Waukesha Foundry, Incorporated v. Industrial Engineering, Incorporated

91 F.3d 1002, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 18993, 1996 WL 430993
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1996
Docket95-3648
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 91 F.3d 1002 (Waukesha Foundry, Incorporated v. Industrial Engineering, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waukesha Foundry, Incorporated v. Industrial Engineering, Incorporated, 91 F.3d 1002, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 18993, 1996 WL 430993 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code reflects an effort to harmonize the law of contract with the complexities incidental to the purchase and sale of goods in today’s world of sophisticated commercial relationships. Several provisions of the UCC guide a determination of the specific terms and conditions contained in a contract for sale between two parties. In particular, section 2-207 addresses the inclusion of proposed additional terms to a contract absent the express written agreement of the parties.

This appeal from a diversity case in the Eastern District of Wisconsin requires that we determine whether a course of dealing between parties to a contract operated to include proposed additional terms in that contract under Wisconsin’s adopted version of the UCC. 1 We agree with the district court that the additional terms were incorporated into the parties’ contract and affirm.

I

A

During the time relevant to this lawsuit, Industrial Engineering, Inc., which is located in Indiana, machined steel castings into molds for use by Corning Asahi Video Products, a subsidiary of Corning, Inc., in the manufacture of glass television picture tubes. In 1989, Industrial began to order steel east-ings from Waukesha Foundry, Inc., which is located in Wisconsin. In light of Coming’s specifications, Industrial was concerned that the castings supplied by Waukesha be of high quality, particularly with respect to the surface of the castings that was to come in contact with the molten glass during Coming’s production of the picture tubes. This contact surface had to be free of the imperfections or pronounced porosity caused by inclusions or gas bubbles. According to Industrial, such defects were fatal, for Coming’s specifications did not allow for the repair of these defects by welding because the repaired defect would manifest itself on the surface of the picture tube.

Industrial and Waukesha commenced their relationship and entered into a series of contracts for the sale of metal castings. The typical deal was fairly straightforward. Industrial would telephone Waukesha and place an order for a particular number of castings and then fax a confirming purchase order. The parties disagree over whether Waukesha would then send an acknowledgment form confirming the order. 2 After manufacturing the eastings, Waukesha would ship the order to Industrial. It is undisputed that Wauke-sha enclosed with each order a packing slip and followed each shipment with an invoice. Printed on each packing slip and invoice was *1004 a list of terms and conditions of sale, which included the following:

Buyer agrees he has full knowledge of the conditions printed below, and that the same shall be the sole terms and conditions of the agreement between Buyer and Seller and shall be binding if either (1) the goods referred to herein are delivered to and accepted by Buyer, or (2) if Buyer does not within ten days from date of the Seller’s acknowledgment deliver to SeEer written objections to said conditions or any part thereof.

Paragraph eight of the conditions of sale, entitled “Warranty,” reads as follows:

If the products sold hereunder are defective at the time of delivery in material and workmanship and written notice thereof is given to Seller no later than one (1) year (in case of pumps) or ninety (90) days (in case of foam generators and all other products) after shipment to Buyer, Seller, reserving the right to either inspect such defective products in the field or request their prepaid return to Seller will at its option repair or replace or give equitable credit or refund for such products determined by Seller to be defective provided that the products shall not have been altered or repaired by anyone except Seller’s authorized representatives or operated contrary to Seller’s instructions or subjected to misuse, operator negligence or accident. ... IT IS EXPRESSLY AGREED THAT NO WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR USE, NOR ANY OTHER WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, IS MADE BY SELLER HEREUNDER. THE FOREGOING STATES SELLER’S ENTIRE AND EXCLUSIVE LIABILITY AND BUYER’S EXCLUSIVE AND SOLE REMEDY FOR ANY CLAIM OF DAMAGES IN CONNECTION WITH THE SALE OF THE PRODUCTS HEREUNDER. SELLER WILL IN NO EVENT BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES WHATSOEVER. 3

Industrial placed sixty orders with Waukesha between 1989 and 1993, and Waukesha claims that it sent Industrial a total of sixty acknowledgement forms, 234 packing slips, and 234 invoices during this four-year period.

There is evidence that some of the castings contained imperfections requiring repair and that Industrial weld repaired many of these defective castings with Coming’s permission. Mr. Laffkas, Industrial’s president, testified at his deposition that the parties negotiated an arrangement in these cases whereby Industrial would notify Waukesha of the defect and subsequent repair and Waukesha would then give Industrial an equitable credit of 10 percent of the casting’s cost. Mr. Laffkas also testified that if the repairs were unsuccessful, Industrial would return the defective casting to Waukesha for replacement at no additional cost. He noted, however, that Industrial would absorb the costs of its failed repair attempt and of the missed deadlines for delivery to Coming. In any event, -it appears from Mr. Laffkas’s testimony that Industrial availed itself of the remedy provisions contained in Waukesha’s transmitted documents on several occasions.

Neither party has offered a precise assessment of how many defective castings Wauke-sha delivered to Industrial. It appears that Industrial began to track the incidence of faulty castings and to submit documentation to Waukesha identifying faulty castings and seeking credit sometime in 1992. Both parties agree that according to Industrial’s records, 31 percent of the eastings inspected between April and December 1992 were defective. Industrial claims that it requested $30,407.94 in credit but received only $6,050.81 from Waukesha. The last shipment of castings was delivered sometime around early March 1993.

The evidence suggests that the parties operated under an agreement of net payment thirty days after delivery of the castings. However, in August 1992, Waukesha determined that it would no longer extend thirty-day credit to Industrial and notified Industrial that payment would henceforth be “COD.” Mr. Kerwin, Waukesha’s president, stated in *1005 an affidavit that Waukesha decided to change the payment terms because of Industrial’s delayed payments and outstanding invoices in the summer of 1992 totaling more than $250,000. Industrial did not agree to this change of payment terms, and thus ended the relationship. At the time the parties terminated their dealings, Waukesha had manufactured ninety-one castings pursuant to Industrial’s last order, but Waukesha never shipped these castings.

B

Waukesha filed a lawsuit against Industrial in Wisconsin state court on May 12, 1993, alleging that Industrial owed it $256,304.99 on outstanding invoices.

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91 F.3d 1002, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 12, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 18993, 1996 WL 430993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waukesha-foundry-incorporated-v-industrial-engineering-incorporated-ca7-1996.