TPS Technologies, Inc. v. Rodin Enterprises, Inc.

816 F. Supp. 345, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103, 1993 WL 79597
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 11, 1993
Docket91-7040
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 816 F. Supp. 345 (TPS Technologies, Inc. v. Rodin Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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TPS Technologies, Inc. v. Rodin Enterprises, Inc., 816 F. Supp. 345, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103, 1993 WL 79597 (E.D. Pa. 1993).

Opinion

ADJUDICATION AND MEMORANDUM

BRODY, District Judge.

Before me is the record submitted by the parties to the Court. I am being called upon to decide:

(1) Whether, in a contract requiring the contractor to treat all of the soil on the property determined to be contaminated by a third party, a permit exemption letter from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources (“Pa. DER”) referring to “the approximately 1,000 tons of petroleum contaminated soil to be treated” that was incorporated into a contract as a performance warranty created a quantity term limitation of 1,000 tons? I find that it did not.

(2) Whether the general partners of a limited partnership, including both the withdrawing and substituted general partners pursuant to a certificate of amendment that was not filed with the state until after the liability was incurred, are liable to the contractor for amounts due and owing by the limited partnership? I find that they are.

*347 This is a final adjudication of the merits of this diversity ease based upon the trial briefs, written narratives of the direct testimony of the witnesses that the parties would have presented at trial, and trial exhibits submitted to the Court. 1

I. FINDINGS OF FACT.

This dispute arises from a contract between plaintiff TPS Technologies, Inc. (“TPS”), a Florida corporation, and defendant Triangle Center Associates (“Triangle”), a Pennsylvania limited partnership. 2 TPS seeks $58,637.80 plus pre-judgment interest at the rate of 1.5% per month plus attorney’s fees from the three general partners of Triangle in compensatory damages for breach of contract or, in the alternative, under a claim of quantum meruit for services rendered. (See Plaintiffs Pretrial Memorandum).

The original general partners of Triangle identified on the certificate of limited partnership filed on August 28, 1986 were Rodin Enterprises, Inc. (“Rodin”), a Pennsylvania corporation, and Buttzville Corporation (“Buttzville”), a Netherlands Antilles corporation with its principal place of business in the United States in New York. (Exh. P-21).

During the fall of 1989, Triangle owned a property known as the Golden Triangle Shopping Center in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; the property manager of the shopping center was a management company operated by Rodin, one of Triangle’s general partners. (See Exh. P-23 at 13-14, 16).

Triangle first learned of a soil contamination problem from one of its tenants, a Jiffy Lube International franchisee that had agreed to construct a Jiffy Lube station on the site of an existing Gulf Oil Station at the center contingent upon Triangle’s (1) demolishing the gasoline station and (2) turning over a “clean piece of property”. (Exh. P-23 at 15). After being notified of the contamination problem, Stuart Seidman, a Rodin employee, contacted TPS in response to a magazine clipping from an industry publication about TPS’s soil remediation process. (Exh. P-23 at 15-16, 21).

On December 8, 1989, Jeffrey Powell, the vice-president of TPS, forwarded brochures to Mr. Seidman describing the TPS remediation process that utilized on-site mobile soil remediation units for thermal treatment of petroleum contaminated soil. (Exh. P-2). One week later, Mr. Seidman requested a proposal from TPS. (Exh. P-3).

Mr. Seidman testified that Rodin — and most probably that he himself — initially told TPS that approximately 1,000 tons of soil were involved in the remediation after Rodin was advised of the same by Dunn Geoscience Corporation (“Dunn”), a company retained by Triangle to oversee the environmental remediation at the site. (Exh. P-23 at 69-70). In fact, the Dunn Summary and Recommendations to Rodin, dated March 8, 1990, identified “290 tons of contaminated soil” al *348 ready excavated and stockpiled and referred to further excavation of “approximately 1,500 tons of soil.” (Exh. P-14).

On March 25,1990, in response to its letter request of March 13, 1990, TPS received a letter from Pa. DER exempting “the treatment of approximately one thousand (1,000) tons of petroleum contaminated soil” at the site from departmental plan approval and permit requirements. (Exh. P-22). 3

On April 2, 1990, TPS forwarded a written proposal including its price quotation for remediation of soil at the property. (Exhs. P-1; P-4). The proposal consisted of a form agreement setting forth certain terms and conditions and a cover letter — identifying “The Rodin Group” as the client — stating, in pertinent part:

TPS Technologies is pleased to present this quotation to thermally treat the petroleum contaminated soil located at the Golden Triangle property in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. TPS will utilize a Mobile Soil Remediation Unit to treat the soil. Laboratory decontamination analysis will be conducted by the Client or his agent during completion of the project to insure the processed soil TPH level is below 100 ppm.
SRU Mobilization Cost.waived
Contaminated Soil Treatment Price .$65.00/ton

Term 8.1 of the form agreement was a warranty of performance by TPS:

TPST warrants to the CLIENT that TPST will exercise reasonable care, skill, competence and judgement consistent with the standards for soil remediation set forth in TPST’s operating permit for the State in which the work is being performed, a copy of which has been made available to the CLIENT and made part hereof (the “Permit”). Provided that the actual soil and site characteristics do not materially vary from those set forth on the reverse side of the agreement. 4 If any soils processed by TPST fail to meet the standards set forth in the Permit, TPST shall reprocess such soil until such standards are met.
In consideration of TPST’s extension of this warranty to the CLIENT, the Client agrees that THIS WARRANTY SHALL BE EXCLUSIVE OF ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.

TPS also transmitted to Rodin the March 25, 1990 exemption letter from Pa. DER with the April 3, 1990 proposal. (Exhs. P-4; P-22).

Mr. Powell agreed that TPS personnel would revisit the site on April 17, 1990. (Testimony of John Adderly at ¶ 7; Exh. D-3). The soil excavation was in progress during the TPS site visit. (Exh. P-15; Testimony of Mr. Powell at 2). The excavation was done by a local excavating contractor under the supervision of Dunn, which tested the soil as it was being excavated in order to determine the boundary lines of the depth and width of contaminated soil to be removed by the excavator. (Exh. P-23 at 70). Thus, as Mr. Seidman testified, Dunn determined the quantity of contaminated soil to be remediat-ed. (Exh. P-23 at 26).

On April 19, 1990, Ivan Krouk, signing as President of Rodin (see Exhs. P-1 and P-5), signed the proposal on behalf of Triangle, which was substituted for Rodin as the “client” by a handwritten notation. (Exh. P-1).

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816 F. Supp. 345, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3103, 1993 WL 79597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tps-technologies-inc-v-rodin-enterprises-inc-paed-1993.