Jordan v. East Dayton ( 1995 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion





    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________


    No. 95-1181

    RANDY JORDAN,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    HAWKER DAYTON CORPORATION and EAST DAYTON TOOL & DIE CO.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. Morton A. Brody, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Boudin, and Lynch, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    Laurie Ann Miller, with whom N. Laurence Willey, Jr. and Ferris, _________________ _______________________ _______
    Dearborn & Willey were on brief, for appellant. _________________
    Brent A. Singer, with whom David C. King and Rudman & Winchell ________________ _____________ __________________
    were on brief, for appellee Hawker Dayton Corporation.


    ____________________

    August 10, 1995
    ____________________




















    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. Randy Jordan, an injured LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

    worker, appeals, asking us to revisit the law of Maine on

    successor liability so that he may reach the Hawker Dayton

    Corporation, which purchased the assets of a division of

    another company that had manufactured the machinery which

    injured Jordan's hand. Sitting as a court in diversity

    jurisdiction under Erie Railroad v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 _____________ __ ________

    (1938), we decline to do so and affirm the grant of summary

    judgment issued in favor of Hawker Dayton Corporation by the

    district court.

    FACTS _____

    In September 1991, the appellant, Randy Jordan,

    badly injured his hand at work while attempting to unjam a

    doweling machine. Jordan underwent medical and psychological

    treatment, and filed this products liability action in the

    United States District Court for Maine against "Hawker Dayton

    Manufacturing Company."

    The doweling machine was manufactured in 1973 by

    Hawker Manufacturing Company ("Hawker Manufacturing"), a

    division of East Dayton Tool & Die Co. ("East Dayton"). East

    Dayton also manufactured automobile components and other

    products. Around the time that the doweling machine was

    manufactured, Dorothy Darrow, the sole shareholder of East

    Dayton, sold some of her stock to family friends, and East

    Dayton redeemed her remaining stock for cash and an



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    installment note. The company continued its manufacturing

    operations and even added additional product lines.

    In August 1973, East Dayton sold to Harmon Darrow,

    the president of Hawker Manufacturing, an option to purchase

    the assets of Hawker Manufacturing at their net book value.

    In March 1974, Mr. Darrow formed Hawker Dayton Corporation

    ("Hawker Dayton"), conveyed his option to that company, and

    in July 1974, Hawker Dayton exercised the option and

    purchased the Hawker Manufacturing assets for approximately

    $150,000. Hawker Dayton continued the operations of Hawker

    Manufacturing and continued to use the Hawker Manufacturing

    trade name. East Dayton continued to manufacture woodworking

    machines (including doweling machines at first), automobile

    dies and other specialized machinery for about two years.

    In 1976, East Dayton defaulted on its note to Ms.

    Darrow. It then sold the rest of its equipment for $925,000

    and its real property for $650,000 to entities not involved

    in this lawsuit, and made payments out to Ms. Darrow on the

    installment note for the next ten years.

    PROCEEDINGS BELOW _________________

    On June 14, 1993, Jordan filed this suit. In

    August, the district court issued a scheduling order giving a

    deadline of September 15, 1993, for amendment of the

    pleadings. The judge later amended the scheduling order,

    extending the deadline for amending pleadings by fifteen days



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    and extending the discovery deadline by two months. During

    discovery, Jordan learned, inter alia, that East Dayton was _____ ____

    the manufacturer of the doweling machine. On February 10,

    1994, five days before discovery was to be completed under

    the scheduling order, Jordan moved to correct the corporate

    name of the defendant from "Hawker Dayton Manufacturing

    Corporation" to "Hawker Dayton Corporation," to add East

    Dayton as a defendant and to include additional theories of

    liability against Hawker Dayton. The district court granted

    the motion to correct the corporate name of the defendant and

    to add East Dayton, but denied the motion to add additional

    theories of liability.

    Jordan filed a motion for summary judgment on the

    issue of whether Hawker Dayton was liable as a successor

    corporation for the debts and liabilities of East Dayton.

    Hawker Dayton objected, and in its response asked that

    summary judgment be entered in its favor instead. The

    Magistrate Judge recommended that Jordan's motion be denied,

    and the district court adopted the recommendation. Neither

    ruled on the issue of whether summary judgment should be

    entered on behalf of Hawker Dayton. Hawker Dayton

    subsequently moved for summary judgment, and the district

    court granted the motion.

    Judgment by default was entered against East

    Dayton, after a hearing on damages, for $2,230,088.21.



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    Jordan appeals the grant of summary judgment in

    favor of Hawker Dayton on the issue of successor liability.

    DISCUSSION __________

    Four years ago, albeit in a different context than

    a tort suit, the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine held, as to

    corporate successor liability: "[A]bsent a contrary

    agreement by the parties, or an explicit statutory provision

    in derogation of the established common law rule, a

    corporation that purchases the assets of another corporation

    in a bona fide, arm's-length transaction is not liable for _________

    the debts or liabilities of the transferor corporation."

    Director of Bureau of Labor Standards v. Diamond Brands, ________________________________________ __ ________________

    Inc., 588 A.2d 734, 736 (Me. 1991). Diamond Brands involved ____ ______________

    interpretation of the term "employer" in a severance pay

    statute. Conceding that there is no contrary agreement by

    the asset purchase parties and no statutory exception to

    common law here, Jordan tries to avoid the Diamond Brands ______________

    holding by arguing the opinion does not foreshadow what the

    Maine Court would do in a tort action.

    There are two responses. First, the rule, as

    stated above, that a mere asset purchase will not give rise

    to successor liability is articulated by Maine's highest

    court as being "the established common law rule." That alone

    defeats Jordan's claim, as he has argued that Maine law

    applies. This common law rule is reinforced by the social



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    policy judgment made by the Maine legislature, in the statute

    at issue in Diamond Brands. Maine there decided that it is ______________

    benefited by not discouraging purchases of assets of Maine

    businesses through imposition of successor liability on

    purchasing corporations, thus keeping businesses going which

    would otherwise fail, and so continuing to have employees

    benefit from their continued employment. Id. at 737 n.7. ___

    Jordan points to no legal developments in the law of

    successor liability in Maine or in any other jurisdiction

    since Diamond Brands to suggest that the Supreme Judicial _______________

    Court would change this law. See Bernhardt v. Polygraph Co. ___ _________ __ _____________

    of America, 350 U.S. 198, 205 (1956) ("[T]here appears to be __________

    no confusion in the [Maine] decisions, no developing line of

    authorities that casts a shadow over the established ones, no

    dicta, doubts or ambiguities in the opinions of [Maine]

    judges on the question, no legislative development that

    promises to undermine the judicial rule."). Thus, Diamond _______

    Brands is the law of Maine, and this Court must apply that ______

    law.

    Secondly, plaintiff chose a federal, rather than a

    state forum, presumably cognizant of this court's statement

    that "litigants who reject a state forum in order to bring

    suit in federal court under diversity jurisdiction cannot

    expect that new trails will be blazed." Ryan v. Royal ____ __ _____

    Insurance Company of America, 916 F.2d 731, 744 (1st Cir. _____________________________



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    1990). Jordan did not file a motion that the issue be

    certified to the state court. Here Jordan has suffered an

    injury and East Dayton appears to no longer have assets with

    which to satisfy his claim. But the complex policy arguments

    as to whether the common law should strive to assure him

    recompense are left to the state, not the federal court, to

    decide. Here Maine has made that calculus and given the

    greater weight to the protection of jobs through limits on

    successor liability. It is not the role of the federal

    courts to "question the policy choices of states whose law we

    apply." Krauss v. Manhattan Life Insurance Company of New ______ __ _________________________________________

    York, 643 F.2d 98, 102 (2d Cir. 1981). ____

    Jordan argues that the Supreme Judicial Court

    recently adopted a "majority rule" in another aspect of tort

    law and so will adopt the majority rule as to successor

    liability. Jordan relies on Oceanside at Pine Point __________________________

    Condominium Owners Association v. Peachtree Doors, Inc., 659 ______________________________ __ ______________________

    A.2d 267, 270 (Me. 1995), which held that a plaintiff did not

    state a claim in tort for a defective product's damage to

    itself, thus having Maine join that rule adopted by a

    majority of jurisdictions. Even were we incorrect in our

    understanding that the law of Maine on successor liability

    has been determined by its highest authority, this argument

    would not assist Jordan. The Peachtree Doors decision does _______________

    not expand plaintiffs' remedies, but reflects a rejection of



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    such an expansion. More tellingly, even if Maine were to

    adopt a "majority rule" as to successor liability, Jordan

    would still not prevail. Assuming the majority rule to be

    that a corporation which purchases assets from another is not

    liable in tort for the actions of the transferor unless one

    of four exceptions is met, see, e.g., 1 American Law of ___ ____ ________________

    Products Liability 7:1 at 10-11 (3d ed. 1990), those ___________________

    exceptions avail Jordan naught. See also Ohio Bureau of _________ _______________

    Workers' Compensation v. Widenmeyer Electric Co., 593 N.E.2d _____________________ __ ________________________

    468, 470 (Ohio 1991); Ramirez v. Amsted Industries, Inc., 86 _______ __ _______________________

    N.J. 332, 340, 431 A.2d 811, 815 (1981); Ray v. Alad Corp., ___ __ __________

    19 Cal.3d 22, 28, 560 P.2d 3, 7 (1977). There was no

    agreement by Hawker Dayton, express or implied, to assume the

    liabilities of East Dayton Tool and Die Co., and Jordan does

    not claim that the asset sale was fraudulent, not made in

    good faith, or made without sufficient consideration. There

    was no de facto merger nor a mere continuation of the

    predecessor here where the transferor corporation, East

    Dayton, neither dissolved nor liquidated after the asset

    sale. See, e.g., 1 American Law of Products Liability, ___ ____ _____________________________________

    supra, 7:10, 7:12, 7:14 & 7:15 (both merger or _____

    consolidation and mere continuation exceptions require that

    there be only one corporation at the end of the transaction).

    Indeed East Dayton sold less than 10% of its assets to Hawker





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    Dayton, continued to do business thereafter and paid out on

    an installment note for twelve years after the asset sale.

    Jordan's argument ultimately is that the "product

    line" doctrine of successor liability should be adopted.

    Under the product line doctrine, a corporation that purchases

    all or substantially all of the assets of another

    corporation, continues the manufacturing operations and sells

    the same product line may be strictly liable for injuries

    caused by defective products in that line. See, e.g., 1 ___ ____

    American Law of Products Liability, supra, 7:25 at 42; see __________________________________ _____ ___

    also Ray, 19 Cal.3d 22, 560 P.2d 3; Ramirez, 86 N.J. 332, 431 ____ ___ _______

    A.2d 811 (1981); Dawejko v. Jorgensen Steel Company, 290 Pa. _______ __ _______________________

    Super. 15, 434 A.2d 106 (1981); Martin v. Abbott ______ __ ______

    Laboratories, 102 Wash.2d 581, 689 P.2d 368 (1984). It is ____________

    far from clear the product line doctrine would assist Jordan.

    See, e.g., Ray, 19 Cal.3d at 31; 560 P.2d at 9; Ramirez, 86 ___ ____ ___ _______

    N.J. at 358, 431 A.2d at 825 (the product line exception

    requires that the asset purchase destroy the plaintiff's

    remedy, for example, because all of the assets are purchased

    or because the purchase agreement requires the predecessor to

    liquidate). This doctrine is at most a minority rule which

    has plainly not been adopted by Maine.

    Finally, Jordan makes a procedural argument that

    the court was precluded from entering summary judgment for

    Hawker Dayton because it failed to do so when Hawker Dayton



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    had countered his motion in part by saying that it, not

    Jordan, was entitled to entry of judgment. The court

    originally denied Jordan's motion and took no action on

    Hawker Dayton's counter request. When Hawker Dayton later

    filed a formal motion for summary judgment in its favor, the

    court granted it, saying it had not considered the merits of

    Hawker Dayton's request when it denied Jordan's motion.

    There was no error in this procedure and would have been none

    even if the court had considered the counter request the

    first time around. See Burns v. Massachusetts Institute of ___ _____ __ ___________________________

    Technology, 394 F.2d 416, 418 (1st Cir. 1968). Nor was there __________

    an abuse of discretion in denying Jordan's motion to amend

    his complaint filed more than four months after the deadline

    set in the scheduling order and only a few days before

    discovery was to be completed.

    The decision of the district court granting summary

    judgment to Hawker Dayton is affirmed.



















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