Water Works & Industrial Supply Co. v. Wilburn

437 S.W.2d 951, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1169, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 29, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 437 S.W.2d 951 (Water Works & Industrial Supply Co. v. Wilburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Water Works & Industrial Supply Co. v. Wilburn, 437 S.W.2d 951, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1169, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 172 (Ky. 1968).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

Appellee Claud Wilburn obtained a contract for construction of a water main for the Quicksand Water District. He arranged to purchase his materials, including pipe, fittings and gaskets, from the appellant, Water Works and Industrial Supply Company. After the main was installed and the water was turned on a series of “blow-outs” developed at joints where the pipe was joined with fittings for bends or *953 for lateral connections. Wilburn was put to considerable expense in digging up the pipe, refilling and reblocking the connections, and back filling. He sued the appellant (hereinafter “Supply Company”) for damages, claiming in substance that Supply Company had furnished the wrong kind of gaskets. He also sought recovery for an alleged shortage in the delivery of a quantity of 4-inch pipe. Supply Company answered denying liability, and counterclaimed for some $5,000 representing the balance due on the purchase price of the materials sold to Wilburn. The case went to the jury, which awarded Wilburn $15,-000 on his damage claim and $600 on the shortage claim, to be offset by the balance due on the purchase price of the materials as sought in the counterclaim. Judgment was entered accordingly.

Supply Company has appealed, asserting numerous grounds of error. We shall consider first the contention that the proof was not sufficient to establish that the wrong type of gaskets had been furnished.

The “blowouts” occurred in the main 8-inch line, where the pipe made joints with fittings. The pipe and fittings were designed for “push-on” connections in joints, the pipe being pushed into the opening in the fitting. Inside the lip of the fitting there is a groove into which is inserted a rubber gasket which is designed to seal the space between the outer circumference of the pipe and the inner circumference of the fitting, so as to make the joint watertight. Lengths of pipe also are designed to be joined in a similar manner, by use of couplings into which the ends of the pipes are inserted and which have grooves for gaskets.

The evidence shows that there are two standard or common types or brands of pipe and pipe gaskets in general use for water lines. One is the “fluid-tite” brand manufactured by Certain-Teed Products Company and the other is the “ring-tite” brand manufactured by Johns-Manville Manufacturing Company. The main difference in the two, as relates to the issue in this case, is that the groove in the coupling in the ring-tite brand is wider than the one in the fluid-tite brand, wherefor the ring-tite gasket is wider than the fluid-tite gasket. The fluid-type gasket also differs in that it has a series of small holes or indentations around its circumference, on the back, designed to make the gasket expand when water enters the pipe so as to make a tighter seal.

As concerns fittings, there are numerous brands on the market. However, Certain-Teed and Johns-Manville do not manufacture fittings — their pipes are used with the fittings of other manufacturers. The evidence indicates that, as is the case with the pipe, there are two types of fittings commonly in use; one with grooves designed for ring-tite gaskets and the other with grooves designed for fluid-tite gaskets. The trouble in the instant case arises out of the fact that Supply Company furnished to Wilburn a relatively new type of fitting manufactured by Ductile Iron Company of America which is claimed by the manufacturer to have a “common groove” suitable for accommodation of either the ring-tite or the fluid-tite gasket. The groove in this fitting is of comparable width to that in the exclusively ring-tite fittings but the manufacturer claims that by reason of careful machining and the use of ductile iron the groove will properly handle the narrower fluid-tite gasket.

The specifications for the construction job did not specifically cover gaskets, and were somewhat ambiguous as to fittings. They provided that “Cast Iron Fittings * * * shall be short body mechanical joint, ring-tite joints or fluid-tite joints * * *.” Supply Company maintains that this meant that the use of either type of gasket would be acceptable, while Wilburn argues that it meant that ring-tite gaskets should be used with ring-tite fittings, and fluid-tite gaskets with fluid-tite fittings. We shall have more to say about this later.

For his use on the Quicksand job, Supply Company supplied to Wilburn fluid-tite *954 pipe couplings and gaskets manufactured by Certain-Teed, and ductile iron fittings manufactured by Ductile Iron Company. Included were some 4-inch and 6-inch sizes as well as the 8-inch size for the main line. However, the leaks or “blow-outs” complained of occurred only in the 8-inch joints.

We shall summarize the evidence (including inferences) designed to prove that the fluid-tite gaskets' were not fit for the purpose for which they were intended to be used. First is the fact that 35 leaks or blow-outs developed, and that they occurred only in the 8-inch fitting joints— not in any of the coupling joints nor in any of the joints using smaller pipe. It is plain that the blow-outs were due either to the furnishing of the wrong kind of gaskets or to faulty installation by Wilburn. The fact that leaks did not occur in any of the coupling joints or in any of the joints using smaller pipe indicates that Wilburn’s installation work generally was proper. It would be a strange coincidence indeed if there turned out to be faulty installation in practically every 8-inch fitting joint but none in the 8-inch coupling joints. Particularly is this so since the possible faulty installation suggested by appellant as having occurred would consist of failure to properly lubricate the pipe before making the joint, getting dirt in groove, and similar things that could happen with couplings or with-joints using smaller pipe.

Second, is the evidence that literature put out by Certain-Teed, describing its fluid-tite pipe and gaskets, carried a prominent warning that when assembling fittings to fluid-tite pipe “Make Sure You Use FLUID-TITE Gaskets in all fittings and valves having FLUID-TITE grooves * * RING-TITE rings in all fittings and valves having RING-TITE grooves.” This was an indication by the pipe and gasket manufacturer that there were two separate types of grooves in use, each requiring a different gasket, and there was no recognition of such thing as a common groove.

Third, is the fact that the specifications, in providing for the use of either ring-tite joints or fluid-tite joints, obviously were not referring to the gaskets alone, because surely it was not intended that fluid-tite gaskets could be used with a groove designed exclusively for a ring-tite gasket. The specifications clearly mean the word “joint” to cover both the groove and the gasket and they, like the Certain-Teed literature, do not seem to recognize the existence of a common groove.

Fourth, there is the testimony of two witnesses (one a graduate engineer) with considerable experience in the water main field, that the fluid-tite gaskets are too narrow and too soft and pliable to operate properly in the kind of groove that is in the Ductile Iron Company fittings; that they could be forced out of the groove by the pressure of the water.

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437 S.W.2d 951, 5 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1169, 1968 Ky. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-works-industrial-supply-co-v-wilburn-kyctapphigh-1968.