SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-0935-96T5
RAMON CLASS,
Plaintiff,
v.
AMERICAN ROLLER DIE CORP., T/A ARDCORE,
AN OHIO CORPORATION,
Defendant-Respondent/Cross-Appellant,
and
LEE WILSON ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC.,
AN OHIO CORPORATION,
Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Respondent,
and
B & K MACHINERY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED,
A FOREIGN CORPORATION; COMPANY(S) 4-6,
DESIGNERS AND/OR MANUFACTURERS OF PRESSES;
MECHANICAL STEEL TUBING CORP.; COMPANY(S) 8-10,
DISTRIBUTORS OF PRESSES MANUFACTURED BY
AMERICAN ROLLER DIE CORP., T/A ARDCORE, LEE
WILSON ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC., B & K
MACHINERY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, AND P & F
INDUSTRIES AND COMPANY(S) 4-6; BILL KNATH
MACHINERY COMPANY; COMPANY(S) 11-13,
MAINTENANCE COMPANIES OF STRUT MILL CUT-OFF
PRESSES; SUTTER MANUFACTURING TOOL & DIE CO.,
DIVISION OF MJM TOOLING CORP., MANUFACTURER OF
DIES TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE STRUT
MILL CUT-OFF PRESS MANUFACTURED AND DESIGNED
BY AMERICAN ROLLER DIE CORP., T/A ARDCORE, LEE
WILSON ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC., B & K
MACHINERY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, P & F INDUSTRIES
AND COMPANY(S) 4-6; BC COMPANY(S) MANUFACTURERS
OF VARIOUS COMPONENT PARTS TO THE STRUT MILL
CUT-OFF PRESS MANUFACTURED AND DESIGNED BY
AMERICAN ROLLER DIE CORP., T/A ARDCORE, LEE
WILSON ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC., B & K MACHINERY
INTERNATIONAL LIMITED, P & F INDUSTRIES AND
COMPANY(S) 4-6, XYZ COMPANY(S), DISTRIBUTORS OF
VARIOUS COMPONENT PARTS AND/OR NECESSARY PARTS
TO STRUT MILL CUT-OFF PRESSES; HAYDON CORPORATION,
Defendants,
and
P & F INDUSTRIES, INC., A FOREIGN CORPORATION
Defendant-Respondent.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued: December 3, 1997 - Decided: January
30, 1998
Before Judges Baime, Brochin and Braithwaite.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Passaic County, the
opinion is reported at
294 N.J. Super. 407
(Law Div. 1996).
William C. Carey argued the cause for
appellant/cross-respondent (McElroy, Deutsch
& Mulvaney, attorneys; Nancy McDonald and Mr.
Carey, on the brief).
Thomas M. O'Hara argued the cause for
respondent P & F Industries, Inc. (Clemente,
Gesicki & O'Hara attorneys; Mr. O'Hara, on
the brief).
Terri Smith argued the cause for
respondent/cross-appellant Ardcore Press
Manufacturing Company, Inc., Ardcore,
Division of American Roll Tooling, Inc.
(Stevens & Minter attorneys; Ms. Smith, of
counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
BRAITHWAITE, J.A.D.
This appeal involves the issue of product line successor
liability. Plaintiff, Ramon Class, was injured at work in
November 1988, while operating a press that was manufactured in
1954. The original manufacturer of the press, American Roller
Die Corporation (Ardcor), dissolved prior to the accident.
Plaintiff initiated a product liability action naming various
corporations as defendants. Three of those defendants, Lee
Wilson Engineering Company, Inc. (Wilson), American Roll Tooling,
Inc. (American), and P & F Industries (P & F), settled with
plaintiff for $875,000, with each defendant paying $250,000.
American paid plaintiff an additional $125,000 to settle a
separate failure to warn claim that is not raised on appeal. The
settlement agreement further provided that Wilson, American, and
P & F retained the right to seek a judicial determination of
their individual liability as alleged seriatim successors to the
original manufacturer of the press and their rights and
obligations inter sese.
The chain of succession of the Ardcor product line included
Wilson, the first successor that owned and manufactured the
product line from 1963 until 1968. Wilson then entered into a
sales agreement with the second successor, P & F, that owned and
stored the product line between 1968 and 1970, but did not
manufacture any products. P & F entered into a sales agreement
with American, the third successor, that has owned and continued
to manufacture the product line since 1970.
In determining liability, the trial judge relied on Ramirez
v. Amsted Industries, Inc.,
86 N.J. 332 (1981), and Nieves v.
Bruno Sherman Corp.,
86 N.J. 361 (1981), and imposed successor
liability on both Wilson and American, and held them equally
liable for plaintiff's damages. She found that P & F, was not
subject to successor liability because it only owned and stored
the assets, but did not manufacture the product line.
In addition, in construing the purchase agreement between
Wilson and P & F, the judge held that Wilson was obligated to pay
P & F a stipulated amount of $29,000 that P & F expended in
attorneys fees in defending the lawsuit by plaintiff.
Wilson appeals, asserting that the judge improperly imposed
successor liability upon it when American is a currently viable
manufacturer. Essentially, Wilson argues that since American is
still a viable entity, it should be solely liable for plaintiff's
damages.
In the alternative, Wilson asserts that if successor
liability was properly imposed, then the judge erred in ordering
equal payments by Wilson and American to satisfy plaintiff's
damages. Wilson claims that it should only be responsible for an
apportionment of the damages to plaintiff based on a contributive
share of plaintiff's loss, measured by the number of years that
each corporation owned and manufactured the Ardcor product line.
Finally, Wilson contends that the judge improperly determined
that it should have to pay attorney fees and defense costs to
P & F.
American cross-appeals, arguing that successor liability was
improperly imposed upon it and that Wilson should be solely
responsible for plaintiff's damages. Alternatively, American
asserts that if both Wilson and American are responsible
successors, they should pay an equal share of plaintiff's
damages.
We affirm the trial judge's determination that both Wilson
and American are successor corporations and therefore are liable
for plaintiff's damages under the product line theory,
substantially for the reasons expressed by the trial judge in her
published opinion found at
294 N.J. Super. 407, 429-34 (Law Div.
1996).See footnote 1 However, we reverse the order directing an equal
apportionment of damages between Wilson and American and hold
that under these circumstances, plaintiff's damages should be
apportioned based upon the number of years that the successor
corporations manufactured the product line. We also reverse the
order directing Wilson to pay attorneys fees and defense costs to
P & F.
line until October 1968 when it sold the Ardcor and Seco assets
to P & F.
Section twelve of the agreement between Wilson and P & F
provided as follows:
12. No Assumption of Liabilities. It is
understood and agreed that the total purchase
price to be paid by Buyer [P & F] hereunder
is the amount stated in Section 2 hereof, and
that Buyer [P & F] assumes no liability or
obligation whatsoever of Seller [Wilson]
including service and warranty obligations
with respect to products of the Ardcor and
Seco Product Lines heretofore sold by Seller
[Wilson] or B & K Machinery International
Limited.
After the transfer of the Ardcor and Seco assets to P & F,
Wilson continued to service previously-sold Ardcor and Seco
products and to manufacture other product lines until 1993.
Class, supra, 294 N.J. Super. at 414-15. Wilson formally
dissolved in 1994. Therefore, Wilson was in business when
plaintiff was injured in 1988. Ibid. In fact, in 1988, it had a
"one million dollar indemnity policy covering product defects."
Id. at 415.
P & F never manufactured the product line after its
acquisition of the Ardcor and Seco businesses; it only stored the
machinery in a warehouse. Ibid. In January 1970, P & F sold
everything it purchased from Wilson, including the Ardcor
products, to American. American operated the Ardcor business
from 1970 until the settlement of plaintiff's claim. Id. at 415-16.
After determining that both Wilson and American are both
responsible for plaintiff's damages, the next step is to
apportion damages between those corporations. Neither Ramirez
nor Nieves addressed the issue of allocation of damages among
successor corporations. In fact, the Nieves Court specifically
stated:
While the Ramirez rationale is concerned with
imposing strict tort liability for damages
caused by defects in units of the product
line acquired and continued by successor
manufacturers, neither Ramirez nor the
injured plaintiff -- if he successfully
proves his case against the successors, who
stand in the shoes of the original
manufacturer -- is concerned with how that
liability will be allocated or borne as
between two successor corporations.
[Nieves, supra, 86 N.J. at 372.]
In Nieves, the Court only recognized that the two successor
corporations had indemnification provisions in their agreement,
and stated that "if applicable to the particular fact situation
presented, [indemnification agreements] should be given their
intended effect as a risk-spreading and cost-avoidance measure."
Ibid. Here, no such provisions are applicable. Thus,
allocation of damages among liable successor corporations was an
issue of first impression for the trial judge.
The trial judge acknowledged that because product line
liability imposed upon successor corporations is "without regard
to fault," neither the Joint Tortfeasors Contribution Law,
N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-1, nor the Comparative Negligence Act, N.J.S.A.
2A:15-5.1, are applicable to this case. Class, supra, 294 N.J.
Super. at 435-36. We do not decide, nor do we perceive a need to
decide here if that conclusion is correct. To apportion
plaintiff's damages the trial judge relied on the contribution
principle that "equity is equality" and determined that both
Wilson and American should be equally responsible for plaintiff's
damages. Id. at 536. The judge referred to worker's
compensation awards and stated that where such awards "cannot on
any factual basis be apportioned among seriatim employers,
entities liable to an injured worker based on their status, equal
apportionment has been approved." Ibid. (citations omitted).
American agrees with the trial judge's reasoning that if
both American and Wilson are successor corporations, then the
liability should be equally divided. Wilson argues that the
liability should not be equally divided, but rather apportioned
based on the number of years that each of the companies
manufactured the product line. Here, Wilson manufactured the
product line from 1963 until 1968, a period of approximately five
years.See footnote 2 American manufactured it from 1970 until 1988, the year
of plaintiff's accident, some eighteen years. Wilson argues that
it would be fair to apportion damages based on those years of
operation.
Because a strong policy reason for the imposition of
successor liability is that the corporation "benefits from
trading its product line on the name of the predecessor and takes
advantage from its accumulated good will, business reputation and
established customers," Ramirez, supra, 86 N.J. at 358, we
conclude that apportioning damages based on the benefits received
by each successor corporation is the appropriate method to
allocate plaintiff's damages. Although the benefits received by
any individual successor may be difficult to measure, we believe
a reasonable basis for allocation is the number of units produced
by each successor corporation during the period of time they
manufactured the product line up to the date of plaintiff's
accident, assuming that this information is available. In other
words, the damages payable by each corporation should be
calculated as the number of units produced by each successor
corporation bears to the total number of units produced by all
successor corporations up to the date of plaintiff's accident.
Here, the number of units produced by Wilson and American
during the period of their respective operations of the Ardcor
product line, up to the date of plaintiff's accident, is unknown.
Because this information is unavailable, we conclude that the
next best method is to apportion damages by the number of years
each successor corporation manufactured the product line up to
the date of plaintiff's accident, information that is available
here. The damages payable by Wilson and American should be
calculated as the number of years each corporation manufactured
the product line bears to the total number of years both
corporations manufactured the product line up to the date of
plaintiff's accident. Where information reflecting the number of
units produced is unavailable, we are satisfied that the number
of years that a successor corporation manufactured the product
line bears a reasonable relationship to the benefits received by
each corporation.
We recognize that this basis of apportionment is not without
its faults, and is therefore lacking in precision. We conclude,
however, that many, if not all, methods to apportion damages lack
precision and allocations are simply justifiable means to
accomplish what is fair and reasonable. Cf. Sindell v. Abbott
Laboratories,
607 P.2d 924, 937 (Cal. 1980) ("But just as a jury
cannot be expected to determine the precise relationship between
fault and liability in applying the doctrine of comparative fault
or partial indemnity, the difficulty of apportioning damages
among the defendant producers in exact relation to their market
share does not seriously militate against the rule we adopt.")
(citations omitted), cert. denied.,
449 U.S. 912,
101 S. Ct. 286,
66 L. Ed.2d 140 (1980).
We conclude that an equal apportionment of damages is not
fair and just under the circumstances. Wilson manufactured the
Ardcor product line for approximately five years; American
manufactured that product line for approximately eighteen years
before plaintiff was injured. This difference in time fairly
reflects the difference in the benefits that each received from
the "good will [they] enjoyed . . . in the continued operation of
the [Ardcor] business." Ramirez, supra, 86 N.J. at 349 (quoting
Ray v. Alad Corp., 560, P.2d 3, 9 (Cal. 1977)). This difference
should be reflected in the quantum of damages each corporation is
responsible to pay.
We find support for the use of the number of units produced
during the operation of the product line, when that information
is available, or the number of years each successor manufactured
the product line when the unit information is unavailable, to
determine the portion of damages payable by each successor
corporation in the allocation principles of market share
analysis, recognizing that this theory is used to determine
liability in certain situations. See Sindell, supra, discussed
in Shackil v. Lederle Laboratories,
116 N.J. 155 (1989).
The market share theory of liability is typically used in
DES cases where an injured plaintiff must join as defendants
manufacturers representing a substantial share of the particular
market for a product. E.g.,
63 Am. Jur 2d Products Liability §
179, at 213 (1997). In essence, the theory "imposes presumptive
liability based upon a manufacturer's share of the market of the
injury-causing product, shifting the burden of proof to the
defendants to show that they could not have made the specific
product which injured the plaintiff." Id. at 213-14 (citation
omitted). The theory is operative "where all defendants produced
the type of product in question from an identical formula and the
manufacturer of the specific unit or units of the product by
which the plaintiff was allegedly injured cannot be identified
through no fault of the plaintiff." Id. at 214.
To impose successor liability our Supreme Court in Ramirez
adopted the three-fold justification announced in Ray v. Alad
Corp., supra, 560 P.
2d at 9. They are:
(1) The virtual destruction of the
plaintiff's remedies against the original
manufacturer caused by the successor's
acquisition of the business, (2) the
successor's ability to assume the original
manufacturer's risk-spreading role, and (3)
the fairness of requiring the successor to
assume a responsibility for defective
products that was a burden necessarily
attached to the original manufacturer's good
will being enjoyed by the successor in the
continued operation of the business.
[Ramirez, supra, 86 N.J. at 349 (citation
omitted).]
Underlying both successor liability and market share
liability is the need to create a cause of action for injured
plaintiffs in a products liability case where traditional
principles of tort liability would leave them without a remedy.
Moreover, both doctrines rely on the principle that as between an
innocent injured plaintiff and a manufacturer of a product, the
manufacturer is in the best position to bear the costs of
injuries resulting from defective products. Sindell, supra, 607
P.
2d at 936; See Ramirez, supra, 86 N.J. at 350-51.
The market share analysis addresses the issue of liability,
particularly "causation-in-fact," Shackil, supra, 116 N.J. at
158; however, because of its similar reasons for imposing
liability, it provides support to justify apportionment of
damages in a successor liability case. In Sindell, "the seminal
market share case," the California Supreme Court addressed the
allocation of damages among defendants. Shackil, supra, 116 N.J.
at 166. Specifically, the court recognized that the market share
analysis "provides a ready means to apportion damages among the
defendants," by holding that "[e]ach defendant will be held
liable for the proportion of the judgment represented by its
share of that market unless it demonstrates that it could not
have made the product which caused plaintiff's injuries."
Sindell, supra, 607 P.
2d at 937. Thus, the Sindell court
recognized that this allocation of damages would approximate the
responsibility for injuries caused by each defendant's product.
Ibid.
We are satisfied that the rationale for imposing successor
liability is consistent with reasons for imposing market share
liability, and deem it appropriate to use the market share
liability approach to damages as the model for apportioning
damages in a successor liability case such as this one, where
more than one successor is liable for plaintiff's injuries. In
adopting the product-line successor liability theory, the Ramirez
Court stated:
[t]he social policies underlying strict
products liability in New Jersey are best
served by extending strict liability to a
successor corporation that acquires the
business assets and continues to manufacture
essentially the same line of products as its
predecessor, particularly where the successor
corporation benefits from trading its product
line on the name of the predecessor and takes
advantage from its accumulated good will,
business reputation and established
customers.
[Ramirez, supra, 86 N.J. at 358.]
The product line theory focuses on a successor corporation
that "continues to manufacture essentially the same products as
its predecessor." Ibid. Comparable to the market share theory,
those successor corporations represent the "market" for the
product that caused a plaintiff's injuries. Consistent with
Ramirez, as the liability follows the product line, it is fair
and reasonable to apportion plaintiff's damages among multiple
successors based on the benefits received from the product line
as reflected by the number of units produced, and in the absence
of that information, the number of years that each corporation
manufactured the product. Similar to damages apportioned based
upon a defendant's share of the market, these are both
appropriate measures to allocate plaintiff's damages between
Wilson and American as manufacturers of the Ardcor product line.
was not responsible to P & F for plaintiff's choice of
defendants.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded for entry of
a judgment apportioning plaintiff's damages in accordance with
this opinion.
Footnote: 1 All of the parties agree that the trial judge correctly concluded that successor liability should not be imposed on P & F because it only owned and stored the Ardcor assets as opposed to manufacturing the product line. This issue is not raised on appeal. Footnote: 2 Although, as we previously stated, Wilson continued to service Ardcor products until 1993, it manufactured the Ardcor product line only between 1963 and 1968, when it transferred the product line to P & F.