delivered tbe opinion of the court:
The petition in this case (filed on July 20, 1971) seeks recovery of additional freight charges on 35 shipments of household goods moved by plaintiff carrier, Container Transport International, Inc., during 1964 for the Defense Department, under government bills of lading, between this country and overseas points. These same 35 shipments were also the subject of a separate and earlier litigation, Container Transport International, Inc. v. United States, Ct. Cl. No. 195-67,
The earlier petition, in No. 195-67, asked for additional compensation for the line-haul transportation of these 35 shipments from origin 'at Evreaux-Fauville Air Base, France, to the destination shown on the government bills of lading at Lockbourne Air Force Base, Ohio. The question posed and decided was whether the applicable single factor rate for this line-haul transportation was $34.00 per hundredweight, with a minimum weight of 8,000 pounds, or $35.30 per hundredweight, with a minimum weight of 500 pounds per shipment. The ruling was that the $35.30 rate should be applied.
The present petition, in No. 549-71, concerns compensation sought for services performed after these 35 shipments were tendered for delivery at the government-bill-of-lading destination — including storage-in-transit, warehouse handling, delivery from storage-in-transit, diversions, and appliance servicing. The carrier argues that these services are separate and apart from the line-haul transportation from origin to government-bill-of--lading destination, and are not covered by the single factor rate paid for such line-haul transportation but, rather, by the rates for additional
The general rule is, of course, that a final decision on the “merits” of a claim bars a subsequent action on that same claim or any part thereof, including issues which were not but could have 'been raised as pant of the claim. See Lawlor v. National Screen Service,
We have also held that, normally, a single claim (or, as it used to be called, “cause of 'action”) arises out of each single, indivisible contract (see Nager Electric Co. v. United States, supra,
On that view, plaintiff should have presented all facets of its demand relating to these 35 shipments in the prior litigation, as it could easily have done. As to each shipment, the transportation and the bill of lading were the same. A single contract of carriage covered all phases of the shipment, and the shipment itself was an integral unit. Before bringing the earlier suit, the carrier knew the defendant’s position on both the line-haul charges and the other charges at issue in the current case. There was no obstacle to putting both aspects of the demand in one suit, and that would be the normal expectation for a claimant seeking to recover transportation charges owed it. See James, supra, § 11.12 at 563-64.
Plaintiff counters, however, that we applied a different rule for tariff cases in Great Northern Ry. v. United States,
Although plaintiff’s cause of action for additional line-haul charges in the case formerly adjudged by this court*719 arose out of tbe same transaction (the bill of lading), the present action is based on bills for demurrage which are separate and distinct from the bills for transportation charges. Before these two cases came to issue in this court, the Government had asserted its deductions from the carrier for transportation charges separately from its de-Demurrage charges are no part of the rate charges in effect for transportation of the shipment. Although they may follow the shipment and be collected together with the transportation charges, they are for a distinct and separate service. Krause Brothers Lumber Co. v. Director General, 92 ICC 450-452. In the former case in this court, judgment for plaintiff was entered upon agreement between the parties on an amount in full settlement of all claims asserted for additional transportation charges. No claims for demurrage were there asserted and the prior judgment is not res judicata as to the present case. ductions for demurrage by separate overpayment notices and by separate deductions at widely different times
Defendant distinguishes this holding on the ground that in Great Northern the General Accounting Office made separate audits of, and deductions from, the line-haul and the demur-rage charges.
In our view these differences insofar as they exist (see note 2, supra), are not significant. We do not see why it matters, for res judicata purposes, whether the GAO makes one or two audits, or one or more deductions — so long as they all occurred before the first action was begun. But we now disagree with the rule of Great Northern where the claimant knows of both types of demand sufficiently before it brings suit. As indicated above, under the “transactional” theory now generally accepted the shipment is the transaction. 'Putting that together with the rule that the bill of lading is the
On the other hand, the Great Northern opinion has been on the books since 1963 and the present plaintiff-carrier can rightfully say that it relied on it, and had a right to rely on it, in splitting up its demands into two separate cases when it first brought suit here in 1967
This is a persuasive reason for applying the Great Northern holding in this specific case, but announcing that it is overruled for the future and will not govern any tariff case filed after today. Prospective overruling is permissible in civil litigation, at least, 'as here, where a retroactive application of the new rule would be inequitable, producing injustice or undue hardship. See City of Phoenix v. Kolodziejski,
Notes
The test case of Trans Ocean Van Service v. United States,
Defendant's brief in this case says incorrectly that, in the Cheat Northern situation, "lalfter the first suit was filed the General Accounting Office conducted a second audit with respect to the demurrage charges and made additional deductions for which plaintiff filed a second petition in the tc]ourt” (emphasis added). However, the findings show (fdg. 29,
The shipments in question did not occur until 1964. See
