*733 Opinion of the Court by
The “economic loss rule” prevents the commercial purchaser of a product from suing in tort to recover for economic losses arising from the malfunction of the product itself, recognizing that such damages must be recovered, if at all, pursuant to contract law. Twenty-five years ago, when the United States Supreme Court unanimously adopted the economic loss rule as a common-law aspect of admiralty law, Justice Blackmun observed that while product liability law grew out of a concern that “people need more protection from dangerous products” than might be afforded by warranties, if tort principles were extended too far then “contract law would drown in a sea of tort.”
East River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,
The Supreme Court of Kentucky has not heretofore charted a course in what commentators and courts across the country have referred to as the “choppy waters” of the economic loss rule. Although our Court of Appeals applied it in a classic commercial transaction context some twenty years ago,
Falcon Coal Co. v. Clark Equipment Co.,
RELEVANT FACTS
Appellee Ingersoll Rand purchased from Appellant Giddings & Lewis, Inc. a Diffus *734 er Cell System for use in its Mayfield, Kentucky plant. The Diffuser Cell System, which consisted of a vertical turning lathe, two vertical machining centers, and a material handling system, was used to cut and shape metal parts through a series of steps. First, the operator would secure a block of metal onto the large pallet with a clamp. The material handling system then automatically shuttled the pallet and block of metal into the vertical turning lathe, which spun the pallet and metal block while computer-controlled cutting tools shaped the metal block. Next, the material handling system automatically shuttled the pallet and shaped metal into the vertical machining center, where the shaped metal was finished into its final form.
Ingersoll Rand’s engineers provided Giddings & Lewis with extensive specifications for the Diffuser Cell System, including the requirement that the vertical turning lathe operate at a maximum of 690 RPM (revolutions per minute), a speed that was considerably faster than the 400 RPM customary on Giddings & Lewis machines. Giddings & Lewis apparently redesigned the bearings, transmission, and the pallet material to accommodate Ingersoll Rand’s specifications, and then manufactured the Diffuser Cell System generally to the specifications provided by Ingersoll Rand in an eight-page document. The parties’ written contract included an express warranty that provided inter alia that the goods furnished were “the best quality of their respective kinds and ... free of defects in design, workmanship, or material.”
After seven years of virtually continuous operation, by which time the express warranty had expired, an incident occurred in which the clamp, the pallet and a large chunk of spinning metal flew off the vertical turning lathe and catapulted around the workspace in Ingersoll Rand’s plant. The clamp weighed 3400 pounds, the pallet 1500 pounds and the chunk of metal approximately 300 pounds. No one was injured and damage to property beyond the Diffuser Cell System itself, if any, appears to have been minimal. Ingersoll Rand engaged Giddings & Lewis to rebuild the System and filed a claim with its (Ingersoll Rand’s) insurers, whieh paid $2,798,742.00 for repairs to the damaged machinery, overtime payments to employees and related expenses.
The insurers, now the Appellees and collectively referred to as Industrial Risk Insurers, 1 then sued Giddings & Lewis to recover the amount paid, claiming breach of implied warranty, breach of contract, negligence, strict liability, negligent misrepresentation and fraud by omission. Giddings & Lewis moved for summary judgment, which was initially denied by the trial court but granted upon reconsid *735 eration. 2 The trial court agreed Industrial Risk Insurers’ implied warranty claim was barred by the statute of limitations and held that the economic loss rule, which it found was implicitly adopted by the Court of Appeals in Falcon Coal Co. v. Clark Equip. Co., barred the tort claims, including those for fraud and negligent misrepresentation. The trial court considered but declined to adopt the “calamitous event” exception to the economic loss rule. Finally, the trial court held the vertical turning lathe, the two vertical machining centers, and the material handling system constituted the product, effectively preventing Industrial Risk Insurers from recovering for damage to any part of the Diffuser Cell System.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s explicit adoption and application of the economic loss rule and agreed the calamitous event exception should be rejected. However, relying on Justice Keller’s dissent in
Presnell Construction Managers, Inc. v. EH Construction, LLC,
This Court granted Giddings & Lewis’ ensuing motion for discretionary review as well as Industrial Risk Insurers’ cross-motion. Giddings & Lewis argues the negligent misrepresentation and fraud claims should be barred by the economic loss rule because they are not distinct tort claims arising independent of the contract. Rather, both claims reference the quality or character of the Diffuser Cell System and are thus simply the warranty claims “repackaged” which causes them to fall squarely within the ambit of the economic loss rule. Industrial Risk Insurers counters that the tort claims are not based solely on the product’s failure to perform but are premised on classic tort theories beyond the scope of the economic loss rule. Industrial Risk Insurers posits that if this Court does adopt the economic loss rule, it should include exceptions for negligent misrepresentation and fraud claims and, further, an exception for “calamitous events.”
Giddings & Lewis also maintains that the Diffuser Cell System constituted one product and the component parts should not be considered “other property” for purposes of the economic loss rule. Noting that the Court of Appeals’ view is contrary to established precedent, Gid-dings & Lewis argues that that court’s position would bring only the simplest of machines, those with no components, within the purview of the economic loss rule. Industrial Risk Insurers maintains the individual components of the Diffuser Cell System constitute “other property” but also argues broadly that, regardless of how the Diffuser Cell System and its parts are classified, the economic loss rule would not apply in this case because property completely distinct from the System — a remote Q stand, chucks, cables and the concrete floor — was damaged by the machine malfunction. Giddings & Lewis insists this is the first time this particular “other property” argument has been mentioned and, having been improperly raised, it should not be considered by the Court.
ANALYSIS
The standard of review on appeal of summary judgment is whether the trial
*736
court correctly found there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Hammons v. Hammons,
I. The Economic Loss Rule Applies in Kentucky to Negligence and Strict Liability Claims Arising from the Malfunction of Commercial Products
When the United States Supreme Court adopted the economic loss rule as part of admiralty law in
East River Steamship,
it relied heavily on
Seely v. White Motor Co.,
In
Falcon Coal Co.,
a coal operator purchased a front-end loader which self-destructed in a fire, resulting in a product liability action against the manufacturer/seller based on strict liability.
Shortly thereafter, this Court issued
Real Estate Marketing, Inc. v. Franz,
addressing a defective house construction claim brought by the current homeowners against the original owners of the house and the builder.
In any event, this Court’s first mention of the economic loss rule by name came in Justice Keller’s concurring opinion in
Presnell Construction Managers, Inc. v. EH Construction, LLC,
Faced squarely with a classic case for application of the economic loss rule, we hold that the rule applies in Kentucky. We adopt the
East River Steamship
Court’s holding that “a manufacturer in a commercial relationship has no duty under either a negligence or strict products-liability theory to prevent a product from injuring itself.”
Because the principles underlying the economic loss rule have bearing on other issues presented by this dispute, the three policies supporting its application deserve emphasis:
The economic loss rule marks the border between tort and contract law. Where tort law, primarily out of a concern for safety, fixes the responsibility for a de *739 fective product directly on the parties responsible for placing the product into the stream of commerce, contract law gives the parties to a venture the freedom to allocate risk as they see fit....
Three policies support applying the economic loss doctrine to commercial transactions: (1) it maintains the historical distinction between tort and contract law; (2) it protects parties’ freedom to allocate economic risk by contract; and (3) it encourages the party best situated to assess the risk of economic loss, usually the purchaser, to assume, allocate, or insure against that risk.
Mt. Lebanon Personal Care,
In this case, all or virtually all 7 of the damages which Industrial Risk Insurers seeks to recover are economic losses, ie., repair/replacement costs for the Diffuser Cell System, costs associated with Ingersoll Rand’s contracting work to outside companies, in-house overtime and other miscellaneous costs. The trial court and Court of Appeals correctly concluded the negligence and strict liability claims seeking only those types of damages must be dismissed based on the economic loss rule. We turn next to whether a so-called “calamitous event” should justify an exception to the general rule.
II. There Is No “Calamitous Event” Exception to Kentucky’s Economic Loss Rule
When the Diffuser Cell System in this case malfunctioned it damaged itself in what the trial court described as a “fairly spectacular” fashion. Anticipating that this Court might adopt the economic loss rule, Industrial Risk Insurers urges the adoption of a “calamitous event” or “destructive occurrence” exception for cases such as this, noting the “damaging event” reference in
Franz
as well as a series of cases from other jurisdictions where the exception is supposedly gaining traction. In fact, it appears that a majority of our sister courts do not recognize the exception, just as the U.S. Supreme Court declined to do in
East River Steamship,
Our position is not a matter of deference to the majority view or the nation’s highest court but rather a matter of logic. As Justice Blackmun so succinctly stated:
Nor do we find persuasive a distinction that rests on the manner in which the product is injured. We realize that the damage may be qualitative, occurring through gradual deterioration or internal breakage. Or it may be a calamitous.
* * ⅜ * * *
But either way, since by definition no person or other property is damaged, the resulting loss is purely economic. Even when the harm to the product itself occurs through an abrupt, accident-like event, the resulting loss due to repair costs, decreased value, and lost *740 profits is essentially the failure of the purchaser to receive the benefit of its bargain-traditionally the core concern of contract law.
East River Steamship,
The jurisdictions which subscribe to the calamitous event or destructive occurrence exception almost uniformly focus on the potential for what could have been: even though no person or other property was injured, the calamitous manner in which the product malfunctioned or destroyed itself could have produced serious injuries to people or property.
See, e.g., Capitol Fuels, Inc. v. Clark Equipment Co.,
We agree that there is a steady, strong incentive for manufacturers to produce safe products as a result of not only government and industry standards and the potential for traditional product liability litigation but also as a matter of sound business practice. Declining to recognize the calamitous event exception to the economic loss rule in commercial transactions has not in the last few decades and will not in the future prompt manufacturers to produce unsafe products on the theory that suddenly safety does not matter. Moreover, declining to adopt the calamitous or destructive event exception grounds Kentucky law in what has actually occurred as opposed to what might have occurred, the facts as opposed to speculation. In other contexts, this Court has frequently condemned theories or disallowed evidence that involve speculation.
See, e.g., O’Bryan v. Cave,
Finally, as the U.S. Supreme Court recognized in
East River Steamship,
courts which allow “endangered” commercial purchasers to sue for economic losses in tort for a calamitous event determine whether the exception applies by considering “the nature of the defect, the type of risk, and the manner in which the injury arose.”
Having thoroughly considered the “calamitous event” rationale and its application in practice, we decline to adopt it as an exception to Kentucky’s economic loss rule. To the extent Franz’s alluded-to limitation of Falcon Coal can be read to suggest that a commercial purchaser can recover economic losses under a strict liability theory if a destructive event damages the product itself, Franz is hereby overruled.
III. The Product Covered by the Economic Loss Rule is the Product Which the Manufacturer Placed into the Stream of Commerce Pursuant to the Parties’ Contract
When Ingersoll Rand first contacted Giddings & Lewis about the product at issue in this litigation it sought production of a Diffuser Cell System, an integrated system which Ingersoll Rand itself defined as follows: “The system will consist of a vertical turning center, and (2) vertical machining centers tied or integrated into a machining system. This machining system will incorporate automated material handling in the form of a shuttle ear with pallet transfer or the equivalent.” The parties discussed Ingersoll Rand’s eight pages of specifications for the Diffuser Cell System and, after some modifications, Gid-dings & Lewis sold the System to Inger-soll Rand pursuant to a contract which, at least as to the terms of sale such as the warranty, appears to have been drafted by Ingersoll Rand. After the accident and Industrial Risk Insurers’ payment of In-gersoll Rand’s insurance claim, Industrial Risk contends in this litigation that in fact Ingersoll Rand purchased four separate items — the vertical turning lathe, two vertical machining systems and the material handling system. Industrial Risk maintains that the vertical turning lathe (VTL) is the defective product and, consequently, the other damaged parts of the Diffuser Cell System were “other property” not subject to the economic loss rule. In support of this argument, Industrial Risk notes that the various parts of the System have separate serial numbers, can be operated separately and have been sold separately, although they were not in this particular case.
The trial court rejected this “other property” argument with the following conclusion: “The [manufacturing] cell was purchased at one time, it is one system, and ... for purposes of the Economic Loss Rule it should be treated as one piece of property.” The Court of Appeals, apparently influenced by the fact that the various parts of the Diffuser Cell System could operate independently of each other, found that it could not conclude that the VTL, vertical machining systems and material handling system were one product as a matter of law. It then deemed that determination of the relevant “product” to be an issue of fact to be decided by a jury on remand. On this issue, we must reverse the Court of Appeals because both the facts and the law support the trial court’s conclusion.
In
East River Steamship,
the Supreme Court observed that the plaintiffs three primary claims related to defectively de
*742
signed turbine components which damaged the turbines themselves and that “since each turbine was supplied ... as
an integrated package
... each is properly regarded as a single unit.”
In
Barton Brands Ltd. v. O'Brien & Gere, Inc. of North America,
As noted, Ingersoll Rand submitted detailed specifications for the Diffuser Cell System as an integrated package and the parties contracted for precisely that, an integrated system. The fact that particular component parts such as the VTL could have been sold separately is irrelevant because, as with our rejection of the calamitous event exception, we look at the facts before us, what actually occurred, not speculation about what might have been. The bargained-for item placed in the stream of commerce by Giddings & Lewis pursuant to the parties’ contract was the complete Diffuser Cell System. Consequently, we reverse the Court of Appeals to the extent that it found the identity of the “product itself” to be an issue of fact which must be addressed by a jury. The *743 economic loss rule precludes recovery in tort for any damage to the Diffuser Cell System because that System was the “product itself’ and any economic losses arising from its malfunction must be recovered pursuant to the terms agreed upon by the parties in their contract or any relevant provisions of Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
IV. Industrial Risk Insurers Has Not Preserved for our Review the Issue of Damage to “Other Property” Beyond the Diffuser Cell System
Having rejected the argument that the VTL alone constitutes the product and the other components of the Diffuser Cell System constitute “other property,” we turn to a second “other property” argument. Industrial Risk Insurers also argues that additional “other property” was damaged, namely a remote Q stand, chucks, cables and the concrete floor, all of which was separate and distinct from the Diffuser Cell System purchased from Gid-dings & Lewis. With this argument, Industrial Risk Insurers maintains there is still “other property” damage to prohibit application of the economic loss rule. After careful review of the record, we find Industrial Risk Insurers did not sufficiently raise the issue of this additional “other property” in the trial court and, as such, is precluded from now making the argument to this Court.
Industrial Risk Insurers argues the issue was properly raised because the damage to this additional “other property” was discussed in various depositions, was noted in a service and installation report, 8 was included in the Amended Complaint, 9 and was argued in its Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Memorandum). It is clear that a party does not properly raise a legal issue by simply including factual information in a complaint or discussing those facts in a deposition or an exhibit. While Industrial Risk Insurers did make an “other property” legal argument in its Memorandum, that argument was distinctly different from the one now made to this Court. The other property referred to in the trial court Memorandum was the collection of components of the Diffuser Cell System beyond the VTL, not any separate or distinct property located in the vicinity of the System. Industrial Risk Insurers designated the VTL as the product that malfunctioned and, when describing the damage caused, specified only damage to other parts of the Diffuser Cell System. Industrial Risk Insurers did not premise its “other property” argument on damage to property separate from the Diffuser Cell System, and we will not read general phrases such as “other property,” “nearby machinery” or “equipment in the area” to refer to such distinct property where it is clear from specific argument in its Memorandum and the record as a whole that Industrial Risk Insurers considered the VTL to be the product and the other components of the Diffuser Cell System to be the other property, machinery or equipment that was damaged.
This Court has long held that a party may not argue one theory to the trial court and then a different theory to an appellate court, which is “without authority to review issues not raised in or decided by the
*744
trial court.”
Ten Broeck Dupont, Inc. v. Brooks,
V. The Economic Loss Rule Extends to Negligent Misrepresentation Claims
Industrial Risk Insurers contends that even if the economic loss rule precludes negligence and strict product liability claims when a product malfunctions, it should not bar a negligent misrepresentation claim associated with that product. Giddings & Lewis counters that when the alleged misrepresentations relate solely to the character, nature and performance of the product itself, the claim is essentially an attempt to make an end-run around the negotiated warranty in the parties’ contract and the economic loss rule should apply just as it does to negligence and strict liability theories. We agree and find the negligent misrepresentation claim unsustainable on this ground and also for a more elementary reason — the failure to identify affirmative false information supplied by Giddings & Lewis.
As previously noted, negligent misrepresentation was first recognized specifically as a basis for recovery in Kentucky in
Presnell Construction,
(1) One who, in the course of his business, profession or employment, or in any other transaction in which he has a pecuniary interest, supplies false information for the guidance of others in their business transactions, is subject to liability for pecuniary loss caused to them by their justifiable reliance upon the information, if he fails to exercise *745 reasonable care or competence in obtaining or communicating the information.
(2) Except as stated in Subsection (3), the liability stated in Subsection (1) is limited to loss suffered
(a) by the person or one of a limited group of persons for whose benefit and guidance he intends to supply the information or knows that the recipient intends to supply it; and
(b) through reliance upon it in a transaction that he intends the information to influence or knows that the recipient so intends or in a substantially similar transaction.
Although Section 552 had never been adopted before, the
Presnell Construction
court noted prior Kentucky cases which were consistent with the negligent misrepresentation claim. For example, in
Seigle v. Jasper,
These cases are instructive because they all involve a party who “supplies false information for guidance of others in their business transactions” and is liable to the recipient for failing to “exercise reasonable care or competence in obtaining or communicating the information.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 552. A construction consulting firm and an attorney providing a title opinion, as well as an auctioneer, offer services which consist of information upon which others will rely. A manufacturer of a product is not in the business of supplying information but rather the product itself and, only incidentally, information about the product. The product and any information about its character, nature or performance are properly the subject of the parties’ contract.
This was essentially the holding in
Miller’s Bottled Gas, Inc. v. Borg-Warner Corp.,
Although dressed in a different costume, the essence of Miller’s claim is that its losses occurred as a result of the Acu-carb’s defects and failure to perform as expected. “But the injury suffered — the failure of the product to function properly — is the essence of a warranty action, through which a contracting party can seek to recoup the benefit of its bargain.” East River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,476 U.S. 858 , 868,106 S.Ct. 2295 , 2300,90 L.Ed.2d 865 (1986). Thus, the Supreme Court’s reasoning in East River preclud *746 ing negligence-based actions for purely economic losses, which we have expressly adopted ... applies with equal force to the tort of negligent misrepresentation in a commercial context.
Turning to the facts before us, in its Amended Complaint, Industrial Risk Insurers alleges that Giddings & Lewis represented that the VTL portion of the Diffuser Cell System could safely operate at the 690 RPM specified by Ingersoll Rand’s engineers. Although no specific oral or written representation is identified in the Amended Complaint or the briefs to this Court, it appears that Industrial Risk Insurers is alleging that by manufacturing and selling the System, after engineering adjustments to Ingersoll Rand’s specifications, Giddings & Lewis implicitly represented it was a safe, non-defective product. Such implicit representations in the course of the sale are not enough to state a prima facie case as to this particular tort because negligent misrepresentation requires an affirmative false statement.
Republic Bank & Trust Co. v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
YI. Industrial Risk Insurers Has Not Stated a Viable Fraud by Omission Claim
Although Industrial Risk Insurers frequently refers to its final claim as simply a fraud claim, it is apparent that the claim asserted was actually “fraud by omission,” as reflected by both the title and substance of Count VII of the Amended Complaint. This claim is apparently premised on a Giddings & Lewis internal memorandum from the sales department *747 to the engineers dated October 12, 1988, just days after the manufacturer received the Ingersoll Rand specifications:
I am in the process of writing up the order for the cell which will contain this 36" VTL, which is quoted to operate at up to a maximum RPM of 690. As this exceeds our WO RPM maximum by a considerable amount, I believe it is proper to get a disclaimer from Inger-sollr-Rand Company against operating this machine under unsafe conditions. As this machine is going to operate using 38" dia. plain pallets, the maximum peripheral speed of the pallets will be approximately 7,000 surface feet when operating at maximum RPM. This may create unsafe conditions due to loss of clamping pressure due to centrifugal force or loss of clamping force due to the forces created by unbalanced work pieces, fixtures and/or the machine itself
In the ensuing weeks, all parties acknowledge that the order was forwarded to the engineering department where adjustments were made to the transmission, bearings and pallet material, and the VTL operating at 690 RPM was deemed a “doable” project. Giddings and Lewis ultimately acknowledged or accepted the Ingersoll Rand purchase order approximately six weeks later on November 23, 1988. The machine was delivered to In-gersoll Rand in February 1990, after having undergone trial production runs at Giddings & Lewis’ facility. The Diffuser Cell System operated for seven years before the incident at issue in this litigation.
“Fraud by omission is not the same, at law, as fraud by misrepresentation, and has substantially different elements.”
Rivermont Inn, Inc. v. Bass Hotels Resorts, Inc.,
Industrial Risk Insurers’ fraud by omission claim founders on the first element. Kentucky recognizes a duty to disclose in four circumstances.
Smith,
The “superior knowledge” duty is illustrated by Smith wherein a new vehicle dealership failed to disclose that a “new” van had already received extensive repairs following instances of stalling while traveling at highway speeds. Having serviced the vehicle twice, the dealership was in an obviously superior position at the time of the sale yet it withheld information about the van’s history of stalling and repairs from the consumer-purchaser. The Court of Appeals found a common law duty to disclose due to the dealership’s superior knowledge of the past problems with the vehicle and attendant repairs as well as statutory duties to disclose based on the Motor Vehicle Sales provisions of the Kentucky Revised Statutes. In this case, In-gersoll Rand’s engineers drafted eight pages of specifications and worked with Giddings & Lewis’s engineers in refining those specifications to produce the eventual Diffuser Cell System. This contract for a custom-made product resulting from engineering input by both the buyer and seller is plainly not an instance of one party having superior knowledge not available to the other. Indeed, the “knowledge” that Industrial Risk Insurers refers to, the increased risk that a more rapidly revolving lathe would throw a metal part, appears from the record to be nothing more than a concern expressed early-on by someone in Giddings & Lewis’ sales department to the company’s engineers, a concern consistent with what any engineer would recognize as the consequences of increased centrifugal force. If there was evidence that Giddings & Lewis had actual knowledge, either through its testing or other means, that a vertical turning lathe revolving at 690 RPM as was ultimately manufactured was unsafe and kept that specific knowledge from Ingersoll Rand and its engineers, perhaps a duty could arise but those are not the facts. Industrial Risk Insurers’ cannot establish that Gid-dings & Lewis had superior knowledge to that of Ingersoll Rand that was not disclosed and thus no duty arose under this theory.
The final potential source of a duty to disclose is in the case of partial disclosure. The information that Industrial Risk Insurers points to is again simply one salesperson’s observation that the higher RPM specified by Ingersoll Rand “may create unsafe conditions due to loss of clamping pressure due to centrifugal force or loss of clamping force due to the forces created by unbalanced work pieces, fixtures and/or the machine itself.” An actionable misrepresentation (and by analogy an actionable omission) must “relate to a past or present material fact.”
Flegles,
In sum, Industrial Risk Insurers has not stated a viable claim of fraud by omission because it has not established any grounds for a duty to disclose. In any event, the matter not disclosed was not a past or present material fact known only to Gid-dings & Lewis but rather an initial general engineering concern known to both the manufacturer and Ingersoll Rand. Thus, although for different reasons, we conclude the trial court properly dismissed Industrial Risk Insurers fraud by omission claim. Having found the absence of a duty to disclose, we do not reach the issue of what effect the economic loss rule has on a fraud by omission claim.
CONCLUSION
The trial court properly determined as a matter of law that the product at issue in this case is the Diffuser Cell System bargained for by Ingersoll Rand and that the losses claimed are purely economic losses. The economic loss rule precludes an action to recover those losses in tort, based on negligence, strict liability or negligent misrepresentation and, consequently, the trial court properly dismissed those claims. The fraud by omission claim was also properly dismissed because as a matter of law there was no duty to disclose and, in any event, no undisclosed past or present material fact. For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part the opinion of the Court of Appeals, rendering final the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Giddings & Lewis.
Notes
. Industrial Risk Insurers is an unincorporated association consisting of the following insurers: Allianz Insurance Company, a California corporation; Cigna Property and Casualty Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation; The Continental Insurance Company, a New Hampshire Corporation; The Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York, a New Hampshire corporation; Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, a California Corporation; Fireman's Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, a New Jersey corporation; The Glens Falls Insurance Company, a Delaware corporation; Great American Insurance Corporation, an Ohio Corporation; Hartford Fire Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation; Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation; Motors Insurance Corporation, a New York corporation; Sumitomo Marine and Fire Insurance Company, Ltd, a New York corporation; Tokio Marine and Fire Insurance Company, Ltd, a New York corporation; Yasuda Fire & Marine Insurance Company of America, a New York corporation; and Zurich American Insurance Company, a New York corporation.
. The motion was granted on August 8, 2007, more than eight years after the case was filed and less than a month before the scheduled September 4, 2007 trial date.
. See Andrew Gray Drowning in a Sea of Confusion: Applying the Economic Loss Doctrine to Component Parts, Service Contracts and Fraud, 84 Wash. U. L.R. 1513 (2006).
. As the Court of Appeals noted:
Section 402A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts provides in relevant part that "[o]ne who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer or to his property is subject to liability for physical harm thereby caused to the ultimate user or consumer, or to his property_" (Emphasis added.)
. The case sub judice does not require us to consider the effect of the economic loss rule on consumer transactions but, notably, the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability makes no distinction between products produced for commercial customers and those produced for consumers. See Restatement (Third) of Tort § 19(a) (1998) defining "product” in relevant part as "tangible personal property distributed commercially for use or consumption.”
. Section 1, "Liability of Commercial Seller or Distributor for Harm Caused by Defective Products” provides:
One engaged in the business of selling or otherwise distributing products who sells or distributes a defective product is subject to liability for harm to persons or property caused by the defect.
(emphasis supplied).
Section 21, "Definitions of 'Harm to Persons or Property’: Recovery for Economic Loss” provides:
For purposes of this Restatement, harm to persons or property includes economic loss if caused by harm to:
(a) the plaintiffs person; or
(b) the person of another when harm to the other interferes with an interest of the plaintiff protected by tort law; or
(c) the plaintiff's property other than the defective product itself.
The Comment to this section notes: "Products liability law lies at the boundary between tort and contract. Some categories of loss, including those often referred to as ‘pure economic loss,’ are more appropriately assigned to contract law and the remedies set forth in Articles 2 and 2A of the Uniform Commercial Code.”
. The issue regarding damage to other property beyond the Diffuser Cell System itself was not preserved for our review, as discussed infra.
. The service and installation report, prepared by Giddings & Lewis, was attached as Exhibit G to the Plaintiffs' Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. If scrutinized carefully, one may be able to read "remote que destroyed,” “cables damaged,” and, perhaps, that the floor was gouged or cracked.
. The Amended Complaint simply states the malfunction caused "severe and extensive damage to the VTL and other property of Ingersoll Rand.”
. In any event, it is apparent from the record that the damage to property beyond the Diffuser Cell System was
de minimus. See Delmarva Power & Light v. Meter-Treater, Inc.,
. Section 9, "Liability of Commercial Product Seller or Distributor for Harm Caused by Misrepresentation” provides:
One engaged in the business of selling or otherwise distributing products who, in connection with the sale of a product, makes a fraudulent, negligent, or innocent misrepresentation of material fact concerning the product is subject to liability for harm to persons or property caused by the misrepresentation.
