Tyco Electronics Corporation v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc.

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 2, 2008
Docket1-07-3539 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Tyco Electronics Corporation v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc. (Tyco Electronics Corporation v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyco Electronics Corporation v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc., (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION September 2, 2008

No. 1-07-3539

TYCO ELECTRONICS CORPORATION, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) ) ILLINOIS TOOL WORKS, INC., ) Honorable ) Brigid Mary McGrath, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE SOUTH delivered the opinion of the court:

Tyco Electronics Corporation purchased surge protection components which failed to

perform as expected. Consequently, Tyco filed an action against the manufacturer, Illinois Tool

Works, for breaches of contract and warranty and presented to a jury evidence of more than $9

million in damages. The jury returned a verdict in the amount of $2 million, and Tyco now

appeals the denial of its motion for a retrial limited to the issue of damages. We affirm.

Tyco’s customer, Motorola, made cable access units which provided Internet, telephone

and cable television service through a single cable. Tyco produced the cable connection for

Motorola’s access units. The connection, called the “Superblock,” contained a gas-filled tube

which provided surge protection. After another vendor’s gas tubes proved to be unsatisfactory,

Tyco contracted to purchase the surge protection tubes from Illinois Tool Works (ITW). ITW

assembled Superblocks which included its gas tubes and shipped them to Motorola on Tyco’s

behalf. 1-07-3539

Soon after their installation in residences located in Australia, the Superblocks’ surge

protection components began to short-circuit prematurely. Motorola tested the ITW gas tubes,

compared them to tubes which were made by other vendors, and hired surge protection experts

to conduct further tests. The test results suggested that the ITW tubes and related backup

assembly caused the premature Superblock short-circuits in the Australian installations.

Motorola decided to replace the Superblocks containing ITW tubes with units that used another

vendor’s tubes. Motorola then demanded that Tyco reimburse it for those replacement costs.

Tyco settled Motorola’s potential claims for $7.7 million, which included a cash payment of

more than $4.8 million and a credit against future product purchases of more than $2.8 million.

Tyco then filed suit against ITW, alleging that ITW breached the contract, as well as the express

performance warranties and implied warranties of fitness and merchantability.

At trial, Tyco presented evidence that the surge protection units provided by ITW did not

meet ITW’s own specifications, were not suitable for use in the Superblock, and were not

properly designed and manufactured. ITW asserted that any failure of the unit to meet its own

specifications related to the long-term life of the units, and any breach of warranty regarding

those specifications did not cause the short-term failures in the Superblock installations.

ITW also asserted that the surge protector failures were caused by the hot and humid

conditions in the locations where the Superblocks were installed, that Motorola and Tyco

established the specifications for the surge protection units, and the two companies could have

demanded that the units pass industry-recognized tests for performance in those conditions.

ITW claimed that Motorola did not ask for units which would have passed more stringent tests

because it did not want to reveal details of the workings of its cable access hardware and the

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Superblock, and it wanted to avoid the delay and expense of purchasing a unit that had passed

the extra tests.

ITW argued that its surge protectors met the only industry standards Tyco had required,

that Tyco and Motorola had approved the ITW units, and Motorola was responsible for the

failure to communicate any requirement for higher standards. ITW also argued that Motorola’s

responsibility would have shielded both Tyco and ITW from liability for the Superblock failures

in Australia, and Tyco agreed to the cash settlement to preserve larger and more lucrative

business relationships with Motorola. Accordingly, ITW denied liability for Tyco’s losses in

settling Motorola’s potential claims.

Tyco presented expert testimony asserting that its payments to Motorola and other costs

associated with the Superblock failures caused approximately $9.1 million in damages. ITW’s

damages expert, Glenn Sheets, testified that his examination of the costs of the incident led him

to conclude that Tyco’s damages were approximately $4.7 million. Sheets did not include

Tyco’s payments and credits to Motorola as an element of damages; instead, he attempted to

calculate the cost of producing and installing the actual number of new Superblocks needed to

replace those that had been deployed with the ITW surge protectors. Neither party suggested the

measure of damages that would have been the proper compensation for the surge protectors’

failure to meet ITW’s own long-term performance specifications.

The jury returned a verdict of $2 million for Tyco. It completed special verdict forms

which indicated that it found ITW had breached its contract with Tyco and breached express

warranties under the contract and Tyco had proven that it had sustained damages. Tyco moved

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for a new trial limited to the issue of damages; it did not alternatively seek a retrial of all of the

issues. The trial court denied Tyco’s motion, and this appeal followed.

Tyco contends that ITW’s damages expert, Glenn Sheets, testified in violation of

Supreme Court Rule 213(f)(3), which requires a party to reveal the opinions and conclusions of

its retained experts. 210 Ill. 2d R. 213(f)(3). Tyco claims that in his written report, which was

produced prior to trial and in his discovery deposition, Sheets testified that he estimated Tyco’s

damages to be $3.94 million, and his trial testimony of $4.7 million in damages was an

undisclosed change from his earlier position. However, the record contradicts Tyco’s claim.

Sheets’ opinion, as disclosed in both his written report and in his discovery deposition,

was that Tyco’s damages consisted of two elements: Tyco’s cost of producing new Superblocks

to replace the defective units; and the shipping and labor costs incurred by Motorola to remove

the original Superblocks and install new units. In his report, in his testimony during his

deposition, and in his testimony at trial, Sheets consistently asserted that the Tyco production

cost element amounted to approximately $1.3 million. Sheets’ written report, in its introductory

summary, asserted that Motorola’s “substantiated” shipping and labor costs were not more than

$2.6 million. But in the detail which followed the introductory summary, Sheets’ report

explained that he reached the total of “substantiated” shipping and labor costs by excluding from

his calculation all Superblocks shipped to Motorola after July 15, 1999. This date was based on

ITW’s contention that Tyco and Motorola had failed to mitigate their damages by continuing to

produce and deploy the original Superblocks after deciding in mid-July that they were not

performing properly. Sheets’ disclosed opinion clearly identified the possible alternative

formulations of the shipping and labor cost component of his damage calculation: reduced by the

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exclusion of costs incurred after July 15, the shipping and labor component was $2.6 million and

unreduced by the cutoff date, $3.48 million. Sheets’ use of the latter calculation at trial, adding

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