Case: 17-20709 Document: 00515115827 Page: 1 Date Filed: 09/12/2019
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
September 12, 2019
No. 17-20709
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
BAKER HUGHES PROCESS AND PIPELINE SERVICES, L.L.C.,
Plaintiff - Appellant
v.
UE COMPRESSION, L.L.C.,
Defendant – Appellee
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
Before JONES, HO, and OLDHAM, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
Baker Hughes sued UE Compression for breach of contract and express
and implied warranties after a containerized air booster compressor
manufactured by UE ruptured on the job in Western Australia, injuring a
Baker Hughes contractor (the “Incident”). The district court rejected all of
Baker Hughes’s claims on summary judgment and awarded sanctions to UE
for Baker Hughes’s misplacement and destruction of the allegedly defective
compressor part. Finding no reversible error of law or fact in the court’s
ruling on these and related issues, we AFFIRM.
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BACKGROUND
BJ Process and Pipeline Services (Australia) Pty. Ltd., Baker Hughes’s
predecessor, entered into an agreement in December 2011 for UE to configure
and supply seven containerized air booster compressors for use by Chevron on
its Gorgon project in Western Australia. Baker Hughes used these units in
putting Chevron’s pipeline into service, including dewatering and hydrotesting
functions. In November 2014, Baker Hughes’s contractors were using the
boosters when the drain line on one of the boosters exploded and injured a
Baker Hughes contractor. All seven of the boosters were taken offline while
the Incident was investigated, and Baker Hughes was forced to rent
replacement boosters to fulfill its contract with Chevron. The explosion and
its aftermath cost Baker Hughes millions of dollars.
Baker Hughes filed this suit for breach of express warranty, breach of
implied warranties of merchantability and fitness, and breach of contract.
The company alleged that UE improperly selected a ball valve for the drain
line of the boosters and provided deficient drain line configuration.
The plaintiff’s case turns on the parties’ contract. The entire contract
consists of four documents: (1) the agreement for the supply of the boosters (the
“Supply Agreement”); (2) the LOGIC General Conditions of Contract (the
“LOGIC Terms”) 1; (3) Baker Hughes’s Purchase Specification for Containerized
Air Booster Compressor System (the “Specification”); and (4) UE’s Quote.
The LOGIC Terms of the agreement control unless modified by the Supply
1 The LOGIC Terms constitute a standard contract for the UK Offshore Oil and Gas
Industry, in this case comprising General Conditions of Contract (including Guidance Notes)
for Supply of Major Items of Plant and Equipment.
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Agreement. A choice of law provision mandates that Texas law governs
controversies arising from the contract.
The Supply Agreement states that UE shall provide seven “6425 Nm3/hr
150 Barg booster compressor units,” which “shall be supplied in full compliance
with the [Specification] and [the Quote].” UE’s Quote represents that the
boosters will be designed to meet the performance specifications provided by
Baker Hughes. The LOGIC Terms reinforce the allocation of design
responsibility to Baker Hughes. Section 4.3 of the LOGIC Terms provides
that, “[e]xcept as expressly specified in the Contract [UE] shall not be
responsible for the design of any part of the Permanent Work.” Further,
Section 12.1 of the LOGIC Terms requires Baker Hughes to furnish “technical
information,” including documents and drawings, as necessary to carry out the
manufacture. Baker Hughes retained the right under Section 14.1(a) of the
LOGIC Terms to modify the specifications at any time as the boosters were
being built. For any sketches, drawings, calculations, reports or
recommendations relating to the product that UE might be required to
produce, Baker Hughes required UE to submit those for prior review and
approval, affording Baker Hughes sufficient time to conduct its review.
The express warranty pertinent to the claims at issue is contained in
§ 28 of the LOGIC Terms:
28.1: [UE] warrants and guarantees that it has performed and
shall perform the WORK in accordance with the provisions of the
CONTRACT, and that the PERMANENT WORK will be free from
defects.
28.2: In the event that [Baker Hughes] notifies the CONTRACTOR
[UE] of any defects in the WORK prior to or subsequent to the
COMPLETION DATE in accordance with Clause 27 hereof and
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within the relevant Defects Correction Period or Periods specified
in Appendix 1 to Section I – Form of Agreement, [UE] shall, subject
to the operational requirements of [Baker Hughes] and to the
provisions of Clause 28.3, carry out all works necessary to correct
any defects in the WORK arising from any default of the
CONTRACTOR GROUP.
The relevant appendix sets the defects correction period as “1.5 years after
shipment or 1 year from the date of the first field use of the unit, whichever
occurs first.” The WORK described in this express warranty is defined by the
LOGIC Terms to mean “all work that [UE] is required to carry out in
accordance with the provisions of the CONTRACT, including the provision of
all materials, service and equipment to be rendered in accordance with the
CONTRACT.”
In its complaint, Baker Hughes identified three express warranties that
UE allegedly breached: (1) UE would “perform its obligations under the
Agreement with all due care and diligence and with the skill to be expected of
a reputable, experienced contractor”; (2) the boosters would be “fit for the
purposes specified in the Agreement”; and (3) the boosters would be “free from
defects.” Baker Hughes pled breach of contract based on UE’s failures “to
meet its obligations by, among other things, providing an air booster that
stopped functioning” and “to provide a timely replacement air booster
compressor and to repair and/or replace the other compressor units on site.”
Baker Hughes sought damages including the full sales price of the boosters
(more than $6.8 million), approximately $11 million for losses it allegedly
incurred under its contract with Chevron, and approximately $1.4 million for
replacement booster rental fees.
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The district court granted UE’s motion for summary judgment and
dismissed Baker Hughes’s claims. The district court found that: (1) Section
28.2 of the Agreement was Baker Hughes’s sole remedy for breach of express
warranty; (2) the implied warranty of merchantability is inconsistent with
Section 28.2 and is thus displaced; (3) no implied warranty of fitness for a
particular purpose arose because Baker Hughes provided specifications for the
boosters and the Agreement provided that UE would “not be responsible for
the design” of the boosters; and (4) Baker Hughes’s breach of contract claim,
relating only to the general defectiveness of the boosters, was superseded by
its express warranty claim. 2
UE sought sanctions for its costs resulting from Baker Hughes’s failure
to make the subject ball valve available for inspection by UE’s expert in
Australia as the parties had agreed and for destroying the ball valve before
UE’s expert could inspect it. After an oral hearing, the district court granted
UE’s motion, assessing monetary sanctions and a mandatory adverse-
inference instruction because of Baker Hughes’s destruction of the ball valve.
Baker Hughes moved for a new trial and to reopen the summary
judgment record. In response, the district court agreed that it had erred in
finding as a matter of law that there was no reliance by Baker Hughes that
would give rise to the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose, but
the court ultimately denied Baker Hughes’s motion because the parties’
agreement placed the sole responsibility for the design on Baker Hughes.
Baker Hughes appeals from all adverse rulings and the judgment.
The court accordingly denied as moot Baker Hughes’s and UE’s motions for partial
2
summary judgment.
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STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment should be rendered only if the record demonstrates
that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). This court
reviews the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Haley v.
Townley, 45 F.3d 914, 917 (5th Cir. 1995).
The district court’s order denying Baker Hughes’s motion for new trial
and to reopen the summary judgment record is reviewed for abuse of
discretion. See Templet v. HydroChem Inc., 367 F.3d 473, 477 (5th Cir. 2004).
The district court’s award of sanctions is also reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Guzman v. Jones, 804 F.3d 707, 713 (5th Cir. 2015). A district court abuses
its discretion by assessing sanctions if its ruling is based on an “erroneous view
of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.” Cooter &
Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405 (1990).
DISCUSSION
Breach of contract, breach of express warranty, and breach of implied
warranties for fitness and merchantability are all the subjects of Baker
Hughes’s complaint and its quest to reverse the adverse judgment. We
discuss each theory in turn. Texas law governs this diversity case according
to the parties’ choice of law provision.
1. Breach of contract
Although this is not Baker Hughes’s principal point in briefing, as a
matter of logic the first question we should consider is whether Baker Hughes’s
complaints about the booster may be examined as both a breach of contract
and breach of warranties. Like the district court, we conclude that Baker
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Hughes’s case sounds exclusively in warranty. 3 Breach of contract and
warranty claims are distinct causes of action under Texas law and provide for
different remedies, and Texas law forbids conflating breach of warranty and
breach of contract. Ellis v. Precision Engine Rebuilders, Inc., 68 S.W.3d 894,
897 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002); Med. City Dall., Ltd. v. Carlisle
Corp., 251 S.W.3d 55, 60 (Tex. 2008). A breach of contract claim exists when
“a party fails to deliver the goods as promised.” Omni USA, Inc. v. Parker-
Hannifin Corp., 964 F. Supp. 2d 805, 812 (S.D. Tex. 2013). Damages “are only
permitted under a breach of contract cause of action when the seller has failed
to deliver the goods, the buyer has rejected the goods, or the buyer has revoked
his acceptance.” Luig v. N. Bay Enterprises, Inc., 817 F.3d 901, 906 (5th Cir.
2016) (citing A.O. Smith Corp. v. Elbi S.p.A., 123 F. App’x 617, 619 (5th Cir.
Feb. 22, 2005)). Texas law allows a buyer to revoke acceptance of a good “if
the good was accepted without knowledge of the nonconformity and ‘acceptance
was reasonably induced either by the difficulty of discovery before acceptance
or by the seller’s assurance.’” Id. (citing Toshiba Mach. Co., Am. V. SPM Flow
Control, Inc., 180 S.W.3d 761, 772 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005, pet. granted,
judgm’t vacated w.r.m.)). If a buyer retains and uses, alters, or changes the
goods, it will be found to have accepted them. Bacchus Indus. v. Frontier
Mech. Contractors, 36 S.W.3d 579, 584 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2000, no pet.); see
also Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.606 (describing actions constituting the
3 Aside from ruling that claims for contract breach and warranty do not overlap in
Texas law, the district court faulted Baker Hughes for failing to plead specific contract
sections that it contended were breached. Texas law does not require such specificity.
Bowen v. Robinson, 227 S.W.3d 86, 94 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006). Whether that
matters in a federal diversity case, we need not decide. Baker Hughes’s attempts to put
flesh on the barebones contract breach pleading in this court fall short either way.
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acceptance of goods, including when the buyer “take[s] or retain[s]” the goods
“in spite of their non-conformity” or “does any act inconsistent with the seller’s
ownership” of the goods). Baker Hughes does not attempt to show that UE
failed to deliver the boosters, that Baker Hughes rejected them, or that it
revoked its acceptance. Baker Hughes accepted the boosters, and paid for and
took possession of the boosters after conducting inspections and factory
acceptance tests. 4
The gravamen of Baker Hughes’s complaint instead is that UE
improperly designed the boosters by incorporating a ball valve into the drain
system. As the district court observed, this is best understood as a breach of
warranty claim, which arises when a seller “delivers nonconforming goods.”
Omni USA, 964 F. Supp. 2d at 812; see generally Sw. Bell Tel. Co. v. FDP Corp.,
811 S.W.2d 572, 576 (Tex. 1991) (“The UCC recognizes that breach of contract
and breach of warranty are not the same cause of action. The remedies for
breach of contract are set forth in [Texas Business and Commerce Code] section
2.711, and are available to a buyer ‘where the seller fails to make delivery. . . .’
The remedies for breach of warranty, however, are set forth in section 2.714,
and are available to a buyer who has finally accepted goods, but discovers the
goods are defective in some manner. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.714, § 2.711
(Comment 1).”). Thus, “the critical factor in whether the buyer has a breach
4 This claim also cannot be pursued as a “non-conformity” claim under contract law,
for such a claim can only arise from a breach of contract where the alleged non-conformity
relates to the “specific obligations of the seller under the terms of the contractual agreement.”
Contractor’s Source Inc. v. Hanes Cos., Inc., No. 09-CV-0069, 2009 WL 6443116, 2009 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 126518, *23 (S.D. Tex. Dec. 29, 2009). But Baker Hughes can point to no
contractual provision establishing UE’s specific obligation to use a valve other than a ball
valve.
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of contract or breach of warranty claim is whether the buyer has finally
accepted the goods.” Emerson Elec. Co. v. Am. Permanent Ware Co.,
201 S.W.3d 301, 310 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.) (citing Tex. Bus. & Com.
Code §§ 2.711, 2.714); see also Trident Steel Corp. v. Wiser Oil Co., 223 S.W.3d
520, 526 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2006, pet. denied) (“[I]t is the buyer’s acceptance
or rejection of goods which determines the remedies available to the buyer, not
the seller’s mere delivery of something.”).
Citing this court’s opinion in Reynolds Metals Co. v. Westinghouse Elec.
Corp., 758 F.2d 1073 (5th Cir. 1985), Baker Hughes contends that UE’s
contractual obligations were somehow breached and are actionable in addition
to a warranty claim based on the defective condition of the booster valve or
drainage configuration. In Reynolds Metals, the supplier of an electric
transformer supervised its installation with an allegedly incompetent engineer
whose failure to correctly ground the device contributed to the transformer’s
burning up. Id. at 1075. Thus, a breach of performance occurred separate
from the warranty breach. No such actions apart from the construction of the
boosters are alleged here. Baker Hughes alludes to certain codes and
standards that were allegedly not complied with in the construction of these
boosters, but it accepted the goods, eliminating pre-delivery claims other than
for warranty. To top it off, the express warranty here covers the WORK, a
defined term that expressly includes “services” to be performed by UE; clearly,
“services” must include any design work UE performed under the contract.
Under Texas law, this is a claim for breach of warranty, not breach of
contract.
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2. Express warranty
Section 28 of the LOGIC Terms, titled “Defects Correction,” provides that
UE “warrants and guarantees” that it will perform the subject WORK in accord
with the contractual provisions and that the boosters will be free from defects.
Section 28.2 specifies the period within which defects must be pointed out to
UE and incorporates, at most, an 18-month period from the date of shipment
for such notification. As the district court noted, this provision embodies the
contract’s only warranty language, explicitly uses the term “warrants,” and
sets out procedures necessary for Baker Hughes to have defects corrected. 5
Baker Hughes identifies no other provision of the Agreement that constitutes
an express warranty. Baker Hughes admits it failed to notify UE that the
ball valve was an unsatisfactory component of the drain line before the 18-
month deadline expired. On its face, the warranty period expired and offers
Baker Hughes no remedy.
Baker Hughes contends, however, that the Texas Business and
Commerce Code requires the exclusivity of a contractual remedy to be
expressly stated, otherwise any other remedy is considered optional and
cumulative. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.719(a)(2). Baker Hughes is correct,
but it misstates the holding of the district court. The district court explained
in its order denying a motion for reconsideration that it did not find Section 28
to be the only remedy for any dispute in the agreement. Rather, Section 28 is
the express warranty for defects in the WORK. Because Baker Hughes was
suing for UE’s failure to properly design the boosters, which resulted in a
5 UE asserts that the warranty here was limited under several clauses of Section 28.4
concerning matters like proper operation and specified operating conditions, but we do not
reach those arguments.
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defective product, Section 28 provided the exclusive warranty for defects.
Baker Hughes’s complaint avers that UE provided an air booster that “stopped
functioning.” Section 28 is not the only remedy in the Agreement, but it is the
only remedy for fixing defects in the product that “stopped functioning.” And
to reiterate, the WORK warranted under Section 28.1 includes “services,”
which by its nature includes design “services” furnished by UE.
Second, to overcome the 18-month warranty expiration date with a
general 4-year limitation period referenced elsewhere in the contract, Baker
Hughes argues that the LOGIC Terms include other express warranties, such
as Sections 4.1, 4.2, and 9.2. But those terms merely outline UE’s general
obligations under the contract. For example, Baker Hughes claims that
pursuant to Section 4.2, if UE designed any part of the boosters, it must do so
“with all due care and diligence,” in such a way that the boosters would be “fit
for the purposes specified in the CONTRACT.” This provision applies to
design services, however, only if UE had express responsibility for design in
accord with Section 4.3; Baker Hughes has not offered evidence confirming
UE’s design responsibility for the drain system on the boosters. In any event,
this provision makes no express affirmation or promise that the boosters would
be free from defects. Likewise, Section 9.2, which requires that personnel
employed by UE be “competent, properly qualified, skilled, and experienced in
accordance with good industry practice,” and Section 4.1, which requires UE
to provide adequate personnel, equipment, and facilities to manufacture the
boosters, state generalities different from any express affirmation of the
quality of the end products. Important as these provisions are, they do not
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call into question that Section 28 provided Baker Hughes with its sole remedy
for defective WORK.
The boosters were shipped in March 2013, triggering commencement of
the warranty period, and 20 months later, the Incident occurred in late
November 2014. Baker Hughes did not notify UE timely under Section 28 to
trigger the warranty. Consequently, the express warranty for defects
correction expired, taking with it Baker Hughes’s remedy for the defective
booster.
3. Implied warranties
Baker Hughes also contends that UE breached the implied warranties of
merchantability and fitness for a particular use. Tex. Bus. & Comm. Code
§§ 2.314, 2.315. Baker Hughes adds that these warranties should apply to
the Agreement because, under Texas law, implied warranties may not be
disclaimed unless the intention to do so is clearly and conspicuously expressed.
See Tex. Bus. & Comm. Code § 2.316. Further, the implied warranties would
be actionable within a statutory four-year statute of limitations rather than
the 18-month period of the Section 28 express warranty. UE responds, and
the district court agreed, that the implied warranties were displaced by
Section 28’s express warranty and by Section 4.3’s complete allocation of
responsibility for the boosters’ design to Baker Hughes. 6 We agree with UE.
Texas Bus. & Com. Code § 2.316 permits the exclusion or modification of
warranties in connection with a sale of goods, subject to qualifications: a
written disclaimer or modification of implied warranties must be conspicuous,
6 To re-emphasize, Section 4.3 states: “Except as expressly specified in the Contract
[UE] shall not be responsible for the design of any part of the PERMANENT WORK.”
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and, if applicable, must mention “merchantability” explicitly. Tex. Bus. &
Comm. Code § 2.316(b). 7 No language in the parties’ Agreement purports to
exclude or modify either implied warranty, and nowhere is the implied
warranty of merchantability mentioned. However, Comment 9 describes an
exception to these requirements where the parties’ agreement does not require
protection of the buyer, and implied warranties may nevertheless be excluded
by other contractual terms:
The situation in which the buyer gives precise and complete
specifications to the seller is not explicitly covered in this section,
but this is a frequent circumstance by which the implied
warranties may be excluded. The warranty of fitness for a
particular purpose would not normally arise since in such a
situation there is usually no reliance on the seller by the buyer.
The warranty of merchantability in such a transaction, however,
must be considered in connection with the next section on the
cumulation and conflict of warranties. Under paragraph (c) of
that section in case of such an inconsistency the implied warranty
of merchantability is displaced by the express warranty that the
goods will comply with the specifications. Thus, where the buyer
gives detailed specifications as to the goods, neither of the implied
warranties as to quality will normally apply to the transaction
unless consistent with the specifications.
Tex. Bus & Com. Code § 2.316 (Comment 9). It appears that Texas courts
have not considered how to apply Comment 9, but the Third Circuit addressed
precisely this question when it interpreted New Jersey’s identical Uniform
7 Subsection (c) indicates that this rule does not apply where certain explicit
expressions, examination of the goods by the buyer or refusal to so examine, or the course of
dealing, course of performance, or usage of trade, displace the implied warranties. Because
Comment 9 directly contemplates the facts of this case, this court need not reach whether
Subsection (c) independently excludes the implied warranties here.
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Commercial Code provision and Comment 9. See New Jersey Transit Corp. v.
Harsco Corp., 497 F.3d 323, 328–30 (3rd Cir. 2007).
In New Jersey Transit, the court found no implied warranties according
to Comment 9 where the Transit Company included dozens of pages of
specifications in its purchase agreement for a track geometry inspection
vehicle. Id. at 324-25. As the Third Circuit recognized, Comment 9
envisions the scenario involved here–where Baker Hughes, a sophisticated
purchaser, has provided detailed specifications for UE to implement. This is
the type of situation where the implied warranties are excluded. The implied
warranty of fitness for a particular purpose does not arise because this
Agreement included 18 single-space pages of Baker Hughes’s Specification and
a 21-page responsive set of specifications comprising UE’s Quote. Baker
Hughes ordered exactly what it required in the boosters. Other contractual
provisions cited above confirm Baker Hughes’s ultimate responsibility for the
design, its duty to supply technical information, its ability to modify specs
during the fabrication, and its right to approve any drawings or specifications
prepared by UE. 8
8 Baker Hughes does not address New Jersey Transit. Instead, Baker Hughes
simply points out that the district court, although initially influenced by Comment 9, later
determined that fact questions exist as to whether the specifications Baker Hughes provided
were precise and complete and whether there was no reliance by Baker Hughes on UE’s
discretion. Initially, we note that New Jersey Transit resolved the exclusion of an implied
warranty of fitness under Comment 9 on review of a summary judgment. In any event,
Baker Hughes fails to account for the Agreement’s disclaimer of any responsibility on the
part of UE for the Boosters’ design and the requirement for Baker Hughes to provide or agree
to specifications with which UE was required to comply. Regardless of whether Baker
Hughes’s specifications were complete to the last nut and bolt, Baker Hughes assumed final
responsibility for the design. See School Supply Serv. Co. v. J.H. Henney & Co., 410 F.2d
481, 483 (5th Cir. 1969) (citing Comment 9 and finding that “in order for there to be an
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Under Comment 9, the analysis due the implied warranty of
merchantability, however, requires a further step: it “must be considered in
connection with the next section on the cumulation and conflict of warranties
[2.317],” and “under paragraph (c) of that section” the implied warranty of
merchantability is displaced if there is an inconsistency between the implied
warranty and the express warranty that the goods will comply with the
specifications. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 2.316 (Comment 9). Section 2.317,
in turn, provides that:
Warranties whether express or implied shall be construed as
consistent with each other and as cumulative, but if such
construction is unreasonable the intention of the parties shall
determine which warranty is dominant. In ascertaining that
intention the following rules apply: . . . (3) Express warranties
displace inconsistent implied warranties other than an implied
warranty of fitness for a particular purpose.
Id. § 2.317. The relevant analysis for exclusion of the implied warranty of
merchantability considers whether the implied warranty and the contractual
express warranty are consistent, and this court must construe the warranties
as consistent and cumulative, unless such a construction is unreasonable.
Baker Hughes asserts that the warranties are cumulative, because the
implied warranty of merchantability applies to the condition of goods at the
time of delivery, while the express warranty in Section 28 guarantees that the
boosters would be free of defects for a period of time past delivery. 9 Baker
implied warranty of the sufficiency of the design, the seller must be responsible for the design”)
(emphasis added).
9 Baker Hughes additionally argues that whether a good is merchantable is a
different question from whether a good has defects, since a good can be unmerchantable even
though undefective. But this court need not address whether merchantability is distinct
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Hughes relies on Dickerson v. Mountain View Equip. Co., 710 P.2d 621 (Idaho
Ct. App. 1985) and S-C Industries v. American Hydroponics System, Inc.,
468 F.2d 852 (5th Cir. 1972) (per curiam). Both cases are distinguishable.
In Dickerson, an express warranty that covered a used tractor’s defects arising
post-sale was held not to supersede an implied warranty of merchantability.
710 P.2d at 625–26. In S-C Industries, an express warranty based on a
discrete metric, the strength of a structure, was held not to supersede the
implied warranty of merchantability. 468 F.2d at 855. Section 28 differs
from the express warranties in those cases; it covers defects in the work at the
time of delivery, and additionally indicates that if there is a defect, UE will
“carry out all works necessary to correct any defects in the WORK arising from
any default of the CONTRACTOR GROUP [UE].” Since UE’s involvement in
the design of the boosters terminated at delivery, the only defects that could
“arise from any default” of UE are those contained in the boosters at the time
of delivery.
Because the express and implied warranties cover the same
performance—that the boosters would be free of defects at the time of
delivery—but are inconsistent as to time limitations, the implied warranty is
displaced as envisioned by Comment 9. 10 See N.J. Transit, 497 F.3d at 329
(where express warranty and implied warranty of merchantability differed
from whether a good lacks defects because Baker Hughes asserts no other ground of
unmerchantability other than a defect in the boosters.
10 Baker Hughes argues that because the remedy period applies up to 18 months after
shipment or 1 year from the field test, this was a warranty by UE that the boosters would be
free of defects past the time of delivery. But this misreads Section 28, which still applies
only to defects attributable to UE, whose involvement terminated at delivery.
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only as to the period of time applicable to each, it would be “unreasonable” to
conclude that the longer implied warranty was controlling).
4. Sanctions
Baker Hughes challenges the monetary sanction awarded against it. 11
The district court sanctioned Baker Hughes for fees and costs involved when
UE sent an expert to Australia to inspect the ball valve that allegedly
malfunctioned in the booster. Baker Hughes refused to ship it to Houston and
instead, experts for both parties planned to inspect the ball valve in Australia
at Baker Hughes’s facility. Once there, neither expert could inspect the ball
valve because Baker Hughes did not produce it. Eventually, Baker Hughes
shipped the valve to Utah, although in a further damaged state because of
storage conditions. The district court found that the trip to Australia was
“frustrated” but not “completely wasted” and so awarded partial expenses and
attorneys’ fees.
Baker Hughes does not argue that the court’s decision was based on a
“clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.” Instead, the company
contends that the sanctions constituted an abuse of discretion because Baker
Hughes eventually shipped the valve to UE’s expert in the United States. But
given that Baker Hughes’s delay still wasted a portion of the UE expert’s
Australia trip, there was no abuse of discretion.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
11 This court need not reach the related spoliation issue, and Baker Hughes’s cross-
motion for summary judgment on consequential damages is mooted by this opinion.
17