Vol. 71, No. 7,
July 1998
Resolving Commercial Disputes
Drawing the Line Between
Contract and Tort Theories
Under the Economic Loss Doctrine
By Ronald R. Ragatz
Over the last decade, the Wisconsin Supreme Court has been refining the
roles of contract law and tort law in resolving commercial disputes. On
Feb. 26, 1998, the supreme court took another major step in that process,
ruling in Daanen & Janssen Inc. v. Cedarapids
Inc. that Wisconsin's economic loss doctrine precludes tort claims
by a commercial purchaser of a product against the manufacturer, even where
there is no privity between the manufacturer and the purchaser.1 This decision
helps define the rights of manufacturers, sellers, and commercial purchasers
of products. It also leads to questions about where the supreme court will
apply the doctrine next.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court's recent decision on the economic loss doctrine
- Daanen & Janssen Inc. v. Cedarapids Inc. - helps define the
rights of manufacturers, sellers, and commercial purchasers of products.
The question now is, where will the supreme court apply the doctrine next? |
Economic loss doctrine
The economic loss doctrine precludes a commercial purchaser of a product
from suing the seller in tort for solely "economic losses" where
there is no personal injury or damage to property other than to the product
itself or the machine of which it is a component. "Economic loss"
is damage resulting from a product being inferior in quality or not working
for its intended purposes.2
It includes loss in value of the product itself and consequential losses
such as lost profits.
The privity issue
When the Wisconsin Supreme Court first adopted the economic loss doctrine
in 1989, it left open the question of whether the doctrine applies where
the purchaser and the defendant are not in privity of contract. In Sunnyslope
Grading Inc. v. Miller, Bradford and Risberg,3 a commercial purchaser of backhoe
equipment sued the manufacturer in tort, alleging negligence and strict
product liability. The purchaser had received a manufacturer's warranty
on the equipment and, thus, the manufacturer and purchaser were in privity.
The supreme court held that the tort claims were barred by the economic
loss doctrine.
In adopting the economic loss doctrine, the Sunnyslope court followed
the reasoning of the 1986 U.S. Supreme Court decision in East
River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval Inc.4 In East River the
court reasoned that a manufacturer has no duty in tort to prevent a product
from injuring itself and that claims for such damages should be addressed
under contract theories, not tort theories.5
It based the economic loss doctrine on fundamental distinctions between
tort law and contract law, and did not mention privity.
However, the Sunnyslope court confined its ruling to the question
directly before it, that is whether the doctrine barred economic losses
between commercial parties where there was a warranty between the parties.
Two years later, the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Northridge Co. v. W.R.
Grace & Co. again considered the economic loss doctrine and again
discussed the fundamental distinctions between tort and contract law.6 However, the
court did not have occasion to address the privity issue, since it concluded
that the economic loss doctrine did not apply for other reasons.
In the meantime, federal courts applying Wisconsin law predicted that
the Wisconsin Supreme Court would apply the economic loss doctrine even
in the absence of privity.7
Daanen & Janssen background
In 1991 Daanen & Janssen purchased from a local dealer a replacement
component part for its rock crushing machine. The component was manufactured
by Cedarapids, but Daanen & Janssen never received a manufacturer's
warranty.
Daanen & Janssen claimed that over the next three years the crushing
machine had multiple breakdowns caused by defects in the component. The
breakdowns did not cause any personal injury or damage to property other
than the crushing machine. The only damages claimed were repair costs and
lost profits, totaling several hundred thousand dollars.
Daanen & Janssen sued Cedarapids in tort, including negligence and
strict liability claims. Cedarapids moved for summary judgment, arguing
that the claims were barred by Wisconsin's economic loss doctrine. Summary
judgment was granted in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District
of Wisconsin, and Daanen & Janssen appealed to the Seventh Circuit.
The sole issue on appeal was whether Wisconsin's economic loss doctrine
applies where there is no privity between the plaintiff purchaser and the
defendant manufacturer. The Seventh Circuit certified the following question
of state law to the Wisconsin Supreme Court:
"In the absence of privity, does the economic loss doctrine bar
a remote commercial purchaser from recovering economic losses from a manufacturer
under theories of strict liability and negligence?"
The Daanen & Janssen
decision
The Wisconsin Supreme Court answered the certified question in the affirmative,
ruling that Wisconsin's economic loss doctrine applies in the absence of
privity. In a unanimous decision authored by Justice Donald Steinmetz, the
court provided a thorough analysis of the principles underlying the economic
loss doctrine:
"Application of the economic loss doctrine to tort actions between
commercial parties is generally based on three policies, none of which is
affected by the presence or absence of privity between the parties: (1)
to maintain the fundamental distinction between tort law and contract law;
(2) to protect commercial parties' freedom to allocate economic risk by
contract; and (3) to encourage the party best situated to assess the risk
of economic loss, the commercial purchaser, to assume, allocate, or insure
against that risk."8
With respect to the first policy, the concept of duty is at the heart
of the distinction drawn by the economic loss doctrine. Contract law seeks
to hold commercial parties to their promises, ensuring that each party receives
the benefit of its bargain, while tort law is rooted in the concept of protecting
society as a whole from physical harm to persons or property. Therefore,
a "manufacturer in a commercial relationship has no duty under either
negligence or strict liability theories to prevent a product from injuring
itself."9
Second, the economic loss doctrine protects commercial parties' freedom
to contract. The marketplace operates best when commercial parties are free
to factor risk allocation into their agreements. Commercial purchasers can
opt for warranty protections at a higher price or can choose to bargain
for a lower price and accept the risk of product failure. However, if a
purchaser that has chosen the lower price without a warranty can resort
to tort remedies in the event of product failure, then the bargain is frustrated.
Manufacturers would have to build the cost of such risks into the price
of all their products and the freedom to allocate risks by contract would
be impaired.
Finally, as a corollary to the second policy, the economic loss doctrine
encourages the party with the best understanding of the risks of economic
loss - the commercial purchaser - to assume, allocate, or insure against
the risk of loss caused by a defective product. The doctrine thus promotes
efficiency and predictability in commercial relationships by basing liability
solely on contract. Permitting tort theories for recovery of economic losses
in commercial transactions would "make the manufacturer of products
potentially liable for unbargained-for and unexpected risks."10
The court rejected arguments by Daanen & Janssen that applying the
economic loss doctrine in the absence of privity would be unfair and contrary
to public policy because it would leave a purchaser like Daanen & Janssen
with no remedy against the manufacturer. The doctrine is intended to encourage
commercial parties to negotiate protections at the time of the purchase,
and permitting tort remedies after the fact would "allow an end run
around contract law and would all but destroy the economic loss doctrine."11
Impact of Daanen & Janssen
This decision has a real impact for commercial manufacturers, distributors,
and dealers in Wisconsin. In today's marketplace, few products are sold
directly by the manufacturer. Rather, most transactions involve intermediaries
of some sort - dealers, distributors, or retailers.
If there were a privity exception to the economic loss doctrine, a purchaser
could opt for a lower price rather than pay for a manufacturer's warranty
and then could fall back on tort remedies if a problem arose. After Daanen
& Janssen, the purchaser now has the incentive to bargain for a
manufacturer's warranty because without one, the purchaser probably will
be left with no remedy at all against the manufacturer.
The decision also alters the dynamics between dealer and purchaser and
between dealer and manufacturer. If the purchaser could sue the manufacturer
in tort, contract remedies against the dealer might be of secondary importance.
Now, the contractual relationship between the purchaser and the dealer generally
will be the focus of any product failure claims, if there is no manufacturer's
warranty. The dealer either must bargain for limitations of remedies with
the purchaser or make sure that its contract remedies against the manufacturer
are preserved so that it can pass the liabilities up the chain of distribution.
The Daanen & Janssen decision should provide the incentives
that the supreme court envisioned. It provides motivation for all of the
commercial parties to think about and allocate risks in the sale of products.
It is the natural completion of what the court began nine years ago when
it adopted the doctrine in Sunnyslope for product liability. The
question now is whether the court will apply the same principles in areas
beyond product liability.
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