Sullivan-Waldron Products Company v. Indiana Limestone Company, Inc.

216 F.2d 70, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 15, 1954
Docket11004_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 F.2d 70 (Sullivan-Waldron Products Company v. Indiana Limestone Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan-Waldron Products Company v. Indiana Limestone Company, Inc., 216 F.2d 70, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927 (7th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, Sullivan-Waldron Products Company, brought this action for breach of a contract whereby defendant undertook, for a stated consideration, to manufacture for plaintiff 200,000 “Whipsters”, semi-mechanical devices for whipping cream. The complaint averred that defendant sub-contracted with the Stone City Machine & Tool Company, hereinafter referred to as Stone City, to do the actual manufacture; that because of faulty manufacture, the finished products failed to conform to the contractual specifications; and that, by reason of these allegedly faulty products reaching the market, and ultimately the consumer, plaintiff’s market for them was ruined, causing it extensive losses in repairs of defective products, restitution of purchase price to customers and waste of its extensive investment in advertising and other promotional schemes on behalf of the device.

Defendant answered, admitting execution of the contract in suit and the subcontract with Stone City, but denying all allegations of any breach on its part. Defendant also filed a counterclaim based on the contract for an amount allegedly due and unpaid to defendant for devices manufactured by it and delivered to plaintiff’s order pursuant to the contractual terms.

The cause was referred to a special master, who, after hearing the testimony and receiving voluminous documentary evidence, entered findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to defendant on both the complaint and counterclaim. The District Court rejected the master’s report in part, and, as thus modified, adopted it as the basis for judgment in favor of defendant from which plaintiff takes this appeal. Plaintiff’s position on appeal can be best understood after narration of pertinent contents of the master’s report.

In his conclusions of law, the master adopted an erroneous theory of liability, namely, that a condition in the contract that defendant “replace without charge all defective parts, which are due to faulty workmanship or materials” limited plaintiff’s right to recover to the reasonable cost to it of replacing such defective parts, and that defendant’s liability was contingent upon a showing by plaintiff that it had made such a demand which had been refused. This theory was embodied in the master’s Concjusion of Law Number 1. Conclusion Number 2 applied the same conception to preclude plaintiff’s recovery of certain special damages claimed. These conclusions were ultimately rejected by the trial court as erroneous.

Notwithstanding his determination, however, the master entered findings of fact addressed to the true issues raised by the pleadings. The contractual re *72 lationship between the parties and that between defendant and Stone City were found to be as previously stated. Pursuant thereto, retooling of Stone City’s plant for Whipster production was completed and ten initial models were manufactured and shipped to plaintiff for its inspection, by early,.-September, 1946. Plaintiff submitted to defendant numerous criticisms of the models, based on inspection conducted by plaintiff’s agent, Northwest Research. : Although many of the objections were based on claimed structural defects and departures from the contractual specifications,, several were addressed to defects in design re; quiring changes in plaintiff’s specifications. Numerous changes .were made in Stone City’s tooling and manufacturing procedures in order to eliminate or alleviate these objectionable features. In September, 1946, at plaintiff’s request, Northwest sent one Burns to Stone City’s plant located in Bedford, Indiana, to oversee the entire Whipster program. Burns remained at Bedford in that capacity, first as a representative of Northwest and later as an employee of plaintiff, throughout the period of time pertinent tp this cause.

Shortly after Burns’ arrival at the plant, actual production of the device was begun in late September, 1946. During all pertinent times, Burns was the active overseer for all manufacturing and shipping operations connected with Whipster production. The devices and all component parts thereof were subjected to strict inspection by inspectors employed by defendant and Stone City. Burns established all final inspection procedures and the standards of acceptability of the completed devices. As manufacturing progressed, many difficulties of the type usually associated with initial production of any new product were encountered, and changes in design and manufacturing procedures were worked out by Burns and representatives of defendant in attempts to eliminate these undesirable factors as they presented themselves from time to time.

The devices manufactured and passed through final inspection substantially complied with plaintiff’s drawings and specifications. Relative to this, plaintiff employed a special inspection crew, under Burns’ supervision, which worked from January, 1947, .to the end of March, 1947, inspecting all Whipsters warehoused at defendant’s plant and consigned to plaintiff, and more than 20,0.00 units were accepted and set aside for plaintiff’s account. Also, more than 51,-000, were sold to plaintiff's customers without complaint being made. From these last related facts, the master inferred that such Whipsters were, in fact, accepted by plaintiff as substantially complying with its specifications.

. However, from the outset of plaintiff’s sales program, devices were returned to plaintiff from time to time on its customers’ claims that they would not operate. Inspection of some of these revealed that the fault lay with the inability of the customer to make practical use of the device. In other cases inspection showed that the operating difficulty lay in design defects. A large proportion of the returned products were never inspected by plaintiff or anyone else to determine whether there had been substantial compliance with specifications. Inspection for operability revealed that, in many such cases, the fault lay with improper cleaning of the device after use, rendering it thereafter inoperable. Many cartons of Whipsters returned had never been opened by the retailers.

Defendant manufactured and billed to plaintiff under the contract 145,854 units. Payment was made by plaintiff for some 32,000 only, leaving a net total due to defendant of more than $294,000. Because of this default, defendant terminated further production under the contract on February 5, 1947. Manufacture was never resumed. The foregoing is a summary of the pertinent findings of the Special Master.

. On plaintiff’s objection to the report, the court, as previously noted, rejected the master’s conclusions as to the limited theory of liability as error. The master’s findings and remaining conclusions were adopted as the findings and conclusions of the court. Plaintiff contends *73 that we may not accord the usual weight on appeal to these findings, — that the master’s adoption of, and trial of the cause on, an erroneous theory of liability so affected his rulings on the admissibility of evidence and the weight accorded by him to the conflicting evidence that a judgment based on such findings is clearly erroneous and cannot stand, irrespective of action taken by the court below to cure the error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 F.2d 70, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-waldron-products-company-v-indiana-limestone-company-inc-ca7-1954.