Simkins Industries v. Standard Group, No. X01 Cv 00 0165315 S (Jun. 5, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 7213
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 5, 2002
DocketNo. X01 CV 00 0165315 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 7213 (Simkins Industries v. Standard Group, No. X01 Cv 00 0165315 S (Jun. 5, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simkins Industries v. Standard Group, No. X01 Cv 00 0165315 S (Jun. 5, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 7213 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AFTER TRIAL ON THE MERITS
The above-captioned case arises from a two-page written contract. By the terms of that contract the plaintiff, a manufacturer of recycled paperboard, agreed to sell and one of the defendants, The Standard Group, Inc., agreed to purchase recycled paperboard for conversion into printed boxes and cartons as packaging for various products. The plaintiff, Simkins Industries, Inc. ("Simkins"), claims that the defendant breached the contract in various ways, including terminating its purchases of CT Page 7214 material before the end of the contract term, failing to buy the quantity agreed to, and failing to pay for all product received. The defendants are Standard Folding Cartons, Inc, ("Folding Cartons"), which is located in Jackson Heights, New York; Southern Standard Cartons, Inc. ("Southern"), which is located in Louisville, Kentucky; and The Standard Group, Inc. ("Standard"), a holding company, which executed the contract at issue.

The defendants have pleaded in special defenses that they paid for all goods and that termination of the contract was justified because the paperboard provided failed to meet their requirements and was not of merchantable quality. The defendants filed a counterclaim alleging that Simkins breached the contract by failing to provide paperboard of the quality promised and that it failed to correct problems with the paperboard. The defendants seek damages for additional costs caused by the alleged breach. The plaintiff filed a special defense to the counterclaim asserting that the doctrine of accord and satisfaction applied.

On April 26, 2002, during the second week of the trial, the defendants withdrew the second count of their counterclaim, in which they had alleged that the plaintiff tortiously interfered with the defendants' business expectancies by refusing to sell the defendants a specialty paperboard needed to fill that customer's order.

Procedural History

This action was commenced in the Superior Court for the Judicial District of New Haven and was transferred to the complex litigation docket for management and trial. At a case management conference conducted on June 14, 2001, this court elicited from counsel their choice of trial dates and their preferences for deadlines for disclosure of expert witnesses. The dates chosen by counsel were adopted by the court and issued in Case Management Order #1. That order included a provision requiring the plaintiff to disclose experts in support of its claims and the defendant to disclose experts in support of its counterclaims ("claim experts") by November 1, 2001. The order also required the parties to disclose experts in defense to the claims of the opponent ("defense experts") by January 15, 2002. The order specified that disclosures comport with the requirements of Practice Book § 13-4(4). Trial was scheduled to begin on April 16, 2002.

During the period from November 2001 through January 2002, the parties requested various extensions of the deadlines for disclosing experts. The parties litigated these and other discovery issues with great attention to advantages to be realized and disadvantages to be imposed on their adversaries, and with considerable concern that extensions of time might CT Page 7215 make depositions of experts impossible or highly inconvenient in the weeks during which counsel wished to be preparing for trial rather than completing discovery. The court extended the deadline for disclosure of "claim experts" that is, experts whose testimony would support the party's own claim, or in the case of the defendants, their counterclaims, to February 1, 2002, and of "defense experts" to March 1, 2002.

In a pleading decided on March 1, 2002, the parties requested that the court approve a detailed agreement to extend the time for disclosing defense experts until March 10, 2002, provided that all documents on which the expert's opinion was based were provided to opposing counsel by that date. The parties proposed that if Ben Markens was disclosed as a defense expert, he must be disclosed in accordance with Practice Book § 13-4 by March 6, 2002. The defendants timely disclosed Markens as an expert witness in support of their claim that Folding Cartons suffered lost profits; however, they did not disclose him as an expert on the subject of Southern's lost profits until April 16, 2002. The court granted a motion to preclude his testimony as an expert on the issue of lost profits suffered by Southern, and he testified on the other subjects for which he had been timely disclosed.

The court also granted a motion in limine concerning the scope of the testimony of Philip Lieder on the issue of industry standards concerning incidence of quality problems, as he was not timely disclosed as an expert on this subject.

Trial to the court proceeded with twelve days of testimony followed by oral argument. The parties submitted pretrial briefs, and the court set May 13, 2002, as the deadline for post-trial briefs. At the request of counsel, the court extended this deadline to May 17, 2002.

This case posed unusually difficult issues in determining what the facts actually were. Most witnesses were employees of the plaintiff or the defendant. The parties handled most transactions orally, with minimal documentation. Both sides padded their pleadings and pre-trial briefs with claims from which they retreated in the course of trial. Both the plaintiff and the defendants operate fast-paced, high-volume businesses with an emphasis on getting jobs done rather than on documentation. Many of the actions of the parties are amenable to more than one interpretation. In deciding the central issues, the court has had to depend heavily on its assessment of the credibility of the various witnesses.

Findings of fact

Simkins operates three mills that produce recycled paperboard and seven CT Page 7216 businesses that convert this product into folding cartons. As well as supplying its own converters, Simkins sells paper products from its mills to other converters.

Recycled paperboard is made from old newspapers and other previously used paper products, referred to as "stock." The Simkins mills pulp these materials and form them into multi-ply paperboard on long paper-making machines that extract water from the pulp and join the layers into paperboard of various grades or thicknesses for various uses. They refer to these grades as "calipers." The mills apply coatings of clay to the front and back of the paperboard. The white clay coating on the front provides a smooth surface for printing. Simkins forms its recycled paperboard into paper that is ninety-two inches wide, then slits an inch off each side and a further slits along the span to form rolls of the widths specified by customers.

Because recycled paperboard is made of recycled materials, some imperfections in the surface are regarded as usual and within the realm of commercially acceptable quality for this product.

The three Simkins paper mills sell some of their output to their own converter divisions and some to outside converters such as the defendants. One of Simkins' paper mills is located in New Haven, Connecticut; another, the Lowe Mill, is located in Ridgefield, New Jersey; and a third, located in Baltimore, is not at issue in this case. Simkins' Lowe Mill does not manufacture paperboard in the "heavy" weights. While witnesses varied in their characterization of weights as "heavy," most agreed that paper of a caliper of 24 millimeters or thicker was "heavy weight."

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 7213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simkins-industries-v-standard-group-no-x01-cv-00-0165315-s-jun-5-connsuperct-2002.