Tex Enterprises v. Brockway Standard
This text of 39 P.3d 362 (Tex Enterprises v. Brockway Standard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
TEX ENTERPRISES, INC., a Washington corporation, Appellant,
v.
BROCKWAY STANDARD, INC., a foreign corporation, and J.F. Shelton Company, a Washington corporation, Respondents.
Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.
*363 David S. Grossman, Lesourd & Patten P.S., Kimberly O. Grieco, Seattle, for Appellant.
John P. Hayes, Michael Hooks, Frosberg & Umlauf P.S., Seattle, for Respondents.
BAKER, J.
Tex Enterprises, Inc. (Tex) entered into a contract with J.F. Shelton Company (Shelton), a distributor, to purchase three and five gallon containers for shipping and storing the deck coating it produces. Tex claims that it was induced into purchasing the containers *364 by in-person representations from the Georgia manufacturer, Brockway Standard, Inc. (Brockway). Tex brought breach of warranty claims against Brockway when the containers malfunctioned. The trial court dismissed Tex's warranty claims against Brockway based upon disclaimers and choice of law provisions printed on the reverse side of invoices from Brockway to the distributor from whom Tex purchased the containers. Tex appeals the dismissal of the express and implied warranty claims as well as the refusal to allow it to add a claim of estoppel to the complaint.
We hold that a manufacturer's direct representations to the purchaser can create express and implied warranties that run to the purchaser independent of any contract between the manufacturer and distributor, and we reverse.
I
Tex, a Washington Corporation based in Auburn, manufactures deck coating under the brand name Spantex. It packages the coating in one, three and five gallon containers. Tex historically purchased its three and five gallon containers from a different manufacturer, Norton, but Tex purchased its one gallon containers from Shelton,[1] a Washington distributor. The defendant Brockway, headquartered in Georgia, manufactured the one gallon containers.
Tex alleges that in 1997, a representative from Shelton arranged a meeting with Tex's president, Charles Pieratt, and Brockway's representative, Tod Egan, to convince Tex to switch to Brockway's three and five gallon containers. In that meeting, Brockway's representative stated to Pieratt that the Brockway containers were "just as good as the Norton [containers]." He represented that the Brockway containers would be equally as effective for storing and shipping the deck coating material. Brockway offered Shelton a chargeback (similar to a rebate) if Tex purchased these containers through Shelton.
Following the meeting, Tex ordered and purchased thousands of the three and five gallon Brockway containers from Shelton, and used them to ship more than 22,000 gallons of deck coating. Thereafter, Tex began receiving complaints from its customers that the coating was congealing in the containers. As a result, Tex replaced more than one-half of the coating shipped in the Brockway containers.
When Brockway shipped its containers to Shelton, it set forth terms and conditions of the sale on the reverse side of invoices sent to Shelton. These terms included a choice of law provision selecting Georgia law, a warranty disclaimer, and a damage limitation clause. None of these terms appeared on the containers, nor were any of the terms communicated in any way to Tex.
In its various orders, the trial court ruled that the choice of law provision was binding on Tex, and applied Georgia law. The court dismissed various claims brought by Tex including a claim for breach of implied warranty and limited damages recoverable for breach of express warranty. Later, the court dismissed the breach of express warranty claim entirely. Dismissal of both warranty claims was based upon lack of privity. The court also denied Tex's motion to add a claim for promissory estoppel. Tex appeals.
II
We first examine whether the trial court correctly applied the law of Georgia in dismissing Tex's claims. If Tex's claims against the manufacturer are strictly derivative of the contractual relationship existing between the manufacturer and the distributor, Shelton, then arguably Tex is bound by the choice of law provision found on the invoices sent to Shelton by the manufacturer. But we need not decide this question because we conclude that Tex's claims are not strictly derivative. The claims are not based solely on the existence of a contract between Brockway and Shelton, but upon the central role Brockway assumed in persuading Tex to purchase its product. Brockway's representative came to Washington for that purpose, and met personally with Tex's president. It was during that meeting that express and *365 implied verbal warranties were made by Brockway, and it was as a direct result of that meeting that the allegedly defective containers were purchased. Tex is seeking to recover damages for a breach of those same express and implied warranties. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the terms and conditions applicable to the contractual relationship between Brockway and Shelton are not applicable to Tex's claim against Brockway.
The question remains whether, under the law of Washington, Tex may pursue its claims directly against the manufacturer, Brockway.
This case presents a question of vertical privity as opposed to horizontal privity. Vertical privity refers to privity of contract between parties connected in the chain of distribution, for example an end user who purchases a product from a retailer may be deemed to be in vertical privity with the manufacturer.[2] Horizontal privity describes the relationship of a non-buyer consumer or user to a product seller or manufacturer. For example, a member of a buyer's household injured by a product may be in horizontal privity with the manufacturer.[3] Washington courts historically required privity of contract between the parties in actions founded upon warranty.[4] More recently, however, the strict privity requirement has been relaxed in favor of the sum of the circumstances test,[5] at least in cases dealing with vertical privity. The sum of the circumstances test is applied to determine whether an ultimate purchaser is an intended beneficiary of warranties made by a party further up the distribution chain.[6]
Both parties extensively cite to and rely on Touchet Valley Grain Growers, Inc. v. Opp & Seibold General Construction, Inc.[7] to support their respective positions on the issue of privity. But Touchet is inapplicable because the sum of the circumstances test discussed in that case deals with whether express and implied warranties between the manufacturer and intermediary run to the benefit of the purchaser. In contrast, Brockway disclaimed all such warranties to Shelton. Thus a third party beneficiary analysis cannot apply here. Instead, we conclude that a manufacturer's representations and conduct can create express and implied warranties which run directly to the purchaser independent of any contract between the manufacturer and intermediary.
Although not directly on point, Dobias v. Western Farmers Association[8] provides support for this conclusion. In that case, the manufacturer of a weedkiller herbicide made representations to the retailer that its product was compatible for use with corn.[9] As a result, Dobias, a corn farmer, purchased the herbicide from the retailer and used it on corn crops.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
39 P.3d 362, 110 Wash. App. 197, 2002 Wash. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tex-enterprises-v-brockway-standard-washctapp-2002.