ORDER
In this diversity action, 1 plaintiff Public Service Company of New Hampshire (“PSNH”), a public utility company, seeks damages of $3 million from defendant Westinghouse Electric Corporation (“Westinghouse”) in connection with Westinghouse’s sale to PSNH of a steam turbine electric generator which subsequently malfunctioned. In a six-count amended complaint, PSNH alleges breach of express and implied warranties, strict liability, negligence, and fraud.
At bar are PSNH’s motion to amend Count VI, Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., Westinghouse’s motion for summary judgment, Rule 56(b), and the parties’ respective objections. Pleadings, memoranda, affidavits, and exhibits have been filed with the Court, and the issues raised by this litigation are clear; accordingly, the Court resolves said motions on the documents as filed. See Rule 11(g), Rules of the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire.
Background
On March 1, 1971, PSNH purchased a 400-megawatt steam turbine generator 2 *1283 from Westinghouse for approximately $8 million. The generator, known as Unit # 1, was subsequently installed at PSNH’s Newington, New Hampshire, power station and began operating in 1974.
In May 1974, after extended negotiations in response to several failures in the turbine’s L-l stage blades, the parties agreed to a revision of the warranty provisions of the purchase contract. Under the revised warranty, Westinghouse was obligated to retrofit new L-l blades without charge and extend the warranty on the new blades for one year following retrofit and start-up. See Affidavit of Janice A. Fall, Westinghouse paralegal, Exhibit C (copy of warranty provisions and accompanying letter of May 81, 1974, from Westinghouse to PSNH). Westinghouse executed the retrofit on Unit # l’s low pressure (“LP”) turbine between June 19 and September 26, 1975.
On May 27, 1975, effective that date, the parties also entered into an automatically renewable annual service contract under which Westinghouse agreed to perform inspection, maintenance, and repair work on PSNH’s generating equipment, including Unit # 1. See Affidavit of Stan Dembkoski, former District Manager of Westinghouse’s Framingham, Massachusetts, Power Generation Service Division, at 1 & Exhibit 1 § 1(a)(4) & passim (photocopy of contract). Under the service contract, costs of replacement parts for the turbine generator unit and its auxiliaries were to be borne by PSNH and billed at actual cost plus 25 percent. Id., Exhibit 1 at §§ 1(b)(2), 3(a)(7).
In 1976 Westinghouse discovered three cracked blade lugs in the LP turbine and replaced an entire group of six blades. In 1979 Westinghouse discovered two cracked blade rоots. After replacing the failed blade roots, Westinghouse submitted them for metallurgical testing. Although Westinghouse issued a 1979 inspection report, it did not report the results of the metallurgical testing of the two failed blade roots to PSNH until January 1986.
In 1982 Westinghouse inspected Unit # l’s high pressure turbine and, at the same time, recommended that the LP turbine be disassembled for inspection. PSNH elected to forego the LP turbine inspection, allegedly because Westinghouse implicitly represented that there was nothing to be concerned about relative to the blade roots at the L-l stage of the turbine. See Proposed Amended Count VI ¶¶ 9-12. On September 21, 1982, an L-l blade in Unit # l’s LP turbine failed, necessitating a shut-down of Unit # 1 until December 10, 1982. During the ten-week shut-down period, PSNH allegedly incurred significant expense from having to rebuild the turbine and from, losing of revenue while it was inoperable.
Discussion
Westinghouse seeks summary judgment on all counts. Summary judgment is appropriate “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 a judgment as a matter of law.” Rule 56(c), Fed.R.Civ.P. The burden is upon the moving party to establish the laсk of a genuine, material, factual issue,
Finn v. Consolidated Rail Corp.,
In resolving the issues raised by this motion, the Court considers the counts of the complaint seriatim.
Count I
Count I relates to the purchase contract and is brought pursuant to New Hampshire’s enactment of the Uniform *1284 Commercial Code (“UCC”), New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated (“RSA”) 382-A (1961 & Supp.1987). Count I alleges that because the Unit # 1 turbine was defective in design, material, and workmanship, Westinghouse breaсhed RSA 382-A.-2-313 (1961), which pertains to “express warranties by affirmation, promise, description, sample.” Westinghouse argues that Count I is barred by the UCC statute of limitations and by limitation of warranty provisions explicitly set forth in the contract.
RSA 382-A:2-725 (1961) sets a four-year statute of limitations for breach of contract and breach of warranty actions:
(1) An action for breach of any contract for sale must be commenced within four years after the cause of action has accrued____
(2) A cause of action accrues when the breach occurs, regardless of the aggrieved party’s lack of knowledge of the breach. A breach of warranty occurs when tender of delivery is made, except ... where a warranty explicitly extends to future performance of the goods____
Tender of delivery of Unit # 1 occurred in 1975. The revised warranty agreed to by the parties in connection with the retrofit of new L-l blades extended warranty coverage for one year following retrofit and start-up. See Fall Aff., Exhibit C. Westinghouse executed the retrofit on the Unit # 1 low pressure (“LP”) turbine between June 19 and September 26, 1975; therefore, the warranty negotiated by the parties expired on or about September 26, 1976.
The instant lawsuit was commenced in state court by writ of summons dated September 19,1986. Petition for Removal ¶ 1. Whether measured from the date of tender of delivery or from expiration of the revised warranty — a distinction the Court need not address at this juncture — the instant action was clearly filed subsequent to the expiration of the four-year statute of limitations. PSNH concedes that it has no evidence to offer that the warranty explicitly extends to future performance. Objection of PSNH to Motion for Summary Judgment [hereinafter “PSNH Objection”] at 12. The inescapable result is that Count I must be barred for its failure tо be filed within the statute of limitations period.
See, e.g., Wentworth v. Kawasaki, Inc.,
Because the statute of limitations is an absolute bar to Count I, the Court need not address whether Count I is barred by contractual limitation of warranty provisions. Count II
Count II is also brought pursuant to the UCC, RSA 382-A.-2-314 (1961). It alleges breach of implied warranties: that due to the defective design, construction, and manufacture of the L-l stage rotor blades, the LP turbine was not merchantable, was unfit for the ordinary purposes for which such turbines are used, and was unfit for the particular purpose for which it was sold.
Actions for breach of implied warranties are also subject to the UCC fоur-year statute of limitations, as the UCC does not differentiate between implied and express warranties for the purpose of limiting the period in which actions may be brought. See RSA 382-A:2-725(2). Accordingly, the Court’s discussion of the viability of Count II may be short-circuited by referring to the discussion above regarding Count I. For the same reasons, Count II is barred. Count III
Count III is brought under a theory of strict liability. PSNH alleges that because Unit # 1 was defectively designed, constructed, and manufactured, it was unreasonably dangerous to users or consumers of the product, and Westinghouse is therefore liable for property loss occasioned by the unit’s malfunction “regardless of whether the ultimate impact of any hazard is on people, other property, or upon the product itself.” PSNH Objection at 18 (citing
Pennsylvania Glass Sand v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
The determinative issue in Count III is whether a manufacturer may be held strictly liable for selling a defective product in a commercial transaction if, in malfunctioning, the product damages only itself and causes only economic loss. This issue was previously addressed by Judge Loughlin of this court in
Limback Co. v. Owens-Coming Fiberglass Corp.,
Civil No. 83-759-L (D.N.H. Jan. 28, 1987) (Order on Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment) [available on WESTLAW,
In Buttrick, although the New Hampshire Supreme Court allowed the plaintiff to proceed on theories of express and implied warranty as well as strict liability, the court prefaced its holding by stating:
The question of when a plaintiff should be permitted to recover under the law of warranty or under strict liability and whether strict liability has superceded the warranty approach has been argued by legal scholars with all the zeal, fury and abstruseness of medieval theologians.
It is apparent that before the fine problems raised by the scholars have settled into clear rules as to when the approach is warranty and when strict liability many cases will have to settle into the books.
Buttrick, supra,
Since
Buttrick
the New Hampshire Supreme Court has declared that the doctrine of strict liability is to be applied reluctantly and limited to cases in which the New Hampshire Legislature has provided for it or in which the common law has imposed such liability and the Legislature had not seen fit to disagree.
See, e.g., Bagley ¶. Controlled Environment Corp.,
Moreover, in
Buttrick
and in all post
Buttrick
cases in which courts applying New Hampshire law have allowed a plaintiff to assert both strict liability
and
warranty claims based on the same cause of action (i.e., the combination which PSNH herein urges upon the Court), the product defect at issue resulted in personal injury as well as property damage.
See, e.g., Sheehan v. New Hampshire Liquor Comm’n,
Furthermore, in a case similar to the instant one, the United States Supreme Court recently addressed the issue of whether a manufacturer may be held strictly liable for selling a defective product which, in malfunctioning, damages only itself, and held that no claim was stated under theories of striсt liability
or
negligence.
See East River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,
The Supreme Court analyzed the three most prevalent approaches used by courts, commentators, and Congress in addressing whether injury to a product itself may be actionable in tort,
id.
at 868-69
&
nn. 3-4,
Even when the harm to the product itself occurs through an abrupt, accident-like event, the resulting loss due to repair costs, decreased value, and lost profits is essentially the failure of the purchaser to receive the benefit of its bargain — traditionally the core concern of contract law.
Id.
at 870,
In light of the above-discussed cases, this Court is of the view that the New Hampshire Supreme Court would, if faced with the issue, deny tort liability for purely economic loss.
See Aloe Coal Co. v. Clark Equip. Co.,
Count IV
Count IV alleges that Westinghouse’s defective design, construction, and manufacture of Unit # l’s turbine is actionable under a theory of negligence.
As set forth above, the damage at issue involves only the turbine itself. Because Westinghouse оwed no duty to PSNH based on negligence principles to avoid causing purely economic loss through purchase and subsequent malfunctioning of its product, PSNH has no cause of action in negligence.
See East River,
Count V
Count V relates to the service contract. PSNH contends that it is entitled to $3 million in damages based on Westinghouse’s negligence in failing to proрerly perform its 1979 and 1982 inspections of Unit # 1, failing to report the results of the 1979 metallurgical testing of the failed blade roots to PSNH, and failing to disclose to PSNH breakdowns of similar turbines owned by other Westinghouse customers. In opposition, Westinghouse contends that Count V is barred by express terms of the service contract.
Although Westinghouse is correct in noting that the service contract includes language purporting to preclude actions brought in negligence, the gravamen of the harm alleged in Count V is that PSNH did not get the benefit of its bargain because Westinghouse failed to comply with the terms of the contract. As damages, PSNH seeks the cost of remedying the defects in Westinghouse’s performance; that is, PSNH seeks to be placed in the same position it would have been in had Westinghouse properly performed the contract. Therefore, Count V is properly viewed as an action in contract, not tort, and contractual language precluding negligence actions is not germane.
See Roberts v. Richard and Sons, Inc.,
It is clear that there are gеnuine issues of material fact as to whether Westinghouse properly performed under the service contract, if evidenced by nothing more than the self-destruction of the Unit # 1 turbine while the service contract was in effect. It is also clear that Count V was timely brought. 6 Therefore, summary *1288 judgment totally precluding Count V is inappropriate. However, summary judgment regarding the limit of Westinghouse’s liability is appropriate.
Although three clauses in the service contract purport to limit Westinghouse’s liability, PSNH alleges that such a disparity existed between the parties’ bargaining positions at the time the contract was negotiаted that the contractual terms were “forced” on PSNH, and the Court should accordingly find the limiting terms to be unconscionable. In a commercial setting, “courts dealing with unconscionability claims have espoused the principle that the parties ought to be left free to make their own agreements in the absence of fraud or overreaching.”
Hydraform Prod. Corp. v. American Steel & Alum. Corp.,
To support its position, PSNH has provided the affidavit of Warren A. Harvey, PSNH’s Vice-President of Production. Mr. Harvey asserts that because Westinghouse and General Electric (“GE”) were the only companies which could realistically bid on the project, they “effectively controlled access to this limited market,” and were able to “insist that their standard form contracts be made part and parcel of any agreement to work with PSNH in constructing and placing into service power-generating equipment.” Harvey Aff. ¶¶ 5, 8. Even accepting at face vаlue Mr. Harvey’s assertion that Westinghouse and GE enjoy a duopolistic position in the marketplace, 7 Mr. Harvey admits that PSNH voluntarily chose to do business with Westinghouse, rather than GE, without negotiating with GE or other companies and that the decision to go with Westinghouse was largely based on the parties’ ongoing and satisfactory business relationship. Id. mi 6-7.
The doctrine of unconscionability is of questionable applicability if the transaction involves a significant sum of money because the buyer retains “impressive negotiation power.”
County Asphalt, Inc. v. Lewis Welding & Eng’g Corp.,
In summary, the Court finds that the service contract’s limitations of warranty are not unconscionable. Therefore, at issue is which of the limiting clauses controls.
As stated previously, three clauses are at issue. The first, found in the section of the service contract entitled “Limitation of Liability”, precludes Westinghouse’s liability for “special, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages.”
See
Dembkoski Aff., Exhibit 1 (service contract)
(see particularly
“Field Repair and/or Maintenance Services, Selling Policy 1710”, at 1-2). The Court finds that this clause is valid because it is uncontradicted; moreover, such a limitation is not unusual in the power industry.
See American Elec. Power Co., supra,
However, the other two clauses at issue contradict each other and thus create an ambiguity as to the parties’ intent. One clause states that PSNH may recover the cost of having the turbine replaced or repaired; the other limits PSNH to recovery of what it paid for the service contract.
8
Dembkoski Aff., Exhibit 1 (service contract). It is the Court’s function, “with or without the assistance of the jury, [to] resolve those ambiguities” to ascertain the intent of the parties.
MacLeod v. Chalet Susse Int'l, Inc.,
New Hampshire law contemplates that “relevant extrinsic evidence concerning [the parties’] intent should not be excluded,” and that it is the jury’s function “to determine the ‘credibility of’ and the ‘reasonable inferences to be drawn from extrinsic evidence.’ ”
MacLeod, supra,
Count VI
Count VI alleges that Westinghouse’s failure to report the results of the metallur *1290 gical testing of the failed blade roots and its failure to disclose known information of Westinghouse turbine blade failures in other power plants constitutes common law fraud. Westinghouse moves for summary judgment on two grounds. First, it avers that the allegations of fraud are not stated with sufficient particularity to satisfy Rule 9(b), Fed.R.Civ.P. Second, in further argument and in answer to PSNH’s motion for leave to amend Count VI pursuant to Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., Westinghouse contends that, even in an amended form, Count VI does not state a cause of action under New Hampshire law.
The decision to grant or deny a Rule 15(a) motion to amend lies within the sound discretion of the district court,
Tiernan v. Blyth, Eastman, Dillon & Co.,
PSNH alleges that had it been informed that Westinghouse had experienced blade root problems in other similar turbines, it wоuld have ordered Unit # 1 to be disassembled and repaired during the July 1982 inspection, before the breakdown and resultant damage occurred. PSNH contends that Westinghouse’s failure to warn constitutes misrepresentation by omission; i.e., fraud.
Here, Westinghouse’s obligation does not arise out of any common law tort duty, even assuming that such exists.
But see Benoit v. Perkins,
With respect to any nondestructive examination services performed hereunder, Westinghouse warrants that the services of its personnel or contractors will reflect their best professional knowledge and judgement.
See
Dembkoski Aff., Exhibit 1 (service contract) (“Field Repair and/or Maintenance Services, Selling Policy 1710”, at 1). The gravamen of the harm alleged in Count VI is that PSNH did not get the benefit of its contractual bargain because, by withholding necessary information, Westinghouse service personnel failed to exercise reasonable professional knowledge and judgment, breaching the contractual term set forth above. Therefore, Count V is properly viewed as an action in contract, not tort.
See Roberts v. Richard & Sons, Inc., supra,
The distinction between tort and contract liability, as between parties to a contract, has become an increasingly difficult distinction to make. It would not be possible to reconcile the results of all cases. The availability of both kinds of liability for precisely the same kind of harm has brought about confusion and unnecessary complexity. It is to be hoped that eventually the availability of both theories — tort and contract — for the same kind of loss with different requirements both for the claimant’s prima fade case and the defendant’s affirmative defenses will be reduced in order to simplify the law and reduce the costs of litigation.
Prosser § 92 at 655.
The Court herewith finds that Count VI is improperly cast, but may be *1291 viable if viewed as a breach of contract claim. Whether Westinghouse failed to provide PSNH personnel with pertinent information and, if so, whether such failure breached the above-cited or other contractual terms are, however, issues of fact which are not susceptible of resolution on summary judgment.
Conclusion
Summary judgment is granted in favor of defendant Westinghouse on all counts relating to the purchase contract: Counts I and II for PSNH’s failure to comply with the applicable UCC statute of limitations; Counts III and IV because PSNH’s claims must be brought in contract, not tort.
Summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part as to Counts V and VI, which relate to the service contract. As set forth above, summary judgment is granted insofar as barring all claims brought under theories of liability оther than contract and all claims for consequential damages, but is denied as to certain issues of fact which must be determined by the trier of fact.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Jurisdiction is based on the diversity statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the parties being diverse and the amount in controversy exceeding $10,000 exclusive of interest and costs, and on the removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), the action having been removed to this court from the Hillsborough County (New Hampshire) Superi- or Court on November 13, 1986.
. A megawatt is one million watts, or one thousand kilowatts. The purpose of a steam turbine generator and the manner in which it operates is described in
Ebasco Serv., Inc. v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co.,
A steam turbine generator is at the heart of any power plant. The turbine obtains steam, under pressures up to super-critical pressure of 3500 lbs per square inch, from either a coal- or oil-fired boiler or a nuclear steam supply system. The steam causes the turbine rotor and its blades (or “buckets") to rotate at very high speeds, often 3600 revolutions per *1283 minute. The energy thus created is transferred to the generator, which converts this energy to electricity. This electricity is passed, first through a transformer and then through transmission lines, to the electrical user.
. "Or," the Court stated, "if the customer prefers, it can reject the product or revoke its acceptance and sue for breach of contract."
East River, supra,
. PSNH contends that
East River
is inapposite because it is based on admiralty law. PSNH Objection at 20-21. The Court finds otherwise. Although jurisdiction in
East River
was based on admiralty, and the Supreme Court applied general admiralty law, it noted that maritime law "is an amalgam of traditional common-law rules" and that in facing the issue at hand the court would apply general products liability concepts, "long a part of the common law of torts,” and incorporate those principles into the body of maritime law.
East River, supra,
. Westinghouse also argues that Section D of the pinchase contract’s warranty provisions bars PSNH’s negligence claims by limiting Westinghouse’s liability to correction of nonconformities. In light of the discussion above dismissing PSNH’s negligence claim, this argument is moot.
. Article 2 of the UCC applies to transactions in goods, not services,
see
RSA 382-A:2-102 (1961); therefore, the UCC four-year statute of limitations which bars Counts I and II is not applicable to Count V. Instead, general New Hampshire statutory provisions regarding the limitation of actions apply: herein, six years.
See
RSA 508:4 (1983 & Supp.1987) (amended effec
*1288
tive July 1, 1986);
Roberts, supra,
. Westinghouse refutes this contention, claiming that PSNH has failed to account "for such well-known suppliers as Brown-Boveri, Siemens, English Electric and other international companies which compete in the domestic market." Defendant’s Reply Memorandum at 3-4. The presence of competitors with whom the weaker party may deal militates against a finding that terms are unconscionable.
See, e.g., Hydraform Prod Corp., supra,
. Further confusion as to the parties’ intent is engendered by the service contract’s specification that PSNH was to pay for replacement parts. See supra at 1283.
. Based on the Court’s previous finding that PSNH was not in a vastly disparate bargaining position, this is not an appropriate case in which to apply the principle that ambiguous contractual language is to be construed against the author.
See, e.g., RCI Northeast Serv. Div. v. Boston Edison Co.,
