MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I.
This cause is before the court on the motion for summary judgment of defendant, Chief Industries, Inc. (Chief Industries). Plaintiff, Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Company, Inc., commenced this action by filing a complaint in the Lafayette Division of this court on August 31, 1984. The complaint alleges that on April 6, 1979, Chief Industries designed, manufactured, distributed and assembled large cаpacity, all-steel grain storage bins and tanks. Defendant, Riggs Drying and Storage Equipment Company (Riggs), was in the business of installation, construction, assembly and erection of such grain storage bins and tanks. In this case, Chief Industries manufactured, fabricated and assembled an all steel storage bin, designated as Model 18-20, on the premises of Jasрer County Farm Bureau Co-Operative Association, Inc. in Fowler, Indiana. Riggs allegedly established, assembled, and/or erected the model 18-20 grain bin.
In this complaint, Chief Industries, is charged with the following negligent acts and omissions: (1) negligent design, fabrication, manufacture and/or assembly of the model 18-20 grain bin so that it was incapable of withstanding lаteral wind loading under normal conditions to this area; (2) negligent design, fabrication manufacture and/or assembly of the anchoring system in the model 18-20 grain bin; (3) negligent preparation of the instructions for the erection, installation, and/or assembly of the model 18-20 grain bin; (4) negligent design, fabrication, manufacture and/or assembly of the model 18-20 grain bin roof to sidewall corrections; (5) negligent design, fabrication, manufacture and/or assembly *1180 of the model 18-20 grain bin in whole as well as component parts in that it failed as a whole after erection and installation to comply with recommended and accepted engineering codes as well as accepted engineering principles as to lateral wind loadings; (6) negligent selection of materials of adequate strength for the model 18-20 grain bin; (7) negligent design, fabrication, manufacture and assembly of the roof to sidewall stiffners; (8) negligent selection of materials of adequate strength for the roof to sidewall connection bolts, nuts and washers, anchor bolts, nuts and washers and anchor angles and sidewall stiffness.
It is further alleged that as a result of such negligence, the roof to sidewall connections and anchor system became detached causing the grain bin to become dislodged and deformed. This, in turn, caused damage to the connected lоading and unloading augers and drying fans.
Chief Industries filed a motion for summary judgment on April 1, 1985. This court heard oral argument on the motion June 14, 1985, in Lafayette, Indiana. At that time a schedule for supplemental briefing was set. Such schedule has been met and this motion is now ripe for ruling. Jurisdiction of this court is predicated upon 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The substantive law of Indiana applies.
II.
A.
Chief Industries argues , that this complaint is time barred by Ind.Code § 33-1-1.-5-5 which provides that “any product liability action in which the theory of liability is negligence or strict liability in tort must be commenced within two [2] years after the cause of action accrues or within ten [10] years after the delivery of the product to the initial user or consumer.” Chief Industries contends that since plaintiffs action against it is a “product liability action” based on a negligence theory, plaintiffs claim is barred by the above statute’s provision that such actions must be brought within two (2) years after the cause of action accrues. In support of its argument, Chief Industries relies upon
Monsanto Company v. Miller,
Ind.App.,
Plaintiff contends that the applicable statute of limitations is Ind.Code § 34-4-20-1, the Indiana improvement to realty statute. The statute provides that an action can be brought for damages to real and personal property arising out of the design, planning, supervision or construction of an improvement to real property within ten (10) years of the date of substantial completion. Plaintiff argues that this case was filed well within the parameters of this statute. It is beyond dispute that these issues can be properly raised by a motion for summary judgment under Fed. R.Civ.P. 56.
The key case on the issue of whether the Indiana improvement to realty statute or the Indiana produсts liability statute applies in a factual context as is here presented is
Dodd v. Kiefer,
Ind.App.,
The plaintiff homeowner raised a cross-error on appeal regarding the trial court’s ruling that the ten year statute of limitations for real estate improvements applied to the product liability count of the complaint. The plaintiff argued that the six and two year accrual statutes for injuries to real (Ind.Code § 34-1-2-1) and personal (I.C. § 34-1-2-2) property should apply. *1181 Immediately after restating the plaintiffs argument, the Court of Appeals noted: “This particular problem has been subsequently resolved with the passage of the Indiana Prodict Liability Act, IC § 33-1-1.-5-1 et seq.” Id. at 465 n. 1.
The Court of Appeals then ruled that the real estate improvement statute аpplied to the product liability count for two reasons. First, the court noted that the coverage of the real estate improvement statute is very broad since it applies to actions based “upon contract, tort, nuisance or otherwise.” It then pointed out that product liability is a form of tort and that therе was no statutory intent to exclude products liability from the coverage of the statute of limitations. The court also noted that
Luxurious Swimming Pools v. Tepe,
Dodd
involved a lawsuit against an electrical contractor who was intimately involved in the construction of an imprоvement to a particular piece of real estate. Other Indiana cases in which the real estate improvement statute has been applied to an action against an entity which was intimately involved in the improvement of a particular parcel of real estate include
Monsanto Co. v. Miller, supra,
(builder of concrete silo);
Beecher v. White,
Ind.App.,
The Indiana real estate improvement statute has never been applied to actions against entities like Chief Industries who design fungible products without any pаrticular parcel of real estate in mind and do not participate in the on-site construction of an improvement to real estate. The courts in other jurisdictions which have addressed the issue appear to be unanimous that it is inappropriate to apply real estate improvement statutes similаr to Ind.Code § 34-4-20-2 to entities which mass produce items not intended for particular parcels of real estate.
See, e.g., Montaup Electric Co. v. Ohio Brass Corp.,
The Indiana cases in which the real estate improvement statute has been applied have all involved actions against an entity which was intimately involved in designing, planning, constructing, or supervising the construction of an improvement to a particular piece of real estate. Nothing in Dodd compels the conclusion that the real estate improvement statute governs this plaintiffs product liability action as against Chief Industries.
Moreover, footnote one to the opinion of the court in
Dodd
indicates that the product liability státute of limitations, not the real estate improvement statute, should be applicable to the plaintiffs action against the defendant. Footnote one states: “This particular problem has been subsequently resolved with the passage of the Indiana Product Liability Act, IC 33-1-1.5-1
et seq. ”
The conclusion of the Court of Appeals in
Dodd v. Kiefer
that, after the effective date of the product liability statute, the Product Liability Act’s statute of limitations governs products liability actions, even when the product has become part of an improvement to real estate at the time it causes damage, is supported by one of the basic rules of statutory interpretation. In a case where two or more statutes deal with the same matter in different language, the latest expression of the legislature is controlling.
State ex rel. Board of Tax Commissioners v. Daviess Circuit Court,
Plaintiff cites and relies on a number of cases outside of this jurisdiction. Neither
Grover Kill Grain Company v. Baughman-Oster, Inc.,
B.
A review of the Indiana cases which have either cited or applied the Indiana product liability statute demonstrates thаt an action against the manufacturer of an allegedly defective item which becomes part of an improvement to real estate after the item is delivered by the manufacturer is a product liability action.
See Corbin v. Coleco Industries, Inc.,
Further, Indiana courts have applied рroduct liability law in situations similar to this case in which an action has been brought against the manufacturer of an
*1183
item which has become part of a grain or silage storage system. In
Monsanto Co. v. Miller, supra,
the Indiana Court of Appeals applied the Indiana products liability statute (including the statute of limitations provision) in an action against a mаnufacturer of a coating which was applied to the inside of a silo. The case was viewed as a product liability action even though the coating had become part of an improvement to the real estate at the time it caused injury to the plaintiffs property. The real estate improvement stаtute was applied to the claim against the entity which had constructed the concrete silo. Ind.App.,
C.
The strongest support in Indiana case law for the proposition that an action against a manufacturer of a product which later becomes incorporated into an improvement to real estate is governed by the product liability statute rather than the real estate improvement statutes is contained in
Beecher v. White, supra. Beecher
involved a constitutional challenge to the real estate improvement statute. One argument set forth by the plaintiff in that case was that the statute violated the equal protection clause or the special law proscriptions of the federal or state constitutions. Ind.App.,
In
Great Lakes Co. v. Merrill A. Jones & Associates, Inc.,
Ind.App.,
*1184 Great Lakes has charged no one with negligence in the role of a supplier of materials. At most, Jackson [the general contractor] erred in planning, supervising, or observing installation of materials which it supplied. I.C. 34-4-20-2 bars the action to recover damages from Jackson for such deficiencies.
Id. at 261. Given this reasoning the real estate improvement statute would not be applicable here.
The Motion for Summary Judgment filed by defendant Chief Industries is GRANTED. SO ORDERED.
