NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 19a0587n.06
Case No. 18-2253
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
Dec 04, 2019
CROSSING AT EAGLE POND )
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
APARTMENTS, LLC, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
v. ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF
) MICHIGAN
LUBRIZOL CORPORATION; LUBRIZOL )
ADVANCED MATERIALS, INC., )
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
BEFORE: CLAY, STRANCH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
MURPHY, Circuit Judge. When a buyer has purchased a defective good but has suffered
only “economic” (as opposed to “physical”) injuries as a result, the buyer typically cannot avoid
the contractual limits on the remedies available against the seller by bringing a tort suit rather than
a contract suit. Instead, the buyer must protect itself at the time of the parties’ contract negotiations
by demanding warranties or similar safeguards against the risk that the product turns out to be a
lemon. This principle, known as the “economic-loss doctrine,” has been Michigan law since at
least Neibarger v. Universal Cooperatives, Inc., 486 N.W.2d 612 (Mich. 1992).
We must decide whether the doctrine applies to an apartment building’s leaky pipes. The
Crossing at Eagle Pond, LLC (“Eagle Pond”) owns the building that suffered the pipe failures. It
blames Lubrizol Advanced Materials, Inc., and its parent company for the leaks. (We refer to the
Case No. 18-2253, Crossing at Eagle Pond Apartments, LLC v. Lubrizol Corp., et al.
defendants collectively as “Lubrizol” because their corporate distinction does not matter to our
outcome.) Eagle Pond brought a products-liability suit against Lubrizol, alleging that it sold a
defective chemical compound to the manufacturer that made the building’s pipes and that this
compound caused the pipe failures. The district court found that the economic-loss doctrine barred
this tort suit and granted summary judgment to Lubrizol. On appeal, Eagle Pond offers various
reasons why the economic-loss doctrine should not apply: it did not have a contract with Lubrizol;
this case involves real property, not goods; and the leaks caused damage to more than just the
pipes. Because we think the Michigan Supreme Court would reject these arguments, we affirm.
I.
Located on the outskirts of Detroit in Walled Lake, Michigan, the Crossing at Eagle Pond
Apartments (the “Apartments”) contains 201 units over four floors. This apartment building has
changed hands several times over the years. A family initially constructed the Apartments in the
late 1990s. But the lender that fronted the construction costs eventually foreclosed on this family,
and Walled Lake Granite LLC bought the Apartments out of the ensuing receivership. In October
2011, five limited liability companies (the “LLCs”) owned by the Bleznak Real Estate Investment
Group purchased the Apartments from Walled Lake Granite through a “like-kind exchange”
involving another property. In January 2016, the Bleznak Group created Eagle Pond and
transferred the Apartments from the LLCs to this new entity, although the owners retained the
same ownership shares in the Apartments after this transfer.
Before the LLCs purchased the Apartments, Walled Lake Granite informed the LLCs’
owners, including Adam Bleznak, that the building had suffered plumbing leaks. While Bleznak
and the other owners thought that this “was a problem that [they] were going to have to deal with,”
they “didn’t feel that it was a big enough problem . . . to walk away from closing the deal.” They
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Case No. 18-2253, Crossing at Eagle Pond Apartments, LLC v. Lubrizol Corp., et al.
“did not hire a master plumber” or investigate the leaks in detail. Rather, they were “comfortable
that anything that would come up in the future, [they] would be able to remedy,” believing that the
leaks represented “normal property management challenges.”
Their belief proved mistaken. The pipes suffered what Bleznak described as “four major
failures” within two years. The first occurred almost immediately after the LLCs bought the
building in October 2011. In June 2013, after the fourth leak, the LLCs’ owners realized that they
had a larger problem and decided to replace all of the building’s pipes at a price tag of $545,739.
The company that the LLCs hired to conduct the replacement work recommended that an engineer
test the old pipes to identify the source of their problems. According to Eagle Pond, which was
assigned the LLCs’ rights after the ownership transfer, those tests revealed that the pipes had
become brittle and that their “embrittlement” had caused the failures.
This finding led Eagle Pond to Lubrizol. Lubrizol makes “chlorinated polyvinyl chloride”
resins and compounds for use in plumping pipes and fittings. It sells its compounds to pipe
manufacturers, not to downstream contractors or consumers. Eagle Pond believed that the
materials Lubrizol provided to the manufacturer that made the Apartments’ pipes caused their
“defective embrittlement.” It brought a products-liability suit against Lubrizol in Michigan state
court. The complaint sought, among other damages, “the cost of replacing the piping throughout
the apartment complex.” After removing this suit to federal court on the basis of diversity
jurisdiction, Lubrizol moved for summary judgment. Lubrizol argued that the economic-loss
doctrine barred Eagle Pond’s tort suit and that any potential contract claim had expired under the
Uniform Commercial Code’s statute of repose. Lubrizol added that, even if the economic-loss
doctrine did not apply, Michigan’s three-year statute of limitations for products-liability claims
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had run. The district court agreed on all fronts. Eagle Pond now appeals all of these rulings, but
we can resolve this appeal on the basis of the economic-loss doctrine alone.
II.
Michigan’s economic-loss doctrine prohibits buyers from bringing tort suits against sellers
for economic losses arising from the product that the parties exchanged in a commercial context.
See Neibarger v. Universal Coops., Inc., 486 N.W.2d 612, 615 (Mich. 1992). The phrase
“economic loss” generally refers to non-physical commercial losses (like the money spent on a
faulty product or the lost sales caused by its poor performance) in contrast to the injuries that have
long been the central domain of tort law: physical injuries “to the plaintiff’s person or property
(property other than the product itself).” Miller v. U.S. Steel Corp., 902 F.2d 573, 574 (7th Cir.
1990).
Courts developed the economic-loss doctrine to keep a clear line between tort and contract
law, two common-law areas that serve distinct purposes. On the one hand, tort law imposes duties
of care that all people owe to each other (whether or not they have a contractual relationship) in
order to discourage negligent conduct and the physical injuries that it can cause. See Neibarger,
486 N.W.2d at 615. Designed to ameliorate the “accident problem,” McCann v. Brody-Built
Const. Co., 496 N.W.2d 349, 352 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992) (Griffin, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part), tort law generally does not allow parties to reallocate through their contracts
the substantive legal rules that it creates. See Detroit Edison Co. v. NABCO, Inc., 35 F.3d 236,
239 (6th Cir. 1994). On the other hand, contract law “operates on the premise that commercial
actors, because of their ability to bargain for the terms of the sale, will be able to allocate the risks
and costs of a product’s potential nonperformance.” Id. Thus, contracting parties, through their
negotiations, generally may allocate either to the buyer or to the seller the economic risk that a
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product will “prove[] to be faulty.” Neibarger, 486 N.W.2d at 616. If the buyer believes that it
can more cheaply ensure against that risk through private insurance, it can agree to “disclaimers”
or a “limitation of remedies” in exchange for a lower price. See id. If the buyer cannot do so, it
can seek “warranties” from the seller in exchange for a higher price. See id.
The economic-loss doctrine responds to the reality that one of these two bodies of law (tort)
is not subject to the party’s negotiations whereas the other one (contract) is. If a disgruntled buyer
could avoid the contract’s allocation of the risk that a product will turn out to be defective by suing
in tort when the product fails, tort law’s duties of care would erode the areas over which the parties
may bargain. Id. at 618. What rational seller would give a price discount to the buyer for bearing
the risk of a product’s poor performance if the buyer could simply claim a breach of tort law’s
non-negotiable duties whenever that risk came about? By barring tort recoveries for economic
harms, the doctrine preserves a “negotiation zone” in which the parties may bargain—allowing
them to allocate the risk of “economic” losses as they see fit (without worrying that tort law will
later upend the deal). See Tyson v. Sterling Rental, Inc., 836 F.3d 571, 581–82 (6th Cir. 2016). In
short, the economic-loss doctrine prevents “contract law [from] drown[ing] in a sea of tort.” East
River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc., 476 U.S. 858, 866 (1986).
In at least two ways, Michigan courts have broadened the economic-loss doctrine beyond
the “paradigmatic” case of a buyer who contracts with a seller for a poor product and then seeks
to use tort law to obtain a refund of the purchase price.
Expansion One: In Michigan, the economic-loss doctrine bars tort claims that seek to
recover not just for losses to the product itself but also for foreseeable losses to other property.
Neibarger, 486 N.W.2d at 619–20. When adopting this broader rule, the Michigan Supreme Court
reasoned that, “[i]n many cases, failure of the product to perform as expected will necessarily cause
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damage to other property.” Id. at 620. The court thus sought to allow commercial parties to
negotiate over which side will bear the risk of this additional property damage and incorporate that
risk allocation into the contract price. See id. Applying this rule, the court held that a dairy farm
that contracted for what turned out to be a defective milking system could not recover in tort for
the injuries that the system caused the dairy farm’s cows (the “other property”). See id. at 620–
21.
Expansion Two: A long line of Michigan cases has applied the economic-loss doctrine to
bar a commercial plaintiff’s tort suit against a product manufacturer even though the plaintiff did
not directly contract with the manufacturer. See Fed. Ins. Co. v. Conbraco Indus., Inc., Nos.
274351, 274421, 2008 WL 1959059, at *2–3 (Mich. Ct. App. May 6, 2008) (per curiam); MASB-
SEG Prop./Cas. Pool v. Metalux, 586 N.W.2d 549, 551, 553–54 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998); Citizens
Ins. Co. v. Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc., 585 N.W.2d 314, 316 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998); Affiliated
FM Ins. Co. ex rel. Motor City Stamping, Inc. v. Abolite Lighting, Inc., No. 193016, 1998 WL
1997669, at *3 & n.8, *9 (Mich. Ct. App. Mar. 20, 1998) (per curiam); Sullivan Indus., Inc. v.
Double Seal Glass Co., 480 N.W.2d 623, 628–29 (Mich. Ct. App. 1991). While “a series of
commercial decisions and transactions” separated the commercial plaintiff from the commercial
defendant in these cases, Conbraco Indus., 2008 WL 1959059, at *3, the courts still rejected tort
suits seeking economic losses because “it would poorly serve the commercial expectations
bolstered by the [doctrine] to permit a tort recovery when each transaction in the series of events
had a commercial nature,” Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Butler Mfg. Co., No. 240463, 2003 WL 22204734,
at *1 (Mich. Ct. App. Sept. 23, 2003) (per curiam). The doctrine’s purpose (to give parties the
ability to negotiate over the risk of a faulty product) holds in this setting because the commercial
plaintiff may protect itself through “ordinary contractual remedies,” Conbraco Indus., 2008 WL
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1959059, at *3, even if those remedies run against an entity in the distribution chain other than the
manufacturer itself. Cf. Rardin v. T & D. Mach. Handling, Inc., 890 F.2d 24, 28 (7th Cir. 1989).
Michigan courts, for example, have applied this principle to a commercial real-estate
owner’s tort suit alleging that its real estate was harmed by a defective product added to the
property. See MASB-SEG, 586 N.W.2d at 553–54; Citizens Ins., 585 N.W.2d at 316. Citizens
Insurance provides the best example. There, the plaintiff, a restaurant owner’s insurer, sued a
manufacturer of flame-retardant chemicals in tort, claiming that the chemicals caused the
restaurant’s roof to collapse. 585 N.W.2d at 315. The restaurant owner had contracted with a
builder that, in turn, had used the defendant’s chemicals on the roof. Id. The insurer argued that
the economic-loss doctrine should not apply because the restaurant owner did not contract with
the chemical manufacturer and so “was not in a position to negotiate the terms of the sale.” Id. at
316. The state court disagreed. Id. It held that the economic-loss doctrine barred a tort suit
because the owner was a “commercial business” and the defendant sold its products “for
commercial purposes.” Id. Thus, the “exclusive” remedy was in contract. Id.
The logic of these Michigan cases extends to Eagle Pond’s tort suit too. To begin with,
Eagle Pond sued for economic losses (the cost of replacing the pipes) and for the harm that the
pipe failures caused to nearby property. Both types of damages fall within Michigan’s economic-
loss doctrine. See Neibarger, 486 N.W.2d at 620. Indeed, when the Michigan Supreme Court
held that commercial parties can predict that defective products may cause damage to other
property, it listed as an example a “leaking roof” that “caused water damage to other parts of an
apartment building.” Id. at 620 & n.27 (citing Chicago Heights Venture v. Dynamit Nobel of Am.,
Inc., 782 F.2d 723 (7th Cir. 1986)). Replace the roof with the pipes and that case might as well be
this one.
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In addition, while Eagle Pond did not have a contract with Lubrizol, it does not dispute that
every party connecting it (and the LLCs) to Lubrizol was a commercial entity. The LLCs bought
the Apartments for a commercial purpose and could have negotiated with Walled Lake Granite
during the deal to protect themselves from any defects on the premises. See Citizens Ins., 585
N.W.2d at 316. Yet when the LLCs’ owners learned of potential plumbing problems, they opted
to close the deal apparently without obtaining any warranties from Walled Lake Granite. The
economic-loss doctrine would apply to Lubrizol’s initial sale to the pipe manufacturer, and
Michigan courts have not allowed a downstream commercial purchaser to avoid the doctrine
merely because of “the fortuity of a resale” of the product. Motor City Stamping, 1998 WL
1997669, at *9–10. Where, as here, each party in the distribution chain could have protected itself
through contract, the doctrine applies in Michigan even if the “chain of commercial transactions”
is a long one. Cincinnati Ins., 2003 WL 22204734, at *2.
Eagle Pond offers several rejoinders, all of which are foreclosed by Michigan precedent.
First, it argues that it purchased an apartment building, not a product, and that the economic-loss
doctrine should not cover real-estate purchases because they fall outside the Uniform Commercial
Code. The Michigan Supreme Court has yet to opine on whether the doctrine extends to real-
estate deals. Compare Flynn v. Damal, No. 1:98-cv-483, 1999 WL 35655608, at *5–6 (W.D.
Mich. Aug. 6, 1999), and McCann, 496 N.W.2d at 351–52 (Griffin, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part), with Encana Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Zaremba Family Farms, Inc., No. 1:12-cv-369,
2013 WL 12177022, at *13 (W.D. Mich. Dec. 3, 2013). But we need not make a prediction about
how it would rule on that issue.
Even assuming the economic-loss doctrine does not cover real-estate contracts, Michigan
cases have looked to the defendant’s sale—not the plaintiff’s purchase—when deciding whether
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to apply the doctrine. As noted, Michigan courts have refused to allow real-estate owners to
recover for property damage caused by a product added to the land. MASB-SEG, 586 N.W.2d at
553–54 (technology center); Citizens Ins., 585 N.W.2d at 316 (restaurant); Motor City Stamping,
1998 WL 1997669, at *6–9 (manufacturing building). These cases did not consider whether the
economic-loss doctrine applied to real-estate sales because the defendant in each case sold a
product. MASB-SEG, 586 N.W.2d at 553–54 (fluorescent light); Citizens Ins., 585 N.W.2d at 316
(flame-retardant chemical); Motor City Stamping, 1998 WL 1997669, at *6–9 (light fixture and
component parts). This reasoning reaches this case. Eagle Pond seeks to recover for damages to
real estate (the Apartments) based on Lubrizol’s sale of a product (a chemical compound).
Second, Eagle Pond argues that the real-estate owners in these cases themselves purchased
the defective product that was incorporated into their real estate (even if they did not purchase it
directly from the manufacturer), whereas a different real-estate owner, not Eagle Pond, purchased
the defective pipes that made their way into the Apartments. This distinction is factually mistaken
and legally irrelevant. Factually, Eagle Pond’s argument does not distinguish Michigan cases in
which the plaintiff itself did not add the defendant’s allegedly defective product to the real estate.
Like Eagle Pond, for example, the real-estate owner in Motor City Stamping bought the
manufacturing building only after a prior owner had added the defective light fixtures to the
building, but the court applied the economic-loss doctrine nonetheless. 1998 WL 1997669, at *1,
*6; see also Cincinnati Ins., 2003 WL 22204734, at *1–2.
Legally, Eagle Pond fails to explain why its factual distinction should matter for purposes
of the economic-loss doctrine. Were we to accept its view, a real-estate owner who uncovers that
a defective product has been incorporated into its property could sell the property to allow the new
purchaser to avoid the economic-loss doctrine that would otherwise apply to the damages that the
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product caused. Yet Eagle Pond does not explain why a manufacturer’s liability in tort should
depend on this mere “fortuity of a resale.” Motor City Stamping, 1998 WL 1997669, at *9. The
economic-loss doctrine exists to allow parties to arrange their affairs through contract, and the
LLCs in this case could have protected themselves through their contract with Walled Lake
Granite. That exchange provided the “potential contractual relief” that Michigan’s economic-loss
doctrine requires. Cincinnati Ins., 2003 WL 22204734, at *2.
Eagle Pond’s two contrary cases do not create a different rule. Quest Diagnostics, Inc. v.
MCI WorldCom, Inc., 656 N.W.2d 858 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002), held that the economic-loss doctrine
did not apply to an “accident” that fell within tort’s traditional domain. When doing underground
work, the defendants ruptured a water main and left many individuals and businesses without
water. Id. at 860 & n.1. No chain of contracts connected the defendant’s sale of goods to the
plaintiffs. In fact, there “was ‘no underlying sale of goods’” at all. SEMCO Energy, Inc. v. Eclipse,
Inc., No. 306644, 2012 WL 6049655, at *4 n.4 (Mich. Ct. App. Dec. 4, 2012) (per curiam) (quoting
Quest, 656 N.W.2d at 863). In this case, by contrast, Lubrizol did sell a product, and a chain of
contracts connects it to Eagle Pond—even if the last “link[s]” in the chain were real-estate deals.
Cincinnati Ins., 2003 WL 22204734, at *2. This case is thus like Cincinnati Insurance and Motor
City Stamping, not Quest.
Eagle Pond fares no better with River House at Bridgewater Place Condominium
Association v. Bridgewater Condos, L.C., No. 14-03282-NZB, 2014 Mich. Cir. LEXIS 157 (Mich.
Cir. Ct. Dec. 12, 2014). There, a trial court held that the economic-loss doctrine did not apply
when condominium owners sued a pipe manufacturer after pipes in the condominiums leaked. Id.
at *4–7. Yet the condo owners in River House—unlike Eagle Pond—were not “commercial
business[es]” engaged in a “commercial purpose.” Citizens Ins., 585 N.W.2d at 316. The court
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expressed concern that the owners “had no idea that their entire investment in their residences
could be put at risk by repeated flooding . . . .” River House, 2014 Mich. Cir. LEXIS 157, at *6.
And while some Michigan cases hold that the economic-loss doctrine applies to transactions
involving consumers (like the condo owners), see Sherman v. Sea Ray Boats, Inc., 649 N.W.2d
783, 788–90 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002), we need not consider whether the Michigan Supreme Court
would apply the doctrine to River House’s consumer context. The doctrine has always applied in
full to this case’s business context. See Detroit Edison, 35 F.3d at 242.
Third, Eagle Pond argues that it suffered injuries to more than just the pipes because the
leaks damaged other property, including carpeting, floor boards, and ceiling tiles, and displaced
Eagle Pond’s tenants (whom it presumably had to compensate). Yet any funds that Eagle Pond
spent to reimburse its tenants are prototypical “economic” losses. See Neibarger, 486 N.W.2d at
621. And while some jurisdictions limit the economic-loss doctrine to claims for damages to the
defective product alone, see Saratoga Fishing Co. v. J.M. Martinac & Co., 520 U.S. 875, 877
(1997), the Michigan Supreme Court has long held that the doctrine applies to foreseeable damage
to other property, see Neibarger, 486 N.W.2d at 619–20. Eagle Pond understandably would prefer
that we apply the version of the economic-loss doctrine that the Supreme Court has adopted for
admiralty cases, see Saratoga Fishing, 520 U.S. at 877, but we must follow the Michigan Supreme
Court’s instructions in this diversity suit, Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 78 (1938). Under
Michigan law, the economic-loss doctrine bars Eagle Pond’s request to recover all of its alleged
damages in tort.
We affirm.
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