed because this court affirms the trial court and finds that Browning’s remedy limitation does not apply to Olathe as a matter of law; thus, the validity of the implied warranty claim is moot. Even if Browning is correct and the jury’s finding that Browning breached implied warranties should be set aside because Browning was a non-privity seller, the jury still found that Browning breached an express warranty. With the lack of a valid remedy limitation, the jury would have awarded the same amount of damages for the breach of an express warranty, regardless of the implied warranty claims. Hence, the implied warranty claim is moot.

[738]*738Since the implied warranty claim is moot, it is not necessary to analyze the warranty disclaimer as it only applied to the implied warranty. Browning does not contend that the express warranty was disclaimed by the warranty disclaimer. In fact, Browning does not even appeal the jury’s finding that it breached an express warranty. Browning simply contends that the damages for breach of an express warranty should have been limited to repair and replacement, as its remedy limitation provides. Further, our discussion of Browning’s remedy limitation does not include a discussion of the warranty limitation because as Rasor & Baker, Kansas Law of Sales Under the Uniform Commercial Code p. 9-21 (1982) states: "[I]t is essential that the lawyer distinguish between exclusions (or disclaimers) of warranty responsibility and limitations on remedies. The Code deals with each of these in different ways, and confusion of the two concepts has caused problems for both judges and lawyers.”

In analyzing the remedy limitation, it is important to understand the relationship between Browning, BHQ, and Olathe and how the remedy limitation fits into this relationship. Olathe did not purchase Browning’s bearings directly from Browning. Instead, Olathe ordered the Browning products from an independent distributor, BHQ. All contracts between Browning and BHQ for the bearings in question included a limitation of remedy provision. Further, Browning published a product catalog, and each new edition of the catalog contained the following sales terms:

“WARRANTY. All BROWNING products are warranted against defects in workmanship and materials for one year from date of shipment. This constitutes BROWNING’S only warranty in connection with this sale, and is in lieu of all other warranties, express or implied, written or oral. THERE ARE NO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE THAT APPLY TO THIS SALE. No employee, agent, dealer, or other person is authorized to give any warranties on behalf of BROWNING, nor to assume for BROWNING any other liability in connection with any of its products, except an officer of BROWNING, in a signed writing.
“LIMITATION OF REMEDY. BROWNING will repair or replace, at BROWNING’S option, F.O.B. Factory, freight prepaid, any BROWNING product proved defective in workmanship or materials if immediate written notice of claim is made to BROWNING by purchaser within one year from date of ship[739]*739ment. It is agreed that such replacement or repair is the exclusive remedy available from BROWNING should any of BROWNING’S products prove defective. BROWNING is not hable for damage of any sort whatsoever, including incidental or consequential damages. Browning will not be hable for delay caused by said defects and will not be responsible for work or repairs done by others.”

Any new products which Browning introduced between printings of the catalog were described in a product brochure. The brochure did not contain a remedy limitation provision. However, when Browning published a new edition of the catalog containing the remedy limitation, it would incorporate the preceding brochures into the catalog. Further, Browning points out that the remedy limitation provided in the catalog stated that it applied to any Browning products.

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Bluebook (online)
915 P.2d 86, 259 Kan. 735, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 495, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olathe-manufacturing-inc-v-browning-manufacturing-kan-1996.