Walgreen Co. v. Panasonic Healthcare Corporation of North America

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 11, 2023
Docket1:17-cv-02120
StatusUnknown

This text of Walgreen Co. v. Panasonic Healthcare Corporation of North America (Walgreen Co. v. Panasonic Healthcare Corporation of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walgreen Co. v. Panasonic Healthcare Corporation of North America, (N.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

WALGREEN COMPANY,

Plaintiff, No. 17-cv-02120 v. Judge John F. Kness PANASONIC HEALTHCARE CORPORATION OF NORTH AMERICA,

Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff,

v.

COMM-WORKS, LLC,

Third-Party Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Walgreen Company (which refers to itself in its briefing as “Walgreens”) contracted with Defendant Panasonic Healthcare Corporation of North America (“Panasonic”) to install an alarm system for its refrigerated drug storage facility in Beaverton, Oregon. The alarm system is supposed to alert Walgreens if the temperature in the refrigerated facility deviates from the proper range to safely store pharmaceuticals. Panasonic, with the approval of Walgreens, subcontracted the installation work to Comm-Works, LLC (“Comm-Works”). Comm-Works frequently works for Walgreens both as a contractor and sub-contractor. In June 2016, Walgreens’ cooler failed, and the temperature rose above the alarm-triggering threshold, but Walgreens did not receive an alarm. Many of the specialty pharmaceuticals in the facility were destroyed. Walgreens sued Panasonic, alleging that Panasonic is responsible for the alarm’s failure. Walgreens brings three counts against Panasonic for breach of contract (Count I), negligence (Count II), and breach of warranty (Count III).

Panasonic filed a third-party complaint against Comm-Works seeking contractual indemnification for liability and the cost of defense (Third-Party Count I), contribution (Third-Party Count II), and implied indemnification (Third-Party Count III). Judge Dow, to whom this case was previously assigned, granted with prejudice Comm-Works’ motion to dismiss Panasonic’s implied indemnification claim. (Dkt. 80.) Before the Court now are Panasonic’s motion for summary judgment against

Walgreens (Dkt. 124) and cross-motions for summary judgment brought by Comm-Works (Dkt. 113) and Panasonic (Dkt. 119). For the reasons stated below, the Court grants summary judgment to Panasonic against Walgreens on all claims. Additionally, the Court grants partial summary judgment to Panasonic against Comm-Works on Panasonic’s contractual indemnification claim because Comm-Works had a duty to defend Panasonic in Walgreens’ suit. Panasonic’s

remaining claims are dismissed as moot. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. The Parties Walgreens operates retail pharmacies nationwide and a select number of specialty pharmacies that store certain high-value pharmaceuticals. (Dkt. 141 ¶ 1.) Panasonic sells products used in the life science and biomedical industries, including a temperature monitoring system called the “LabAlert System.” (Id. ¶ 2.) In April 2015, Walgreens and Panasonic entered a Hosted Services and License Agreement (the “HSA”) for Panasonic to provide Walgreens with LabAlert systems, implementation, training, and support services for Walgreens’ specialty pharmacies,

including the one in Beaverton, Oregon (the “Beaverton Facility”). (Id. ¶ 3.) Panasonic hired Comm-Works to install LabAlert at Walgreens facilities, including the Beaverton Facility, and Panasonic and Comm-Works entered a Master Terms and Conditions Agreement (the “Comm-Works Contract”) governing the work. (Dkt. 115 ¶ 16.) Panasonic hired Comm-Works at Walgreens’ recommendation, as Comm-Works was a Walgreens-approved vendor that had installed security systems at Walgreens locations across the country for over a decade. (Dkt. 162 ¶¶ 29–31.)

B. Overview of the LabAlert System The LabAlert System continuously monitors and records the temperature of assets, such as pharmaceutical coolers, via wireless sensors that send data to the system’s central hardware component called the “Gateway.” Each sensor is either “enabled” if connected to an asset, or “bypassed” if not connected to an asset. (Id. ¶ 11.) If a sensor is configured in the Gateway as enabled but is not connected to

an asset, the Gateway generates an “open sensor fault” alert. (Id. ¶ 12.) The Gateway also generates an alert when an asset, measured by the sensor, experiences a “triggering condition,” such as when the asset’s temperature exceeds the temperature range specified by the user (“temperature excursion”). (Id. ¶ 14.) For the Gateway to generate alarms, it must be configured with desired parameters, such as temperature thresholds, and those parameters must be saved to the Gateway’s memory. (Dkt. 115 ¶ 10.) The Gateway has both volatile (temporary) and non-volatile (permanent) memory. (Id.) Parameters saved in volatile memory control the system’s alert generation. When the system loses power or otherwise resets, the Gateway defaults to the last parameters saved to non-volatile memory.

(Id. ¶ 11.) So, if a parameter is saved only in volatile memory, that parameter will be erased if the system resets. Alarm parameters thus must be double-saved to both volatile and non-volatile memory to become permanent. (Id. ¶ 12.) End users like Walgreens are notified of the Gateway’s alerts in two ways. First, the Gateway communicates alerts to LabAlert’s cloud-based software, FusionLive. (Id. ¶ 10.) FusionLive then generates a ticket that provides asset-specific information about the condition causing the alert (e.g., Cooler 1 – Temperature

Exceeded). (Id. ¶ 14.) Second, the Gateway can be integrated with the end-user’s separate, on-site alarm panel that generates alerts in the user’s internal security system. At the Beaverton Facility, the Gateway was connected to the facility’s on-site Bosch alarm panel (“Bosch Panel”) that communicates alerts to Walgreens’ Security Operations Center (“SOC”), the central monitoring station for Walgreens’ asset

protection systems nationwide. (Id. ¶¶ 15, 17.) The SOC receives alerts from the Bosch Panel in software known as MASterMind. But unlike the alerts in FusionLive, the alerts sent to the SOC in MASterMind are “undifferentiated,” meaning the alert does not indicate whether it was caused by a triggering condition, such as a temperature excursion, or some other, non-emergent problem such as an open sensor fault. (Id. ¶¶ 15, 24, 25; Dkt. 162 ¶ 12.).1 Walgreens’ employees at the SOC are required to login to FusionLive to determine the cause of the alarm. C. LabAlert Installation at the Beaverton Facility

On January 15, 2016, Walgreens issued Panasonic a purchase order under the HSA for a LabAlert System at the Beaverton Facility. (Dkt. 115 ¶ 24.) Panasonic in turn sent Comm-Works a work order under the Comm-Works Contract to perform the installation. (Id. ¶ 25.) Panasonic’s work order required Comm-Works to install the LabAlert Gateway and connect it to the SOC’s network, but it did not require Comm-Works to program the Gateway or remove the existing temperature monitoring system called the Winland System. (Id. ¶¶ 24, 26.) Comm-Works in turn

subcontracted installation of LabAlert to CCV Technology LLC (“CCV”), Comm-Works’ authorized installer that was a vetted security vendor for Walgreens. (Dkt. 162 ¶ 33.) Although CCV was vetted, CCV had never installed a LabAlert System. (Id.) Comm-Works’ work order to CCV was identical in scope to Panasonic’s work order to Comm-Works. (Dkt. 115 ¶ 28.) From late January to early February 2016, CCV installed the LabAlert System

at the Beaverton Facility. (Dkt. 162 ¶ 34.) On February 4, Walgreens’ on-site property manager, Darrell McGee, signed a form acknowledging that installation of LabAlert was completed and that the system had been integrated with Walgreens’ internal security system, MASterMind, and was running and fully visible through FusionLive.

1 LabAlert can also send real time email and text alerts with asset-specific information about the condition causing the alert. (Dkt. 115 ¶ 15; Dkt. 162,¶ 16.) But Walgreens elected not to use this feature at the SOC prior to June 8, 2016. (Id.) (Dkt.

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