S. Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc. v. Cincinnati Insurance , 353 F.3d 367 ( 2003 )


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  •                            PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    S. WALLACE EDWARDS & SONS,            
    INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                               No. 02-1885
    THE CINCINNATI INSURANCE COMPANY,
    an Ohio Corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    S. WALLACE EDWARDS & SONS,            
    INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                               No. 02-1928
    THE CINCINNATI INSURANCE COMPANY,
    an Ohio Corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond.
    Richard L. Williams, Senior District Judge.
    (CA-02-99)
    Argued: May 6, 2003
    Decided: December 24, 2003
    Before WIDENER and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges,
    and Frank W. BULLOCK, Jr., United States District Judge for the
    Middle District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.
    2           EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Widener wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Bullock concurred. Judge Michael wrote an opinion con-
    curring in part and dissenting in part.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Calvin Wooding Fowler, Jr., WILLIAMS MULLEN,
    P.C., Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Scott James Golightly, HIR-
    SCHLER FLEISCHER, P.C., Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee. ON
    BRIEF: Theodore J. Edlich, IV, Jonathan S. Campbell, WILLIAMS
    MULLEN, P.C., Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant.
    OPINION
    WIDENER, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant Cincinnati Insurance Company appeals two of the
    orders making up the judgment of the district court: (1) a July 19,
    2002 order granting partial summary judgment in favor of plaintiff S.
    Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc. on its claims for breach of contract and
    declaratory judgment in the amount of $155,441.41; and (2) an
    August 15, 2002 order granting the plaintiff’s motion to amend and
    awarding prejudgment interest in the amount of $11,191.78. The
    defendant contends that the district court erred in granting summary
    judgment because the plaintiff failed to set forth any objective evi-
    dence that the product was damaged under the terms of the insurance
    policy and that the plaintiff cannot maintain the breach of contract
    claim because it failed to adhere to a two-year period of limitation set
    forth in the insurance policy. For the reasons set forth below, we
    affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I.
    S. Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc. (Edwards) is a wholesale seller
    of Virginia ham, bacon, and sausage. In September of 1999, Edwards
    had over 70,000 pounds of ham product stored in cold storage at
    Richmond Cold Storage in Smithfield, Virginia. On September 30, an
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.                  3
    employee at the storage facility cracked a refrigerant line with a fork-
    lift, causing the release of anhydrous ammonia vapor within the stor-
    age facility. Following this incident, Edwards made a claim under its
    commercial property policy,1 which defendant Cincinnati Insurance
    Company (Cincinnati Insurance) had issued to Edwards & Sons for
    April 1, 1998 through April 1, 2001. The claim alleged damage to its
    property due to the ham products’ exposure to the ammonia. In addi-
    tion to filing the claim, Edwards collected samples of the exposed
    product and contacted Microbac Laboratories, Inc. (Microbac), to test
    the product and determine the extent of the ammonia damage.
    Cincinnati Insurance sent an adjuster to visit the cold storage facil-
    ity and inspect the ham that had been exposed. The adjuster stated
    that he detected the smell of ammonia in the product, and at the direc-
    tion of his supervisor requested additional evidence of the damage.
    The additional evidence requested and sent to the insurance company
    consisted of: (1) a large loss notice to Cincinnati Insurance; (2) a
    statement from the forklift driver or other witness; (3) a copy of the
    sales contract to the wholesale dealer establishing the sale price; (4)
    certification from the FDA that the meat is contaminated and cannot
    be sold;2 (5) Proof of Loss for claim check subject to Edwards &
    Sons’ $1,000.00 deductible; and (6) proceed with subrogation against
    wrongdoer.
    While Edwards was waiting for the results of the tests from Micro-
    bac, the storage facility agreed to repackage the ham products.
    Edwards agreed, and the repackaging took place on February 10,
    2000. Samples of the repackaged product were also sent to Microbac
    1
    Edwards & Sons notified its insurance agent of the ammonia incident
    on October 7, 1999, and the agent contacted Cincinnati Insurance shortly
    thereafter.
    2
    The email relaying this information requested certification from the
    FDA, but it is not clear from the record whether this would be regulated
    by the FDA or the USDA. The plaintiff stated in its brief that the USDA
    is the agency that regulates meat products. Upon contacting the USDA
    for information, the plaintiff was informed that, per regulations, the meat
    packer had the responsibility for assuring that the product was safe for
    human consumption and the USDA remained neutral until the product
    had been released into commerce.
    4           EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    for testing. Following the repackaging, on March 9, 2000, Cincinnati
    Insurance sent a letter to Edwards & Sons informing them that "there
    was nothing wrong with the ham as repackaged," and that the case
    was being "removed from active status."
    Meanwhile, Microbac informed Edwards & Sons by letter on
    March 13, 2000 that it was unable to find any regulatory guidelines
    for the limit of ammonia in pork, other than adulteration. Thus,
    Microbac stated that it had arrived at its conclusion by using a refer-
    ence in an FDA International Association of Refrigerated Warehouses
    Manual that set forth the guidelines for ammonia contamination of
    food products. These guidelines indicated that the ammoniacal nitro-
    gen level in meat products normally does not exceed .15 percent and
    none of the plaintiff’s samples had tested above .10 percent. In addi-
    tion, Microbac noted that there was an ammonia odor while at the
    refrigerant site, but the analyst did not notice any odor while at the
    laboratory. There was also mention in the March 13, 2000 letter of
    some brown areas observed on the meat, which was assessed as prob-
    able effects from being frozen. In a later letter sent March 16, 2000,
    however, Microbac retracted its earlier statement and concluded that
    it was unable to determine the cause of the brown areas.
    Due to Edwards’ uncertainty about the safety of the product and
    Microbac’s indeterminate analysis, Edwards finally decided to discard
    the product in April of 2001 as a total loss.
    Over one year after receiving the Microbac results, and more than
    two years after notification of the loss, on October 11, 2001, Cincin-
    nati Insurance sent the plaintiff a letter advising Edwards that after a
    review of the Microbac analyses, the on-sight evaluation, and the fact
    that the "USDA ha[d] not determined that the product [wa]s unsafe
    for human consumption," there was insufficient evidence to determine
    that the product was damaged from exposure to ammonia. Accord-
    ingly, Cincinnati Insurance denied the claim on the basis that
    Edwards & Sons had not shown any damage.
    Edwards filed this action on January 22, 2002, in the Circuit Court
    of Surry County, Virginia. The complaint asserted three claims. First,
    Edwards sought a declaratory judgment that the defendant has an
    obligation under the policy to pay the claim because the ammonia
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.                 5
    exposure had caused damage to Edwards & Sons’ product. Second,
    Edwards & Sons alleged a breach of contract claim against Cincinnati
    Insurance. Lastly, Edwards asserted that Cincinnati Insurance was
    acting in bad faith in denying the coverage. Cincinnati Insurance
    removed the case to federal district court on February 19, 2002. On
    that same day, Cincinnati Insurance filed in state court its answer and
    grounds of defense to Edwards & Sons’ original complaint.
    Once the case was removed, Edwards filed a motion for partial
    summary judgment, asserting that there was no genuine issue of mate-
    rial fact regarding the claim for declaratory judgment and breach of
    contract claim (counts I and II). It reserved the bad faith claim (count
    III) for trial. In response, Cincinnati Insurance filed a motion for sum-
    mary judgment as to all claims, contending in its accompanying mem-
    orandum that there was no damage to the ham products and thus it
    was not obligated to pay under the policy; that Edwards & Sons could
    not maintain the breach of contract claim because, inter alia, it was
    filed beyond the two-year limitations period required under the policy;3
    and that it did not act in bad faith in denying the claim.
    On July 19, 2002, the district court granted summary judgment in
    favor of Edwards & Sons on its claims for a declaratory judgment and
    for breach of contract, but granted summary judgment for Cincinnati
    Insurance as to the claim of bad faith. On August 1, 2002, Edwards
    & Sons filed a motion to amend its judgment to include an award of
    prejudgment interest which was granted by the district court in the
    amount of $11,191.78.
    Cincinnati Insurance appeals the money judgments against it.
    There is no issue on appeal of bad faith in the denial of coverage by
    Cincinnati. There is also no issue on appeal as to the amount of dam-
    age if any should be awarded. Cincinnati Insurance takes the position
    that no damages at all are authorized.
    3
    Under paragraph D of the Commercial Property Conditions, the pol-
    icy states, "No one may bring a legal action against us under this Cover-
    age Part unless: 1. There has been full compliance with all of the terms
    of this Coverage Part; and 2. The action is brought within 2 years after
    the date on which the direct physical loss or damage occurred."
    6            EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
    See Bass v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., 
    324 F.3d 761
    , 766 (4th
    Cir. 2003). Summary judgment is warranted when there are no mate-
    rial facts in dispute and the moving party is entitled to judgment as
    a matter of law. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322
    (1986). The non-moving party has the burden of showing that a genu-
    ine dispute exists. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio
    Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 586-87 (1986).
    II.
    The principal contention of Cincinnati Insurance on appeal is that
    the district court should have applied a provision of the insurance pol-
    icy contained as a Commercial Property Condition, numbered D,
    which is that:
    No one may bring a legal action against us under this Cover-
    age Part unless: . . .
    2. The action is brought within 2 years after the date on
    which the direct physical loss or damage occurred.
    It is agreed that the direct physical loss or damage occurred on Sep-
    tember 30, 1999 and that this case was filed in the Circuit Court of
    Surry County, Virginia, on January 22, 2002. So more than two years
    had elapsed between the date of the damage and the filing of the suit.
    The district court held that the time "limitation in the contract
    becomes the functional equivalency of a code section, and therefore
    is entitled to the protection that it gets under the Virginia statute." The
    district court applied "the statute of limitations that applies under Vir-
    ginia law [and] is five years. See Virginia Code Section 8.01-246 and
    243." Virginia Code § 8.01-235 provides in part that "[t]he objection
    that an action is not commenced within the limitation period pre-
    scribed by law can only be raised as an affirmative defense specifi-
    cally set forth in a responsive pleading."
    Although Cincinnati Insurance had filed its grounds of defense in
    the Circuit Court of Surry County, obviously just prior to removal of
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.                  7
    the case, the grounds of defense did not contain any plea or ground
    of defense that the action had not been commenced, following the
    terms of the policy, within two years after the date on which the direct
    physical loss or damage occurred. The district court correctly held
    that the contractual limitation was an affirmative defense and because
    it had not been raised in the grounds of defense filed by Cincinnati
    Insurance, it had been waived by the failure to raise it as an affirma-
    tive defense in its responsive pleading.
    The district court also held that Cincinnati Insurance had waived
    the two-year limitation provision in the contract "by its conduct in
    responding to Edwards’ claim."
    We agree with the result obtained by the district court, but for a
    somewhat different reason. See SEC v. Chenery, 
    318 U.S. 80
    , 88
    (1943).
    The district court’s equating the contractual limitation to a statute
    of limitations was not authorized under Virginia law. In two cases the
    Virginia court has held that statutory and contractual limitations are
    different. See Massie v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield, 
    500 S.E.2d 509
    (Va. 1998), and Board of Supervisors of Fairfax County v. Sampson,
    
    369 S.E.2d 178
     (Va. 1988). The Supreme Court has held in Guaranty
    Trust Co. v. York, 
    326 U.S. 99
     (1945), that a federal court, adjudicat-
    ing a state-created right solely because the diversity of citizenship of
    the parties, is obliged to apply the statute of limitations which would
    be applied by a state court, which the district court related in this case
    is five years. But applying the Virginia statute of limitations under the
    rule of Guaranty Trust Co. would have no application here because
    in Virginia, as Sampson and Massie have held, contractual and statu-
    tory limitations are not the same under Virginia law.
    The district court’s alternate reasons for its decision are next exam-
    ined. The district court decided that the two-year contractual limita-
    tion had been waived by "failing to raise it as an affirmative defense
    in its responsive pleading and by its conduct in responding to
    Edwards’ claim." Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 8(c) provides in
    pertinent part that:
    8           EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth
    affirmatively [among other things] . . . any other matter con-
    stituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.
    And the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure govern. Granny Goose
    Foods v. Teamsters, 
    415 U.S. 423
    , 437 (1974). This is agreed to by
    Cincinnati Insurance. Br. p.38-39.
    We are of opinion that a defense urged by an insurance company
    of such a breach of a provision of the policy by an insured is an affir-
    mative defense under Rule 8(c). Wright and Miller, Federal Practice
    and Procedure § 1271 (5th Ed. 1994) (noting decisions in United
    States Courts of Appeal for the Fifth, Eighth and Tenth Circuits);
    Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice (Berdal ed.) §§ 11976 and
    12014 (1980) (noting state decisions in Massachusetts, Arkansas,
    Maine, Texas and Missouri). In Caterpillar Overseas S.A. v. Marine
    Transport, Inc., 
    900 F.2d 714
     (4th Cir. 1990), a case under the Car-
    riage of Goods By Sea Act, we held that a contractual limitation of
    liability required the pleading of such a defense under Rule 8(c) and
    that when all the facts were apparent to the parties, as here, "Such a
    record would support a waiver of any possible failure to plead," 800
    F.2d at 825 n.7, but waiver was not decided when the district court
    treated any such requirement as waived. 800 F.2d at 825. In Brinkley
    v. Harbour Recreation Club, 
    180 F.3d 598
     (4th Cir. 1999), a Title VII
    and Equal Pay Act case, we held that a statutory defense of a "factor
    other than sex defense" under the Equal Pay Act is an affirmative
    defense which must be pleaded under Rule 8(c) which may result in
    waiver. Such waiver, however, should not be effective unless the fail-
    ure to plead resulted in unfair surprise or prejudice. Brinkley, 180
    F.3d at 612-13.
    In the case at hand, we are of opinion that the affirmative defense
    of a two-year limitation on bringing suit was an affirmative defense
    which should have been asserted under Rule 8(c) and that the decision
    of the district court, that it had been waived, was not error. We note
    that the district court not only correctly characterized the two-year
    limitation as an affirmative defense but also based its decision on Cin-
    cinnati’s "conduct in responding to Edwards’ claim." That conduct
    included the following: Cincinnati Insurance was notified of the loss
    only a few days after the leaking ammonia was discovered. For some
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.                   9
    two years it negotiated with Edwards with respect to the amount of
    the loss, engaged in discovery, attended depositions of witnesses, and
    examined the reports of proposed witnesses with respect to that loss.
    Cincinnati Insurance never denied liability on the claim until October
    11, 2001, some 11 days after the two-year limitation period of the pol-
    icy had expired. Although the two-year defense was available to Cin-
    cinnati Insurance at the time, the letter denying liability to Edwards
    relied on the contention of the insurance company that there was no
    damage, it never mentioned the two-year limitation. In a nutshell, the
    letter states, "There is still insufficient evidence to determine that this
    product was damaged from exposure to ammonia." Although the two-
    year period had expired when Cincinnati Insurance filed its grounds
    of defense on February 19, 2002, the grounds of defense did not men-
    tion the two-year limitation period as a defense. Although the two-
    year period had expired on September 30, 2001, on April 11, 2002 the
    case was even set for trial on July 26, 2002, and the two-year period
    had not then been mentioned. The two-year period was never men-
    tioned until Cincinnati filed its motion for summary judgment and
    response to Edwards’ motion for summary judgment on June 28,
    2002, which was the first time the two-year defense was mentioned
    by the insurance company.
    Under such circumstances, we are of opinion and hold that the
    decision of the district court, that the two-year defense had been
    waived, was not erroneous. Under the facts of this case, if that
    defense were not waived, Cincinnati Insurance, by its inaction and
    persistence that there had been no damage, would simply escape lia-
    bility. Whether the actions of Cincinnati Insurance were by inadver-
    tence or design, the result does not differ. Edwards was taken by
    unfair surprise and prejudiced by the delayed assertion of the two-
    year limitation as a defense.4
    4
    The district court held that Cincinnati waived the two-year limitation
    of action in the insurance policy. It stated "Cincinnati has waived the
    two-year limitation provision, both by failing to raise it as an affirmative
    defense in its responsive pleading and by its conduct in responding to
    Edwards’ claim." J.A., Vol. I, p. 150.
    The grounds of defense filed by Cincinnati in the state court just prior
    to removal did not rely on the two-year limitation. Under the facts of this
    10           EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    III.
    The last argument we consider is the contention of Cincinnati
    Insurance that there was no evidence that the ammonia rendered the
    meat products damaged. In the most general terms, it argues that the
    ham products were not adulterated because the evidence would show
    the meat was not injurious to health.
    The policy provides in the building and personal property coverage
    form that:
    We will pay for direct physical loss of or damage to Cov-
    ered Property in the premises described.
    The policy does not define damage, and the district court gave the
    policy language its plain and ordinary meaning of "impairment of the
    usefulness or value of person or property; or harm." It rejected an
    case and under Virginia law, that would have been a waiver of the notice
    provision of the policy. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co. v. Hodge,
    
    135 S.E.2d 187
     (Va. 1964). But under Erie Railroad and Fed. R. Civ. P.
    81(c), the federal rules apply to "actions removed to the United States
    District Courts from the state courts and govern procedure after
    removal." Thus, while the filing of the grounds of defense in the state
    court may be governed by state law, the actions of Cincinnati in not
    bringing the policy defense to the attention of the court or the plaintiff
    until after the case was set for trial is governed by federal law. In that
    respect, Rule 8(c) requires that such defense "shall be set forth affirma-
    tively," which was never done until Cincinnati’s motion for summary
    judgment was filed and trial was imminent. We do not hold that Rules
    8(c) and 81(c) require the inclusion of the policy defense in the grounds
    of defense filed in the state court, but we do hold that the failure of Cin-
    cinnati to comply with the substantive provisions of Rule 8(c) is appro-
    priately considered in deciding the effect of the failure to include the
    policy defense in either the grounds of defense, or in any of the various
    papers filed with the district court prior to the motion for summary judg-
    ment, or in any of the communications made to the plaintiff. Rule 8(c)
    prevents just such inaction from reaping the benefit of notice timely
    given under the rules of court.
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.                 11
    argument of Cincinnati Insurance that the ham had to be classified as
    adulterated under USDA regulations relating to meat products.
    It relied upon the undisputed facts that the meat was exposed "to
    very high levels of anhydrous ammonia gas, which is described as
    both poisonous and toxic"; that the ham was not hermetically pack-
    aged; that the ammonia had permeated into the meat; that the expo-
    sure caused an odor of ammonia about the meat; and that a
    discoloration reduced the quality of the meat. The insurance adjuster
    for Cincinnati Insurance testified in his deposition that some three
    weeks after the exposure there was still an odor of ammonia in the
    rooms where the ham involved was stored. Even if most of the labora-
    tory tests of the meat, many of which showed ammonia content, did
    not show a content high enough to be actually dangerous to human
    health, one of the samples showed an ammonia content of 938 parts
    per million, while the danger point was 870. The district court found
    that the exposure to ammonia caused an odor and discoloration that
    reduced the quality of the product whether or not it may not have
    been directly injurious to health or adulterated under the regulations.
    We are of opinion the district court was correct in its construction
    of the policy and in its view of the evidence. The evidence the district
    court relied on, and we have related, is not subject to contradiction,
    and even if the argument of Cincinnati Insurance is that Edwards
    destroyed too much of the ham rather than examining it piece by
    piece to see which was discolored and which smelled of ammonia, we
    do not believe, and are of opinion, that no duty of minimizing dam-
    ages would require Edwards to so segregate the thousands of pieces
    of ham involved when there was a very real chance of risk to human
    health in selling the product for human consumption.
    In this respect, the witness Krut was prepared to testify that the dis-
    position of all of the ham exposed to ammonia was the way the Haz-
    ardous Analysis Critical Control point system of the USDA is
    supposed to work. If the ham, having been exposed to anhydrous
    ammonia, had been introduced into commerce by Edwards, in his
    opinion the USDA would have tagged the product and recommended
    that Edwards recall it. Krut is the Executive Director of the American
    Association of Meat Processors and has worked with the USDA’s
    Food, Safety and Inspection Service and in various other aspects of
    the meat industry.
    12            EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.
    The judgment of the district court is accordingly
    AFFIRMED.
    MICHAEL, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    The Cincinnati Insurance Company issued a commercial property
    policy to S. Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc., a wholesaler of ham prod-
    ucts. The insurance company agreed to "pay for direct physical loss
    or damage to Covered Property." Edwards seeks payment of $155,000
    for discarded ham that it claims was damaged by exposure to ammo-
    nia gas in a cold storage facility when a refrigerant line was cracked
    by a forklift. I concur in part II of the majority’s opinion, which holds
    that the insurance company waived its defense under the policy provi-
    sion that requires the insured to bring an action for coverage within
    two years of the damage. I respectfully dissent, however, from part
    III of the majority’s opinion because I believe there is a genuine issue
    of material fact about whether the ham was damaged by the ammonia
    gas. This factual dispute precludes the award of summary judgment
    to Edwards, the insured. See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    ,
    322 (1986); Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e).
    The majority points to evidence proffered by Edwards that indi-
    cates the ham was damaged by ammonia gas. The problem is that the
    insurance company proffers evidence, which I will summarize, that
    goes the other way. An employee of Richmond Cold Storage, where
    the ham was stored, conducted litmus tests on the ham on two occa-
    sions, just after the accident and later during repackaging; neither set
    of tests showed any ammonia contamination to the ham. J.A. 395,
    398-403, 418-22. Edwards engaged Microbac Laboratories, Inc., an
    independent laboratory, to evaluate the ham. In Microbac’s first anal-
    ysis of the ham, each of three samples had an ammonia content of less
    than 0.10 percent, well within the range the International Association
    of Refrigerated Warehouses considers acceptable. J.A. 252, 255, 276.
    David Danis, Microbac’s laboratory director who supervised the test-
    ing of the three samples, said that the ammonia levels in the samples
    "were all at insignificant levels when compared to the control ham
    hock." J.A. 287. In Microbac’s second analysis of seventeen samples,
    sixteen had ammonia levels within the range that typically occurs in
    nature. J.A. 247-49, 381-83. One sample had a higher than normal
    EDWARDS & SONS v. CINCINNATI INSURANCE CO.            13
    ammonia content, but an expert explained that the ham’s age could
    have caused the heightened ammonia level. J.A. 382-83. Barbara
    Starks, a Microbac employee, performed smell and visual tests on the
    ham samples. Starks did not detect the smell of ammonia about the
    ham. J.A. 281. Starks did note that the ham was discolored in places,
    that is, it had brown areas. 
    Id.
     Starks acknowledged that she did not
    know how ammonia exposure affected the appearance of ham, but she
    said that the "brown areas were similar to the appearance of product
    that had been frozen for some time." 
    Id.
    Microbac, the laboratory chosen by Edwards to test the ham, con-
    sistently concluded that the ham was not tainted by the ammonia
    exposure. Microbac’s initial report to Edwards stated that "testing
    verified that no ammonia residue was present" and that "the meat
    evaluated falls within acceptable ammonia guidelines for food prod-
    ucts." J.A. 252. A second version of the report, which Microbac
    claims it produced in response to pressure from an Edwards
    employee, J.A. 255, stated that Microbac could not determine the
    cause of the brown areas, but it still concluded that the ham was
    "within acceptable ammonia guidelines for food products." J.A. 253.
    Both reports stated that Microbac’s analyst did not detect an ammonia
    odor about the ham. J.A. 252-53.
    The evidence proffered in the summary judgment proceedings
    makes clear that a court cannot decide on summary judgment which
    side is right in this case. There is a genuine factual dispute about
    whether the ham was damaged by the ammonia leak. I would there-
    fore vacate the award of summary judgment to Edwards and remand
    the case for trial.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02-1885, 02-1928

Citation Numbers: 353 F.3d 367

Judges: Widener, Michael, Bullock, Middle

Filed Date: 12/24/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024