ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This аction is before the court on the parties’ cross-motions for partial summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In their second amended complaint, Plaintiffs, a conglomeration of corporations and their insurers, (collectively, “Myrtle Beach”), assert claims of common law negligence and breach of implied warranty of merchantability pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted in South Carolina, see S.C.Code Ann. §§ 36-1-101 to 36-10-103 (Law.Co-op.1976 & Supp. 1992), against Defendant Emerson Electric Company (“Emerson”), contending that Emerson is liable to Myrtle Beach for damages resulting from injury to property owned by the United States. Conversely, Emerson asserts that Myrtle Beach cannot proceed on its common law negligence claim because this action is grounded solely in contract and therefore Myrtle Beach is relegated to the limited remedies embodied in the contract between the parties. Concluding that under South Carolina law Myrtle Beach’s negligence claim cannot be maintained and that the limited remedy of repair and replacement is the sole remedy to which Myrtle Beach is entitled under the breach of implied warranty, this court grants Emerson’s motion for partial summary judgment and denies Myrtle Beach’s motion for partial summary judgment.
II. THE FACTS
Myrtle Beach, a corporation with its headquarters in Houston, Texas, but transacting business in South Carolina, supplied and stored fuel for the United States Air Force at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base (“Base”), property owned by the United States. In 1979, Myrtle Beach and one of its principals, Standard Southern Corporation (“Standard”), also a Texas corporation, contracted with the United States to install a fuel metering system to link storage tanks of Myrtle Beach and the Government. Pursuant to this agreement, Myrtle Beach and Standard hired Gonzalo Ancira (“Ancira”) to design the metering system. Concluding that the metering system should incorporate an air eliminator, Ancira solicited several bids for the production of such a mechanism and recommended that the air eliminator manufactured by Brooks Instrument Division of Emerson Electric Company (“Brooks”) be incorporated into the metering system. Like Myrtle Beach and Standard, Brooks and Emerson are also Texas corporations.
Brooks’s bid quoted a price of $1,145.00 for the cost of the air eliminator. Additionally, the quotation contained the following disclaimer:
WARRANTY: All Brooks products (other than resale, custom and electro-mechanical equipment not manufactured by Brooks), when operated under the conditions stipulated by Brooks in the operating manual for the product are warranted against defect in workmanship and materials for one year from date of shipment and to conform to the written specifications. This constitutes Brooks’ only warranty in connection with this sale and is in lieu of all other warranties, expressed or implied, written or oral. THERE ARE NO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILI-
*1032 TY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE THAT APPLY TO THIS SALE. No employee, agent, dealer or other person is authorized to give any warranties on behalf of Brooks, nor to assume for Brooks any other liability in connection with any of its products without prior written approval by an officer of Brooks. Limitation of Remedy: Brooks will repair or replace at Brooks’ option, F.O.B. factory, any Brooks parts defective in workmanship or materials if such part is returned, freight prepaid, within one year from date of shipment to the nearest factory authorized service station or to the factory. It is agreed that such replacement or repair is the exclusive remedy available from Brooks should any of Brooks products prove defective. Brooks is not liable for damages of any sort, including incidental and consequential damages.
The quotation supplied by Brooks therefore explicitly disclaimed any implied warranties, limited Myrtle Beach to a remedy of repair or replacement, and excluded incidental and consequential damages. These warranty provisions appeared on the reverse side of page one on the two-page quotation. Aneira forwarded this quotation to Standard, writing “[pjlease place purchase order with Brooks Instrument Division as quoted.” In turn, Standard wrote to Brooks, attached a copy of Brooks’s quotation, which included the provisions previously recited, and requested that Brooks “[p]lease ship the [air eliminator] ... [a]s per your quotation.” Brooks complied and shipped the air eliminator to South Carolina, where it was installed by Myrtle Beach in 1980. These transactions were negotiated in Texas.
On January 15, 1981, approximately ten months after installation, the air eliminator ruptured and roughly 123,000 gallons of fuel spilled on Base premises. The United States, concluding that Myrtle Beach was responsible for the spill, requested that it be reimbursed for the loss of the fuel. Myrtle Beach initially denied liability and refused reimbursement, but the dispute was subsequently settled on Myrtle Beach’s payment of $80,000 to the Government for the fuel. Myrtle Beach incurred $23,000.00 in attorneys’ fees and expenses in this litigation. Greater than the costs of the spilled fuel, however, and the principal damages sought by Myrtle Beach, are the costs incurred by Myrtle Beach in cleaning up the spill at the Government’s order.
Faced with high clean up costs, Myrtle Beach filed a complaint in the District of South Carolina in June of 1986. 1 In its original complaint, Myrtle Beach, contending that South Carolina law applies to this action, alleged four claims: (1) strict liability in tort; (2) violation of the South Carolina Unfair Trade Practices Act, see S.C.Code Ann. §§ 39-5-10 to 39-5-160 (Law.Co-op.1976); (3) breach of implied warranty; and (4) negligence. Emerson, asserting that Texas law governed disposition of this action, moved for partial summary judgment with respect to all of Myrtle Beach’s claims. Another district judge to whom this case was originally assigned granted Emerson’s motion with respect to the strict liability and unfair trade practices claims in 1988. The prior district judge, however, without comment, denied Emerson’s motion regarding the breach of implied warranty of merchantability and negligence claims. In its second amended complaint before this court, the only claims are for breach of implied warranty of merchantability and negligence. Despite the prior ruling, all parties have resubmitted the issues to this court. Because of developments in the law, this court finds reviewing these issues appropriate. Accordingly, at the behest of the parties, this court considers the claims against Emerson for breach of implied warranty and negligence. The court commences its disposition by determining what law governs this action.
III. CHOICE OF LAW
The threshold issue facing the court is determining the applicable law. Myrtle Beach contends that South Carolina law applies with respect to the alleged negligence claim because the alleged injury occurred in this forum; likewise, Myrtle Beach contends
*1033
that South Carolina law applies to the breach of implied warranty claim under South Carolina’s choice of law provision pursuant to the South Carolina Uniform Commercial Code. Conversely, Emerson asserts that Texas law governs the disposition of the breach of implied warranty claim pursuant to the Texas Uniform Commercial Code and that the statute of limitations has expired on this claim thereby barring it.
2
Pursuant to
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
A. The Tort Claim
South Carolina law provides that the substantive law governing a tort action is determined by the state in which the injury occurred, commonly referred to as the
lex loci delicti
rule.
See Algie v. Algie,
B. The Contract Claim
Myrtle Beach’s breach of implied warranty claim is asserted pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-314 of the South Carolina Uniform Commercial Code, S.C.Code Ann. §§ 36-1-101 tо 36-10-103 (Law.Co-op. 1976) (“Uniform Commercial Code”). The Uniform Commercial Code provides for choice of law:
Except as provided hereafter in this section, when a transaction bears a reasonable relation to this State and also to another state or nation the parties may agree that the law either of this State or of such other state or nation shall govern their rights and duties. Failing such agreement this act applies to transactions bearing an appropriate relation to this State.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-1-105(1). Under this choice of law provision, the law of South Carolina applies provided that the transactions between the parties bear an “appropriate relation” to the forum state; and the parties have not, as here, provided for choice of law. Unfortunately, what constitutes an “appropriate relation” is not defined in subsection 36-1-105(1); and the courts of South Carolina have not construed or interpreted the term with respect to South Carolina choice of law rules.
3
The Fourth Circuit, however, has concluded that the “appropriate relation” test mirrors the “most significant relationship” test of conflicts of laws analysis, which holds that “the law of the state with the ‘most significant relationship’ to the matter at issue is applied.”
Compliance Marine, Inc. v. Campbell (In re Merritt Dredging),
Under the facts of this case, the court concludes that South Carolina law should be applied. First, while the negotiations occurred in Texas, the injury was sustained in South Carolina; thus, the injury occurred in the forum. This occurrence strongly favors application of South Carolina law. Second, Myrtle Beach transacts business in South Carolina; therefore, a party with contacts in South Carolina is bringing this action in the forum. Again, this favors application of the forum’s law. Finally, the air eliminator was shipped to South Carolina and installed by Myrtle Beach in South Carolina; hence, the part was finally attached in the forum. The court concludes that these reasons compel application of South Carolina law to the breach of implied warranty of merchantability claim.
See generally Thornton v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
IV. THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that summary judgment “shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Thus, the Rule requires that the court enter judgment against a party who, “after adequate time for ... discovery fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 322,
*1035
Summary judgment serves the useful purpose of disposing of meretricious, pretended claims before the court and parties become “entrenched in a frivolous and costly trial.”
Donahue v. Windsor Locks Bd. of Fire Comm’rs,
Summary judgment procedure is properly regarded not as a disfavored procedural shortcut, but rather as an integral part of the Federal Rules as a whole____ Rule 56 must be construed with due regard not only for the rights of persons asserting claims and defenses that are adequately based in fact to have those claims and defenses tried to a jury, but also for the rights of persons opposing such claims and defenses to demonstrate in the manner provided by the Rule, prior to trial, that the claims and defenses have no factual bases.
Celotex Corp.,
Y. THE MERITS
Before addressing the merits, this court makes some general, yet crucial, observations concerning this action. Undisputedly, both Myrtle Beach and Emerson are sophisticated commercial entities that enjoy relatively equal bargaining power. The impetus giving rise to this suit is a commercial transaction governed by the law of contracts as codified by the Uniform Commercial Code. Stripped to its essentials, therefore, this a contract action executed in a commercial setting between two merchants that bargained for a particular product. In this context, this court examines Myrtle Beach’s claims.
Myrtle Beach attempts to assert both a breach of implied warranty of merchantability claim and a tort claim against Emerson, contending that the contract claim does not preclude the tort claim. Emerson counters that this case is solely governed by the law of contract and that no tort claim lies. The court addresses Myrtle Beach’s claims separately.
A. The Contract Claim
The Uniform Commercial Code provides for both express and implied warranties. See S.C.Code Ann. §§ 36-2-313 to 36-2-315. The Uniform Commercial Code, however, also provides that parties may exclude or modify, or both, the implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose subject to certain conditions, see S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-316(2), (3), but that express warranties may not be disclaimed, see § 36-2-316(1). The court therefore must first determine the type of warranties, if any, that were created in this transaction and then determine if any implied warranties were properly excluded. 5
*1036 1. Implied Warranty
a. Creation
Implied warranties are created and disclaimed pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code. See generally §§ 36-2-313 to 36-2-318. For example, a warranty of merchantability is implied in a contract for the sale of goods if the vendor is a merchant with respect to goods of that type. See § 36-2-314. Similarly, an implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose arises if the vendor knows when the contract is formed that the purchaser is relying on the vendor’s skill or judgment in furnishing the goods. See § 36-2-315. Both of these implied warranties may be disclaimed. See § 36-2-316. Becausе the implied warranty of merchantability arose in this case, the court must now determine whether it was properly disclaimed. 6 This inquiry requires that the court determine whether the disclaimer was express or implied. The express disclaimer of implied warranties provision of the Uniform Commercial Code provides:
(2) Subject to subsection (3), to exclude or modify the implied warranty of merchantability or any part of it the language must mention merchantability and in case of a writing must be conspicuous, and to exclude or modify any implied warranty of fitness the exclusion must be by a writing and conspicuous. Language to exclude the implied warranty of merchantability or of fitness for a particular purpose must be specific, and if the inclusion of such language creates an ambiguity in the contract as a whole it shall be resolved against the seller.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-316(2). Apart from providing the express method for disclaiming implied warranties, the Uniform Commercial Code also provides for alternative methods for disclaiming implied warranties:
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (2)
(a) unless the circumstances indicate otherwise, all implied warranties are excluded by specific language which in common understanding calls the buyer’s attention to the exclusion of warranties and makes plain that there is no implied warranty; and
(b) when the buyer before entering into the contract has examined the goods or the sample or model as fully as he desired or has refused to examine the goods there is no implied warranty with regard to defects which an examination ought in the circumstances to have revealed to him; and
(c) an implied warranty can also be excluded or modified by course of dealing or course of performance or, between merchants, by usage of trade.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-316(3)(a)-(c). Here, the disclaimer is express because it is embodied in the contract between the parties. The various alternative methods for disclaiming implied warranties found in subsection 36-2-316(3) simply do not apply. Rather, the rights and remedies of the parties are expressly articulated in their written contract. Because here the parties are bound by a written instrument, subsection 36-2-316(2) applies to Myrtle Beach’s breach of warranty of merchantability claim. 7
*1037 b. Effectiveness of Disclaimer
Concluding that the express disclaimer provision of subsection 36-2-316(2) applies further narrows the issue to determining whether Emerson properly disclaimed any implied warranties as prescribed by the statute. To exclude the implied warranty of merchantability, subsection 36-3-316(2) requires that the disclaiming language “mention merchantability,” be “conspicuous,” and be “specific.” The statute further provides that any ambiguity in the purported disclaimer is to be construed against the seller. Of subsection 36-2-316(2)’s three requirements, the Uniform Commerciаl Code only defines “conspicuous:”
A term or clause is conspicuous when it is so written that a reasonable person against whom it is to operate ought to have noticed it. A printed heading in capitals ... is conspicuous. Language in the body of a form is “conspicuous” if it is in larger or other contrasting type or color____ Whether a term or clause is “conspicuous” or not is for decision by the court.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-1-201(10). The instant disclaimer must be examined in light of these requirements.
Disclaimers in written instruments pursuant to subsection 36-2-316(2) are valid contractual provisions because they are expressly provided for by the Uniform Commercial Code and are to be enforced when agreed upon because “courts are compelled to give effect to the intent of the parties.”
Valtrol, Inc. v. General Connectors Corp.,
In
Investors Premium Corp. v. Burroughs Corp.,
THERE ARE NO UNDERSTANDINGS, AGREEMENTS, REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED (INCLUDING ANY REGARDING MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE) NOT SPECIFIED HEREIN, RESPECTING THIS CONTRACT OR THE EQUIPMENT HEREUNDER. THIS CONTRACT STATES THE ENTIRE OBLIGATION OF SELLER IN CONNECTION WITH THIS TRANSACTION.
Id.
at 45. The court sustained the disclaimer because “the exclusionary language is set out in a separate paragraph in large contrasting type — being in ALL CAPITAL LETTERS.”
Id.
at 45. Likewise, in
Childers & Venters, Inc. v. Sowards,
The status of the parties is material in resolving the issue of whether language is conspicuous. For example, in
American Electric Power Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
The principle to be distilled from these cases is that in order for a disclaimer to be conspicuous, it must have particular distinction. Equally, the court must examine the nature of the parties to the transaction in undertaking its “conspicuous” analysis. The court concludes that the various factors to be considered by a court in determining whether a document is conspicuous for purposes of disclaiming an implied warranty pursuant to subsection 36-2-316(2) include the following: (1) the color of print in which the purported disclaimer appears; (2) the style of print in which the disclaimer is written; (3) the size of the disclaiming language, particularly in relation to other print in the document; (4) the location of the disclaimer in the contract; (5) the appearance of the term “merchantability” with respect to color, style, size, and type of print in the disclaimer clause; and (6) the status of the parties contesting the validity of the disclaimer, namely whether they be consumers or commercially sophisticated entities. While these factors lend aid to the determination of what constitutes “conspicuous” language, the court believes that no single factor is dispositive nor are these enumerated factors exhaustive of all the criteria that can be used in examining a disclaimer.
The disputed disclaimer provides in pertinent part:
This constitutes Brooks’ only warranty in connection with this sale and is in lieu of all other warranties, expressed or implied, written or oral. THERE ARE NO IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE THAT APPLY TO THIS SALE. No employee, agent, dealer or other person is authorized to give any warranties on behalf of Brooks, nor to assume for Brooks any other liability in connection with any of its products without prior written approval by an officer of Brooks.
The court concludes that this disclaimer meets the requirements' of subsection 36-2-316(2):
First, the disclaiming language explicitly mentions merchantability and plainly states that there is no implied warranty with respect to the transaction; furthermore, the word “merchantability” is written in uppercase letters. See
Winter Panel Corp. v. Reichhold Chemicals, Inc.,
Second, the language and form of the disclaimer is “conspicuous.” Here, the disclaimer is printed in large-type, capital letters;
*1039
thus, the style and size are distinct from the other print in the contract.
See id.
As in
Sowards,
the fact that the disclaimer is written on the reverse side of the contract does not render it invalid because the printing is distinct.
See also Winter Panel Corp.,
Third, the disclaimer clause satisfies the requisite specificity. The language simply states that the express warranty is the sole warranty and that any other purported warranties are expressly disclaimed. The language elaborates on this exclusion by stating that there are no warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Finally, the clause concludes by providing that Myrtle Beach cannot rely on warranties based on representations by Brooks or others, nor will Brooks assume any further liability without written modification and approval. There is nothing vague about this disclaimer clause, and therefore the court holds that the specificity requirement of subsection 36-2-316(2) has also been met.
Having concluded that the disclaimer mentions merchantability, is conspicuous and specific, the court must now determine whether the disclaimer is ambiguous. In
Valtrol, Inc.,
the Fourth Circuit upheld disclaimer provisions in a contract negotiated between two corporate entities, noting that the Uniform Commercial Code expressly provides for such limitations of liability.
Valtrol, Inc.,
THE COMPANY AND PURCHASER AGREE THAT IN CONSIDERATION OF THE ABOVE EXPRESS PERFORMANCE GUARANTEES THAT ALL OTHER PERFORMANCE ... EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED ... INCLUDING WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE EXCLUDED FROM THIS CONTRACT.
Id.
at 1076. The court held, as a matter of law, that this language was “not ambiguous.”
Id.
at 1077;
see also McDermott, Inc. v. Iron,
Relying on
Hartman v. Jensen’s, Inc.,
Hartman is distinguishable from the instant case. First, in Hartman, the warranty provision of the contract, was, as far as the opinion reveals, limited only to a disclaimer of warranties. Conversely, in the contract between Myrtle Beach and Emerson, the warranty provision of the contract contained an express warranty as well as a disclaimer. The warranty provision heading therefore contained a “grant of warranty,” as well as a disclaimer. Second and paramount, the Hartman court specifically stated that the ambiguity would fail to apprise the consumer that the implied warranty was being disclaimed. Hartman is therefore limited to transactions involving a consumer. The scope of the opinion is not, as Myrtle Beach urges, all-encompassing and meant to embrace all commercial transactions. Here, no consumer was involved; rather, the context of this transaction is a commercial negotiation between two sophisticated corporate entities. Accordingly, Hartman does not govern the disposition of Myrtle Beach’s breach of implied warranty of merchantability claim. The court concludes that the present disclaimer is not ambiguous. Because the disclaimer meets the strictures imposed under the statute, this court must enforce it because it effectuates the intent of the parties.
Myrtle Beach also urges the court to apply
Standard Boiler & Plate Iron Co. v. Brock,
The Uniform Commercial Code clearly provides for disclaimers, and here the disclaimer clearly stated the rights and obligations of the parties. There is nothing vague of indefinite about the disclaimer. Therefore, the court concludes that the disclaimer is not ambiguous.
2. Limitation of Remedy
Section 36-2-316 not only provides for disclaimers of implied warranties, but also provides for limitation of remedies for breach of warranty claims, see § 36-2-316(4). Subsection 36-2-316(4) shifts the parties to either of two damages provisions: either section 36-2-718, which generally provides for liquidated damages, or section 36-2-719, which provides for various limitations on a buyer’s remedies, such as repair or replacement of the defective good and exclusion of consequential damages. Here, subsection 36-2-719(l)(a) applies because the parties dispute whether Myrtle Beach’s sole remedy is repair or replacement of the air eliminator and whether Myrtle Beach is precluded from recovering consequential damages. Emerson asserts that the sole remedy available to Myrtle Beach is repair or replacement of the air eliminator and that consequential damages were expressly excluded by the contract. Myrtle Beach, however, advances a two-pronged argument regarding the limitation of remedy. First, Myrtle Beach contends that the disclaimer of implied warranty of merchantability is ineffective, and thus Myrtle Beach may claim damages for all injuries proximately caused by the air eliminator. *1041 The court has previously concluded that the disclaimer of the implied warranty of merchantability is valid and effective; hence, this contention fails. Second, Myrtle Beach argues that even if the disclaimer is valid, the remedy fails of its essential purpose and thus Myrtle Beach may resort to other remedies. In this action, inquiry into the remedy is crucial because the overwhelming amount of damages are for clean up costs and litigation expenses.
Section 36-2-719 provides:
(1) Subject to the provisions of subsections (2) and (3) of this section and of the preceding section (§ 36-2-318) on liquidation and limitations of damages,
(a) the agreement may provide for remedies in addition to or in substitution for those provided in this chapter and may limit or alter the measure of damages recoverable under this chapter, as by limiting the buyer’s remedies to return of the goods and repayment of the price or to repair and replacement of nonconforming goods or parts; and
(b) resort to a remedy as provided is optional unless the remedy is expressly agreed to be exclusive, in which case it is the sole remedy.
(2) Where circumstances cause an exclusive or limited remedy to fail of its essential purpose, remedy may be had as provided in this act.
(3) Consequential damages may be limited or excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Limitation of consequential damages for injury to the person in the case of consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but limitation of damages where the loss is commercial is not.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-719. Thus, the court must make three inquiries: (1) whether the contract limited the remedy to repair or replacement; (2) whether, if the remedy were so limited, it failed of its essential purpose; and (3) whether, if the limited remedy failed of its essential purpose, consequential damages may be recovered because their exclusion is unconscionable. These inquiries are addressed seriatim.
a. Exclusivity of Remedy
Before considering the enforceability of a limited remedy, the court must first “establish[] that the contract contains ‘an exclusive or limited remedy.’”
Chatlos Sys., Inc. v. National Cash Register Corp.,
Limitation of Remedy: Brooks will repair or replace at Brooks’ option, F.O.B. factory, any Brooks parts defective in workmanship or materials if such part is returned, freight prepaid, within one year from date of shipment to the nearest factory authorized service station or to the factory. It is agreed that such replacement or repair is the exclusive remedy available from Brooks should any of Brooksf’s] products prove defective. Brooks is not liable for damages of any sort, including incidental and consequential damages,
(emphasis added). The court begins with the premise that “[s]uch agreed upon limits on remedy are generally valid.”
McDermott, Inc.,
Guarantee: Fabricator warrants the complete work against defective material and workmanship, exclusive of corrosion or erosion, for the period of one year from completion thereof. Its liability under this *1042 warranty shall be limited to the replacement within the aforesaid time of any defective work or material f. o. b. Fabricator’s shop, and Fabricator shall be liable for no other damages or losses.
Id.
at 456. The buyer sued, claiming breach of warranties and various consequential damages. The court, however, concluded that the disclaimer was sufficiently exclusive to limit the buyer to the stipulated remedy of replacement.
Id.
at 457. The Fifth Circuit, therefore, upheld the clause as containing an exclusive remedy even though neither the terms “exclusive,” “sole,” or “only,” nor any other limiting language, were expressed in the contract. Other courts have similarly upheld repair and replacement remedies as being exclusive,
see, e.g., McDermott,
b. Failure of Essential Purpose
Having concluded that the limited remedy is the exclusive remedy pursuant to subsection 36 — 2—719(l)(b), the court must now determine whether the limited remedy failed of its essential purpose pursuant to subsection 36-2-719(2). This court begins, as it must, by examining the statutory language.
See K-Mart Corp. v. Cartier, Inc.,
The primary objective of the limited remedy is to provide the seller an opportunity to tender conforming goods and thereby limit his exposure to risk for other damages, while simultaneously providing the purchaser with the benefit of his bargain — i.e.—conforming goods.
See Chatios Sys.,
The limited remedy of repair or replacement fails of its essential purpose if the seller will not or cannot repair or replace the defective product with a conforming product or there is unreasonable delay in repair or replacement.
See McDermott, Inc.,
*1044
While the test for determining whether the repair or replacement remedy has failed of its essential purpose is relatively uniform, there is a dearth of law on the test’s application. The Fourth Circuit, applying Delaware law, utilized the following factors to determine whether a limited remedy failed of its essential purpose: (1) “the facts and circumstances surrounding the contract;” (2) “the nature of the basic obligations of the party;” (3) “the nature of the goods involved;” (4) “the uniqueness or experimental nature of the items;” ' (5) “the generаl availability of the items;” and (6) “the good faith and reasonableness of the provision.”
Riegel Power Corp.,
First, this is a commercial transaction involving two sophisticated corporate entities; no consumers are involved. Moreover, there is little or no disparity in the bargaining power of the parties. Unlike Waters, this is not a case where recovery of consequential damages is proper because there is no predicate for unsuccessful attempts at repair. The “facts and circumstances surrounding” this transaction reveal that this contract was freely entered into by two corporations well-versed in commercial practices. Understanding this commercial context cannot be divorced from the concept of limited remedies.
Second, the obligations of the parties were mutual; the promise of neither party was onerous in this transaction. The contract is relatively simple in that Myrtle Beach solicited an air eliminator, and Emerson accepted the offer to provide one. Because the parties entered into this contract on an equal footing, the court should enforce it according to its terms.
Third and Fourth, the type of product involved is a critical factor affecting not only the context of the transaction — i.e.—consumer versus commercial, but also upon the degree of sophistication of the product itself. As noted, this a commercial transaction between two corporations. Therefore, the need to “protect” the buyer is correspondingly less than if the buyer were a consumer. Also, the air eliminator is not a casually-purchased, readily-available item; rather, Myrtle Beach sought an engineer to design the component, and based on Ancira’s specifications, Emerson constructed it. When such is the case, the repair or replacement remedy is particularly compelling: “[WJhere the goods are experimental items, of complicated design, or
built especially for the buyer ...
the repair or replacement clause may simply mean that the seller promises to use his best efforts to keep the goods in repair and in working condition____”
Id.
at 1046 (quoting 3 Hawk-land
Uniform Commercial Code Series
447 (Callaghan 1984));
see also American Elec. Power Co.,
Fifth, this air eliminator is not generally available. Indeed, Myrtle Beach had it designed by an engineer, who, in turn, requested that Emerson manufacture the air eliminator according to his specifications. These facts demonstrate that the air eliminator is not a common item.
Sixth, the clause setting forth the limitation is common between commercial merchants.
See McDermott,
c. Exclusion of Consequential Damages
Concluding that the limited remedy did not fail of its essential purpose pursuant to subsection 36-2-719(2), merely narrows, but does not end, the inquiry. The issue now becomes whether the exclusion of consequential damages, as here, would be unconscionable; and thus the court must separately examine subsection 36-2-719(3), which provides:
(3) Consequential damages may be limited or excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Limitation of consequential damages for injury to the person in the case of consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but limitation of damages where the loss is commercial is not.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36-2-719(3). Determining the propriety of excluding consequential damages is a separate and distinct inquiry from determining whether a limited remedy may be upheld:
The limited rеmedy of repair and a consequential damages exclusion are two discrete [limitations]. The Code, moreover, tests each by a different standard. The former survives unless it fails of its essential purpose, while the latter is valid unless it is unconscionable. We therefore see no reason to hold ... that the failure of the limited remedy ... without more, invalidates a wholly distinct term in the agreement excluding consequential damages.
Chatlos Sys.,
The Fourth Circuit has not directly taken a stance on this position, but it has observed that “recent cases indicated that the two provisions are independent and are to be applied as such.”
Riegel Power Corp.,
While these are separate inquiries, however, the limited remedy’s failure “is not completely irrelevant to the issue of the conscionability of enforcing the consequential damages exclusion.”
Chatlos Sys.,
Consequential damages may be excluded, provided that this exclusion is not “unconscionable.”
See
§ 36-2-719(3). “Unconscionability” is not defined in the Uniform Commercial Code, and the term necessarily invites speculation. For determining unconscionability, “[t]he basic test is whether, in the light of the general commercial background and the commercial needs of the particular trade or case, the clauses involved are so one-sided as to be unconscionable under the circumstances existing at the time of the making of the contract.” § 36-2-302 official cmt. 1. One of the seminal cases attempting to define the term has noted that “[u]nconscionability has generally been recognized to include an absence of meaningful choice on the part of one of the parties together with contract terms which are unreasonably favorable to the other party.”
Williams v. Walker-Thomas Furniture Co.,
First, the nature of the injury sustained by Myrtle Beach is commercial; no personal injury has been sustained.
11
This fact is “significant under the Code” because while “limitations on damages for personal injuries are not favored ... no such prejudice applies to property losses.”
Chatlos Sys.,
Second, Myrtle Beach is a “substantial business concern” that can amply police its own bargains. That Myrtle Beach is a corporation able to manage its own affairs is not disputed. Moreover, as the Sixth Circuit noted, “numerous decisions have pointed out [that] uneonscionability rarely exists unless the buyer is a consumer.”
Lewis Refrigeration Co.,
Third, the parties enjoy equal bargaining power. Myrtle Beach and Emerson are both corporations able to deal with each other at arm’s length. Their contract should be enforced to preserve the sanctity of the law of contract; not enforcing this valid contract would be unconscionable. As the
Smith
court observed, “parties of relatively equal bargaining power can allocate all of the risks that may accompany a breach of warranty.”
Smith,
Fourth, these parties are also sophisticated and well-versed in commercial transactions. The Fifth Circuit has succinctly recognized the importance of the sophistication of the parties in assessing uneonscionability under subsection 2-719(3):
Contracts freely arrived at and fairly made are favorites of thе law. None of the parties here involved were neophytes or babes in the brambles of the business world. Both companies, it would appear, dealt in projects involving considerable sums of money; both operated substantial businesses; and there is no suggestion that their businesses were not capably managed and profitably operated.
Delhomme Indus.,
Fifth, exclusions of consequential damages are common in commercial transactions.
See Winter Panel Corp.,
Finally, this exclusion was conspicuous, being clearly provided for under a subheading that read “Limitation of Remedy.” This is not a case of the exclusionary clause being “lost in a linguistic maze.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). The preclusive language was simply and noticeably stated. The court therefore holds that the exclusion of consequential damages was not “unconscionable” under subsection 36-2-719(3). In short, the case law is rife with courts’ sustaining exclusions of consequential damages.
See, e.g., Smith,
B. The Tort Claim
The court must now embark upon that ill-defined, though well-trod, boundary between the realms of contract and tort. Maintaining a footing on this boundary proves difficult indeed because the boundary that separates these realms is blurred. The court’s excursion is rendered more perilous because the parties are arrayed on opposite sides of this boundary and urge the court to their respective camps: Myrtle Beach asserts that it may maintain a negligence claim against Emerson and therefore invites the court into the realm of tort. Conversely, Emerson contends that Myrtle Beach may only assert a breach of warranty claim and thus argues that the case is confined to the realm of contract. The court must therefore decide whether a genuine tort claim lies or whether this action sounds exclusively in contract. The compass guiding the court through these separate but overlapping worlds is the doctrine of economic loss.
1. Sailing the Straits of East River
In
East River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,
In this case, there was no damage to “other” property.
[Sjince ... no person or other property is damaged, the resulting loss is purely economic.
[W]e ... hold 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.... When a product injures only itself the reasons for imposing a tort duty are weak and those for leaving the party to its contractual remedies are strong.
[Wjhen a product injures only itself, the commercial user stands to lose the value of the product, risks the displeasures of its customers, ... or, ... experiences increased costs in performing a service. Losses like these can be insured.
*1049
Id.
at 867, 870-72,
The Court premised its conclusion on four reasons. First was the traditional differences between contract and tort law; the law of torts encourages safe conduct, while the law of contract encourages business transactions. The “tort concern with safety is reduced when an injury is only to the product itself.”
Id.
at 871,
This “economic loss” doctrine therefore bars tort claims and limits a plaintiffs recovery to those contractual remedies provided by the Uniform Commercial Code where the suit arises out of a commercial transaction and the loss incurred is only to the product itself. Thus, the “doctrine hinges on a distinction ... between transactions involving the sale of goods ... where economic expectations are protected by commercial and contract law, and those involving the sale of defective products to individual consumers who are injured in a manner which has traditionally been remedied by ... the law of torts.”
Neibarger v. Universal Coops., Inc.,
2. Injuries Constituting Economic Loss
In
Moorman Manufacturing Co. v. National Tank Co.,
“Economic loss” has been defined as damages for inadequate value, costs of repair and replacement of the defective product, or consequent loss of profits — without any claim of personal injury or damage to other property, as well as the diminution in value of the product because it is inferior in quality and does not work for the general purposes for which it was manufactured and sold.
Id.,
South Carolina has adopted the economic loss doctrine substantially as articulated in East River:
This rule exists to assist in determining whether contract or tort theories are applicable to a given case. Where a purchaser’s expectations in a sale are frustrated because the product he bought is not working properly, his remedy is said to be in contract alone, for he has suffered only “economic losses.” Conversely, where a purchaser buys a product which is defective and physically harms him, his remedy is in either tort or contract. This is so, ... because his losses are more than merely “economic.”
Kennedy v. Columbia Lumber & Mfg. Co.,
3. Purvis, 2000 Watermark, and Laurens
In
Purvis v. Consolidated Energy Products Co.,
a. Purvis
Purvis, a tobacco farmer, purchased six specially-built tobacco barns from the defendant because the barns were constructed to improve efficiency.
Purvis,
The Fourth Circuit reversed, concluding that Purvis’s losses were only economic losses, and hence “strict products liability does not apply;” thus, he was limited to pursuing exclusively contract claims. Id. at 223. After discussing the purposes and policies of tort strict liability, the court held that traditional tort policies do not apply to commercial transactions between merchants because such negotiations are governed by the law of contract. Id. at 220-23. The court stated that еven if warranty law did not fully compensate for physical injury, id. at 220, such a calculus of law was the best vehicle for operating in a commercial context because the parties could define their own rights and remedies by what they assented to in their bargain, id. at 221. Because Purvis was a commercial plaintiff, he had the power to negotiate with respect to the product’s specifications and with respect to the risk of loss due to any possible defects in the product. Purvis’s own failure to secure a better bargain was the result of his own conscious choice: “the commercial buyer can protect himself by negotiation____ When a buyer who has taken advantage of that opportunity invokes [tort doctrines] with respect to a risk that was allocated to him by contract, he in effect asks the law to accord him a better bargain than he purchased.” Id. The court also noted that when the parties have struck a bargain, the duty of the court is to enforce it, including its limitations:
The right to disclaim warranties and limit remedies enables commercial parties to allocate risks between the buyer and the seller in the most efficient manner and thereby to maximize their respective gains from a transaction. Furthermore, because that right is often embodied in statutory . law, failure by the courts to give it due effect would flout a clear legislative mandate.
Id. at 222.
With respect to loss, the court held that when loss “results from mere product ineffectiveness, it is the law of contracts and commercial transactions, ... which fixes responsibility for the loss.” Id. at 223. As applied to Purvis’s loss for his crop and barns, his losses were economic because they sprang from a commercial transaction and were the result of “an ordinary commercial risk of product ineffectiveness.” Id. The losses did not take the action out of contract *1052 and into tort. Accordingly, the court concluded that no tort claim would lie. Id.
b. 2000 Watermark
In
2000 Watermark,
the defendant installed defective shingles on the plaintiffs roof.
2000 Watermark,
Again, the Fourth Circuit, applying South Carolina law, reversed, holding that the plaintiff could not bring a tort claim. Id. The pillar on which the court rested its reasoning was the fact that the circumstances giving rise to the injury occurred in a commercial setting and the loss was solely economic; as such, contract law alone set the parameters for any claims:
If intangible economic loss were actionable under a tort theory, the UCC provisions permitting assignment of risk by means of warranties and disclaimers would be rendered meaningless.... The UCC represents a comprehensive statutory scheme which satisfies the needs of the world of commerce, and courts have been reluctant to extend judicial doctrines that might dislocate the legislative structure.
Id. at 1186.
The plaintiff claimed that it did not suffer solely economic injury, but also suffered injury to other property because the felt and tar paper under the shingles had to be replaced when new shingles were installed. Id. Thus, plaintiff asserted that it could bring a tort claim because property other than the product had been injured. The court, however, rejected this contention, concluding that this type of injury was contemplated by the contract because the injury was to the product itself; plaintiff simply did not get the benefit of its bargain — i.e.—a leakproof roof. Accordingly, there could be no recovery in tort: “[t]he cost of replacing the old felt is an incidental expense which may be recoverable in a warranty action, but it will not support an action for negligence,” id. at 1188. This conclusion was based on a determination by the court that the felt and tar paper would have to be replaced whenever old shingles are removed. Id. at 1187-88. Accordingly, the negligence claim could not proceed,
c. Laurens
In
Laurens,
the parties, both commercially sophisticated, contracted for the defendant to make substantial modifications to a derrick and remount it to a truck.
Laurens,
Concluding that the plaintiff could not assert these tort claims, the Fourth Circuit affirmed. Id. at 1323. The Laurens court commenced its discussion by recognizing that the impetus behind strict products liability law “was born out of concern for the individual consumer,” but that this rule did not enjoy “universal application in a commercial world.” Id. at 1324 (emphasis added). Indeed, the court noted that typically in commercial transactions where the parties are commercial entities with the “ability to provide self-protection,” id. at 1326, the parties may freely allocate risk of loss, id. at 1324. The court then noted that application of strict products liability was a fluid concept that created room “for carefully fashioned judicial exceptions and limitations.” Id. The court then proceeded to discuss Purvis, recognizing, however, that the analogy to Purvis was “not perfect” because in Purvis the defective barns “could not be made to function as intended,” while in Laurens, the product was actually destroyed. Id. at 1325. The court then noted that while South Carolina had not addressed the applicability of economic loss when the only injury was to the product itself, the court recognized that East River had resolved this issue by holding that “in such situations tоrt principles were *1053 simply inapplicable, and the result should be determined by resort to contract law.” Id. Based on East River, the Laurens court held that no tort action could be maintained since the loss was exclusively economic because the only property of the plaintiff that had been injured was the product itself, and the actions giving rise to this injury germinated from a commercial transaction between two sophisticated corporations. Id. at 1326.
Purvis, 2000 Watermark
and
Laurens
can generally be traced to the much-followed
Seely v. White Motor Co.,
The law of sales has been carefully articulated to govern the economic relations between suppliers and consumers of goods. The history of the doctrine of strict liability in tort indicates that it was designed, not to undermine the warranty provisions of ... the Uniform Commercial Code but, rather, to govern the distinct problem of physical injuries.
[T]he rules governing warranties ... meet the needs of commercial transactions.
Id.,
Applying the principles of
Purvis,
15
2000 Watermark,
and
Laurens,
the court concludes that Myrtle Beach may not maintain its negligence action. Initially, the court observes that a recurrent theme throughout these eases, and indeed, the economic loss doctrine generally, is that if sophisticated parties to a commercial transaction have negotiated a contract, as here, and the product injures only itself and not other property belonging to the plaintiff, also as here, contract law, specifically the Uniform Commercial Code, and not tort law, provides the exclusive rights and remedies of the parties.
See Miller,
South Carolina law has long recognized the principle that no tort claim will lie where the parties’ duties are defined by a contract.
See, e.g., Meddin v. Southern Ry.-Carolina Div.,
The Purvis court held that the plaintiff could not recover for his imperfectly cured tobacco and the barns because these losses were an “ordinary business risk” of a commercial transaction based on a product that did not work as represented, rather than on a product that was inherеntly dangerous. 16 The crux of this holding appeared to be that the losses to the tobacco and the barn were within the purview of the negotiations and reasonably foreseeable by the parties. Because they were contemplated by the contract, the losses were necessarily “economic.” Similarly, in 2000 Watermark, the court concluded that damages for the cost of replacing felt and tar paper under defective shingles constituted incidental contract damages that were recoverable under a warranty theory, not consequential tort damages. Here, because the contract between the parties allocated the risk of loss to Myrtle Beach, tort doctrines provide no justification for the court’s shifting the loss to Emerson.
As the Public Service court observed in resolving whether a tort action could proceed between two sophisticated parties:
[W]e think, quite candidly, that [defendant] is quite right in suggesting that, at its core, this is a contract action. Asking two *1055 questions helped us reach this conclusion: (1) what is the nature of the loss suffered by the plaintiffs? and (2) from what source did the defendant’s duty to refrain from the conduct complained of primarily derive?
Public Serv.,
A more difficult issue is classification of the loss, but the court holds that the type of loss here is economic because the only property belonging to Myrtle Beach that was injured was the air eliminator proper — there was no injury to other property of Myrtlе Beach. In all of the above precedents, the plaintiff owned the other property that was injured by the defective product. Such is not the case here. A critical matter is that the injury for which Myrtle Beach seeks compensation is with respect to property that Myrtle Beach does not own. 17 The “other property” belongs to the United States. Myrtle Beach does not address this fact but asserts that it is the party who bears the consequences of the spill because it must clean up the Base. Emerson contends that there was no injury to any property owned by Myrtle Beach other than the air eliminator. Preeedentially, therefore, Myrtle Beach is in a tenuous position for asserting its claims.
The court believes that Myrtle Beach’s lack of ownership of the injured realty casts grave doubts on whether Myrtle Beach may recover the damages it claims. Indeed, the decisional law reveals that the plaintiff seeking economic loss must also be the same party who actually suffered personal injury or injury to his other property.
See, e.g., Laurens Elec. Coop.,
The court is urged to follow
Tourist Village Motel, Inc. v. Massachusetts Engineering Co.,
Myrtle Beach contends that
City of Greenville v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
In light of the above, the court concludes that no tort claim exists. Accordingly, summary judgment is granted in favor of Emerson with respect to Myrtle Beach’s negligence action.
4. “Other Property”
Although the court concludes that a tort claim will not lie, and that the above holding is dispositive of this issue, the court will nevertheless address the issue of the *1057 “other property” exception. An emerging trend in the decisional law, as discussed below, is that the “other property” exception is not met if: (1)' “other property” and (2) injury to this “other property,” even if owned by a plaintiff, were, or should have been, contemplated by the contract.
Myrtle Beach asserts that it may maintain its negligence claim because the air eliminator injured the surrounding real property, for which Myrtle Beach incurred substantial clean up costs and litigation expenses. Myrtle Beach advances this contention even though it does not own any other injured property. Emerson contends that East River applies because the sole injury was to the product itself — i.e.—the air eliminator ruptured; hence, the tort claim is precluded because no “other property” belonging to Myrtle Beach was injured. Emerson further argues that Myrtle Beach’s attempts to recover clean uр costs and litigation expenses are the very types of economic loss that the economic loss doctrine bars. The injury to the real property here raises the issue not specifically addressed in East River of whether injury to “other property” caused by a defective product is in all circumstances recoverable.
In
East River,
the Court prohibited recovery for “the failure of [a] product to function properly,” unless “the defective product damages other property.”
Id.,
There is a dearth of case law addressing the precise issue presented here. Most of the law addressing the issue of what constitutes “other property” is concerned with whether the other property is merely a component part of the overall product itself. If such is the case, then the courts uniformly hold that the economic loss doctrine precludes recovery in tort against the manufacturer of the component because the component is integrated into the whole product and the purchaser bargained for the whole product, not merely a component of it.
See, e.g., Laurens,
In determining whether “other property” has been injured for purposes of the economic loss rule, the courts have tended to focus on the circumstances and context giving rise to the injury.
See, e.g., Chicago Heights Venture v. Dynamit Nobel of America, Inc.,
Some courts, however, will permit recovery in tort, even if the context is primarily commercial, if the injury were “sudden and calamitous,”
see, e.g., Star Furniture Co. v. Pulaski Furniture Co.,
Cattle loom large in applying the economic loss doctrine to the concept of “other property.” In
Neibarger,
Neibarger, who operated a dairy farm, contracted to purchase a milking system from the defendant.
Neibarger,
In examining the relationship of injury to the product proper and injury to “other property,” the court observed:
In many cases, failure of the product to perform as expected will necessarily cause damage to other property; such damage is often not beyond the contemplation of the *1059 parties to the agreement. Damage to property, where it is the result of a commercial transaction otherwise within the ambit of the UCC, would not preclude application of the economic loss doctrine where such property damage necessarily results from the delivery of a product of poor quality.
Id.
at 620 (footnote omitted). Under
Neibarger
therefore, injury to the product itself cannot be completely divorced from possible injury to other property because poor product performance “will necessarily cause” injury to other property. The
East River
Court noted that virtually all machines have component parts and to distinguish the component part from the whole would result in a finding of injury to “other property” whenever a product injures itself.
See East River,
Similar to
Neibarger
is
Agristor Leasing,
in which the Guggisbergs, farmers, purchased a defective silo system from the defendants.
Agristor Leasing,
Elaborating on risks contemplated by the commercial transactions is
Theuerkauf.
Theuerkauf operated a mink ranch, and contracted with the defendant to inoculate his minks with the BIOCOM-DP vaccine, a vaccine that “[t]he defendant manufactures, tests, and distributes.”
Theuerkauf,
The Theuerkauf court concluded that the economic loss doctrine barred recovery for the minks, “even though the damage claimed by the plaintiff occurred to property other than the product itself.” Id. at 1242. This is application of Neibarger' s position that injury to the product is often not strictly confined to the product’s destruction. Here, the loss was an unfortunate, but natural and foreseeable consequence of a product’s failure:
*1060 The harmful effect to animals injected with a vaccine is without a doubt a necessаry result which would occur from the delivery of a defective vaccine. The vaccine is intended to be injected into the animals, and one of the inherent risks of the use of vaccines is that the vaccine will cause an adverse reaction resulting in harm. The link between product and harm caused does not require one to stretch one’s imagination to reach some tangential nexus — it is the exact damage one would expect from a defective vaccine. Allocation of this damage clearly could have been negotiated by the parties. That is, the death of the mink was a natural, foreseeable result of the product’s defect.
Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Under Neibarger, Agristor Leasing, and Theuerkauf, a rule appears to be emerging that in a commercial transaction between two equal parties, loss to property belonging to the plaintiff flowing from a product or service within the contract’s contemplation and reasonably foreseeable as a result should the product or service prove defective will not support recovery in tort because injury to such property is contemplated, or should have been, by the parties to the agreement. As a corollary therefore, the term “other property” appears to be subject to the construction that it is property belonging to the plaintiff the risk to which is outside the reasonable contemplation of the contract.
In
Neibarger, Agristor Leasing,
and
Theuerkauf,
the injury was to personalty, not, as here, realty. In
Ringer v. Agway, Inc.,
13 U.C.C.Rep.Serv.2d 114,
Concluding that these losses, grave though they were, were the result of “disаppointed commercial expectations” and thus “purely economic,” the court held that these injuries did not constitute injury to “other property.” Id. Accordingly, the economic loss doctrine precluded recovery:
[T]his form of loss, contrary to [Ringer’s] contention, is wholly commercial in nature and will not be recognized as “other property.” These unfortunate losses were an ordinary commercial risk of a transaction in the potato industry. Other courts have consistently held that those aspects of damage which involve items or facilities obviously involving the bargain between the parties is not damage to “other property.”
I conclude that [Ringer] cannot state a cause of action under either negligence or strict liability theories. The damage sustained by [Ringer] falls within the scope of the bargain with [the defendant], and is properly addressed through contractual theories of recovery only.
Id. at 5-6 (citations omitted). Under Ringer, property, real or personal, that can reasonably be expected to be affected by the use of the product is contemplated by the contract and thus does not constitute “other property” for purposes of the economic loss doctrine. See also Chicago Heights Venture, 782 F.2d at 729-30 (holding that plaintiff could not recover for injury to real property sustained as a result of a defective roofs causing wind and water damage and rejecting plaintiffs *1061 contention that it sustained injuiy to “other property” because the “gravamen of the complaint ... is that the roof did not work”).
In
Public Service,
the defendants contracted to maintain a nuclear power plant for the plaintiffs. The plant, however, proved unsafe; so it was closed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Public Serv.,
Although ultimately denying defendants’ motion to dismiss the tort claims, id. at 220, the court nevertheless stated that it “would be inclined to hold that this is simply a contract case,” id. at 211. The court further stated that “the harm suffered by the plaintiffs has been predominately economic in nature.” Id. at 208. With respect to the physical injury to the plant site, the court stated that this did not meet the other property exception of the economic loss doсtrine:
And while it is true that plaintiffs allege that the ... plant was physically damaged because of [defendant’s] failure to maintain it, East River ... make[s] clear that such damage in and of itself need not necessarily determine whether a tort remedy is available____ In short, plaintiffs bargained for a well-maintained plant.
As such, we find it analytically difficult to distinguish between such property damage and damage to a defective product itself. Here, plaintiffs bargained for a well-maintained nuclear plant. They allege that it was poorly maintained and suffered physical damage, i.e., they lost the benefit of their bargain.
Id. at 209. Material to the court’s reasoning was the fact that “this case rationally and logically can be viewed as a contract case.” Id.
Based on the above precedents, the emerging view in the decisional law appears to be that the losses for which Myrtle Beach seeks compensation are non-recoverable economic losses. Here, the losses are for clean up costs and litigation expenses. Under Neibarger, Agristor Leasing, and Theuerkauf, these losses were a foreseeable result because thát a spill would occur is natural if the air eliminator proved defective. Being a contemplated risk, these cases would hold that Myrtle Beach bore this risk because the parties allocated the risk of loss to the purchaser. For similar reasons, Myrtle Beach also cannot bring itself within the “other property” exception because, under Neibarger and Theuerkauf, that the defective product will necessarily injure other property is often a natural consequence of the product’s injury to itself. As Theuerkauf noted, that a spill would result for which Myrtle Beach would be liable simply does not “stretch one’s imagination” as being outside the purview of the contract. Additionally, Ringer held that clean up costs for injury to realty could not be recovered in tort under the economic loss doctrine because use of the real property was contemplated by the contract. Public Service also noted the preclusion for clean up costs for physical injury to a plant site. Similarly, Chicago Heights held that recovery for injury to realty could not be had where the injury was the result of a defective product that was the subject of a contract. Under these eases, therefore, Myrtle Beach could not recover its clean up costs from Emerson. Indeed, Public Service demonstrates that even under extremely compelling circumstances — i.e.—nuclear mishap and over $70 million in damages for injury — Myrtle Beach could not recover its claimed losses.
The possibility of a “public policy exception” regarding possible land contamination has been raised.
Public Service
appears to foreclose any such argument, however, because that court made no such exception, and the circumstances of that action appear far more compelling than those pre
*1062
sented here. The
Public Service
court also noted that there was authority for the proposition that no such exception exists.
See Public Serv., 722
F.Supp. at 197 (citing authorities);
see also Garweth Corp. v. Boston Edison Co.,
Myrtle Beach contends that S.C.Code Ann. sections 48-1-90, 48-43-560 (Law.Co-op. 1976), operate to impose liability on Emerson because these sections require Myrtle Beach to clean up the spill. While the statutes require Myrtle Beach to perform the clean up, they do not impose liability on Emerson because these statutes assume liability. In the instant case, the court has concluded that no tort claim lies against Emerson. Reliance on the statute is misplaced because the argument never reaches the point at which liability attaches to Emerson.
With respect to litigation expenses, these would also appear to be “economic losses.” With respect to attorneys’ fees, the “American rule” provides that with limited exceptions, each party to litigation must bear his own expenses, regardless of what party prevailed at trial.
See Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y,
In 1796, this Court appears to have ruled that the Judiciary itself would not create a general rule, independent of any statute, allowing awards of attorneys’ fees in federal courts. In Arcambel [v. Wise-man, 3 U.S. (3 Dali) 306,1 L.Ed. 613 (1796)] .. .,the inclusion of attorneys’fees as damages was overturned on the ground that the general practice of the United States is in [opposition] to it; and even if that practice were not strictly correct in principle, it is entitled to the respect of the court, till it is changed, or modified, by statute. This Court has consistently adhered to that early holding.
Id.
(emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted). Under
Alyeska
therefore, attorneys’ fees are not considered part of the general calculus of a prevailing party’s damages award; thus, unless modified by statute or judicial exception, attorneys’ fees do not generally constitute damages.
See also Brooks v. Cook,
Myrtle Beach maintains that it is entitled to summary judgment with respect to other issues raised in the cross-motions for partial summary judgment: (1) that it was not contributorily negligent because the sole cause of the rupture was the defective weld; (2) that it did not assume the risk of loss; and (3) that it failed to avoid consequences or mitigate injury. In light of the above rulings regarding the disclaimer, limitation and exclusion of consequential damages, and the disallowance of a tort claim, these contentions are rendered inapplicable. Consequently, the court does not address these issues.
*1063 C. Indemnity
The court now turns to the issue of indemnity. Myrtle Beach has consistently and steadfastly maintained that its action consists solely of a negligence claim and a breach of warranty claim.
See
Second Amended Complaint (pleading only claims for negligence and breach of warranty); Myrtle Beach Pipeline Company’s Memorandum in Support of Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, at 7 (“Myrtle Beach alleged two causes of action: negligence and breach of implied warranty of merchantability under ... the UCC.”); Myrtle Beach Pipeline Company’s Memorandum in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion
in Limine
to Limit Plaintiffs Action to One of Indemnity, at 1 (“This is a traditional products liability case and is not an action for indemnity.”). Emerson, however, after the cross-motions for partial summary judgment had been filed, moved the court to limit Myrtle Beach’s action exclusively to one of indemnity.
See
Emerson Electric Company’s Notice of Motion and Motion
in Limine
to limit Plaintiffs Action to One of Indemnity. The court concludes that addressing the issue of indemnity is proper, even though it equally concludes that the breach of implied warranty of merchantability and tort claims cannot prevail.
See Bellevue South Assoc. v. HRH Constr. Corp.,
Very generally, “indemnity exists whenever the relation between the parties is such that either in law or in equity there is an obligation on one party to indemnify the other, as where one person is exposed to liability by the wrongful act of another in which he does not join.”
Stuck v. Pioneer Logging Mach., Inc.,
1. Express Indemnity
[35] Here, there is no express indemnity because there is no clause in the contract providing for express indemnification. No language in the contract even mentions indemnity.
See Hirasa v. Burtner,
2. Implied Indemnity
Initially, the court observes that “[t]he circumstances from which an implied right of indemnification has been recognized are ... rather limited.”
Hanscome v. Perry,
a. Implied Tort Indemnity
Because the court has concluded that there is no tort action, there can be no implied indemnity based on a tort claim. As the Appellate Court of Illinois observed:
[B]ecause [plaintiff] can have no claim for its economic losses in tort, the claim for indemnification based upon a tort, or faultfinding, theory of recovery is improper---- In actions for breach of warranty under the Uniform Commercial Code, fault is only relevant to the issue of causation in determining if, in fact, a warranty was breached. Instead, [plaintiff] must rely on the Uniform Commercial Code____ Therefore, the suit for breach of warranty against [defendant] is the only indemnifica *1065 tion claim available to [plaintiff] where the claim is not based on express contractual indemnity.
Crest Container Corp. v. R.H. Bishop Co.,
b. Implied Contract Indemnity
As the First Circuit observed regarding contractual indemnity, the “right to indemnification will only be implied when there are unique special factors demonstrating that the parties intended that the would-be indemnitor bear the ultimate responsibility ... or when there is a generally recognized special relationship between the parties.”
Araujo,
The Seventh Circuit likewise denied recovery based on tort or implied indemnity to an aggrieved purchaser in
Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Chicago Eastern Corp.,
Hence, there is no basis for Myrtle Beach to recover based upon a theory of implied contractual indemnity. The parties have clearly set forth by their contract language their intent with respect to the responsibilities and risks. The fact that they have specifically addressed these issues is an additional reason for this court to exclude implied indemnification as a theory of recovery. Its possibilities of indemnity exhausted, Myrtle Beach cannot recovery on any type of indemnity claim.
VI. CONCLUSION
This action is governed by South Carolina law because under South Carolina’s Uniform Commercial Code choice-of-law provision, the transaction giving rise to this suit bеars an “appropriate relation” to the forum state, South Carolina. With respect to the breach of warranty claim, the implied warranty of merchantability was properly disclaimed. Moreover, the contract properly provided for *1066 the sole remedy of repair or replacement; and this exclusive remedy did not fail of its essential purpose. Even if the limited remedy did fail of its essential purpose, exclusion of consequential damages is not unconscionable under these circumstances. Regarding the purported tort claim, the court holds that a tort action cannot be maintained because, boiled down to its bare facts, this suit is nothing more than a breach of warranty action between two commercially sophisticated parties; therefore, Myrtle Beach is relegated solely to its contractual remedies. The issues of Myrtle Beach’s possible contributory negligence, assumption of the risk, and failure to avoid consequences are rendered nugatory in light of the above holding. Finally, the court holds that Myrtle Beach cannot maintain an action for indemnity.
THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that the motion of Emerson for partial summary judgment is granted; and •
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the motion of Myrtle Beach for partial summary judgment is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. While this action was originally commenced before another district judge in June of 1986, it was transferred to my chambers as part of my beginning caseload in April of 1992.
. Emerson avers that Myrtle Beach cannot maintain a negligence action, see infra at 1048, and consequently does not advance a choice of law provision with respect to this claim.
. In
McLean v. Godwin Properties, Inc.,
. This court concludes later in this opinion that under South Carolina law, Myrtle Beach cannot succeed on its contract claim. See infra, at 1035-48. Even if Texas law were applied, Myrtle Beach's contract claim would still fail because the Texas statute of limitations expired before commencement of this suit. Under Texas law, such a cause of action must be brought within four years after it accrues. See generally Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. §§ 2.314 (collecting cases), 2.725(a) (West 1993). Myrtle Beach, in its brief, has not contested the existence or effect of the Texas limitations period, but has instead asserted that Texas law does not apply.
. With respect to express warranties, the Uniform Commercial Code provides:
(1) Express warranties by the seller are created as follows:
(2) Any affirmation of fact or promise, including those on containers or labels, made by the seller to the buyer, whether directly or indirectly, which relatеs to the goods and becomes part of the basis of the bargain creates *1036 an express warranty that the goods conform to the affirmation or promise.
S.C.Code Ann. § 36 — 2—313(l)(a). In the quotation provided to Myrtle Beach, Emerson agreed that its products "when operated under the conditions stipulated by Brooks ... are warranted against defects in workmanship and materials ... and to conform to the written specifications." Myrtle Beach, however, has not pled or argued a breach of express warranty pursuant to this section. Consequently, the court does not address the possibility of a breach of express warranty claim.
. None of the parties raised the issue of implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose. Indeed, Myrtle Beach did not plead this claim in its complaint, nor has it argued this claim in its brief; rather, it has confined itself to the breach of implied warranty of merchantability. Consequently, the court does not address the issue of fitness for a particular purpose. Even if, however, the issue of fitness for a particular purpose were raised, the court concludes that the claim would not succeed for the reasons that the breach of implied warranty of merchantability failed.
. The court concludes that Myrtle Beach’s assertion, based on Official Comment 8 and the South Carolina Reporter's Comments, that there can be no disclaimer of implied warranties with respect to latent defects is misplaced. The commentary applies only to § 36-2-316(3), exclusions arising by implication, not to § 36-2-316(2), explicit ex *1037 clusions pursuant to a written instrument. The text of the opinion also demonstrates this point.
. The commentators agree. Professor Eddy has described the premise of the limited remedy of repair and replacement thusly:
The ... picture of the limited repair warranty ... rests upon at least three assumptions: that the warrantor will diligently make repairs, that such repairs will indeed "cure" the defects, and that consequential loss in the interim will be negligible. So long as these assumptions hold true, the limited remedy appears to operate fairly and, as noted, will usually withstand contentions of "unconscionability."
Eddy, On the "Essential" Purposes of Limited Remedies: The Metaphysics of U.C.C. Section 20719(2), 65 Cal.L.Rev. 28, 63 (1977).
. The
Riegel Power Corp.
court did not "adopt” this test; however, this court likewise applies this test to the case at bar. The court further notes that the Fifth Circuit has cited the
J.A. Jones Const. Co.
factors with apparent approval.
See Delhomme Indus. v. Houston Beechcraft, Inc.,
. The courts have characterized "one-sided” contracts as being "substantively” unconscionable and disparity of choice and bargaining power as "procedurally” unconscionable. See E. Allen Farnsworth, Contracts § 4.28, at 314 (7th ed. 1982).
. The court further notes that the losses claimed by Myrtle Beach are not even to its property. This aspect of the case is discussed in detail, see infra at pp. 1056-62.
. See discussion of "other property,” infra at pp. 1054-62.
. Although the 2000 Watermark court did not characterize this as a “component part” case, undoubtedly because it preceded East River, this court considers 2000 Watermark just such a suit.
. The 2000 Watermark and Purvis courts both relied on Seely for their reasoning, as did the Supreme Court in East River.
. While the
Purvis
plaintiff brought a strict products liability claim, as opposed to a negligence claim, the
Laurens
plaintiff asserted both strict products liability and negligence claims, even though the
Laurens
court devoted its discussion to strict liability. That Myrtle Beach is bringing a negligence claim does not render
Purvis
inapplicable because the same principles that apply to strict products liability also apply to negligence.
See Chicago Heights Venture v. Dynamit Nobel of America, Inc.,
. The
Purvis
court noted in dicta that "[a]rguably[] the doctrine of strict products liability would override the contract if the defect which allegedly caused plaintiff's injury invoked the policies of that doctrine. [But] [t]hose policies have no role in this dispute, for the alleged defect ... was not unreasonably dangerous to plaintiff or his property.”
Purvis,
. By letter dated October 15, 1993 (approximately five weeks after the motion for partial summary judgment was argued), Myrtle Beach stated that it has an easement to be on the Base; and a copy of the document granting the easement was provided to the court. The easement, however, does not change the result of this opinion. The Supreme Court of South Carolina has held that easements are minor property rights that do not confer standing to sue.
See Quinn v. City of Columbia,
. Held, however, permitted the plaintiff to recover under a negligence theory; but the court, applying Texas law, noted that Texas law represented a minorily view. Id. at 377. The Held court further observed that Texas precedents are somewhat confused on this issue. Id. This court does not believe that South Carolina would adopt the minorily view followed in Texas.
. See n. 16 supra at 1054.
. This is not inconsistent with the rule that recovery of attorneys fees and costs are available to a successful indemnity plaintiff.
See Town of Winnsboro v. Wiedeman-Singleton, Inc.,
. The court notes that the concept of indemnity, beginning with its nomenclature, is very far from clear. The courts speak of “implied indemnity" and “equitable indemnity” rather interchangeably.
See and compare Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Chicago Eastern Corp.,
Apart from nomenclatural differences, the courts do not even agree on what elements constitute the same type of indemnity.
Compare Rubenstein v. Ball Bros. (In re New England Fish Co.),
. In
Town of Winnsboro,
the Court of Appeals of South Carolina noted that even under the concept of equitable indemnity, the party seeking indemnity must be free from any fault in causing the injury.
See Town of Winnsboro,
