Patterson v. Kennewick Public Hospital District No. 1

790 P.2d 195, 57 Wash. App. 739, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 3, 1990
Docket9658-1-III
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 790 P.2d 195 (Patterson v. Kennewick Public Hospital District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Kennewick Public Hospital District No. 1, 790 P.2d 195, 57 Wash. App. 739, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 166 (Wash. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

Kennewick General Hospital (KGH) dishonored a warrant it had issued to Jay Patterson for goods he furnished the hospital pursuant to a purchase order. Mr. Patterson then filed this action for wrongful dishonor against KGH in district court. The District Court found Mr. Patterson obtained the purchase order through misrepresentation. It entered judgment in favor of KGH. The Superior Court reversed, and we accepted discretionary review. We hold the District Court's findings are not supported by substantial evidence, and we therefore remand to the District Court for the entry of findings and judgment in accord with this opinion.

Mr. Patterson is a sales representative for Castle Corporation, which manufactures sterilizers for hospitals. In 1986, he sold two sterilizers to Kennewick General Hospital. When the hospital installed the sterilizers in November 1986, it discovered that Castle had shipped the emergency room sterilizer without the stainless steel side panels that *741 hang on the framework of the machine and cover its engineering parts.

Charles Telehala, KGH's materials manager, contacted Mr. Patterson about the problem. Mr. Patterson called Castle and spoke with Freda Bolt, the West Coast correspondent. He testified Ms. Bolt told him that it would take 30 to 60 days to deliver the missing side panels. Mr. Patterson relayed this information to Mr. Telehala, but also told him, based upon his experience, that it could be longer. He later testified that the normal delivery time for any piece of equipment from Castle is 90 to 120 days.

Mr. Patterson suggested that if the hospital did not want to wait, the panels could be made locally. Mr. Telehala asked him to take care of it, since it was Castle's mistake that made the action necessary. Mr. Patterson agreed, and offered a 90-day warranty on the panels, "just to be sure they're right". Mr. Telehala issued him a purchase order dated November 4, for $1,300 plus $101.40 tax, for a total of $1,401.40. The purchase order did not specify a time for delivery, but Mr. Patterson stated "the idea was that we would be able to get the panels faster than from Castle Company." Mr. Patterson also secured a credit for the hospital from Castle for $1,326.

That same month, Mr. Patterson submitted an order for the side panels to Eastside Heating and Air Conditioning of Bellevue, to be made according to specifications which Castle had sent him. Eastside had the panels ready in approximately 3 weeks. However, when Mr. Patterson called KGH to talk to Mr. Telehala, he was advised by the secretary that Mr. Telehala no longer worked there.

Mr. Patterson testified he called several times, told the secretary the panels were ready, but was told by her to "hang on", that there was no materials manager, and they were "getting this thing settled". At trial, the hospital administrator testified that he dismissed Mr. Telehala on December 12, 1986. At the time of trial, Mr. Telehala was *742 under investigation by the State Auditor's office for transactions involving use of the hospital's credit and purchasing power for his own purposes.

Mr. Patterson said that finally he had the panels delivered to the hospital in February 1987, and paid Eastside $1,333 for them out of his own funds. The hospital sent him a warrant dated April 22, 1987, for $1,404.

Jack Beebe began working for KGH as materials manager on March 25, 1987. On April 27, 1987, Allan Streeter, the hospital's director of finance, came to Mr. Beebe with the warrant to Mr. Patterson and asked him why they were paying Castle's sales representative with a warrant made out to him personally. Mr. Beebe investigated and found that the panels were delivered in a box that originally had been addressed to Group Health. He became suspicious and ordered the warrant canceled. Subsequently, he discovered that the purchase order for the panels was generated from the hospital's inventory control system which is used for recurring purchases of consumable supplies. Further, he testified, "[t]he dollar limit was exceeded. The supporting documentation was not there. There were no terms and conditions attached to the purchase order."

On April 30, 1987, Mr. Patterson contacted Michael Fraser, the hospital's chief administrator, about the dishonored warrant. According to Mr. Fraser, Mr. Patterson recounted to him his conversation with Mr. Telehala at the time the purchase order was issued. Mr. Patterson said he had the panels fabricated locally as a service to the hospital, i.e., they were more readily available that way and were comparable to what the hospital would have gotten direct from the manufacturer. Mr. Patterson told Mr. Fraser that the hospital would not have received the equipment from Castle for up to 90 to 120 days.

On May 11, 1987, Mr. Fraser sent Mr. Patterson a letter detailing his concerns about the side panels. He requested a copy of the specifications for the panels with a letter from the manufacturer that they were fabricated according to the specifications; a warranty of the side panels by Castle; *743 and information regarding the delivery time on the panels from Castle as compared to the time required to have them independently fabricated. When Mr. Fraser spoke with Mr. Patterson by telephone on May 22, Mr. Patterson told him the hospital would get the specifications when it paid for the panels.

The hospital also contacted Castle. The record contains two letters from Castle, admitted over Mr. Patterson's objections they were hearsay. Exhibit 9 is dated July 16, 1987, and states: "During the Fall of 1986 we were able to ship these panel packages within 30 days after receipt of an order." Exhibit 11 is dated August 14, 1987, and reads:

We have inspected the panels which you forwarded. They were not manufactured by the Castle Company. We also believe they would not fit properly without additional modification and hardware. The latter includes brackets, bolts, etc. which were missing completely.

On cross, Mr. Beebe admitted he did not have a good idea as to the specifics of the alleged nonconformance. Mr. Patterson testified the needed modifications were not critical. They entailed drilling holes in the panels that lined up with those on the sterilizer and procuring the hardware to attach the panels.

Based on the foregoing evidence, the District Court found:

II.
[T]he plaintiff represented to the defendant that the panels could not be delivered in less than about 120 days. The plaintiff then stated that he could have the panels fabricated locally and would be able to deliver them in 30 days. He also represented that the panels would be just as good as those manufactured by Castle. Charles Telehala, the purchasing agent of the defendant, agreed to purchase the panels from the plaintiff based on the foregoing representations . . ..
III.
The panels . . . were not shipped in 30 days as represented, but were shipped in February of 1987.

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Bluebook (online)
790 P.2d 195, 57 Wash. App. 739, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-kennewick-public-hospital-district-no-1-washctapp-1990.