Germany 9 January 2002 Supreme Court (Powdered milk case) [translation available]
[Cite as: http://cisgw3.law.pace.edu/cases/020109g1.html]
DATE OF DECISION:
JURISDICTION:
TRIBUNAL:
JUDGE(S):
CASE NUMBER/DOCKET NUMBER: VIII ZR 304/00
CASE NAME:
CASE HISTORY: 1st instance LG Dresden (45 O 908/98) 31 March 2000; 2d instance OLG Dresden 23 October 2000 [remanded]
SELLER'S COUNTRY: Germany (defendant)
BUYER'S COUNTRY: Netherlands (plaintiff)
GOODS INVOLVED: Powdered milk
APPLICATION OF CISG: Yes
APPLICABLE CISG PROVISIONS AND ISSUES
Key CISG provisions at issue:
Classification of issues using UNCITRAL classification code numbers:
2A2 [Exclusions from Convention (purchases for personal family or household use): seller's lack of knowledge of buyer's purpose (burden of proof): dicta reference];
4B [Scope of Convention (issues excluded): Convention's rules on burden of proof can only apply to matters within its sphere of application (not question what effect seller's written recognition that the goods were non-conforming has on burden of proof];
19A ; 19C ; 19D [Acceptance with modifications: reply purporting to accept but containing additions or modifications; Modifications that are material; Goods are accepted when "acceptance" differs materially from offer: possible approaches];
35A [Conformity of goods to contract: quality, quantity and description required by contract];
79A [Exemption from liability for damages: need to prove impediment (example of burden of proof issue regulated by the CISG)]
Descriptors:
CITATIONS TO ABSTRACTS OF DECISION
(a) UNCITRAL abstract: Unavailable
(b) Other abstracts
English: Unilex database <http://www.unilex.info/case.cfm?pid=1&do=case&id=766&step=Abstract>
CITATIONS TO TEXT OF DECISION
Original language (German): Click here for this text (sourced from <http://www.rws-verlag.de/bgh-free/volltex5/vo82717.htm>); see also cisg-online.ch <http://www.cisg-online.ch/cisg/urteile/651.htm>; Unilex database <http://www.unilex.info/case.cfm?pid=1&do=case&id=766&step=FullText>; [2002] BGHReport 265-267; [2002] Neue Juristische Wochenschrift (NJW) 1651-1655; [2002] Recht der Internationalen Wirtschaft (RIW) 396-400; [2002] Wertpapier-Mitteilungen (WM) 1022-1027; [2002] Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftsrecht (ZIP) 672-676
Translation (English): Text presented below
CITATIONS TO COMMENTS ON DECISION
English: Perales, Battle of the Forms and the Burden of Proof: An Analysis of BGH 9 January 2002, 6 Vindobona Journal of International Law and Arbitration (2002), No. 2, 217-228; Ferrante, Uniform Law Review (2003-4) 975-981; Larry A. DiMatteo et al., 34 Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business (Winter 2004) 299-440 at nn.281, 289-291, 567, 794; [2004] S.A. Kruisinga, (Non-)conformity in the 1980 UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods: a uniform concept?, Intersentia at 162, 164, 167, 174, 177; [2005] Schlechtriem & Schwenzer ed., Commentary on UN Convention on International Sale of Goods, 2d (English) ed., Oxford University Press, Art. 4 para. 22 Art. 6 paras. 17, 35 Art. 7 paras. 49, 56 Art. 35 paras. 49 Art. 19 paras. 6, 19, 21 Art. 35 paras. 49 Art. 74 para. 51 Art. 79 paras. 40, 53; Henschel, The Conformity of Goods in International Sales, Forlaget Thomson (2005) 93, 114 et seq., 158; Carla Spivack, 27 Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law (Fall 2006) n.178 [commentary on Art. 79 issues]; Schwenzer & Fountoulakis ed., International Sales Law, Routledge-Cavendish (2007) at p. 166; Peter Huber, in: Huber & Mullis, "The CISG: A new textbook for students and practitioners", Sellier European Law Publishers (2007) 94; Kaia Wildner, Art. 19 CISG: The German Approach to the Battle of the Forms in International Contract Law: The Decision of the Federal Supreme Court of Germany of 9 January 2002, in 20 Pace International Law Review (Spring 2008) 1-18
French: Limbach, Receuil Dalloz - Cahier Droit des Affairs No. 34 (October 2003) 2362-2363
German: Achilles, Wilhelm-Albrecht, [2002] BGHReport 267-268
Italian: Ferrante, 8 Contratto e Impresa/Europa (2003) 485-511
Go to Case Table of ContentsJanuary 9, 2002 [VIII ZR 304/00]
Translation [*] by Alston & Bird LLP
Editors: William M. Barron, Esq. & Birgit Kurtz, Esq.
Facts
The plaintiff [buyer 1] and the assignor [buyer 2], both located in the Netherlands and
trading in dairy products, purchased a total of 2,557.5 tons of powdered milk in the first
half of 1998, based on a number of contracts, from defendant [seller 1], which is
headquartered in Germany, and its major shareholder [seller 1A]. Of this powdered milk,
[buyer 1] and [buyer 2] sold 7.5 tons to the Dutch company I. and 2,550 tons to the
Algerian company G.I., owned by P.L. S.p.A. (hereinafter G. S.p.A.), formerly known as
O.R. S.p.A. The contents of the telephonic orders were recorded by [buyer 1] and [buyer
2] and/or by [seller 1] and [seller 1A] in written confirmations. The letters of confirmation
of delivery of [seller 1] and [seller 1A] (whose production facility in L. [seller 1] acquired
in the beginning of 1998 with all existing contractual relationships) each contained in the
footer the following text:
"We sell exclusively pursuant to our general terms and conditions. Contrary statutory
conditions or contrary general terms and conditions of the buyer are expressly not
acknowledged and are therefore not part of the contract."
The terms and conditions at issue contain the following warranty clause:
"VI. Warranty and Notification of Defects
The buyer must inspect the goods immediately upon delivery and note any complaints
on the delivery note … Defects that are not noticeable at the time of delivery can only
be claimed before the printed expiration date … The buyer must make available the
goods at issue or enough samples of the goods at issue; if he does not do so, the buyer
cannot make any warranty claims."
Condition No. 8 in the so-called M.P.C. conditions referred to by [buyer 1] provides:
"Section 10. Sampling and Complaints
Notwithstanding any duty of the seller to pay back the purchase price, or a part
thereof, the liability of the seller for damages suffered (and/or to be suffered) is at all
times limited to the invoiced amount for the delivered goods."
The powdered milk, which was packaged and delivered by [seller 1], was inspected through
spot-checks by [buyer 1] and/or [buyer 2] with the assistance of "I.S. Nederland B.V."
(hereinafter "I.S.") without any special results, then it was newly palletized in the harbor of
Antwerp and thereafter shipped to Algeria and, to the extent it was sold to I., to
Aruba/Netherland Antilles.
After local subsidiaries of G S.p.A. processed the powdered milk delivered to Algeria, some
of the produced milk had a rancid taste. Thereupon, G. S.p.A. complained to [buyer 1] and
[buyer 2] about a total of 207.6 tons of powdered milk as well as part of the powdered milk
that had already been processed into 10,000 liters of milk. On June 24 and August 19, 1998,
representatives of G. S.p.A., of [buyer 1], of [buyer 2] and of [seller 1] had several meetings
in A. to clarify the question of the compensation for G. S.p.A. The result of these
negotiations, during which [buyer 1] and [buyer 2] each promised certain compensation to
G. S.p.A., was recorded in four "minutes of amicable settlement"; these documents were also
signed by the representative of [seller 1].
By letter dated August 24, 1998, the legal department of [seller 1A], which was entrusted by
[seller 1] with the resolution of the matter, informed [buyer 1] and [buyer 2] of the following,
among other things:
"We acknowledge that a partial quantity of 177 tons of the total quantity of 3,495 tons
of powdered milk, delivered pursuant to the letters of confirmation of delivery dated
… did not meet the contractual requirements.
"We do not deny that you have warranty claims because of the quality deviation, but
the following two aspects must be considered:
"… We expressly emphasize here that we are willing to rescind the contractual
relationship with you and/or company A. because of the 177 tons of inadequate
powdered milk. Further claims that company G. may raise against you or company A.
are not substantively justified and will not be accepted by us."
By letter dated September 1, 1998, [buyer 2] claimed damages from [seller 1] in the amount
of $198,150.36; it assigned this claim to [buyer 1] on November 30, 1998.
Company I. also complained to [buyer 1] regarding the delivery of 7.5 tons of powdered milk
because of, among other things, a sour taste of the powdered milk, and claimed damages in
the amount of Hfl [Dutch florin] 29,256, which [buyer 1] paid.
[Buyer 1] alleged that the rancid taste, noticed by the ultimate buyers, was caused by an
infestation of the powdered milk by lipase that already existed at the time of the transfer of
the risk as a result of the faulty processing of the milk. [Translator's note: lipase is an
enzyme.] This defect was only noticeable after the delivery and was immediately
complained of by it. [Seller 1] acknowledged its warranty in the agreements recorded in
Algeria as well as in its letter dated August 24, 1998. Under the rules of the CISG, [seller
1] is liable for the damages incurred by [buyer 1] and [buyer 2] that resulted from the
payment of damages to the ultimate purchasers and the travel costs for the meeting in A.,
totaling DM [Deutsche Mark] 780,506.46; this was not excluded by [seller 1]'s general
terms and conditions of delivery.
[Seller 1] alleged that the lipase infestation of the powdered milk delivered to Algeria first
occurred after the transfer of the risk, or at least it was not caused by it. The powder
delivered to company I. could not be consumed because of an insect infestation. In any case,
the application of the CISG is excluded by its general terms and conditions. Thus, the
German BGB [*] governs, with the consequence that [buyer 1] has no claim for damages
because the delivered powdered milk did not lack an assured quality.
The Regional Court [Landgericht] dismissed the complaint for payment of the above-referenced amount. On appeal by [buyer 1], the Higher Regional Court
[Oberlandesgericht] granted the claim in the amount of DM 633,742.45 - after obtaining
an oral expert opinion regarding the cause of the defect - and dismissed the appeal as to
the rest, especially insofar as the complaint concerns the last partial delivery to G. S.p.A.
on July 6, 1998 (650 tons) and the delivery to company I. On appeal to the Supreme
Court, [seller 1] continues to request the dismissal of the case in its entirety.
Grounds for the decision
I. The Court of Appeals stated in essence:
The warranty claims asserted by [buyer 1], based on its own rights and on rights assigned
to it, are justified according to the rules of the CISG. The CISG was neither totally nor
partially replaced by the General Terms and Conditions and Delivery Conditions of [seller
1] nor by the M.P.C. conditions used by [buyer 1]. The latter did not become part of the
agreements with [buyer 2] and was also altogether superseded by the rejection clause in
the General Terms and Conditions of [seller 1]. The fact that the mutual general terms
and conditions partially contradicted each other did not prevent the existence of the sales
contracts because the parties did not view this contradiction as an obstacle to the
execution of the contracts.
[Seller 1] must pay damages under Arts. 74, 75 CISG because 177.6 tons of the delivered
powdered milk must be considered defective, the defects were claimed in time and the
liability of [seller 1] was not excluded under Art. 79 CISG. According to the expert
report of Prof. Dr. F., the powdered milk was infested by lipase. Because [seller 1]
acknowledged the defect in 177.6 tons of powdered milk by letter dated August 24, 1998,
which caused a reversal of the burden of proof according to the applicable (non-CISG)
German law, it was its duty to show and prove that the powdered milk met the
requirements of the contract at the time of the transfer of the risk. [Seller 1] did not
submit such evidence. According to the expert report of Prof. Dr. F., it cannot be ruled
out that the powdered milk was infested by inactive lipase at the time of the transfer of the
risk. This assumption was not changed by the considerations of the private expert Prof.
Dr. B. (who was retained by [seller 1]), which are based on the fact that no lipase activity
was diagnosed in the analysis of the powdered milk by I.S.; that is so because the expert
does not deal with the question whether the contamination by inactive lipase could have
been determined. Therefore, the commissioning of another report, as requested by [seller
1], is not necessary, the more so since the expert Prof. Dr. F. has testified that, in 1998,
there was no scientifically accepted method to quantitatively determine inactive lipase in
powdered milk.
The assertion of [seller 1] about the comprehensive sensory, physical and microbiological
examination of the powdered milk, carried out in its facilities, can be assumed to be correct,
because also through this examination, knowledge could also not be gained about the
existence of inactive lipase. Even if - as asserted by [seller 1] - the powdered milk was
stored in Algeria at high temperatures and very high humidity, according to the statements
of the expert Prof. Dr. F., it must remain undecided whether the cause of the spoiled flavor
commenced first after the transfer of the risk or whether the powdered milk was infested by
lipase from the outset. At least to that extent, a new trial is not necessary because the
improper storage is only one possible explanation for the spoiled flavor, which does not,
however, exclude the oxidation processes caused by lipase. Finally, a contamination by
inactive lipase that already existed at the time of delivery cannot be excluded by the fact that
the lipase-induced taste allegedly appeared already at the time the powdered milk was mixed
because that could be easily explained with inactive lipase existing in the powdered milk.
[Seller 1] did not sufficiently set forth the requirements of an exemption from the duty of
compensation under Art. 79(1) CISG. It may remain open whether this rule can generally be
applied to goods that do not meet contractual requirements; in any case, [seller 1] did not
show that the causes for the inactive lipase were outside its sphere of influence. It is true that,
because of the expert report of Prof. Dr. F., it can be ruled out (in favor of [seller 1]) that the
powdered milk was infested by lipase-forming microorganisms or by inactive lipoprotein-lipase (at the time of the transfer of the risk). But there is still the possibility of the
contamination by inactive lipase, which must have developed either in the milk that was
delivered by the milk producers, or in the production process at [seller 1]'s facilities; [seller
1] is liable for either. In addition, [seller 1] also did not show that it was unable to avoid the
lipase infestation. It is true that, according to the expert report, it must be assumed that, even
with the highest diligence, the existence of heat resistant lipase in the powdered milk cannot
be ruled out with certainty. That does not, however, say anything about the question whether
the undisputedly existing lipase was caused by a development that was fateful for [seller 1]
or by the failure to comply with optimal standards.
The amount of damages granted must not be diminished because of a violation of a duty of
[buyer 1] and [buyer 2]. [Seller 1] has agreed to the stipulated resolution of the damages
question between [buyer 1], [buyer 2] and G. S.p.A., and it therefore cannot now argue that
the defective powdered milk cannot be returned to it.
II. These elaborations do not withstand legal scrutiny on all points. Because of the current
status of the facts and the dispute, it cannot be ruled out that the defects in the powdered milk
are based on causes for which [seller 1] is not liable under Arts. 36, 45, 74 CISG.
1. The Court of Appeals, however, correctly assumed that the compensation rules of the
CISG for the claims of [buyer 1] are not excluded by its General Terms and Conditions
("M.P.C. conditions"), which provide considerable limitations of liability for the seller, inter
alia, by restricting any compensation to the amount invoiced for the delivered goods.
The question to what extent colliding general terms and conditions become an integral part
of a contract where the CISG applies, is answered in different ways in the legal literature.
According to the (probably) prevailing opinion, partially diverging general terms and
conditions become an integral part of a contract (only) insofar as they do not contradict each
other; the statutory provisions apply to the rest (so-called "rest validity theory"; e.g., Achilles,
Komm. zum UN-Kaufrechtsübereinkommen [Commentary to the CISG], Art. 19 ¶ 5;
Schlechtriem/Schlechtriem, CISG (3d ed.), Art. 19 ¶ 20, esp. p. 226; Staudinger/Magnus,
CISG (1999), Art. 19 ¶ 23). Whether there is such a contradiction that impedes the
integration, cannot be determined only by an interpretation of the wording of individual
clauses, but only upon the full appraisal of all relevant provisions. The appeal misunderstands
this when it wants to compare only the limited rejection clause of [seller 1] to [buyer 1]'s
warranty clauses, which are favorable to [seller 1]. As the Court of Appeals has correctly
determined, the Dutch M.P.C. conditions contain substantial deviations from the CISG's
warranty rules - which would essentially remain applicable based on the General Terms and
Conditions of [seller 1] - and it cannot be assumed that [buyer 1] wanted to have the M.P.C.
conditions, which are internally balanced, apply to it insofar as they are noticeably more
detrimental than the statutory provisions without having the benefit of the clauses that are
favorable to it. Vice versa, there is nothing to show that [seller 1] wanted those clauses of
the M.P.C. conditions that are unfavorable to it apply to the contracts.
The result is no different if one follows the contrary opinion ("Last shot" doctrine; re. the
current status of opinions and the concerns against the application of this theory where the
CISG applies, compare Schlechtriem/Schlechtriem, supra, ¶ 20 and fn. 62). Certainly under
the point of view of good faith and fair dealing (Art. 7(1) CISG), [seller 1] should not have
assumed that the question whether certain provisions of the opposing terms and conditions
contradicted its own (even insofar as it served its Terms and Conditions last) could be
answered in isolation for individual clauses with the consequence that the individual
provisions that were beneficial to it would apply.
2. We also reject as unsubstantiated the argument in the appeal to this Court that the
Court of Appeals incorrectly placed the burden of proof on [seller 1] for the allegation that
the partial amount of 177.6 tons of the delivered powdered milk met the requirements of the
contract at the time of delivery.
Based on all this, the Court of Appeals correctly assumed that, based on the reversal of the
burden of proof resulting from the letter dated August 24, 1998, [seller 1] should have shown
and proven that the powdered milk at issue met the requirements of the contract at the time
of the transfer of the risk.
[3. In this section of the decision, the Supreme Court, based on its prior case law, discusses
the Court of Appeals' incorrect evaluation of the evidence as a procedural error. The expert
opinion presented by [seller 1] regarding the defect in the powdered milk at the time of the
transfer of the risk contradicted the oral expert opinion (which had been commissioned by
the Court) in a decisive point. According to the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeals,
without its own know-how in this question, should have at least obtained a supplementary
statement of the expert on the issue of the contradictory expert opinion presented by [seller
1].]
III. For the further proceedings, the Panel [of the Supreme Court] notes the following:
If, after a new trial, it should appear that an infestation of the powdered milk by
microbiological inactive lipase cannot be excluded at the time of the transfer of the risk, the
outcome will depend on whether [seller 1] is not liable for this infestation under Art. 79
CISG. The appeal to this Court is of the opinion that Art. 79 CISG also applies to the
delivery of goods that do not meet the requirements of the contract (left open in the Panel [of
the Supreme Court] decision BGHZ [*] 141, 129, 132); it argues that the failure to fulfill the
contractual duties to perform of [seller 1] was based here on a ground for which it was not
responsible under Art. 79 CISG because (according to its evidence) the powdered milk had
been manufactured according to the current knowledge of science and technology and that
any existing lipase stock could have only been such stock that could have never been excluded
based on standard procedure. In this context, we note, as a precaution, that [seller 1] can
only be freed from its obligation to pay damages for its failure to comply with the contract
if it can prove that any lipase infestation of the delivered milk would not have been detectable,
even upon the careful use of the necessary methods of analysis before any further processing,
and that a possible infestation in the manufacture of the powdered milk was based on grounds
that were outside of its sphere of influence. As long as the cause of the lipase infestation
before the transfer of the risk cannot be determined, the factual testimony of [seller 1], as
taken into account by the appeal to this Court, lacks the necessary cumulative exonerative
proof.
FOOTNOTE
* All translations should be verified by cross-checking against the original text. Amounts in German currency [Deutsche Mark] are indicated as [DM]; amounts in Dutch currency [Dutch florin] are indicated as [Hfl].
Translator's note on other abbreviations: BGB = Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch [German Civil
Code]; BGH = Bundesgerichtshof [German Federal Supreme Court]; BGHZ = Die amtliche
Sammlung der Entscheidungen des Bundesgerichtshofes in Zivilsachen [Official Reporter
of Decisions of the German Federal Supreme Court in Civil Matters]; NJW = Neue
Juristische Wochenschrift [German weekly law journal].
Case text (English translation)
Federal Supreme Court (Bundesgerichtshof ), Civil Panel VIII
Pace Law School
Institute of International Commercial Law - Last updated April 13, 2009
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