The sole issue in this diversity case involving defective construction materials is which prescriptive period is applicable to plaintiff’s cause of action under Louisiana law. We agree that the action was properly treated as one in redhibition calling for a one-year period.
Plaintiff PPG Industries, Inc. was a subcontractor for the construction of a building in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. As part of its contract with the general contractor, PPG agreed to install spandrel panels on the curtain wall of the building. PPG contracted in turn with the defendant, Industrial Laminates Corporation, for a supply of spandrel panels meeting certain specifications. Industrial Laminates manufactured and delivered the panels to the job-site where they were installed by PPG. After installing the panels and paying the contract price for them, PPG discovered that the panels were delaminating. Industrial Laminates acknowledged this failure and sent replacement panels, the last of which was received in March 1976. PPG removed the defective panels and installed the replacement panels. Upon completion of the contract in March 1977 the owner of the building, pursuant to a release and agreement with PPG, withheld $51,487.29 from PPG because of construction losses associated with the defective panels. One year later, on March 8, 1978, PPG filed suit against Industrial Laminates seeking $51,--487.29 for the sum withheld by the owner, $23,000.00 for the extra labor cost incurred in replacing the defective panels, and $25,-512.31 for interest lost on all the funds withheld by the owner over the duration of these events.
1
The district court granted summary judgment for defendant, holding that the cause of action under Louisiana law was one in redhibition,
2
and therefore barred by a one-year period of prescription. La.Civ.Code Ann. art. 2534 provides that a redhibitory action must be instituted within a year, at the farthest, commencing from the date of the sale. This limitation does not apply where the seller had knowledge of the vice and neglected to declare it to the purchaser,
ibid.
Louisiana law imputes such knowledge to the manufacturer.
E. g. Phillipe v. Browning Arms Co.,
On appeal the plaintiff urges two main points: (1) that the suit is founded on an express warranty contained in the purchase order 3 so that the ten-year prescriptive period to an action for breach of contract applies; and (2) that PPG’s action is one for indemnity from Industrial Laminates, and as such is governed by the ten-year prescription for actions in quasi-contract.
PPG relied heavily on
Delta Refrigeration Co.
v.
Upjohn Co.,
Here, Upjohn represented that its CPA 425 was flame-retardant and self-extinguishing, claims which the facts of this case show are not so, and were held to be misleading and unfair . . . The thrust of plaintiff’s claim is to recover, not for a hidden defect, a redhibitory vice; instead, it is to be awarded damages for breach of the express warranties Upjohn made when it sold the chemicals. Therefore, the proper prescriptive period is founded in La. R.C.C. art. 3544 — ten years — not the one-year period provided by Art. 2534. 4
The district court correctly stated that the presence of an express warranty does not convert an action for redhibition into an action for breach of contract, nor does it alter the one-year prescription for redhibitory suits. Indeed, the Louisiana statutes explicitly recognize that breach of an express warranty gives rise to an action in redhibition where the declaration by the seller as to the product’s qualities forms the principal motive for the purchase. La.Civ. Code Ann. art. 2529. So too, the courts in Louisiana have held unequivocally that actions based on a breach of warranty against defects are to be brought in redhibition instead of as a breach of contract.
See Molbert Bros. Poultry & Egg Co. v. Montgomery,
Had the court in Delta Refrigeration concluded that the claim was one in redhibition but that the presence of an express warranty somehow superceded the one-year prescription, we would have faced the question the district court thought it was facing. However, Delta Refrigeration does not contain the vice which the defendant and court below attribute to it.
That this action is one in redhibition under Louisiana law is easily discerned. Redhibition is the remedy when the defect in the thing sold renders it absolutely useless or its use so inconvenient and imperfect
PPG cites, besides
Delta Refrigeration,
several Louisiana cases where express contractual obligations supposedly mandated application of the prescriptive period for breach of contract. These cases are likewise easily distinguishable. In
Weathermaster Parts & Service, Inc. v. McCay,
S.
H. Hanville Lumber and Export Co. v. C-B Lumber Co.,
PPG argues that since the panels were not readily separable and could not be returned to the seller in avoidance of the sale, redhibition will not lie because the statute envisions the return by the buyer of movable or separable objects. This argument is without merit. Redhibition encompasses those situations where the product cannot be returned.
Molbert Bros. Poultry & Egg Co. v. Montgomery,
PPG’s second major contention, that this is a suit for indemnity and as such is governed by a ten-year prescription period, is disposed of by the case on which PPG purports to rely,
Minyard v. Curtis Products, Inc.,
PPG’s other argument, that Industrial Laminates is a contractor, or should stand in the shoes of the contractor so that the ten-year prescription period applicable to contractors, La.Civ.Code Ann. art. 2762 should apply, is wholly without merit.
The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. For two years prior to correction and replacement the owner had withheld $145,000.00 from PPG because of the defective panels.
. Redhibition is the avoidance of a sale on account of some vice or defect in the thing sold which renders it either absolutely useless, or its use so inconvenient and imperfect, that it must be supposed that the buyer would not have purchased it had he known of the vice. La.Civ. Code Ann. art. 2520.
. The purchase order required the architect’s approval, and further stated:
“Seller guarantees that the product covered by this order shall be of merchantable quality and fit for the use intended and guarantees the products for the number of years indicated in the block at right.” The block on the purchase order was not completed to indicate any duration.
. This court affirmed the district court without opinion.
. However, Louisiana has held that redhibition lies even where the absence of a stated quality does not constitute a defect if the quality which it supposedly contained (such as flame-retardance) was the principal motive for the buyer’s purchase.
Fusilier v. Ardoin,
