OPINION
Four companies involved in the three-dimensional photography business (“respondents”) sued Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company (“3M”) in Texas state court seeking lost profits. The jury found that 3M breached express and implied warranties, and the trial court allowed the four respondents to recover one lump-sum damages award. The Texas Court of Appeals affirmed in all relevant respects,
see Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co. v. Nishika Ltd.,
1. For breach of warranty under [Minn. Stat. § 336.2-318], is a seller liable to a person who never acquired any goods from the seller, directly or indirectly, for pure economic damages (e.g., lost profits), unaccompanied by any injury to the person or the person’s property?
2. If the answer to Question 1 is “yes,” may several such persons, who may or may not be related, and who may or ' may not include the buyer of the goods, recover damages jointly as a single economic unit?
3M,
40 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. 154, No. 94-1124,
I.
In formulating the questions certified, the Texas Supreme Court relied upon the following facts, which the court set forth in a light most favorable to the verdict.
James Bainbridge and Daniel Fingarette established a plan for managing a three-dimensional photography business through four independent companies. When 3M sold the goods at issue, Fingarette was the sole owner of the camera manufacturer (Quan-tronics Manufacturing (H.K.) Limited, a Hong Kong company), while Bainbridge was the sole owner of the camera marketer (American 3D Limited, a Nevada limited partnership), the printer designer (LenTee Corporation, a Georgia corporation), and the printer (Nishika Limited, a Nevada limited partnership).
In January 1988, Bainbridge met with 3M officials to seek assistance with the three-dimensional film development process. Bain-bridge testified that he told 3M about his need for quality emulsion and backcoat sauce to process the film, his printer development efforts, his camera manufacturer (Quantron-ies), his financial commitment, and his experience in and future plans to enter the three-dimensional photography business.
In mid-1989, 3M formulated a new emulsion that 3M claimed would work well with the respondents’ film development process. 3M apparently understood that this emulsion
After the respondents began using 3M’s new emulsion in December 1989, a problem emerged with the film development process. Specifically, the photographs faded, losing their three-dimensional effect. By early 1990, there was a significant decline in camera sales. 3M eventually solved the problem and the respondents began buying a new backcoat sauce from 3M in April 1990, but the respondents’ business ultimately failed.
LenTec, Nishika, American 3D, and Nishi-ka Manufacturing (H.K.) Limited 1 filed suit against 3M in Texas state court alleging, in part, breach of express and implied warranties. At trial the respondents argued that the photographic fading was caused by the incompatibility of 3M’s new emulsion and its old backcoat sauce, which in turn undermined confidence in the respondents’ business.
The jury concluded that 3M breached an express warranty for the emulsion and implied warranties for the emulsion and the backcoat sauce; that these breaches directly caused harm to each of the respondents; and that $50,000,000 would fairly and reasonably compensate the respondents as a group. Damages were reduced, however, because the jury found that the respondents were 49% at fault for failing to exercise reasonable care in evaluating and using the emulsion and backcoat sauce.
Applying Minnesota law, the Texas trial court allowed all four respondents to recover lost profits jointly and entered judgment in the amount of $29,873,599 on January 29, 1993. The Texas Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s award of pre- and post-judgment interest, but upheld the judgment in all other respects.
3M,
II..
The first certified question asks this court to consider whether a seller may be held liable for breach of warranty to a plaintiff, who never used, purchased, or otherwise acquired goods from the seller, for lost profits unaccompanied by personal injury or property damage. Unlike the other two respondents, Nishika Manufacturing and American 3D did not deal directly with 3M nor did they use, purchase, or otherwise acquire the 3M goods at issue. In fact, Nishika Manufacturing did not exist at the time the goods were sold. Hence, Nishika Manufacturing and American 3D premise their recovery of lost profits on the statutory extension of warranty protection to certain noncontracting parties (“third-party beneficiaries”).
The third-party beneficiaries provision of Minnesota’s Uniform Commercial Code (“U.C.C.”) addresses the reach of express and implied warranties to “injured” parties lacking privity of contract with the seller. Essentially, the provision broadens the reach of warranties by narrowing the lack of privity defense:
A seller’s warranty whether express or implied extends to any person who may reasonably be expected to use, consume or be affected by the goods and who is injured by breach of the warranty. A seller may not exclude or limit the operation of this section.
Minn.Stat. § 336.2-318. The term “person” includes corporations and other business organizations. Id. § 336.1-201(28), (30). 2
We agree with 3M that the statute is not so clear and free from ambiguity that we may disregard legislative intent, the aims of section 336.2-318 at the time of enactment, or the consequences of a particular construction.
See
Minn.Stat. § 645.16(l)-(4), (6) (1996). The unadorned term “injured” is not defined in the U.C.C., nor is it used elsewhere in the text of Article 2. As applied to Nishika Manufacturing and American 3D, the reach of section 336.2-318 is unclear. We must therefore interpret the statute consistent with legislative intent and in a sensible manner that avoids unreasonable, unjust, or absurd results.
See id.
§ 645.17(1);
Thoresen v. Schmahl,
Under section 336.2-318, this court has sanctioned the recovery of lost profits (one form of economic loss) by a third-party beneficiary whose damages arose from a remote seller’s breach of warranty.
See Hydra-Mac, Inc. v. Onan Corp.,
But this court has never gone so far as to hold that section 336.2-318 reaches a plaintiff who is seeking lost profits unaccompanied by physical injury or property damage and who never used, purchased, or otherwise acquired the goods in question. To do so, we believe, would expand warranty liability well beyond the limits contemplated by the legislature.
When placed in historical context, it seems clear that the primary motivation for the current version of section 336.2-318 was concern for injured consumers. A prevalent legal conflict at the time of enactment was how best to protect consumers from dangerous products. One route was to expand the doctrine of “warranty” to reach subpurchas-ers and others injured in person by defective products. During the 1960s, however, the preferred course was to recognize that the concept of “warranty” had been outgrown and to legitimize recovery in tort.
See
Wil
Our understanding of the background and aims of section 336.2-318 leads us to conclude that the scope of a seller’s liability for breach of warranty should recede as the relationship between a “beneficiary” of the warranty and the seller’s goods becomes more remote. Consistent with Hydrar-Mac — and assuming that section 336.2-318 is otherwise satisfied — those who purchase, use, or otherwise acquire warranted goods have standing to sue for purely economic losses. Those who lack any such connection to the warranted goods must demonstrate physical injury or property damage before economic losses are recoverable. This line comports with legislative intent, provides a clear rule of law, and identifies a sensible limit to liability without disrupting settled precedent.
Any other result implies almost unlimited liability for sellers of warranted goods. If section 336.2-318 were interpreted as the respondents advocate, it seems that the respondents’ individual employees, or perhaps even their families, would have standing to sue 3M for causing the loss of their jobs or even a decline in their wages. The respondents’ reading also appears to allow recovery on the facts of
Nebraska Innkeepers, Inc. v. Pittsburghr-Des Moines Corp.,
Confronted with liability of this magnitude, sellers would be encouraged to attempt to disclaim warranties or exclude consequential damages remedies — affecting both the immediate buyer and third-party beneficiaries alike.
See
Minn.Stat. § 336.2-318 (prohibiting a seller from limiting the reach of the third-party beneficiaries provision);
Hydra-Mac,
III.
Because our answer to the first certified question necessitates judicial alteration of the respondents’ damages award or a new trial— matters to be addressed by the Texas courts — it is both helpful and proper to reach the merits of the second certified question.
The jury found that 3M’s breach of express and implied warranties was a direct cause of harm to each of the four respondents and that $50,000,000 was a reasonably certain sum that would fairly compensate them collectively. But the special verdict form did not ask for the amount of damages that each respondent had proved individually. The second certified question asks whether the respondents may “recover damages jointly as a single economic unit.”
This issue is a product of modern liberal joinder rules adopted by many states. In Minnesota,
All persons may join in one action as plaintiffs if they assert any right to relief, jointly, severally, or in the alternative with respect to or arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences and if any question of fact or law common to all these persons will arise in the action.
Minn. R. Civ. P. 20.01; see also Tex.R. Civ. P. 40(a). Such rules allow certain plaintiffs to seek relief in a single action, whether their right to relief is “joint” or not. But such rules were not intended to alter the substantive proof burdens of plaintiffs seeking damages. See 2 Douglas D. McFarland & William J. Keppel, Minnesota Civil Practice § 1411, at 219 (2d ed.1990).
The respondents argue that they “alleged and proved joint claims.” There is certainly some authority for the proposition that a defendant has no reason to complain about a joint damages award when the cause of action or claim is itself joint in nature.
E.g., Silver Unicorn, Inc. v. Matheson,
The respondents also assert that no harm is done to a defendant if multiple plaintiffs with separate claims decide to ask for a joint damages award, as long as each plaintiff individually satisfies the other elements of their claims. The respondents concede that plaintiffs in breach of warranty cases must prove that there was a warranty, that it was breached, and that a loss was caused by the breach.
E.g., Peterson v. Bendix Home Sys., Inc.,
We disagree. In general, and absent a joint claim, each plaintiff has. an obligation to prove the amount of damages that it individually suffered. See 2 Herbert B. Newberg & Alba Conte, Newberg on Class Actions § 10.02 (3d ed.1992) (stating that proof of aggregate damages as a common issue is unique to class actions, and that, in traditional individual suits, a defendant’s liability to joined plaintiffs is the total of the damages “as proved for each of the joined plaintiffs”). The lump-sum judgment in this ease deprived 3M of a jury determination of the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to each individual respondent. As legally independent entities with factually distinct. connections to 3M’s alleged breach, the individual respondents’ evidence might vary in strength. A joint recovery risks eliminating the legal significance of these differences. 6 There may be exceptional cases in which lump-sum damages are appropriate and fair. But on the facts of this case, the respondents were not entitled to a joint recovery of damages for lost profits.
First certified question answered in the negative, second certified question answered as above.
Notes
. Nishika Manufacturing displaced Quantronics as the respondents’ camera manufacturer after the sales of allegedly defective goods by 3M but before this lawsuit was filed. The Respondents were also joined in their lawsuit by three individual distributors, but the jury did not award them any damages and they are not parties to this appeal.
. Nine other states have adopted similar third-party beneficiaries provisions.
See
Colo.Rev. Stat. § 4-2-318 (1992); Del.Code. Ann. tit. 6,
. 3M does not argue that Hydra-Mac should be overruled, nor does it dispute that physical injury or property damage is recoverable by those “outside the distributive chain” of a seller's goods.
. The respondents argue that their interpretation of section 336.2-318 is tempered by section 336.2-715(2)(a), which includes as consequential damages “any loss resulting from general or particular requirements and needs of which the seller at the time of contracting had reason to know." Assuming that section 336.2-715(2)(a) applies to third-party beneficiary cases,
see Hydra-Mac,
.
King v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
. Cases from other jurisdictions that have faced the issue of joint recovery also cut against the respondents' position.
See Home Ins. Co. v. Pugh,
