Timmco Case Study
Timmco, Inc. is a publicly traded corporation located in Denton, Texas that makes and sells high pressure industrial spraying equipment used in all sorts of commercial liquid spraying applications. It prides itself on top quality and promotes its products as “100% made in the USA”.
Sales have been declining recently due to competition from lower priced competitors and Timmco is looking for ways to reduce costs. One option under consideration is to find a new source for the high-pressure valves used in its products. These valves are complicated mechanisms that operate under very high internal pressure. If the valve was to burst, it would spray pieces of metal in all directions and pose a significant hazard to anyone standing nearby including the operator of the equipment. Timmco currently has a contract to purchase 1,000 valves a year at $2,500 per valve from Blagg Industries, a small privately owned business located in Boone, North Carolina. The contract has been in place for three years and has two more years to run.
Blagg Industries has a dozen employees. Timmco is its primary customer. If Blagg Industries loses Timmco’s business, it will have to lay off employees and might even go out of business.
Timmco is considering outsourcing the valves from Sanco, an overseas supplier in the country of Solonarie, instead of buying valves from Blagg Industries. The Sanco valves only cost $1,000 each, but are known to be of lower quality than the Blagg Industries valves and are more likely to burst. Sanco can supply these valves at such low cost because they pay their workers, including children, less than the equivalent of $5 per day and work them long hours in hot, dangerous conditions.
Solonarie is a poor country, but it has a large government bureaucracy and there is a lot of red tape involved in getting approval to export manufactured goods to other countries. In fact, it might take more than a year for Sanco and Timmco to obtain the necessary approvals for Sanco to export the valves to Timmco. Fortunately, the CEO of Sanco is related to the Solonarie Minister of Commerce and has told Timmco that the necessary approvals can be obtained in less than a week if Timmco makes a $20,000 “gift” to the Solonarie Minister of Commerce.
In addition to finding a new, low cost valve supplier, Timmco plans to increase sales by running a new marketing campaign that focuses on their commitment to American made quality. The tagline will be “Made in the USA by Americans, for Americans.”
You are a high-level executive at Timmco. Analyze the legal and ethical issues presented by the Timmco scenario. Your legal and ethical analysis should include breach of contract and remedies, negligent torts, product liability, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and deceptive advertising and should incorporate a discussion and application of one or more of the ethical theories from Chapter 4 of the course textbook Business law: The Ethical, Global, and E-Commerce Environment.
Your legal and ethical analysis should,
Analyze breach of contract and remedies
Analyze negligent torts
Analyze product liability
Analyze the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
Analyze deceptive advertising
Incorporate a discussion and application of one or more of the ethical theories from Chapter 4 of the course textbook Business Law: The Ethical, Global, and E-Commerce Environment.
Sample Answer
Legal and Ethical Analysis of Timmco, Inc.’s Outsourcing Decision
As a high-level executive at Timmco, Inc., the proposed shift in valve sourcing and the accompanying marketing campaign present a complex web of legal and ethical considerations that demand careful scrutiny. This analysis will delve into the potential legal ramifications concerning breach of contract, negligent torts, product liability, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), and deceptive advertising. Furthermore, it will incorporate a discussion and application of relevant ethical theories to provide a comprehensive evaluation of the proposed actions.
I. Breach of Contract and Remedies
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Legal Analysis: Timmco currently has a binding contract with Blagg Industries for the purchase of 1,000 high-pressure valves annually for a term of five years. Three years have elapsed, leaving two more years remaining on the agreement. Terminating this contract prematurely to source valves from Sanco would constitute a breach of contract by Timmco.
Under Texas law, which would likely govern the contract given Timmco’s location, a breach occurs when a party fails to perform its obligations as outlined in the agreement. Blagg Industries, as the non-breaching party, would be entitled to seek various remedies to compensate for the damages incurred due to Timmco’s breach. These remedies could include: