Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (082815)(Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 29, 2020
DocketA-89-18
StatusPublished

This text of Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (082815)(Statewide) (Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (082815)(Statewide)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (082815)(Statewide), (N.J. 2020).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (A-89-18) (082815)

Argued March 17, 2020 -- Decided July 29, 2020

SOLOMON, J., writing for the Court.

In this case the Court considers, in response to a question of law certified to the Court by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit pursuant to Rule 2:12A-3, whether a Consumer Fraud Act (CFA) claim can be based, in part or exclusively, on a claim that also might be actionable under the Products Liability Act (PLA).

Sun Chemical Corporation (Sun) purchased an explosion isolation and suppression system (Suppression System) from Fike Corporation and Suppression Systems Incorporated (collectively, Fike) to prevent and contain potential explosions in its new dust collection system. On the first day that the Suppression System was operational, a fire occurred, and an alarm on the Suppression System’s control panel activated but was not audible. An explosion sent a fireball through the ducts of the dust collection system, injuring seven Sun employees and damaging Sun’s facility.

Sun brought a single-count complaint under the CFA in federal court alleging that Fike made oral and written misrepresentations about four aspects of the Suppression System: (1) the Suppression System would prevent explosions; (2) the Suppression System would have an audible alarm; (3) the Suppression System complied with industry standards; and (4) the system had never failed. The District Court granted Fike’s summary judgment motion, finding that Sun’s claims would be governed by the PLA and that it could not avoid the requirements of the PLA by crafting its claims under the CFA. Sun appealed, and after determining that extant New Jersey case law was not sufficiently on point to guide its determination of which of the two statutes to apply, the Third Circuit certified its questions to the Court, which the Court reformulated and accepted. N.J. (2019).

HELD: The Court answers the certified question in the affirmative. A CFA claim alleging express misrepresentations -- deceptive, fraudulent, misleading, and other unconscionable commercial practices -- may be brought in the same action as a PLA claim premised upon product manufacturing, warning, or design defects. It is the nature of the claims brought, not the nature of the damages sought, that is dispositive of whether the PLA precludes the separate causes of action. In other

1 words, the PLA will not bar a CFA claim alleging express or affirmative misrepresentations.

1. There is no authority directly addressing the interplay between the CFA and PLA in this setting, but their statutory language, legislative history, and the Court’s relevant jurisprudence regarding both statutes inform the Court’s answer to the question before it. The CFA prohibits deceptive, fraudulent, misleading, and other unconscionable commercial practices in connection with the sale of any merchandise or real estate. The language of the CFA evinces a clear legislative intent that its provisions be applied broadly. In Lemelledo v. Beneficial Management Corp. of America, 150 N.J. 255, 259-60, 271-73 (1997), a consumer brought a class action under the CFA against a financial services company for loan packing and the defendant argued that the CFA was preempted by other statutes regulating consumer loans. The Court rejected that argument, holding there is a “presumption that the CFA applies to a covered activity,” and the presumption can be overcome only when a court is satisfied “that a direct and unavoidable conflict exists between application of the CFA and application of the other regulatory scheme or schemes.” Id. at 270. In Real v. Radir Wheels, Inc., 198 N.J. 511, 514, 526 (2009), the Court applied the principles set forth in Lemelledo and held that the Used Car Lemon Law did not preempt a CFA claim for fraudulent advertisement brought by the purchaser of a used automobile from a private seller. (pp. 8-13)

2. The PLA imposes liability upon the manufacturer or seller for a product’s manufacturing, warning, and design defects. Under the PLA, a claimant can recover damages against the manufacturer or seller of a product upon proof that the product causing the harm was not reasonably fit, suitable or safe for its intended purpose. In In re Lead Paint Litigation, 191 N.J. 405, 436-37 (2007), the Court scrutinized a nuisance-based pleading and, based on a pleading-to-statute comparison, held that the PLA subsumed the plaintiffs’ common law public nuisance causes of action that were fundamentally PLA claims. The Court determined that the theory of liability claimed by the plaintiffs was, in reality, a PLA claim and was therefore actionable only under the strictures of the PLA. Id. at 440. In Sinclair v. Merck & Co., 195 N.J. 51, 54 (2008), the Court considered whether plaintiffs who used the drug Vioxx could maintain both CFA and PLA claims. The Court determined, after considering the nature of the plaintiffs’ allegations, that the plaintiffs sought “to avoid the requirements of the PLA by asserting their claims as CFA claims,” even though “[t]he heart of [their] case [was] the potential for harm caused by Merck’s drug.” Id. at 65-66. (pp. 13-18)

3. The CFA and PLA are intended to govern different conduct and to provide different remedies for such conduct. There is thus no direct and unavoidable conflict between the CFA and PLA. The PLA governs the legal universe of products liability actions as defined in that Act and the CFA applies to fraud and

2 misrepresentation and provides unique remedies intended to root out such conduct. Although the Court has rejected the idea that contract-based claims could be pled under the PLA, the Court has not yet considered the question at the center of this matter: whether tort-based claims that can be pled under the PLA can also -- or instead -- be pled under the CFA. The failure to warn of a product defect is cognizable under the PLA, while an affirmative misrepresentation that a specific flaw did not exist, or a product had never failed may be brought under the CFA. If a claim is premised upon a product’s manufacturing, warning, or design defect, that claim must be brought under the PLA with damages limited to those available under that statute; CFA claims for the same conduct are precluded. But nothing about the PLA prohibits a claimant from seeking relief under the CFA for deceptive, fraudulent, misleading, and other unconscionable commercial practices in the sale of the product. Indeed, the CFA is expressly “in addition to and cumulative of any other right, remedy or prohibition accorded by the common law or statutes of this State.” N.J.S.A. 56:8-2.13. (pp. 18-20)

4. Said differently, if a claim is based on deceptive, fraudulent, misleading, and other unconscionable commercial practices, it is not covered by the PLA and may be brought as a separate CFA claim. PLA and CFA claims may proceed in separate counts of the same suit, alleging different theories of liability and seeking dissimilar damages. Had the Legislature intended for the PLA to preempt, displace, or subsume the CFA, it would have said so. Neither the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure nor the New Jersey Court Rules preclude separate claims premised upon separate theories of liability from being advanced in the same pleading and sought at the same trial. (pp. 20-21)

5. How a given claim must be pled depends on the underlying theory of liability.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Czar, Inc. v. Heath
966 A.2d 1008 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2009)
Lemelledo v. Beneficial Management Corp. of America
696 A.2d 546 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1997)
In Re Lead Paint Litigation
924 A.2d 484 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2007)
DiProspero v. Penn
874 A.2d 1039 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2005)
Kugler v. Romain
279 A.2d 640 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1971)
Dewey v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
577 A.2d 1239 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1990)
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.
647 A.2d 454 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1994)
Miah v. Ahmed
846 A.2d 1244 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2004)
Real v. Radir Wheels, Inc.
969 A.2d 1069 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2009)
Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors
691 A.2d 350 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1997)
Weinberg v. Sprint Corp.
801 A.2d 281 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2002)
MacEdo v. Dello Russo
840 A.2d 238 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2004)
Daaleman v. Elizabethtown Gas Company
390 A.2d 566 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1978)
Sinclair v. Merck & Co., Inc.
948 A.2d 587 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2008)
Dean v. Barrett Homes, Inc.
8 A.3d 766 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2010)
Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Mendola
48 A.3d 366 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2012)
Francis E. Parker Memorial Home, Inc. v. Georgia-Pacific LLC
945 F. Supp. 2d 543 (D. New Jersey, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Sun Chemical Corporation v. Fike Corporation (082815)(Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-chemical-corporation-v-fike-corporation-082815statewide-nj-2020.