Nipponkoa Insurance v. Atlas Van Lines, Inc. , 687 F.3d 780 ( 2012 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 11-3085
    N IPPONKOA INSURANCE C OMPANY, L TD.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    A TLAS V AN L INES, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Indiana, Evansville Division.
    No. 3:09-CV-168—Richard L. Young, Chief Judge.
    A RGUED A PRIL 5, 2012—D ECIDED JULY 5, 2012
    Before R OVNER, W OOD , and W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
    W OOD , Circuit Judge. This case involves the applica-
    tion of the Carmack Amendment, 
    49 U.S.C. § 14706
    , to
    a set of complicated contractual arrangements among a
    shipper, a carrier, and two entities that facilitated the
    shipment. As is true in many contract cases that wind
    up in litigation, the fundamental question is who must
    ultimately bear the loss when multiple actors play a
    role in an arrangement. While we appreciate the efforts
    2                                              No. 11-3085
    made by both the parties and the district court to sort
    this out, we conclude that further proceedings are neces-
    sary. A final answer must await further development
    of the details of the shipping contract and the nature of
    the relationship among the four companies. Summary
    judgment was therefore inappropriate.
    I
    Our account of the facts, as it must under Federal
    Rule of Civil Procedure 56, takes them in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party; nothing we say
    should be understood as resolving any factual disputes.
    Toshiba American Medical System (TAMS) is a med-
    ical device manufacturer; it markets its equipment to
    hospitals and physicians by displaying its product line
    at trade shows around the country. This case arose out
    of a shipment that was to go from California, TAMS’s
    home state, to the 2008 trade show in Chicago of the
    Radiological Society of North America. TAMS hired
    Comtrans, Ltd., to coordinate that shipment, which
    fell within a special category of cargo known as an
    “Exhibit Shipment.” Comtrans is essentially a middle-
    man; it is not a licensed interstate motor carrier. It used
    its affiliate, Alternative Carrier Source, Inc. (ACS) to
    handle the arrangements for transportation. ACS re-
    tained Atlas Van Lines, Inc. (Atlas) to perform the actual
    shipment of TAMS’s equipment. (We refer to this as
    the Shipment, as there is only one at issue in the case.)
    Unfortunately, the Atlas truck carrying the Shipment
    was involved in a serious accident, leaving TAMS with
    No. 11-3085                                                3
    more than $1 million in losses. Nipponkoa, TAMS’s
    insurance company, brought this action on behalf of
    TAMS.
    Atlas is an interstate motor carrier authorized by
    the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to trans-
    port goods in interstate commerce. Cargo claims against
    it are thus subject to the Carmack Amendment, 
    49 U.S.C. § 14706
    . This statute provides that a carrier of property
    in interstate commerce is liable for “the actual loss or
    injury to the property caused by” the carrier. 
    49 U.S.C. § 14706
    (a)(1). A carrier may limit its liability, however,
    “to a value established by written or electronic declara-
    tion of the shipper or by written agreement between
    the carrier and shipper if that value would be rea-
    sonable under the circumstances surrounding the trans-
    portation.” 
    Id.
     § 14706(c)(1)(A). The question in our case is
    whether Atlas limited its liability to TAMS consistently
    with the Carmack Amendment.
    Atlas relies on two contracts executed in connection
    with the Shipment: (1) the contract it had in place with
    ACS at the time of the accident; and (2) the bill of lading
    delivered to Comtrans and signed by Comtrans’s ware-
    house manager when Atlas picked up TAMS’s ship-
    ment. Each of these, it asserts, independently limits
    Atlas’s liability to TAMS to $0.60 per pound: Nipponkoa
    disputes Atlas’s interpretation of the ACS-Atlas con-
    tract and the bill of lading, contending that neither
    contract applied to TAMS and that even if they did
    apply, they are not Carmack-compliant. The district
    court initially agreed with Nipponkoa and denied Atlas’s
    4                                             No. 11-3085
    motion for summary judgment. At that time, the court
    found that there was a genuine issue of material fact
    whether TAMS agreed to allow Atlas to limit its
    liability for the shipment. Atlas came back with a motion
    to reconsider, however, and succeeded in changing the
    district court’s mind. In the end, the court concluded
    that as a matter of law TAMS (and thus Nipponkoa) was
    compelled to accept the contract terms, including the
    limitation of liability, negotiated between the carrier
    and intermediaries like ACS and Comtrans. This appeal
    followed.
    II
    A
    Our review of the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment is de novo, Righi v. SMC Corp., 
    632 F.3d 404
    , 408
    (7th Cir. 2011), and so we will move directly into the
    merits of the appeal. We apply the widely-accepted test
    established in our decision in Hughes v. United Van Lines,
    Inc., 
    829 F.2d 1407
    , 1415 (7th Cir. 1987), to determine
    whether a carrier has properly limited its liability under
    the Carmack Amendment. See also Tempel Steel Corp. v.
    Landstar Inway, Inc., 
    211 F.3d 1029
    , 1031 (7th Cir. 2000).
    In Hughes, we wrote that “[t]here are four steps a
    carrier must take to limit its liability under the Carmack
    Amendment: (1) maintain a tariff within the prescribed
    guidelines of the Interstate Commerce Commission [ICC];
    (2) obtain the shipper’s agreement as to a choice of
    liability; (3) give the shipper a reasonable opportunity
    to choose between two or more levels of liability; and
    No. 11-3085                                                5
    (4) issue a receipt or bill of lading prior to moving the
    shipment.” Hughes, 
    829 F.2d at 1415-16
    . Following the
    enactment of the Trucking Industry Regulatory Reform
    Act of 1994 and the ICC Termination Act of 1995, the
    first part of the Hughes test is no longer applicable. That
    is of no importance to the present case, however, because
    the only elements that are contested are the second
    and third.
    Atlas argues that the ACS-Atlas contract governs this
    case and achieves a limitation of liability that is con-
    sistent with the Carmack Amendment. The relevant
    language from the ACS-Atlas contract states that the
    “[s]hipper acknowledges that the Tariff includes a choice
    of liability options.” It also says that “[u]nless Shipper
    specifically requests different provisions with respect to
    any single shipment, Shipper releases all shipments
    transported under this Contract to Carrier with its maxi-
    mum liability to be $0.60 per pound under Item 190 of
    the Tariff.” Because TAMS or ACS did not declare a
    higher value, Atlas contends that its liability is limited
    to $0.60 per pound.
    Atlas also asserts that its bill of lading reinforces
    this conclusion and is a second Carmack-compliant
    contract that also limited its liability to $0.60 per pound.
    A bill of lading serves as a contract. North Am. Van Lines,
    Inc. v. Pinkerton Sec. Sys., Inc., 
    89 F.3d 452
    , 457 (7th Cir.
    1996). The bill of lading here states that the shipper has
    released the shipment to a value not exceeding either
    “[t]he maximum released rate set forth in the tariff for
    shipments on which the specified services are being
    6                                               No. 11-3085
    provided, which may be either $.60 per pound per article
    or $5.00 per pound” or “[t]he declared value for the
    property of $ ______.” Comtrans left the line blank
    where it could have declared a higher value than $0.60
    per pound. The bill of lading concludes by stating that
    if the declared amount “exceeds the maximum re-
    leased rate in the tariff, Carrier shall obtain insurance
    in this amount on Shipper’s behalf for the charges set
    forth in the tariff.”
    Putting aside for the moment the question whether
    either contract binds TAMS, because they are not
    contracts directly with TAMS (a point that we discuss
    below), we must examine the meaning of these provi-
    sions. On their face, they suggest that TAMS had a choice
    between accepting a $0.60 per pound limitation of
    liability or declaring a different value for the load, while
    also incorporating Atlas’s tariff. Atlas’s shipment rates
    and rules are contained in the Atlas Van Lines, Inc.,
    Specialized Transportation Group Tariff ATVL 500.
    Unfortunately, this apparent clarity slips away when
    we look to the tariff, which is an ambiguous mess. Atlas
    directs our attention to Item 3035, which states:
    Rates apply on shipments released to a value not
    to exceed 60 cents per pound, per article. When ship-
    ment is released to a value exceeding 60 cents
    per pound, per article, or shipper declares a valua-
    tion on the entire shipment, rates herein apply plus
    charges in Item 190.
    Thus instructed to turn to Item 190, we do so. We find
    that it is entitled Released Value (Valuation Charges) and
    No. 11-3085                                                 7
    states that when a shipment is released to a value ex-
    ceeding the maximum liability (in this case, presumably
    $0.60 per pound), Atlas will obtain third-party insurance
    “to cover all loss or damage to the property being
    shipped.” Atlas charges the shipper “for the cost of this
    coverage” $4.50 per $1,000 for the total value declared,
    “subject to a minimum charge of $45.00.” The im-
    mediate question before us is whether this additional
    rate quoted in Item 190 should be understood as a
    second option for a rate, or if it is merely something
    that sets out the cost of insurance. Although one
    might protest that insurance and rates are economic
    equivalents, they have not been treated that way in
    the transportation trade. Thus, a prominent transporta-
    tion law treatise confirms that an offer to purchase
    third-party insurance does not qualify as an alternative
    choice of rates under the Carmack Amendment. Augello,
    F REIGHT C LAIMS IN P LAIN E NGLISH, Vol. I, § 8.8.20 (4th ed.
    2008). Accepting that distinction, Atlas nonetheless pro-
    tests that Item 190 establishes a second rate option. But
    its bill of lading seems to contradict that position. The
    bill of lading says that the $.60 per pound limitation
    on liability “is not insurance but a limit on Carrier’s
    Liability” without making a comparable clarification
    in Item 190. Nothing that we can find in the evidence
    presently in the record clarifies whether the reference to
    a price of $4.50 per $1,000 of value declared is supposed
    to incorporate both an additional rate and insurance,
    or if it is exclusively the price of insurance.
    The question is further complicated by the disagree-
    ment between the parties over whether TAMS’s ship-
    8                                              No. 11-3085
    ment was an Exhibit Shipment. This is important because
    Item 190 includes an express exception for Exhibit Ship-
    ments, and there is substantial evidence indicating that
    this is what TAMS’s shipment was. On the one hand,
    Wayne Curtis, Comtrans’s CEO and President, testified
    that TAMS’s shipment qualified as an Exhibit Shipment,
    but on the other hand, Curtis does not necessarily speak
    for Atlas. The relevant exception under Item 190 for
    Exhibit Shipments states that “[w]hen an exhibit ship-
    ment is released to a value exceeding the maximum
    liability . . . the Carrier shall provide a certificate of
    transit coverage for EXHIBITGUARD PROTECTION.”
    That might seem straightforward, but again, it is not.
    The glaring problem for Atlas is that Atlas appears to
    have waived any argument that Exhibit Guard was
    Carmack-compliant. It did so through Bradley Beyer, its
    Claim Representative, who stated in an email to
    Nipponkoa’s counsel that Exhibit Guard “is not subject
    to Carmack” because “it is actually insurance coverage
    that provides more protection to the shipper than a
    carrier is required under Carmack.” Atlas responds to
    this evidence not by relying on Exhibit Guard, but instead
    by asserting that it gave Nipponkoa a list of exhibit ship-
    pers that have declared values in excess of $0.60 per
    pound without purchasing Exhibit Guard. We have no
    idea if this is so, or what exactly might have been given,
    because this evidence is not in the record. On the record
    before us, considering all the evidence we have
    reviewed, we conclude that there is a genuine issue of
    material fact whether Atlas offered TAMS “a reasonable
    opportunity to choose between two or more levels of
    liability.” Hughes, 
    829 F.2d at 1415-16
    .
    No. 11-3085                                                9
    B
    Nipponkoa argues that even if the Atlas tariff includes
    a choice of liability levels, neither the ACS-Atlas con-
    tract nor the bill of lading can govern this case because
    TAMS did not authorize ACS or Comtrans to sign ship-
    ment contracts on its behalf. Atlas responds by pointing
    to the Supreme Court’s statement that “[w]hen an inter-
    mediary contracts with a carrier to transport goods,
    the cargo owner’s recovery against the carrier is limited
    by the liability limitation to which the intermediary and
    carrier agreed.” Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Kirby, 
    543 U.S. 14
    , 33
    (2004); see also Werner Enters., Inc. v. Westwind Mar. Int’l,
    Inc., 
    554 F.3d 1319
    , 1324 (11th Cir. 2009) (concluding
    that “Kirby’s teaching is not limited to maritime law”
    because its analysis was based on a non-maritime case,
    Great N. Ry. Co. v. O’Connor, 
    232 U.S. 508
     (1914)). The
    idea is that if A engages B to handle a shipment, among
    other things, A has delegated to B the choice between
    a lower price with a strict limitation of liability and a
    higher price without one, when B engages the services
    of Carrier C. We must therefore determine whether
    ACS or Comtrans served as an intermediary between
    TAMS and Atlas.
    Once again, the record leaves a great deal to be de-
    sired. Here, the chain appears to go from TAMS to
    Comtrans to ACS to Atlas, but the facts pertaining to
    ACS’s role—in particular whether it was functioning as
    the kind of intermediary to which the Supreme Court
    was referring in Kirby—are murky at best. According to
    Atlas, ACS is a freight broker that coordinates the
    10                                           No. 11-3085
    billing for Comtrans’s vendors. Atlas represents that
    ACS served many roles for it, including that of financial
    intermediary between TAMS and Atlas. Atlas argues
    that the ACS-Atlas contract, which establishes the ship-
    ment terms and charges, was automatically triggered
    when ACS tendered TAMS’s load to Atlas. Nipponkoa
    disputes Atlas’s characterization of ACS’s role in
    TAMS’s trade show equipment shipments. It argues
    that ACS is merely Atlas’s invoicing agent. To support
    that point, it notes that ACS is not registered as a
    freight broker, as required under 
    49 U.S.C. § 13901
    .
    Nipponkoa also cites Curtis’s testimony to the effect
    that ACS takes care of Comtrans’s invoicing. At oral
    argument, Atlas’s counsel conceded that ACS and
    Atlas are owned by the same person and have the same
    mailing address. All we can say, in light of this, is
    that there are material disputed issues of fact on the
    question whether ACS was an entity independent
    from Atlas.
    There may be somewhat greater support for Atlas’s
    contention that Comtrans was an intermediary, but there
    are competing facts in the record on that point as well.
    TAMS hired Comtrans to coordinate its shipment to
    Chicago. Comtrans does not work exclusively with Atlas
    for all shipments. For example, Curtis testified that
    Comtrans works with air freight forwarders when air
    shipment is required. On the other hand, Curtis testified
    that Comtrans has an agency agreement with Atlas, and
    that Atlas is Comtrans’s exclusive motor carrier. Under
    the agency agreement between the two entities, Comtrans
    is prohibited from entering into agency agreements
    No. 11-3085                                               11
    with other van lines. In fact, when Comtrans coordinates
    shipments for Atlas it works under Atlas’s motor
    carrier number. Reviewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to Nipponkoa, it is impossible to conclude
    as a matter of law that Comtrans was the kind of inter-
    mediary the Supreme Court had in mind in Kirby.
    III
    In sum, even if the ACS-Atlas contract or the bill of
    lading provides a shipper with a choice of at least two
    levels of liability limitation, as Hughes requires, it is not
    clear that TAMS was bound by either contract. Further
    development of the record is necessary on both of the
    points we have identified. We therefore R EVERSE the
    district court’s grant of summary judgment in Atlas’s
    favor and R EMAND for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    7-5-12