Allied Tube and Conduit Corporation (“Allied”) brought suit under the Carmack Amendment, 49 U.S.C. § 14706, against Southern Pacific Transportation Company (“Southern Pacific”) for damages allegedly sustained to its steel pipes during transit. The district court entered judgment in favor of Allied in the amount of $47,490.15. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm.
Background
In June 1996, Southern Pacific agreed to transport a shipment of approximately eighty bundles of fire protection/sprinkler system pipe to Hayward, California for Allied. Pursuant to their agreement, Allied paid $2,916 in freight charges to Southern Pacific, and Southern Pacific issued to Allied a bill of lading. Allied loaded the shipment onto one of Southern Pacific’s rail cars — an open top, bulkhead type flatcar — -at Allied’s manufacturing plant in Illinois. Allied did not cover the pipe shipment with protective covering. Allied then tendered the railcar to Illinois Central Railroad Company for carriage to St. Louis, where Illinois Central tendered it to Southern Pacific for carriage to California.
When Southern Pacific presented the shipment at its California destination, the pipe was contaminated, pitted, and corroded by what appeared to be rock salt. Allied rejected the entire shipment. Southern Pacific learned that the shipment had been damaged, but it chose not to inspect it. Allied ultimately salvaged the shipment for scrap iron at auction for $6,211.
On June 26, 1997, Allied sued Southern Pacific for the value of the shipment pursuant to the Carmack Amendment, 49 U.S.C. § 14706. Following a bench trial, the district court found in favor of Allied for $47,490.15. 1 Southern Pacific now appeals.
Discussion
The Carmack Amendment, a section of the Interstate Commerce Act, provides shippers with the statutory right to recover for actual losses to their property caused by carriers.
See Gordon v. United Van Lines, Inc.,
The district court found that Allied had established a prima facie case under this scheme and that Southern Pacific failed to meet its burden to avoid liability. Southern Pacific argues that this conclusion was erroneous in several respects.
1. Burden of Proof
Allied first argues that the district court erroneously failed to find that this ease involved a “shipper’s load and count” shipment, in which case the burden would be on Allied to show that Southern Pacific acted negligently. The district court relied on the fact that no express language on Southern Pacific’s bill of lading, nor anything else in the record, indicated that this was to be a “shipper’s load and count” shipment, and it concluded that this was not such a shipment. Southern Pacific contends that the circumstances of this transaction—in particular, that Allied Tube packed and loaded the pipe and selected the type of rail car on which the pipe was shipped—prove that this was, indeed, a “shipper’s load and count” shipment, and therefore the district court should have required Allied to show Southern Pacific’s negligence.
We find no error in the district court’s finding that this was not a “shipper’s load and count” shipment. As noted by the district court, other jurisdictions have generally looked to whether a “shipper’s load and count” designation appears on the face of the bill before shifting the burden of proof.
See, e.g., Johnson & Johnson v. Chief Freight Lines Co.,
The district court did not err in finding that Allied’s shipment was not a “shipper’s load and count” shipment. Accordingly, Allied was not required to prove Southern Pacific’s negligence to establish its prima facie case.
2. Allied’s Prima Facie Case
As noted above, the Carmack Amendment does not place upon a shipper the burden of proving that a carrier was negligent in order to recover for damage to the shipment. Rather, once a shipper demonstrates (1) delivery of its goods to the carrier in good condition; (2) arrival in damaged condition; and (3) specific damages, the burden of proof shifts to the carrier, who can avoid liability if it shows that (1) it was not negligent; and (2) the *371 damage to the cargo was caused by, among other things, the act of the shipper.
Southern Pacific argues that Allied failed to prove the first element: that the steel pipe was in good condition at the time it was delivered to Southern Pacific by Illinois Central, or when it was loaded by Allied. According to Southern Pacific, the only evidence Allied offered in this regard was the testimony of one of its forklift operators, Arturo Zambrano, who testified about the general procedures used by Allied. However, Zambrano did not know whether he loaded this particular shipment. Southern Pacific argues that this testimony was insufficient to establish good condition, and therefore Allied had the burden of proving Southern Pacific negligent — a burden it never met.
We remain unpersuaded that the district court’s finding should be disturbed. This Court has previously held that a shipper may establish by circumstantial evidence that its cargo was in good condition upon delivery to the carrier.
See Pharma Bio,
Southern Pacific also argues that Allied failed to prove that the pipe was ruined, and that Allied could not determine the extent of damage with the specificity needed to make out a
prima facie
case.
See Pharma Bio,
The district court specifically found that “Allied establishes that the pipe was a total loss at the time of delivery to Hayward, California because pit marks marred 100 percent of the pipes inspected,” and our own review of the record reveals no reason to revisit this factual dispute. The district court relied on the testimony of Mary Ann Peddie, a representative of the consignee. Peddie personally inspected a truckload of the pipe and closely inspected approximately ten to fifteen bundles of the pipe unloaded from the truck. She further testified that it was unnecessary to break the bundles apart because it was clear that no customer would accept fire-protection pipe that appeared to be damaged, and she
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testified that one hundred percent of the pipe she inspected showed pitting and erosion. We have previously held that a plaintiff in this situation need not test every single one of the goods in a shipment. Rather, “[a] sampling will be accepted as proof of damages when ‘a reasonably representative sample has been taken and so long as the sample is sufficient to indicate fairly the quality, condition and nature of damage to the whole cargo.’ ” S.C.
Johnson & Son v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co.,
Based on the foregoing, the district court’s holding that Allied successfully established each of the elements necessary to establish a prima facie case of liability against Southern Pacific was proper. At that point, the burden was no longer on Allied to prove Southern Pacific’s negligence. Rather, the burden was on Southern Pacific to demonstrate, among other things, that it was free from negligence. Having failed to rebut this presumption, Southern Pacific was properly held liable for the damage to the shipment.
3. Mitigation of Damages
Southern Pacific’s final argument is that Allied faded to mitigate damages, and the district court therefore erred in awarding Allied the entire cost of the pipe shipment. Southern Pacific contends that Allied did not attempt to clean the pipe immediately, and by the time Allied finally tried to sell it, it could only be sold for scrap.
We agree with the district court’s rejection of this mitigation argument. Illinois law requires that, “[i]n the event [an injured party] fails to take reasonable steps to avoid additional harm, he bears the risk of any increased dangers which could have been avoided.”
Toledo Peoria and Western Railway v. Metro Waste Systems, Inc.,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, the decision of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The damages were calculated as follows: the cost of the shipment ($50,785.15) plus Allied’s shipping costs ($2,916.00) minus the shipment’s salvage Value ($6,211.00).
. The excepted causes are: acts of God, the
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public enemy, the act of the shipper himself, public authority, or the inherent vice or nature of the goods.
See Missouri Pacific,
. Southern Pacific refers us to 49 U.S.C. § 80113(c), which provides:
A common carrier issuing a bill of lading is not liable for damages caused by improper loading if—
(1) the shipper loads the goods; and
(2) the bill contains the words "shipper’s weight, load, and count”, or words of the same meaning indicating the shipper loaded the goods.
