Pulte Home Corp. v. Parex, Inc.

942 A.2d 722, 403 Md. 367, 65 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 430, 2008 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 14, 2008
Docket62, Sept. Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 942 A.2d 722 (Pulte Home Corp. v. Parex, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland 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. Parex, Inc., 942 A.2d 722, 403 Md. 367, 65 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 430, 2008 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 2008).

Opinion

WILNER, J.

This action began as a product liability case involving a defective building material intended for use in residential construction. The product was a synthetic exterior stucco finish known as the Exterior Insulation and Finish System (EIFS). Between 1994 and 1998, petitioner, Pulte Home Corporation, built 77 homes using that system. When the system failed to prevent water penetration, as it was allegedly designed and warranted to do, and some of the home buyers made claims, Pulte corrected the problem and took an assignment of the home buyers’ rights. Pulte claimed that the'77 homes had to be completely “reclad” at an average cost of $50,000 per home.

The appeal now before us arises from Pulte’s effort to recover its losses, which, together with interest and various charges, it calculated to be in excess of $5.2 million. As the result of settlements with three of the defendants, certain rulings by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, and *371 additional rulings by the Court of Special Appeals, Pulte ended up with only $1,450,000, of which half came from its settlements, and it contends that it is entitled to substantially more. We shall affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.

BACKGROUND

In 2001, Pulte, in part on its own behalf and in part as assignee of the home buyers, filed suit in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County against four categories of defendants. One defendant was respondent Parex, Inc., which designed, manufactured, and, through distributors, sold the EIFS product. The second category consisted of two alleged distributors of the product—American EIFS Stone & Stucco, Inc. (American EIFS) and American Stucco and Stone, L.L.C. (American Stucco). American EIFS, which later traded as American Stucco, obtained the product from Parex and supplied it either to Pulte or to the third set of defendants—Coronado Corporation (Coronado) and CSS, L.L.C. (CSS). Those companies, acting as subcontractors of Pulte, installed the product in the Pulte-built homes. Finally, Pulte sued Bernard and Benjamin Franks, the alleged owners, officers, directors, or controlling parties of American EIFS, American Stucco, Coronado, and CSS. They were sued, essentially, as the alter ego of their companies, who exercised sufficient control over them to justify “piercing the corporate veil.”

Pulte’s case proceeded to the point of trial on its Third Amended Complaint, which contained the following 15 counts:

(1) Count 1 alleged negligence against all defendants except Parex. Coronado, CSS, and the Franks—the installers—were charged with improper installation of the EIFS product; the complaint against American EIFS and American Stucco—the distributors—was their failure to obtain a written warranty that was offered by Parex.

(2) Count 2 charged Coronado, CSS, and the Franks with various breaches of the subcontracts entered into with Pulte, including the obligation to perform in a workmanlike manner *372 and to require that suppliers indemnify Pulte from losses arising from their materials.

(3) Count 3 charged all parties except Parex with breach of express warranties. The distributors allegedly warranted the EIFS products they sold, and the installers warranted that the products would be free from defects and would be properly installed.

(4) Count 4 charged all defendants with breaches of an implied warranties of merchantability and that the EIFS product was fit for the particular purpose of residential construction.

(5) There is no Count 5 in the Third Amended Complaint. Count 6 charged Parex with negligence and strict liability in the design of the EIFS product—failure to design the product to be free from defects that prevented the product from properly performing and strict liability because the product was inherently defective in permitting water intrusion that caused damage to other property.

(6) Count 7 alleged negligence and strict liability against all defendants for failure to warn of the defects in the EIFS product.

(7) Count 8 alleged actual fraud against Parex—false representations and concealments on which Pulte relied in using the product.

(8) Count 9 charged all defendants with negligent misrepresentation concerning the ability of the EIFS product to prevent water intrusion, the nature of the product, and its life expectancy and maintenance.

(9) Count 10 alleged constructive fraud against all defendants, based on the alternative supposition that the misrepresentations made by them were made “negligently or innocently” but with the intent that Pulte rely on those misrepresentations.

(10) Count 11 charged Coronado, CSS, and the Franks with actual fraud concerning Coronado’s financial problems and the relationship between Coronado and CSS, as a result of which, *373 both companies were left with insufficient assets to honor their indemnity obligations.

(11) Count 12, captioned “Negligent Misrepresentation,” charged Coronado, CSS, and the Franks with knowingly and intentionally making material misrepresentations regarding Coronado’s financial problems and the relationship between Coronado and CSS.

(12) Count 13 charged Coronado, CSS, and the Franks with constructive fraud, on the basis that the misrepresentations regarding Coronado and CSS may have been made negligently or innocently.

(13) Count 14 charged Parex, American EIFS, American Stucco, and the Franks with false advertising in violation of a Virginia statute.

(14) Count 15 sought recovery against Coronado, CSS, and the Franks for contractual indemnification under the subcontracts with Pulte.

(15) Finally, Count 16 claimed subrogation against all defendants, based on Pulte’s having repaired the homes in which the defective product was installed and thus being subrogated to the rights that the home buyers had.

The intermediary defendants—American EIFS, American Stucco, Coronado, CSS, and the Franks—each filed cross-claims against Parex and, to some extent, against each other. The amended cross-claims of Coronado and CSS were similar in nature. They alleged, in pertinent part:

(1) As subcontractors of Pulte, Coronado and CSS purchased the EIFS product from American EIFS and American Stucco, which purchased it from Parex;

(2) At the time American EIFS, American Stucco, and Parex sold the product, they expressly and impliedly warranted that the product was free from defects, fit for the purpose of residential construction, and merchantable, and should it be determined that the product was defective, the cross-claimants would be entitled to indemnification from American EIFS, *374 American Stucco, and Parex based on their breach of warranties; and

(3) Should Pulte succeed on a theory of negligence, the cross-claimants’ negligence was passive while that of American EIFS, American Stucco, and Parex was active, thereby entitling the cross-claimants to (i) indemnity, and (ii) contribution as a joint tortfeasor.

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942 A.2d 722, 403 Md. 367, 65 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 430, 2008 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulte-home-corp-v-parex-inc-md-2008.