Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca8-04-02035/USCOURTS-ca8-04-02035-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Holland Colors Americas
Appellee
Nebraska Plastics
Appellant
OMYA
Not Party

Document Text:

United States Court of Appeals

FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

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Nos. 04-2035/2180

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Nebraska Plastics, Inc.,

Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

v.

Holland Colors Americas, Inc.,

Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

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Appeal from the United States

District Court for the 

District of Nebraska.

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Submitted: February 14, 2005

 Filed: May 13, 2005

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Before MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, BOWMAN, and GRUENDER, Circuit

Judges. 

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GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

 A jury awarded Nebraska Plastics over $1,800,000 on its claims against

Holland Colors Americas (“HCA”) for breach of implied warranties, negligent

design, manufacture and supply, negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent

concealment. The jury also returned a verdict for HCA on its counterclaim for

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The Honorable Warren K. Urbom, United States District Judge for the District

of Nebraska.

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approximately $50,000 in overdue payments. The district court1 granted HCA’s postverdict motions for judgment as a matter of law on the issue of future damages and

for a pro tanto settlement credit based on Nebraska Plastics’ settlement with another

defendant, reducing Nebraska Plastics’ award to under $300,000. Nebraska Plastics

appeals the district court’s grant of the motions and the entry of judgment for HCA

on its counterclaim, while HCA cross-appeals the submission of the negligent design,

manufacture and supply claim to the jury. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm

the rulings of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

Nebraska Plastics is a producer of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) products,

including PVC fencing. In 1993, Nebraska Plastics decided to develop colored PVC

fencing. With no experience or expertise in producing outdoor colored PVC

products, Nebraska Plastics recognized that it needed assistance. Therefore,

Nebraska Plastics hired pigment supplier HCA to help develop the colored fencing,

based on HCA’s representation that it had the technical knowledge and resources to

help Nebraska Plastics develop a quality product. Nebraska Plastics gave HCA its

proprietary PVC formula to allow HCA to develop an appropriate pigmentation

technology. HCA sales agent Dick Bushart instructed Nebraska Plastics on the

equipment and procedures needed to add HCA’s pigment during the fencing

manufacturing process. Nebraska Plastics began producing colored fencing in 1996.

In 1997, Nebraska Plastics’ customers and dealers began to complain that the

colored fencing was weathering abnormally. Nebraska Plastics was obligated by its

product warranty, and by a desire to maintain its good name in the market, to replace

fencing that weathered abnormally. Nebraska Plastics alerted HCA immediately

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about the abnormal weathering, and HCA assembled a technical team to address the

problem.

By April 1998, HCA had determined the source of the problem. Nebraska

Plastics’ PVC formula for fencing included calcium carbonate, supplied by OMYA,

Inc. (“OMYA”). Calcium carbonate is a common ingredient in white PVC products.

However, it was known in the industry that calcium carbonate is an unsuitable

ingredient for outdoor colored PVC products. PVC reacts with sunlight to form

water-soluble material. The calcium carbonate in the PVC attracts moisture to the

water-soluble material, causing it to wash away in rain. After the water-soluble

material washes away, only a white surface remains, resulting in a faded or chalky

appearance for the colored PVC.

HCA chose not to inform Nebraska Plastics that calcium carbonate was causing

the abnormal weathering. Bushart knew that if Nebraska Plastics altered its PVC

formula to remove calcium carbonate, it would also remove another ingredient that

Bushart sold, and Bushart did not want to lose his sales commissions on that

ingredient. Instead, at the urging of Bushart, HCA’s technical team told Nebraska

Plastics that expensive changes in Nebraska Plastics’ equipment and manufacturing

process would solve the problem. HCA was fully aware that, even if Nebraska

Plastics implemented the changes, the abnormal weathering would continue as long

as calcium carbonate was included in Nebraska Plastics’ PVC formula.

Naturally, even after making the changes recommended by HCA, Nebraska

Plastics continued to receive warranty claims from fading and “chalking” of the

colored fencing. Nebraska Plastics sought information from other consultants and

learned that calcium carbonate was causing the problem. In August 2000, Nebraska

Plastics reduced the calcium carbonate in its formula from eight parts per hundred to

three; five months later, they completely eliminated calcium carbonate from the

formula. Nebraska Plastics has yet to receive a complaint of abnormal weathering

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related to fencing manufactured after the reformulation. Nebraska Plastics sold a total

of 9,893,437 pounds of defective fencing between 1996 and 2001.

When Nebraska Plastics questioned HCA about the new information Nebraska

Plastics had received regarding calcium carbonate, HCA initially was evasive. In

February 2001, visiting HCA technical personnel finally “hinted” to Nebraska

Plastics that calcium carbonate was indeed the source of the problem. Those HCA

personnel were rebuked by Bushart.

Nebraska Plastics brought suit against HCA and OMYA, the calcium carbonate

supplier, in October 2001 for breach of express and implied warranties, negligent

design, manufacture and supply, negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent

concealment. HCA brought a counterclaim against Nebraska Plastics to recover

payment for deliveries of pigment between March and June of 2001. The district

court granted summary judgment to OMYA on the implied warranty of

merchantability and negligent design, manufacture and supply claims. The remaining

claims proceeded to jury trial.

In the early stages of trial, OMYA settled the remaining claims against it. The

jury returned a verdict for Nebraska Plastics on all of its claims against HCA, except

for breach of express warranty, and awarded damages totaling $1,811,590. Of that

amount, $1,042,492 was awarded for colored fence warranty claims expected to be

incurred in the future. The jury also returned a verdict for HCA on its counterclaim.

Following the jury verdict, the district court granted HCA’s motion for

judgment as a matter of law (“JAML”) on the issue of future damages. In addition,

the district court granted HCA’s motion for a pro tanto settlement credit, reducing the

damages against HCA by the amount Nebraska Plastics received in the OMYA

settlement. As a result, the judgment against HCA was reduced to $269,098. Finally,

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the district court entered judgment on HCA’s counterclaim against Nebraska Plastics

for $50,722.

Nebraska Plastics appeals the exclusion of the testimony of its expert on future

damages, the grant of JAML to HCA on future damages, the grant of a pro tanto

settlement credit to HCA and the entry of judgment for HCA on its counterclaim.

HCA cross-appeals the submission of the negligent design, manufacture and supply

claim to the jury.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Excluded Expert Testimony

Nebraska Plastics expert William Cheese offered future damages testimony in

which he attempted to estimate the cost to Nebraska Plastics of customer warranty

claims expected to be received in the future for defective colored fencing. After a

pre-trial hearing, the district court excluded Cheese’s opinions because they did not

fit the facts of the case. “Decisions concerning the admission of expert testimony lie

within the broad discretion of the trial court, and these decisions will not be disturbed

on appeal absent an abuse of that discretion.” Anderson v. Raymond Corp., 340 F.3d

520, 523 (8th Cir. 2003) (quoting Peitzmeier v. Hennessy Indus., Inc., 97 F.3d 293,

296 (8th Cir. 1996)). We evaluate the district court’s understanding of the evidence

at the time the district court made the ruling. See Old Chief v. United States, 519 U.S.

172, 182 n.6 (1997) (“It is important that a reviewing court evaluate the trial court’s

decision from its perspective when it had to rule and not indulge in review by

hindsight.”).

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Some of the defective fencing was covered by a ten-year warranty, and some

of it was covered by a twenty-year warranty. All warranties were limited to the

original purchaser. Cheese used census data for the average length of ownership of

non-commercial real estate, nine years, as an estimate of how long the original

purchaser would retain the fencing. As a result, Cheese reduced his estimate of the

amount of defective fencing that would be eligible for replacement under a twentyyear warranty to 9/20, or 45%. However, as the district court noted, the 45%

assumption for warranty coverage also did not fit the facts of the case because it was

derived from the assumption that all fencing would fade to the point of being subject

to a warranty claim. In addition, not all fencing was purchased for non-commercial

real estate and there was no reason to assume that all fencing was purchased at the

beginning of the proposed nine-year average period of ownership.

3

Nebraska Plastics did not proffer an “historical warranty claim analysis” to

determine how those facts would affect the expected number of future warranty

claims. An “historical warranty claim analysis” uses statistical methods to predict,

with a demonstrable degree of confidence, the amount of product expected to be the

subject of future warranty claims, based on data from existing warranty claims and

the overall sales distribution of defective product.

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Cheese calculated future damages by assuming that every pound of colored

fence produced between 1996 and 2001 would be subject to a warranty claim.2

 The

district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Cheese’s assumption was

invalid in view of the facts of the case. Specifically, the district court noted that,

while Nebraska Plastics’ evidence did show that all colored fencing with calcium

carbonate would eventually fade, it did not demonstrate that every pound of fencing

would fade to the point of being subject to a valid warranty claim. In fact, at the time

of the district court’s order excluding Cheese’s testimony in November 2003,

warranty claims had been filed on only 3.5% of the total colored fencing produced

with calcium carbonate. Other evidence suggested that the rate of chalking would

vary with regional climate differences and that the chalking would be more noticeable

with some fence colors than with others. Cheese’s estimate of future damages

addressed none of these relevant facts.3

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We agree with Nebraska Plastics that “[a]s a general rule, the factual basis of

an expert opinion goes to the credibility of the testimony, not the admissibility, and

it is up to the opposing party to examine the factual basis for the opinion in crossexamination.” Hartley v. Dillard’s, Inc., 310 F.3d 1054, 1061 (8th Cir. 2002)

(quoting Bonner v. ISP Tech., Inc., 259 F.3d 924, 929 (8th Cir. 2001)). However, it

also is true that if the expert’s opinion is so fundamentally unsupported that it can

offer no assistance to the jury, it must be excluded. Id. An expert opinion that fails

to consider the relevant facts of the case is fundamentally unsupported:

If a party believes that an expert opinion has not considered all of the

relevant facts, an objection to its admission is appropriate. Even a

theory that might meet certain Daubert factors, such as peer review and

publication, testing, known or potential error rate, and general

acceptance, should not be admitted if it does not apply to the specific

facts of the case.

Concord Boat Corp. v. Brunswick Corp., 207 F.3d 1039, 1056 (8th Cir. 2000)

(citations and footnote omitted). 

Cheese’s calculation of future damages failed to take into account a plethora

of specific facts tending to show limits on the amount of defective fencing that would

be the subject of future warranty claims. Therefore, we conclude that the district

court did not abuse its discretion in excluding Cheese’s testimony.

B. JAML on Future Damages

At the close of evidence in the jury trial, HCA moved for JAML on the issue

of future damages. The district court reserved ruling on the motion until after the

verdict. The jury returned a verdict against HCA which included $1,042,492 in future

damages. After additional briefing by the parties, the district court granted HCA’s

motion for JAML, concluding that there was not sufficient evidence from which the

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jury could have calculated Nebraska Plastics’ future damages with reasonable

certainty.

We review the grant of JAML de novo, applying the same standards used by

the district court. Arabian Agric. Servs. v. Chief Indus., 309 F.3d 479, 482 (8th Cir.

2002). “[J]udgment as a matter of law should not be granted unless ‘a party has been

fully heard on an issue and there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a

reasonable jury to find for that party on that issue.’” Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P.

50(a)(1)). “In applying this standard, we must ‘draw all reasonable inferences in

favor of the nonmoving party without making credibility assessments or weighing the

evidence.’” Id. (quoting Phillips v. Collings, 256 F.3d 843, 847 (8th Cir. 2001)). “A

reasonable inference is one which may be drawn from the evidence without resort to

speculation. Thus, judgment as a matter of law is appropriate when the record

contains no proof beyond speculation to support a verdict.” Id. (citations omitted).

The parties agreed in their briefs to the district court that the issue of future

damages is governed by Nebraska law as set forth in Pribil v. Koinzan, 665 N.W.2d

567 (Neb. 2003). The relevant language from Pribil is as follows:

[T]he initial question of law for the trial court is whether the evidence

of damages provides a basis for determining damages with reasonable

certainty, i.e., the evidence of damages is not speculative or conjectural.

If the evidence does provide such a basis, the issue of damages can be

submitted to the jury.

Pribil, 665 N.W.2d at 573. In other words, under Nebraska law, “a plaintiff’s

evidence of damages may not be speculative or conjectural and must provide a

reasonably certain basis for calculating damages.” Id. at 572. We agree with the

district court’s conclusion that several missing pieces of evidence prevented a

reasonably certain computation of the expected amount of future warranty claims. 

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First, there was insufficient evidence to allow the jury to determine the

temporal limits of the warranty coverage of the defective fencing. For example, the

jury had no means to determine what proportion of the defective fencing was covered

by a ten-year warranty as opposed to a twenty-year warranty. Nebraska Plastics

represented that only the fencing produced in 1996 was subject to the shorter

warranty, representing 6.4% of the total defective fencing sold. However, Nebraska

Plastics also introduced a warranty-claim letter from a customer who purchased

fencing in 1999 which refers to the customer’s “ten-year warranty.” 

Second, the warranty also limited coverage to the original purchaser, but

Nebraska Plastics presented insufficient evidence to assist the jury in determining

how long the original purchaser would be expected to own the fencing. The nontransferability of the warranty would presumably limit the effective period for

warranty coverage in many cases, but the jury was not provided with any evidence

that would enable a reasonable estimate of the effective coverage period.

Third, the rate of “chalking” of the fencing was unquantified. Nebraska

Plastics’ evidence indicated the rate of chalking would vary with regional climate, but

no evidence was presented to help the jury quantify those regional variations. Even

if adequate evidence regarding the duration of warranty coverage had been

introduced, the jury had no basis for a reasonable estimate of what proportion of the

defective fencing would fade to the point of creating a valid warranty claim before

termination of the warranty.

Fourth, even if the jury had been able to estimate the number of potential

warranty claims, the jury was given no guidance to estimate the proportion of

customers with timely potential warranty claims who would actually choose to pursue

those claims. Nebraska Plastics’ evidence showed that some customers with

abnormally weathered fences had chosen not to make warranty claims against

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As the district court observed in its order excluding Cheese’s expert opinion,

an “historical warranty claim analysis” accounting for relevant factors such as

expected duration of ownership, rate of chalking, regional variations in rate of

chalking and likelihood that a customer would assert a potential warranty claim

would have been useful to the jury in this context. See supra note 3. 

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Nebraska Plastics. Nebraska Plastics presented no statistical analysis regarding what

proportion of customers would be expected to pursue a timely claim if they had one.

Nebraska Plastics argues that Exhibit 330, when combined with the jurors’

personal knowledge and common sense, contains all the purportedly “missing”

information. Exhibit 330 is a list of thirty-three existing warranty claims and four

potential warranty claims. For each claim, Exhibit 330 lists the fencing manufacture

date, warranty claim date, fence color and fence location. Nebraska Plastics believes

that in choosing a dollar figure for future damages, the jury must have extrapolated

those 37 raw data points into “reasonably certain” statistical data to determine what

proportion of the defective fencing would eventually become the subject of a

warranty claim. However, Nebraska Plastics failed to establish that those 37 fences

constituted a statistically meaningful sample of the almost ten million pounds of

defective fencing sold.

Furthermore, Nebraska Plastics’ evidence provided the jury no guidance on

extrapolating the data on existing claims in Exhibit 330 to the overall amount of

fencing sold.4

 Without such guidance, the jury had no reasonably certain factual basis

for computation of the probable loss. In Racicky v. Farmland Indus., Inc., 328 F.3d

389, 400 (8th Cir. 2003), this Court, applying Nebraska law, reversed a jury award

of future damages because “[t]he financial data presented, though voluminous, was

not accompanied by testimony explaining its significance.” The Court stated, “We

are at a loss to know how the jury here calculated the damages award.” Id. at 398.

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Here, as in Racicky, we are at a loss to know how the jury calculated the

damages award. The jury’s choice of $1,042,492 as the value of the future warranty

claims had to result from sheer guesswork about the effective warranty coverage

period, the speed of the weathering process, and the likelihood that a given customer

with a timely potential warranty claim would actually pursue the claim against

Nebraska Plastics. 

We conclude that, because the jury had no reasonably certain factual basis for

computation of the value of future warranty claims, the district court did not err in

granting JAML to HCA on the issue of future damages.

C. Settlement Credit

The district court granted HCA’s motion to reduce the damages awarded

against it dollar-for-dollar by the amount Nebraska Plastics received in the settlement

with OMYA. Nebraska Plastics argues that HCA was not entitled to this pro tanto

settlement credit under Nebraska law. We review the district court’s interpretation

of state law de novo. Kolb v. Paul Revere Life Ins. Co., 355 F.3d 1132, 1134 (8th Cir.

2004). 

The Nebraska Supreme Court explained Nebraska law on settlement credits in

Vowers & Sons v. Strasheim, 576 N.W.2d 817 (Neb. 1998):

In a breach of contract case, the ultimate objective of a damages award

is to put the injured party in the same position he would have occupied

if the contract had been performed, that is, to make the injured party

whole. As a general rule, a party may not have double recovery for a

single injury, or be made “more than whole” by compensation which

exceeds the actual damages sustained. Where several claims are

asserted against several parties for redress of the same injury, only one

satisfaction can be had. 

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Id. at 825 (citations omitted).

The Nebraska Supreme Court also applied the Vowers & Sons pro tanto

settlement credit rule in Jameson v. Liquid Controls Corp., 618 N.W.2d 637 (Neb.

2000), a product liability case:

[The plaintiffs] did not allege separate acts leading to separate injuries.

Instead, they sought an unspecified amount of damages against these

two defendants as redress for the injuries Richard suffered in the

accident. The jury determined that as a result of the injuries which

Richard had suffered in the accident, he was entitled to a total of $5

million in damages. Since the jury found that $5 million is Richard’s

total award of damages for the injuries which he sustained in the July 16

accident, to the extent he received satisfaction from [the settling

defendant] for those same injuries, [the remaining defendant] is entitled

to a pro tanto reduction of the judgment.

Id. at 644-45.

In its claims against OMYA and HCA, Nebraska Plastics asserted a single

injury—customer warranty claims arising from the sale of defective colored PVC

fencing. Nebraska Plastics made no attempt to prove “separate acts leading to

separate injuries.” Id. Therefore, in the absence of any conflicting considerations,

Nebraska’s pro tanto settlement credit rule should apply in this case. 

Nebraska Plastics argues that other equitable considerations should trump the

Nebraska pro tanto settlement credit rule in this case. HCA was guilty of fraudulent

concealment, an intentional tort. In some states, statutes governing contribution

among tortfeasors or general principles of equity have been held to deny intentional

tortfeasors the benefit of settlement credits. See Evans v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,

5 P.3d 1043, 1050 (Nev. 2000) (collecting cases). Other states, however, “have

concluded that the potential for double recovery by the claimant mandates that

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[settlement credit] offsets be imposed,” even if the party seeking relief is an

intentional tortfeasor. Id. Because no Nebraska statute or decision has addressed the

issue of settlement credits for intentional tortfeasors, our task is to predict how the

highest court in Nebraska would decide the issue. Ehlis v. Shire Richwood, Inc., 367

F.3d 1013, 1016 (8th Cir. 2004). 

We conclude that the Nebraska Supreme Court would apply the pro tanto

settlement credit rule in this case. It is true that Nebraska recognizes the general

principle that a party with unclean hands may not obtain equitable relief, see Olsen

v. Olsen, 657 N.W.2d 1, 4 (Neb. 2003), and that Nebraska does not allow intentional

tortfeasors to seek contribution from joint tortfeasors, see Royal Indem. Co. v. Aetna

Casualty & Surety Co., 229 N.W.2d 183, 189 (Neb. 1975). However, Nebraska law

on settlement credits has been predicated firmly on the principle of denying double

recoveries to plaintiffs, not on the defendants’ relative positions in equity. See

Vowers & Sons, 576 N.W.2d at 825; Jameson, 618 N.W.2d at 644-45. As the district

court noted, this is an action by a claimant seeking to be made whole for an injury,

not an action for contribution by one tortfeasor against another. Therefore, we predict

that in this case the Nebraska Supreme Court would apply the pro tanto settlement

credit rule, based on Nebraska’s well-settled policy of denying a double recovery to

the claimant.

Nebraska Plastics also notes that some amount of the OMYA settlement

payment was paid in exchange for Nebraska Plastics’ waiver of its right to appeal the

partial summary judgment entered in favor of OMYA and for a confidentiality

agreement. Nebraska Plastics contends that this amount, which was not identified in

the settlement, should not be included in the settlement credit because it was not paid

in compensation for Nebraska Plastics’ injuries. However, the Nebraska courts did

not reduce the settlement credits by those peripheral settlement amounts in similar

situations in Jameson and Vowers & Sons, and there is no reason to anticipate a

change of Nebraska law on this point.

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Finally, Nebraska Plastics argues that the portion of the OMYA settlement paid

to settle anticipated future damages should not be included in the settlement credit.

Because we have denied the award for future damages against HCA, Nebraska

Plastics contends that the future damages portion of the OMYA settlement is not

duplicative of any part of the judgment against HCA and would not result in a double

recovery. The settlement agreement does not identify the amount paid specifically

for anticipated future damages.

Nebraska Plastics’ argument that the purported “future damages” portion of the

OMYA settlement is not duplicative fails. Nebraska Plastics brought an action

against OMYA and HCA for the redress of a single injury. OMYA paid a lump sum

to settle all potential liability before the extent of the injury was proved. We have

now determined that future damages were not part of the actual damages proved by

Nebraska Plastics. Because Nebraska Plastics only proved actual damages of

approximately $770,000, any recovery beyond that amount would constitute a double

recovery, regardless of the potential categories of damages covered in the OMYA

settlement. Nebraska Plastics correctly states that because OMYA anticipated a

future damages award in its settlement, OMYA ultimately may have paid more than

its fair share of the actual damages. See Stephens, Inc. v. Geldermann, Inc., 962 F.2d

808, 817 n.5 (8th Cir. 1992) (“As with any settlement, . . . the parties take the risk that

the jury’s verdict would have been more favorable.”). This fact, however, does not

allow Nebraska Plastics to avoid the Nebraska rule that the plaintiff may not “be

made ‘more than whole’ by compensation which exceeds the actual damages

sustained.” Vowers & Sons, 576 N.W.2d at 825.

We conclude that the district court did not err in granting HCA’s motion to

reduce the damages awarded against it dollar-for-dollar by the amount Nebraska

Plastics received in its settlement with OMYA.

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D. HCA’s Counterclaim

HCA counterclaimed against Nebraska Plastics to recover payment for pigment

it delivered to Nebraska Plastics between March and June 2001. The jury found for

HCA on that claim and awarded $50,722 to HCA.

Nebraska Plastics argues that the jury verdict on HCA’s counterclaim was not

supported by sufficient evidence and that it was inconsistent with the jury verdicts on

Nebraska Plastics’ claims against HCA. Nebraska Plastics concedes that it did not

raise the necessary objections to preserve these arguments below. 

A party waives a claim of inconsistent verdicts by failing to object to the

inconsistency before judgment is entered. Dairy Farmers of Am., Inc. v. Travelers

Ins. Co., 391 F.3d 936, 945 (8th Cir. 2004). Nebraska Plastics did not object below

to the jury verdict on the counterclaim as being inconsistent with the jury verdicts on

Nebraska Plastics’ claims against HCA. Therefore, to the extent Nebraska Plastics

bases its argument on inconsistency of the verdicts, it has waived its argument.

To the extent Nebraska Plastics argues insufficiency of the evidence on the

counterclaim, Nebraska Plastics concedes that the district court’s entry of judgment

may be reviewed only for plain error. “Plain error review is narrow and confined to

the exceptional case where error has seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or

public reputation of the judicial proceedings,” and “[t]he verdict should be reversed

only if the error prejudices the substantial rights of a party and would result in a

miscarriage of justice if left uncorrected.” Chem-Trend, Inc. v. Newport Indus., 279

F.3d 625, 629 (8th Cir. 2002) (quotations omitted).

Nebraska Plastics has made no showing that the verdict for HCA on the

counterclaim prejudiced its substantial rights. The claim was for the price of pigment

delivered between March and June 2001, after Nebraska Plastics had discovered the

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5

In its reply brief, HCA introduced the argument that the tort-based negligent

design, manufacture and supply claim was precluded by the contract-based warranty

claims under the “economic loss” doctrine. See Nat’l Crane Corp. v. Ohio Steel Tube

Co., 332 N.W.2d 39, 44 (Neb. 1983) (holding that “the purchaser of a product

pursuant to contract cannot recover economic losses from the seller manufacturer on

claims in tort based on negligent manufacture or strict liability in the absence of

physical harm to persons or property caused by the defective product”). This

argument was not raised by HCA in its opening brief, and Nebraska Plastics did not

have a chance to respond to it. This Court does not consider issues first raised in a

reply brief unless the appellant gives some reason for failing to raise and brief the

issue in his opening brief. Martin v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 390 F.3d 601, 608 n.4 (8th

Cir. 2004). Therefore, HCA has waived its argument that the recovery of purely

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problem and ceased the use of calcium carbonate in its colored fencing. Because the

pigment that was the subject of the counterclaim did not contribute to any defective

fencing, Nebraska Plastics’ rights were not substantially prejudiced by a verdict that

forced Nebraska Plastics to pay for that pigment. 

We conclude that the district court’s entry of judgment for HCA on its

counterclaim does not constitute reversible error.

E. Submission of the Negligent Design, Manufacture and Supply Claim

 to the Jury

In its cross-appeal, HCA argues that the district court erred in submitting

Nebraska Plastics’ negligent design, manufacture and supply claim to the jury

because there was no “product” upon which to base the claim. HCA contends that

the pigment it provided was not defective and its participation in the design of the

fencing was not a “product.” HCA argues further that even if its participation in the

design of the fencing was a product, recovery on a negligent design theory for its

“bad advice” would duplicate the recovery under the negligent misrepresentation and

fraudulent concealment claims.5

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economic damages under the negligent design, manufacture and supply claim was

improper.

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Because HCA did not object with specificity to the relevant instructions, its

arguments were not preserved below. HCA objected to the jury instruction for the

negligent design, manufacture and supply claim only on the ground that there was “no

evidence sufficient to warrant that instruction to the jury.” HCA did not object to the

jury instruction defining HCA’s participation in the design process as a “product” or

to the instruction for the negligent design, manufacture and supply claim as being

“duplicative” of other claims. See, e.g., Cross v. Cleaver, 142 F.3d 1059, 1068 (8th

Cir. 1998) (“[A] general objection is insufficient to preserve the specific objections

to the instruction that the appellant may subsequently seek to raise on appeal.”)

(quotation omitted). Therefore, these arguments must be evaluated under the plain

error standard of review. Id. The verdict will be reversed “‘only if the error

prejudices the substantial rights of a party and would result in a miscarriage of justice

if left uncorrected.’” Chem-Trend, 279 F.3d at 629 (quoting Rush v. Smith, 56 F.3d

918, 922 (8th Cir. 1995)).

The district court’s submission of the negligent design, manufacture and supply

claim to the jury does not merit reversal under plain-error review. Nebraska Plastics

hired HCA to provide pigment for its colored fencing based on HCA’s representation

that HCA would lend its expertise to the design process to create a quality final

colored PVC product. Because HCA participated in the design of the colored

fencing, the defectively designed fencing can serve as the predicate product for the

negligent design claim. Furthermore, negligence in designing the colored fencing

would not necessarily duplicate “bad advice” in negligently or intentionally failing

to inform Nebraska Plastics of the calcium carbonate problem. For example, HCA

performed weathering tests of the colored Nebraska Plastics fencing before sales

commenced; these tests apparently failed to reveal any weathering problem. This

would support a negligent design, manufacture and supply claim independent of the

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“bad advice” claims. On these facts, we cannot say that the submission of the

negligent design, manufacture and supply claim to the jury would result in a

miscarriage of justice if left uncorrected.

We conclude that the district court’s submission of the negligent design,

manufacture and supply claim to the jury does not constitute reversible error.

III. CONCLUSION

We conclude that the district court did not err in excluding the testimony of

Nebraska Plastics’ expert on future damages, granting judgment as a matter of law to

HCA on future damages, granting HCA’s motion for a pro tanto settlement credit,

entering judgment for HCA on its counterclaim and submitting Nebraska Plastics’

negligent design, manufacture and supply claim to the jury. Therefore, we affirm the

judgment as entered by the district court.

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Appellate Case: 04-2035 Page: 18 Date Filed: 05/13/2005 Entry ID: 1902470