Power Computing Corporation v. Second Wave, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 2000
Docket03-99-00352-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Power Computing Corporation v. Second Wave, Inc. (Power Computing Corporation v. Second Wave, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power Computing Corporation v. Second Wave, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-99-00352-CV

Power Computing Corporation, Appellant


v.



Second Wave, Inc., Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 53RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 96-09239, HONORABLE SUZANNE COVINGTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

Second Wave, Inc. ("Second Wave") sued appellant Power Computing Corporation ("Power") for breach of contract, fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act ("DTPA"). A jury found in favor of Second Wave on each of its causes of action and assessed actual damages of $510,000.00. (1) We affirm the district court judgment.

BACKGROUND

Second Wave manufactures products that enable multiple peripheral computer devices, such as scanners and printers, to be connected to a single expansion slot on Apple Computer Corporation ("Apple") computers. In late 1994, Apple approached Second Wave to design an expansion chassis to be marketed with Apple's 1995 product line. Apple planned to discontinue use of "NuBus" slot technology in favor of "PCI" slot technology and wanted an inexpensive expansion chassis that would give purchasers of new PCI computers the option of continuing to use NuBus peripherals. Apple was concerned that the change from NuBus slot technology to PCI slot technology would upset members of its customer base who had a substantial investment in NuBus-based peripherals.

Apple offered to provide Second Wave free marketing support as long as Second Wave's chassis was available for commercial sale by June 1995, the date of Apple's new product launch. Second Wave designed a product that made it possible to connect NuBus-based peripheral devices to PCI slots but at a higher cost than Apple wanted. Most of the cost of producing the chassis was due to the need to use multiple chips to produce the desired function. Second Wave suggested that if a single Application Specific Integrated Circuit chip ("ASIC") could be developed that would duplicate the function of the multiple chips, the cost of the expansion chassis could be greatly reduced. Apple expressed an interest in funding such a project and instructed Second Wave to seek quotes from chip manufacturers. Second Wave contacted several chip manufacturers and secured a bid from a company called Sigmatel.

In December 1994, Apple informed Second Wave that it had selected Power to design and manufacture the ASIC, subsequently named "Stargate." The ASIC design, development, and purchase agreement between Power and Apple, effective April 12, 1995, included a specific production schedule to ensure delivery by June 1995. The agreement also prohibited Power from selling the chip to anyone other than Apple and Apple's designated buyers. Second Wave is not mentioned in the agreement.

In January 1995, Second Wave met with Power and Apple to discuss Second Wave's participation in the development of the Stargate chip. Second Wave offered to provide Power with access to Second Wave's preliminary ASIC design in exchange for a five-dollar royalty for each chip produced. Power tentatively accepted the offer but shortly thereafter rejected the offer of assistance and decided to design the entire chip itself. Roger Storer, vice president of Second Wave, testified that Power agreed to make production quantities of the Stargate chip available for sale to Second Wave at cost by June 1995; however, there was no signed agreement between Power and Second Wave.

Power engineers provided Second Wave with information regarding the status of Stargate throughout the design and production phases of the chip. Most of the communications took place between Storer and Power's product manager in charge of the Stargate project, Steve Winegarden. Power requested Second Wave's chip requirements, assuring Second Wave that the Stargate chip would be made according to Second Wave's specifications. Power also shipped the Stargate prototype chip to Second Wave for testing and included Second Wave's vendor identification information in the chip.

Throughout April and May 1995, Power repeatedly updated Second Wave on the production schedule and assured Second Wave that production was on schedule for a June 1995 delivery date. But in June, production quantities of the chip were not available. Second Wave began selling the more expensive version of its expansion chassis at the Stargate expansion chassis price in order to comply with the price Second Wave had previously submitted to Apple to be included in Apple's marketing materials.

Production of the Stargate chip was not completed until March 1996. The parties disagree as to the cause of the delay. Former Power employee Peter Mehring testified that the Stargate design project was significantly understaffed when he left the company in January 1995. Mehring also testified that it was impossible to design and produce an ASIC chip similar to Stargate in the six-month time period specified in the Power-Apple agreement. Second Wave's ASIC design expert, William Bruckert, agreed that Power did not have sufficient staff to design and produce the Stargate chip in six months.

Bob David Nuckolls, a Power chip designer on the Stargate project, testified that the failure to meet the June 1995 deadline was due in part to Power's shortage of chip-testing boards and to delays by the manufacturer of the chip, Toshiba. It is uncontested that during the latter part of 1995 there was a worldwide shortage of silicon wafers used in manufacturing computer chips. Nuckolls also stated that he had been concerned that designing and producing Stargate in six months might not be possible with the size of the staff employed by Power. Winegarden testified that the delays in production were caused both by changes Apple made in the design and Toshiba manufacturing delays. William Hun Lon Fong, Toshiba's customer representative on the Stargate project, testified that an unusually high number of design errors in the Stargate chip design contributed to delays in production.

When the Stargate chip was finally completed, it was incompatible with Apple's Macintosh 601 power PC processor, which was used in a series of Macintosh computers sold by Apple in late 1995. Apple accepted delivery of the Stargate chip but refused final payment because the chip was not delivered before the June 1995 deadline. The chip was never incorporated into any Apple or Power products for sale. Production quantities of the Stargate chip were never made available to Second Wave, and Second Wave sued Power.

The jury awarded actual damages of $510,000 to Second Wave on each of its four causes of action, as well as attorney's fees. Second Wave filed a motion for judgment on the verdict requesting that the trial court award actual damages under Second Wave's breach of contract claim or, alternatively, for violations of the DTPA. The final judgment incorporated the jury's findings for all purposes and awarded Second Wave $510,000 in actual damages.

Of the six issues raised by Power on appeal, two relate to Second Wave's breach of contract claim. Power first argues that the district court erred in submitting a jury question and in rendering judgment on Second Wave's contract claim because there was no evidence or, alternatively, insufficient evidence of a contract between Second Wave and Power.

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Power Computing Corporation v. Second Wave, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-computing-corporation-v-second-wave-inc-texapp-2000.