Pulte Home Corp. v. Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc.

60 F.3d 734, 1995 WL 420761
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1995
DocketNo. 93-2314
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 60 F.3d 734 (Pulte Home Corp. v. Osmose Wood Preserving, 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
Pulte Home Corp. v. Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc., 60 F.3d 734, 1995 WL 420761 (11th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Chief Judge:

Appellant Pulte Home Corporation (“Pulte”), a nationwide homebuilder, challenges the grant of judgment notwithstanding the verdict in favor of appellee Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc. (“Osmose”), a manufacturer of chemicals that were applied to plywood Pulte used in constructing the roofs of 1876 townhouses. After the townhouses were sold, the chemicals caused the plywood to deteriorate; Pulte subsequently replaced the plywood at a cost exceeding $3,650,000. A jury found that Pulte’s loss from replacing the plywood was caused by Osmose’s (1) misrepresentation that the plywood would not deteriorate and (2) negligence in failing to warn Pulte that the plywood would deteriorate, and it awarded Pulte $3,750,000 in compensatory damages. Finding that Os-mose’s misrepresentation was made with fraudulent intent to induce Pulte to purchase Osmose-treated plywood, the jury awarded an additional $2,500,000 in punitive damages.

Following the return of the jury’s verdict, but before entering judgment, the district court revisited Osmose’s Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a) motion, which had been made prior to the submission of the case to the jury, and granted Osmose judgment as a matter of law. The court acted on the theory that Pulte’s tort claims were barred by the economic loss rule. We agree with the district court that the economic loss rule barred Pulte’s negligence claim, but disagree that the rule precluded its fraud claim. The evidence adduced at trial, however, did not support that claim. We therefore affirm the district court’s judgment in full.

I.

Pulte, one of the largest homebuilders in the United States, operates building divisions in several states including Florida and Georgia.1 Pulte constructs and sells between seven and ten thousand homes each year. These homes include condominiums, single family homes, and multi-family townhouses, which are sold at various prices. The multifamily townhouses consist of a row of single-family housing units that are joined by a common wall and, in part, at the roof.

During the time period relevant to this ease, Osmose manufactured a chemical used by lumber suppliers to make plywood fire retardant and specified the procedures that the suppliers had to follow in treating the plywood.2 After treatment, the suppliers stamped each sheet of plywood with the Os-mose trademark to certify that the wood had been treated with Osmose fire retardant chemicals. Although Osmose itself did not treat or sell the plywood that carried its trademark, Osmose distributed promotional materials that described the safety and effectiveness of plywood treated with its chemicals. At the time of the incidents giving rise to this cause of action, Osmose was only one of several manufacturers of chemicals used to create fire retardant treated (“FRT”) plywood. Moreover, Osmose’s competitors conducted business essentially in the same manner as did Osmose, and their trademarks [737]*737were also placed on plywood treated with their products.

FRT plywood was primarily used as a fire wall and in the common roof areas of multifamily townhouses. Every major building code required the use of noneombustible materials, including, for example, FRT plywood, in the common roof areas of multi-family townhouses.3 The specific purpose of these code provisions was to ensure that builders designed and constructed multi-family housing in a manner that would prevent the spread of fire between the individual housing units.4 When a builder used FRT plywood to satisfy code fire safety requirements, building inspectors would not issue an occupancy permit for a multi-family townhouse unless the plywood in the common roof areas carried a FRT certification stamp.5

In addition to a FRT certification stamp, every sheet of FRT plywood carried a second certification stamp mandated by the American Plywood Association (“APA”).6 The APA stamp, which denoted the strength characteristics and appropriate uses for the plywood,7 was placed on the wood directly by the plywood manufacturer. The APA stamp was placed on plywood prior to any treatment process, including the fire retardant treatment.

The APA stamp also was required by the major building codes, such that an inspector would not issue an occupancy permit unless the APA stamp indicated that the wood was being used for its specified purpose. The APA stamp could not be relied on, however, for wood that subsequently underwent a fire retardant treatment procedure because the treatment process and chemicals used therein resulted in a strength loss. The building codes reflected this fact by requiring builders to “take into account” at least a one-sixth reduction in strength when using FRT plywood.

Beginning in 1984, Pulte constructed 1876 townhouses with roofs containing FRT plywood treated with Osmose chemicals.8 When purchasing FRT plywood, Pulte purchasing agents did not specify a particular brand name, such as Osmose, nor did they rely on any of Osmose’s promotional materials. Rather, Pulte treated FRT plywood as a “commodity,” requiring only that it be cost-effective and contain the code-mandated FRT stamp.

In late 1988, after Pulte had sold the townhouses containing Osmose-treated FRT plywood, Pulte began receiving scattered reports that the plywood in its multi-family townhouses was degrading in service.9 At the same time, Pulte also became aware of reports in wood industry journals indicating that FRT plywood generally was unfit for [738]*738use in roof systems because high temperatures and humidity levels in attic environments caused excessive reductions in the strength and structural integrity of the plywood.10

In response to these reports, Pulte immediately notified its homeowners of the situation and warned them to stay off their roofs until Pulte could inspect them. After inspection, Pulte discovered universal degradation in the Osmose-treated FRT plywood, such that, according to Pulte, every roof containing Osmose-treated FRT plywood was “dangerously unpredictable” and unsafe.11 Appellant’s Brief at 6.

Pulte asked Osmose for assistance in resolving its FRT plywood dilemma, but Os-mose refused. Pulte then launched an extensive remedial campaign culminating in the systematic replacement of all of the Osmose-treated FRT plywood. In replacing this plywood, Pulte was also forced to remove and replace other components of its roof systems, including untreated plywood and shingles. In total, Pulte’s roof replacement project cost $8,658,200, or $1950 per roof.

II.

On June 2, 1989, Pulte brought this diversity action against Osmose in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida. In its five-count complaint, which also named Lowe’s Companies and Georgia Pacific Corporation as party defendants, Pulte alleged that Osmose “is engaged in the manufacture and sale of ... fire retardant plywood” and that Lowe’s and Georgia Pacific had sold Pulte substantial quantities of “FRT plywood manufactured by Osmose.”12 Pulte subsequently reached undisclosed settlement agreements with Lowe’s and Georgia Pacific and dismissed its claims against those defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.3d 734, 1995 WL 420761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulte-home-corp-v-osmose-wood-preserving-inc-ca11-1995.