Filed Date: 10/31/2000
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Franklin Weissberg, J.), entered June 24, 1999, in an action to recover the price of goods sold, in favor of plaintiff seller and against defendants buyer and labor and materials surety, and bringing up for review an order, entered April 14, 1999, which granted plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, unanimously affirmed, without costs. Appeal from the order unanimously dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeal from the judgment.
Defendants fail to raise an issue of fact as to whether the repair, replace or refund remedies to which the buyer was limited under the subject contract failed of their essential purpose (UCC 2-719 [2]). They assert that support columns fabricated by plaintiff seller for erection and installation by defendant buyer at a construction site were discovered, after installation and the placement on them of a 100,000 pound crossover deck, to be cut to the wrong size, and that considerations of safety, as well as economic feasibility, required the buyer itself to remedy the defect immediately without first notifying the seller. However, as a matter of law, the limited remedies in the contract could not have failed of their essential purpose absent any explanation why the defect could not have been discovered before the deck was placed on the columns, or other explanation why the buyer, as the motion court stated, “put itself into this position” by not inspecting the columns before