Quebecor Printing Corp. v. L & B Manufacturing Co.

209 S.W.3d 565, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 209 S.W.3d 565 (Quebecor Printing Corp. v. L & B Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quebecor Printing Corp. v. L & B Manufacturing Co., 209 S.W.3d 565, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 340 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court, in which

HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and SHARON G. LEE, J., joined.

Quebecor Printing Corporation (“Plaintiff’) entered into a contract with L & B Manufacturing Company (“Defendant”) to purchase a machine (“the Machine”). A dispute arose after Defendant delivered the Machine to Plaintiff and Plaintiff had paid the majority of the purchase price, but before the Machine was set-up for use in production. Plaintiff and Defendant hired attorneys and entered into a second contract (“Settlement Agreement”) intending to settle their differences. Disputes arose in connection with the Settlement Agreement and Plaintiff sued Defendant seeking, in part, a refund of the money paid for the Machine. After a bench trial, the Trial Court held, inter alia, that the parties had entered into the Settlement Agreement and had undertaken to perform that agreement thereby extinguishing the underlying agreement for the purchase of the Machine; that Plaintiff was entitled to a judgment against Defendant in the amount of $75,000, which was the purchase price of the Machine; that Plaintiff had breached its duty as a bailee of the Machine entitling Defendant to an offset against the judgment for damage to the Machine while in Plaintiffs possession; and that this offset was to be decreased by $5,000, which was the uncontested amount of damages caused to the Machine by Defendant prior to Plaintiffs storage of the Machine. After additional hearings, the Trial Court entered an order finding and holding, inter alia, that Plaintiff was responsible for $10,000 of damages to the Machine, to be reduced by the $5,000 worth of uncontested damages as previously ordered resulting in a net judgment of $70,000. The Trial Court declined to award Plaintiff its discretionary costs. Defendant appeals raising issues regarding the interpretation of the Settlement Agreement, the amount of damages, and the exclusion of evidence. Plaintiff argues the Trial Court erred in not awarding discretionary costs. We reverse as to the issue of discretionary costs, modify the judgment to hold that Defendant is entitled to the Machine and to have the Machine shipped to Defendant at Defendant’s expense, if Defendant so chooses, and we affirm the remainder of the judgment as so modified.

Background

Plaintiff is a printing business which produced Bibles, among other things, at its Sherwood Road plant. Defendant, who had a previous business relationship with Plaintiff, submitted to Plaintiff a proposal to design and manufacture a machine that would mechanically feed the paper sections, also known as signatures, that Bibles are made of into a sewing machine for assembly into a finished product. The paper or stock used to print Bibles is lightweight because Bibles contain a large number of pages. Lightweight paper is more difficult than heavier paper to feed into a sewing machine. At the time that *568 Defendant made its proposal, Plaintiff was using individual operators who would hand-feed the signatures into the sewing machine and the repetitive motions of hand-feeding were causing injuries such as carpal tunnel. Plaintiff and Defendant entered into a contract for Defendant to produce the Machine utilizing, among other parts, a used sewing machine provided by Plaintiff, for a cost to Plaintiff of $75,000.

Defendant built the Machine and shipped it to Plaintiffs Sherwood Road plant where Bill McFarland, one of the Machine’s designers, began to install or set-up the Machine. At that time, Plaintiff had paid Defendant $60,000 of the $75,000 price of the Machine. Problems arose during set-up and, as a result, the parties hired attorneys, Plaintiff filed suit, and the parties began to negotiate. After extensive negotiations, the parties entered into the Settlement Agreement.

In pertinent part, the Settlement Agreement provides:

NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein, same being deemed adequate consideration, the parties hereto agree and have agreed as follows:
1. Within seven (7) days of the effective date of this Agreement, [Plaintiff] will ship to [Defendant] samples of each type of book stock which [Plaintiff] desires to run on the sewing machine in question along with said machine.
2. [Defendant] will then have seven (7) days from the date of receipt of said sample of book stock within which to determine whether or not it can make its automatic feeder, attached to [Plaintiffs] sewing machine, feed the various types of book stock which [Plaintiff] has supplied as samples;
3. [Defendant’s attorney] will inform [Plaintiffs attorney] if, at the end of the seven (7) day period described in Section 2 above, [Defendant] has the ability to make the improvements to the sewing machines necessary to allow the MAC automatic feeder feed the various types of book stock as required by [Plaintiff]. If [Defendant’s attorney] informs [Plaintiffs attorney] that [Defendant] does have said ability, [Plaintiff] will ship its sewing machine to [Defendant] at [Defendant’s] expense, and [Defendant] will have one hundred twenty (120) days within which to complete its work on the machine.
4.If, after said one hundred twenty (120) days, the MAC feeder/sewer will not process the range of book stock desired by [Plaintiff], or otherwise, is not acceptable, then [Defendant] will pay back or refund to [Plaintiff] the $60,000.00 which [Plaintiff] has previously paid to [Defendant] for the feeder/sewer modifications. If [Defendant] is required to make said payback or refund it shall be entitled to keep the feeder/sewer.

As per the Settlement Agreement, Plaintiff sent samples to Defendant. Defendant ran the samples and then Defendant’s attorney sent Plaintiffs attorney a letter along with a page detailing Defendant’s comments regarding the running of the provided samples. The letter from Defendant’s attorney stated, in pertinent part: “In general, the comments are favorable, and there should not be a problem moving to the next step of the Settlement Agreement once the issues raised herein are discussed.” The page detailing Defendant’s comments regarding the samples stated, in pertinent part:

SAMPLE 1 ... paper type, weight and format do not pose a problem — sample did not include endpapers
SAMPLE 2 ... paper type, weight and format do not pose a problem — sample did not include endpapers
*569 SAMPLE 3 ... sample did not include endpapers — 4 page map will not run in this format
Recommendation: tip on map
SAMPLE 4 ... sample did not include endpapers — glossy sheets will cause a problem and will not run in this format
Recommendation: tip on glossy sheets
[[Image here]]
SAMPLE 5 ... this is the same sample as Sample # 4
SAMPLE 6 ... will run consistently
SAMPLE 7 ... sample did not include endpapers
8 page (i.e. pg.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W.3d 565, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quebecor-printing-corp-v-l-b-manufacturing-co-tennctapp-2006.