MEMORANDUM AND OPINION
This opinion addresses the following motions:
1. Shippers Stevedoring moved for partial summary judgment that the one-year statute of limitations in the Carriage of Goods at Sea Act (“COGSA”) bars Crompton Greaves’s claims, or alternatively, limits its damages to $500.00. (Docket Entry No. 65). Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 69), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 70).
*379 2. Shippers Stevedoring moved to strike exhibits submitted by Crompton Greaves in response to Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for summary judgment, (Docket Entry No. 71). Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 80), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 82).
3. Shippers Stevedoring moved for summary judgment on all of Crompton Greaves’s claims, (Docket Entry No. 74). Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 87); Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 95); Crompton Greaves surreplied, (Docket Entry No. 106); and Shippers Stevedoring responded to the surreply, (Docket Entry No. 111).
4. Shippers Stevedoring moved for an adverse inference instruction against Crompton Greaves, (Docket Entry No. 77). Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 85), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 103).
5. Crompton Greaves moved for summary judgment on liability, (Docket Entry No. 76). Shippers Stevedoring responded, (Docket Entry No. 84).
6. Crompton Greaves moved to sever Shippers Stevedoring’s third-party complaint against Union Pacific Railroad, (Docket Entry Nos. 75, 90). Union Pacific joined the motion, (Docket Entry No. 91), and Shippers Stevedoring responded, (Docket Entry No. 83).
7. Union Pacific moved for summary judgment on Shippers Stevedoring’s claims, (Docket Entry No. 99). Shippers Stevedoring responded, (Docket Entry No. 104), and Union Pacific supplemented, (Docket Entry No. 107).
Based on the motions, responses, and replies; the summary judgment record; and the applicable law, this court rules as follows:
• Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for partial summary judgment that COGSA’s one-year statute of limitations bars Compton Greaves’s claims or that COGSA limits damages to $500.00 is denied. (Docket Entry No. 65).
• Shippers Stevedoring’s motion to strike is denied. (Docket Entry No. 71).
• Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for summary judgment on Crompton Greaves’s claims is denied. (Docket Entry No. 74).
• Shipper Stevedoring’s motion for an adverse inference instruction is denied. (Docket Entry No. 77).
• Crompton Greaves’s motion for partial summary judgment on liability is denied. (Docket Entry No. 76).
• Crompton Greaves’s and Union Pacific’s motion to sever is denied. (Docket Entries No. 75, 90).
• Union Pacific’s motion for summary judgment that its damages are limited to $25,000.00 is granted. The motion that Shippers Stevedoring does not have standing and that Shippers Stevedoring’s claims are barred by limitations provision in Union Pacific’s bill of lading is denied. (Docket Entry No. 99).
The parties’ arguments and the reasons for this court’s rulings are discussed in detail below.
I. Background
This dispute arises from the shipment of a power transformer from India to the United States. Crompton Greaves is an *380 Indian corporation that manufactures and sells power transformers. (Docket Entry No. 19, Amended Complaint, at 1). Shippers Stevedoring is a Texas corporation that provides stevedoring services at the Port of Houston, Texas. Crompton Greaves alleges that Shippers Stevedoring is responsible for damaging a transformer that Crompton Greaves manufactured and shipped from India to Arizona through the Port of Houston. The basis for Crompton Greaves’s claims are recordings from a Shock-log device. A Shock-log records “shocks” during transport by measuring force waves. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. A., Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 30). The Shock-log recorded shocks on March 7, 2007 and March 13, 2007, while the transformer was in Shippers Stevedoring’s custody.
Shippers Stevedoring has also filed a third-party complaint for indemnification and contribution against Union Pacific Corporation, the rail company that transported the transformer from the Port of Houston to Arizona. The basis for Shippers Stevedoring’s claims against Union Pacific is a fourth shock recorded on March 31, 2007, when the transformer was in Union Pacific’s custody.
Crompton Greaves manufactured the transformer for sale to Pauwels America, its wholly-owned American subsidiary. Pauwels America in turn contracted to sell the transformer to Tucson Electric Company for use at a power station in Arizona. Pauwels America and Tucson Electric agreed that title to the transformer would remain with Crompton Greaves until delivery. (Docket Entry No. 65, Ex. 1, San-deep Chakravarty Depo. at 21-22).
Crompton Greaves manufactured the transformer at its Bhopal, India plant. Sandeep Chakravarty, a regional vice president and Crompton Greaves’s designated corporate representative, testified that Crompton Greaves specially designed the transformer “to withstand various transportation and other forces.” (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 2, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 107). Crompton Greaves also affixed the Shock-log to the transformer before it was shipped. Viswanathan Shivakumar, a deputy manager at the Bhopal plant, testified that before shipping the transformer, Crompton Greaves performed electrical-function tests recommended by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), professional organizations that set industry testing standards. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. 1, Viswanathan Shivakumar Depo. at 63-66). Shivakumar testified that these tests showed that the transformer functioned properly before shipment. Shivakumar also testified that he personally attached, set, and calibrated the Shock-log on the transformer before the shipment. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 1, Viswanathan Shivakumar Depo. at 89, 98-99). Shippers Stevedoring asserts that Crompton Greaves also attached a second shock recorder, a Logee 10, to the transformer. Shippers Stevedoring bases this in part on testimony by Shivakumar that the transformer had multiple “shelves” designed to hold shock recorders. (Docket Entry No. 77, Ex. D, Viswanathan Shivakumar Depo. at 142-43). Crompton Greaves asserts that there was only one shock recorder attached, and Shivakumar’s testimony is consistent.
Crompton Greaves hired National Shipping Company of Saudi Arabia (NSCSA) to ship the transformer from the Port of Mumbai, India to the Port of Houston, Texas. To prepare for shipment, the transformer was placed on a mafi trailer. A mafi trailer is a shorter version of a flatbed trailer with hard wheels. Once on the mafi trailer, the transformer was *381 chained down and covered with a tarp. (Docket Entry No. 65, Ex. 1, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 88, 97; Ex. 2). It was then loaded onto NSCSA’s vessel, the M/V Saudi Diriyah, for shipment to the Port of Houston. (Id.). Crompton Greaves asserts that the transformer was not damaged from the time it left the Bhopal plant until it arrived at the Port of Houston.
NSCSA issued a bill of lading for the shipment. 1 The front of the bill of lading described the shipper, consignee, cargo, and cargo’s intended voyage. The bill of lading listed Crompton Greaves as the shipper and Pauwels America as the consignee. The cargo was described as “1 uncrated main unit and 39 wooden cases” and a “Power Transformer, South Loop Substation.” Houston, Texas was the port of discharge and Biehl & Company Lines Services in Houston, Texas was the “place of delivery.” Box 14, titled “For Transshipment to,” was blank. (Docket Entry No. 69, Ex. 2, Bill of Lading).
The back side of the bill of lading detailed rights, liabilities, and responsibilities. Section 3 set out the “Carrier’s Liability.” Subsection 3(b) stated: “TRADES TO OR FROM THE UNITED STATES: shall be subject to the United States Carriage of Goods Act [“COGSA”] of 1936 ... which shall also apply to cargo on deck.” 2 (Id.). Section 4 of the bill lading contained a “Himalaya Clause,” extending the bill of lading’s liability limitations to subcontractors. Subsection 4(c) stated:
If an action for loss or damage to the Goods is brought against the ship managers, operator, insurer, servant, independent contractor, or subcontractor of the carrier or underlying carrier, including terminal operators, stevedores, carpenters, and watchmen, such persons shall be entitled to avail themselves of the defenses and limits of liability for which the Carrier is entitled to invoke under the contract.
(Id.). Finally, Section 5 described the carrier’s responsibilities. Subsection 5(a), titled “Port to Port Shipment,” stated:
The Carrier shall be liable for goods from the time the Goods have passed over the Vessel’s [ramp] at time of loading at the Port ... until the time the Goods have passed over the Vessel’s [ramp] at the time of discharging at the Port of Discharge.... For goods to or *382 from U.S. Ports, the Carrier shall be liable from the time the good are received at the loading port until the time the goods have been delivered to the Merchant at the Port of Discharge.
(Id.)-
Crompton Greaves employed Alomex, an interstate-freight forwarder, “to handle the inland portion of the carriage of the transformer,” and employed Vision Logistics to coordinate the railcar transport. (Docket Entry No. 69, at 3). On February 8, 2007, Alomex emailed an invoice to Crompton Greaves. The invoice stated, “From delivered free on mafi, unlashed at the port of Houston, till offloaded at Sahuarita, AZ we can give you a lump sum price of USD 145,800.00.” (Docket Entry No. 69, Ex. 4). Alomex in turn informed Shippers Stevedoring that it was expecting the shipment on the M/V Saudi Diriyah and instructed Shippers Stevedoring to arrange to transfer the transformer to a railcar. (Id., Ex. 5).
The M/V Saudi Diriyah arrived at the Port of Houston on March 1, 2007 and began discharging cargo at the Barbour’s Cut Terminal the next day. Shippers Stevedoring served as the stevedores for the discharge. Captain W. Rego, a surveyor, was hired by Pauwels America and attended the discharge at its direction. Rego’s report notes no incidents. (Docket Entry No. 65, Ex. 10, Vericlaim Report, at 5).
After discharge, Shippers Stevedoring drove the transformer to its terminal at the Port of Houston and parked it in an open yard. (Id., Ex. 6, Scott Butler Depo. at 20, 49). The transformer remained there until March 12, 2007, when it was loaded onto a railcar. (Id., Ex. 8, Derlin Marsh Depo. at 100-01). On March 7, 2007 at approximately noon, the Shock-log on the transformer recorded the first shock. Shippers Stevedoring claims that on March 7, the transformer was idle in the yard. Every Shippers Stevedoring employee who has been deposed denied moving the transformer between March 7 and March 12. Internal records produced by Shippers Stevedoring do not note any attempts to move the transformer during that time.
Captain Rego and Dale Schabel, a Pauwels America representative, were at the Shippers Stevedoring yard on March 7 to check the cargo. Chakravarty testified that they inspected the cargo in the morning. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. A, 215, 217). Captain Rego testified that he took pictures of the transformer and that Schabel noticed some minor damage on the exterior. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. C, Captain Rego Depo. at 63-64). One photograph taken by Captain Rego shows a transformer equipped with two shock recorders. Captain Rego testified that he was not sure whether that photograph was of the transformer at issue in this litigation. (Docket Entry No. 85, Ex. 1, Captain Rego Depo. at 52). Captain Rego and Schabel did not check the Shock-log or perform an internal inspection of the transformer. Captain Rego’s report did not describe any significant damage to the transformer, though it did note damage to crates shipped with the transformer. (Docket Entry No. 65, Ex. 10, Vericlaim Report, at 5). Captain Rego testified that he did not see anyone working on the transformer.
Crompton Greaves claims that the Shock-log data is consistent with Shippers Stevedoring moving the transformer on March 7, 2007 and causing damage. Crompton Greaves bases its claim on evidence that Shippers Stevedoring expected the railcar to arrive on March 8, 2007 and tried to move the transformer on March 7 to prepare. Derlin Marsh, Shippers Stevedoring’s Barbour’s Cut Terminal manager, testified that he was tracking the rail- *383 car sent to pick up the transformer on Shippers Stevedoring’s online account with the Port Terminal Railroad. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 10, Derlin Marsh Depo. at 75-78). A timeline produced by Shippers Stevedoring incorporates data from the Port Terminal Railroad account. The timeline shows a March 8 arrival date for the railcar. (Docket Entry No. 69, Ex. 1, Shippers Stevedoring Timeline). Crompton Greaves also notes that there were Shippers Stevedoring personnel at the yard on March 7 who could have moved the transformer. Scott Butler, Shippers Stevedoring’s corporate representative, testified that in addition to Marsh, a walking foreman authorized to move the transformer to the rail siding was at the yard. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 9, Scott Butler Depo. at 101-02). 3 Shippers Stevedoring denies that its employees moved the transformer on March 7.
The Union Pacific railcar did not arrive until March 12, 2007, the date the Shock-log recorded two more shocks. On that date, Shippers Stevedoring loaded the transformer onto the railcar using two cranes. Shippers Stevedoring alleges that its personnel drove the mafi about one-hundred feet to a rail line and loaded the transformer onto Union Pacific’s railcar without incident. (Docket Entry No. 65, Ex. 6, Scott Butler Depo. at 55). Captain Rego, who also attended the March 12 loading, noted in his report that the transformer “was carefully loaded into position with no shocks.” (Id., Ex. 10, Vericlaim Report, at 6). On March 13, 2007, the transformer left on Union Pacific’s railcar.
Vision Logistics had hired Union Pacific to transport the transformer from the Port of Houston to Tucson. On March 14, 2007, Vision Logistics and Union Pacific agreed to a bill of lading. The bill of lading identified Vision Logistics as the shipper and Tucson Electric as the consignee. (Id., Ex. 1, Union Pacific Bill of Lading). Vision Logistics entered the information about the transformer’s transport on Union Pacific’s computer to create the bill of lading. (Docket Entry No. 99, Terry Sheldon Aff.). Union Pacific has provided screen shots of the electronic form Vision Logistics used. One box on the electronic form allows the shipper to select a tariff for the transport. (Id., Ex. 2). The transformer was carried under UP Tariff 4467, which is governed by the Exempt Circular UP 16-series. (Id., Ex. 3, UP Tariff 4467). The bill of lading, UP Tariff 4467, and Exempt Circular UP 16-series together formed the contract for carriage.
Item 16 of UP Exempt Circular 16 requires all claims against the carrier to be filed with the carrier within 9 months of the delivery date. See 49 C.F.R. § 1005.2 (“a claim for ... damage ... to cargo shall not be voluntarily paid by a carrier unless filed ... with [the carrier]” and allowing the time limit for such writing to be established in the bill of lading). Item 124 from UP Exempt Circular 16 requires lawsuits based on the transport be filed within 18 months from the expected date of delivery. (Id., Ex. 9). Finally, Item 3000 of UP Tariff 4467 caps liability for damage at $25,000.00 per car. (Id., Ex. 3).
Union Pacific transported the transformer to Arizona by rail. On March 31, 2007, while the transformer was on Union Pacific’s railcar, the Shock-log registered a fourth shock event. On April 8, 2007, the transformer arrived in Arizona and was unloaded. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 8, *384 Timeline). Two days later, Gautam Mazumder, a Crompton Greaves supervising engineer, downloaded the Shock-log’s data and turned it off. (Docket Entry No. 76, Ex. 2, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 51). The data showed four shock events, one on March 7, two on March 13, and one on March 31, 2007. (Id., Ex. 8, Mazumder Report; Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 2, San-deep Chakravarty Depo. at 215).
On April 19, 2007, the transformer was tested and did not work. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. A, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 67). The next day, Crompton Greaves conducted its first internal inspection of the transformer in Arizona and found loose pieces of insulation at the bottom of the transformer tank, as well as other damage. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 2, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 77). Chakravarty testified that at first, Crompton Greaves, Tucson Power, and a consulting company hired by Tucson Power considered the damage to be minor and repairable. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 2, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 108). Crompton Greaves shipped the transformer to the Edison ESI facility in Westminister, California for repair. (Id., 222). Edison inspected the transformer and informed Crompton Greaves that it would have to be rebuilt. Chakravarty testified that at this point, Crompton Greaves had incurred approximately $750,000.00 in expenses and that Pauwels America had paid most of those. (Id., 145); (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. A, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 141— 42).
Because Edison did not have the capability to rebuild the transformer, Crompton Greaves and Tucson Power decided to ship it to a plant in Canada for rebuilding. (Docket Entry No. 74, Ex. A, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 219-20). The transformer was rebuilt and shipped back to Tucson. (Id., 49). In total, Crompton Greaves alleges that it incurred $2,749,858.76 in damages. Captain Rego testified that the commercial value of the transformer at the time it was damaged was its invoice price, $1,264,135.00.
On March 19, 2009, Crompton Greaves filed this suit against Shippers Stevedoring. Its complaint asserted claims for negligence, including under res ipsa loquitur; breach of contract; and breach of bailment obligations. 4 On February 24, 2010, Shippers Stevedoring filed a third-party complaint against Union Pacific for indemnity or contribution. (Docket Entry No. 61).
Shippers Stevedoring has filed two motions for summary judgment. The first argues that Shippers Stevedoring is entitled to the liability limitations under the Himalaya Clause in NSCSA’s bill of lading because the cargo was not delivered until March 8, 2007, when the steamship release issued, or until March 13, 2007, when the transformer left the Port of Houston. (Docket Entry No. 65). The motion also argues that under COGSA, Crompton Greaves’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations or limited to $500.00. Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 69), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 70). Shippers Stevedoring also moved to strike evidence Crompton Greaves attached to its response, (Docket Entry No. 71). Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 80), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 82).
In its second motion for summary judgment, Shippers Stevedoring argues that it *385 is not liable to Crompton Greaves for negligence or breach of contract. (Docket Entry No. 74). Alternatively, Shippers Stevedoring argues that the constructive-loss doctrine limits Crompton Greaves’s damages. Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 87); Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 95); Crompton Greaves surreplied, (Docket Entry No. 106); and Shippers Stevedoring responded to the surreply, (Docket Entry No. 111).
Shippers Stevedoring has also moved for an adverse inference instruction against Crompton Greaves based on evidence that there was a second shock recorder but neither it nor data from it has been produced. (Docket Entry No. 77). Shippers Stevedoring argues that because Crompton Greaves has not produced data from the second shock recorder, an adverse inference that the data from the second shock recorder would have shown that there were no shocks is appropriate. Crompton Greaves responded, (Docket Entry No. 82), and Shippers Stevedoring replied, (Docket Entry No. 84).
Crompton Greaves has also moved for partial summary judgment on liability. It argues that Shippers Stevedoring had an implied contract for bailment of the transformer on March 7 and March 13, 2007, creating a presumption of negligence that Shippers Stevedoring has not rebutted. (Docket Entry No. 76). Shippers Stevedoring responded, (Docket Entry No. 84).
Union Pacific and Crompton Greaves have also moved to sever Shippers Stevedoring’s claims against Union Pacific on the basis that it has not had an opportunity to conduct discovery and that Shippers Stevedoring joined Union Pacific too late. (Docket Entries No. 75, 90). Shippers Stevedoring responded. (Docket Entry No. 83). Union Pacific has also moved for summary judgment that Shippers Stevedoring lacks standing because it was not a party to the bill of lading. Alternatively, Union Pacific argues that the bill of lading bars Shippers Stevedoring’s claims or limits liability to $25,000.00. (Docket Entry No. 99). Shippers Stevedoring responded, (Docket Entry No. 104), and Union Pacific supplemented, (Docket Entry No. 107).
Each motion is analyzed below.
II. The Motion to Strike
Shippers Stevedoring moved to strike Exhibits 2, 4, 8, attached to Crompton Greaves’s response to Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for partial summary judgment. (Docket Entry No. 69). This court did not consider Exhibits 2 and 8, making the motion to strike those exhibits moot. 5 Exhibit 4 contains emails between Crompton Greaves and Alomex about the transformer’s shipment. Shippers Stevedoring moved to strike on the basis that these emails “are not relevant to this court’s determination of ‘delivery’ and the contents of the emails are hearsay.” (Docket Entry No. 71, at 2).
The emails between Crompton Greaves and Alomex are properly considered on summary judgment. Sandeep Chakravarty, Crompton Greaves’s regional vice-president of sales to Latin America and the Caribbean, testified that the February 8, 2007 email was the invoice from Alomex for inland transport and established the terms and conditions of the transport. (Docket Entry No. 80, Ex. A, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 170-71). Crompton Greaves’s agreement with Alomex is relevant. Crompton Greaves argues that because Shippers Stevedoring
*386
operated under this agreement as Alomex’s agent it cannot claim defenses and liability limitations under NSCSA’s bill of lading. A contract is not hearsay because it has independent legal significance.
See Kepner-Tregoe, Inc. v. Leadership Software, Inc., 12
F.3d 527, 540 (5th Cir.1994) (“Signed instruments such as wills, contracts, and promissory notes are writings that have independent legal significance and are not hearsay.”);
Everest Indem. Ins. Co. v. Allied Int’l Emergency LLC,
Civ. No. 4:08-CV678-Y,
Shippers Stevedoring’s motion to strike is denied.
III. The Summary Judgment Motions
A. The Legal Standard
Summary judgment is appropriate if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Crv. P. 56(e). “The movant bears the burden of identifying those portions of the record it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Triple Tee Golf, Inc. v. Nike, Inc.,
If the burden of proof at trial lies with the nonmoving party, the movant may satisfy its initial burden by “ ‘showing’ — that is, pointing out to the district court — that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving party’s case.”
See Celotex,
When the moving party has met its Rule 56(c) burden, the nonmoving party cannot survive a summary judgment motion by resting on the mere allegations of its pleadings. The nonmovant must identify specific evidence in the record and articulate how that evidence supports that party’s claim.
Baranowski v. Hart,
B. Shippers Stevedoring’s Motion for Summary Judgment under COG-SA
Shippers Stevedoring argues that it is entitled to judgment that COGSA defenses and liability limitations in the Himalaya Clause in NSCSA’s bill of lading apply. Crompton Greaves responds that under the Himalaya Clause, these defenses and liability limitations are only available to agents or subcontractors of NSCSA. Crompton Greaves argues that the evidence shows that Shippers Stevedoring was Alomex’s agent or subcontractor. Shippers Stevedoring responds that because the alleged damage occurred before “delivery” under the bill of lading, it can assert the bill of lading’s defenses and liability limitations, regardless of whether it was NSCSA’s agent or subcontractor. Shippers Stevedoring also responds that the contention Alomex hired and instructed Shippers Stevedoring is refuted by evidence that Vision Logistics gave Shippers Stevedoring instructions.
COGSA governs bills of lading “from the time when the goods are loaded on to the time when they are discharged from the ship.” COGSA § 1(e), 49 Stat. 1207 (1936),
reprinted in
note following 46 U.S.C. § 30701;
Kirby,
Crompton Greaves argues that Shippers Stevedoring is not entitled to take advantage of the otherwise enforceable limitations on liability in the bill of lading. The Himalaya Clause, section 4(c) of the bill of lading, limits the liability of “the ship managers, operator, insurer, servant, independent contractor, or subcontractor
of the carrier or underlying carrier,
including terminal operators, stevedores, carpenters, and watchmen.” (Docket Entry No. 69, Ex. 2, Bill of Lading (emphasis added)). A Himalaya Clause is interpreted like any other contract term.
Kirby,
Under the plain meaning of this Himalaya Clause, COGSA defenses and liability limitations are available only if Shippers Stevedoring can show that it was a manager, operator, insurer, servant, independent contractor, or subcontractor of NSCSA.
See Dewanchand Ramsaran Indus. Ltd. v. Ports Am. Tex., Inc.,
Civ. A. No. H-08-1274,
Shippers Stevedoring is not entitled to summary judgment on the basis that COG-SA’s one-year statute of limitations bars Crompton Greaves’s claims or that COG-SA limits Shippers Stevedoring’s damages to $500.00. The motion for summary judgment on these grounds is denied. 7
C. Shippers Stevedoring’s Motion for Summary Judgment on all Claims
In its second motion for summary judgment, Shippers Stevedoring argues that it is entitled to judgment that it is not liable to Crompton Greaves for negligence or breach of contract. (Docket Entry No. 74). Alternatively, Shippers Stevedoring argues that the constructive-loss doctrine limits Crompton Greaves’s damages.
1. Negligence
Shippers Stevedoring argues that it is entitled to summary judgment on Crompton Greaves’s negligence claim because there is no evidence of causation. Shippers Stevedoring argues that the March 7 shock recording provides only “speculative” evidence that Shippers Stevedoring’s negligence caused damage to the transformer. Crompton Greaves responds that the March 7 Shock-log recording and expert testimony that the Shock-log was properly functioning creates a fact issue as to Shippers Stevedoring’s negligence. 8
In Texas, the elements of negligence are that: (1) the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty of care; (2) the defendant breached the duty; and (3) the defendant’s breach proximately caused injury to the plaintiff.
IHS Cedars Treatment Ctr. v. Mason,
Crompton Greaves has produced sufficient circumstantial evidence to create a fact issue as to whether Shippers Stevedoring caused the damage to the transformer. Shippers Stevedoring has admitted that the transformer was in its custody on March 7, 2007, when the Shock-log registered the first shock. In response to a request for admission, Shippers Stevedoring admitted that it “discharged, that is unloaded the goods in question, at the Port of Houston on or about March 1, 2007,” and that the “cargo in question was in [Shippers Stevedoring’s] custody from March 2, 2007 through March 11, 2007.” (Docket Entry No. 76, Ex. 7). 9 Crompton Greaves has also produced circumstantial evidence raising a fact issue as to whether Shippers Stevedoring dropped the transformer in a failed attempt to move it for railroad transport. Crompton Greaves’s expert, Dr. David Hullender, testified that only “something ... big,” such as a drop, could have created the force registered on the Shock-log. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 6, Dr. David Hullender Depo. at 27). Dr. Hullender further testified that based on the registered force, “in all probability, it did get dropped.” (Id., 27-28). A timeline produced by Shippers Stevedoring shows that it expected the railcar to arrive on March 8. (Id., Ex. 8, timeline; Ex. 10, Derlin Marsh Depo. at 76). Another Crompton Greaves expert, Edmund Feloni, testified that based on the railcar’s expected arrival date, “it would make sense that [Shippers Stevedoring was] preparing to move it.” (Id., Ex. 8, Edmund Feloni Depo. at 174). There were Shippers Stevedoring personnel at the yard on March 7 authorized to move the transformer. Scott Butler, Shippers Stevedoring’s corporate representative, testified that on March 7, Shippers Stevedoring’s walking foreman was at the yard and authorized to move the transformer to the rail siding. (Id., Ex. 9, Scott Butler Depo. at 101-02).
*390 Shippers Stevedoring argues that testimony from Captain Rego, Pauwels’s marine surveyor, that he inspected the transformer on March 7 and did not see anyone working around it establishes that Shippers Stevedoring did not attempt to move the transformer on that date. Dale Schabel, a representative from Pauwels was also present for the inspection. The first shock event was recorded at 23:51 hours 13 seconds, a little past noon. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 2, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 214-15). The evidence, however, is that Rego and Schabel inspected the transformer “in the morning hours.” {Id., 215). Shippers Stevedoring points out that Captain Rego took a photograph of a transformer at 12:41 p.m. (Docket Entry No. 95, Ex. 3, Forensic Expert Report, at 2). But there is evidence that this photograph was not of the transformer at issue. Rego and Schabel also inspected cargo stored in “a distant Shippers warehouse which blocked [any] view of the location of the transformer,” and the 12:41 photograph shows this cargo. (Docket Entry No. 106, Ex. 4, Captain Rego. Depo. at 164-65). Captain Rego’s first photograph of the transformer was taken at 1:28 p.m., approximately an hour and ten minutes after the shock event’s time. Captain Rego’s testimony and photographs do not show that, as a matter of law, Shippers Stevedoring did not damage the transformer.
Shippers Stevedoring argues that Crompton Greaves’s evidence is insufficient under the Texas Supreme Court’s decision in
Marathon Corporation v. Pitzner,
Marathon is distinguishable. The Marathon plaintiff presented competing liability theories and there was another theory that was equally plausible but did not involve negligence by the defendant. The court found that there was insufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict. Crompton Greaves has presented evidence supporting only one theory: that Shippers Stevedoring damaged the transformer by dropping it while trying to load it onto the rail line on March 7, 2007. The shock recording is circumstantial evidence that the transformer was dropped on that date. The expected March 8 arrival of the railcar provides circumstantial evidence that Shippers Stevedoring attempted to move the transformer on March 7. This evidence provides the “something else” corroborating the probability that Shippers Stevedoring moved the transformer on March 7. This evidence creates a fact issue as to negligence. 10
2. Breach of Contract and Bailment
Shippers Stevedoring argues that it did not have an express contract with Crompton Greaves and that as a matter of law the evidence is insufficient to establish an implied contract for bailment. Shippers Stevedoring emphasizes that the evidence shows that it did not have control over the transformer on March 7 because it was not authorized to move the transformer until it received a “steamship release,” which did not occur until March 8. Shippers Stevedoring also emphasizes that under NSCSA’s bill of lading, it did not have control of the transformer on March 7 because “delivery” did not occur until the transformer was given a steamship release or until it was delivered to Union Pacific for transport. Crompton Greaves responds that in a request for admission, Shippers Stevedoring admitted that it had custody of the transformer on March 7, 2007, the date of the first shock, and that this admission shows an implied bailment.
A bailment relationship does not create a specific cause of action but instead allows the bailor to choose the form of relief for breach, such as an action for breach of contract or an action for conversion.
See Int’l Freight Forwarding, Inc. v. Am. Flange,
(1) a contract, either express or implied;
(2) delivery of property to the bailee; and
(3) acceptance of the property by the bailee.
Russell v. Am. Real Estate Corp.,
Crompton Greaves has submitted sufficient circumstantial evidence to support an implied bailment. Shippers Stevedoring knowingly accepted the transformer when it was discharged from the
M/V Saudi Diriyah
on March 1, 2007 and that the transformer was in Shippers Stevedoring’s custody when the first shock event was recorded.
Russell,
Shippers Stevedoring argues that no bailment existed because it was not in privity with Crompton Greaves and had only contracted with Alomex. Shippers Stevedoring also points to testimony by Chakravarty that “the custody of or the responsibility of Alomex began on the date and the time the goods were offloaded from the ship” and that Alomex had “custody and control” over the transformer while it was at the Port of Houston.
11
*393
(Docket Entry No. 95, Ex. 1, Sandeep Chakravarty Depo. at 187, 192). Shippers Stevedoring argues that under this court’s decision in
Suzlon Wind Energy Corp. v. Shippers Stevedoring Co.,
In Suzlon, Suzlon Wind Energy sued Shippers Stevedoring after fire damaged a nacelle (part of a wind turbine generator) while Shippers Stevedoring was performing “hot work.” Id. at 633. Suzlon filed a cross-claim against Andrews Boom Repair, Inc. (“ABR”), a third-party defendant, which had performed welding work for Shippers Stevedoring. Suzlon argued that there was an implied bailment between it and ABR, created when ABR accepted delivery of the nacelle and began working on it. Id. at 655. ABR responded that the nacelle was never in its custody or control and that it could not have formed an implied bailment with Suzlon because ABR was not even aware that Suzlon existed. Id. at 655-56. This court found that no bailment existed because there was no evidence that ABR knew it was assuming the responsibilities of bailee or that ABR knew it was taking possession, custody, or control of the nacelle by performing hot work, and there was no evidence that ABR knew of Suzlon’s existence. Id. at 656. The issue in Suzlon was not whether ABR was in privity with Suzlon. Instead, the issue was whether there was sufficient circumstantial evidence to find that ABR had accepted property it knew belonged to Suzlon or that ABR had custody, control, or possession of the property when it performed welding work. There was no evidence showing that when ABR began welding, it understood that it was also assuming custody, control, or possession of Suzlon’s nacelle. To the contrary, the evidence showed that ABR was only hired to perform welding work. There was also no evidence that ABR knew that the nacelle belonged to Suzlon.
The facts of the present case are different. Crompton Greaves has submitted evidence that Shippers Stevedoring knew that the transformer belonged to Crompton Greaves; that Shippers Stevedoring knowingly accepted the property from the MfV Saudi Diriyah; and that Shippers Stevedoring had custody of the transformer from its discharge until its placement on the railcar.
Shippers Stevedoring also argues that it did not have control of the transformer on March 7 because NSCSA did not issue the steamship release until March 8. But even assuming that Shippers Stevedoring lacked authorization to move the transformer before March 8, this does not demonstrate the absence of an implied bailment. Under Texas law, custody of the bailor’s property is sufficient to support an implied contract for bailment.
See Russell,
3. Damages
Shippers Stevedoring seeks summary judgment that the doctrine of constructive total loss, which limits recovery for damage to goods to their fair market value before damage. Applied here, the doctrine limits Crompton Greaves’s damages to the fair market value of the transformer on the date it was damaged ($1,264,135.00) less the amount Crompton Greaves recovered by selling salvage materials from the transformer ($198,000.00). Shipper Stevedoring also argues that Crompton Greaves does not have standing to recover the $748,428.76 incurred for shipping the transformer to Edison because Pauwels America paid these expenses.
Crompton Greaves responds that it may recover the costs it incurred in good faith to mitigate its damages, even if the cost of repairs exceeded the transformer’s value before the damage. Crompton Greaves also argues that even though Pauwels America paid for the shipment to Edison, Crompton Greaves ultimately incurred those damages because it bore the risk of loss and because it is Pauwels America’s parent company.
a. Constructive total loss
“ ‘The purpose of compensatory damages ... is to place the injured person as nearly as possible in the condition he would have occupied if the wrong had not occurred.’ ”
Transcon. Gas Pipe Line Corp. v. Societe D’Exploitation du Solitaire,
In both contract and tort cases, a plaintiff has a duty to mitigate damages.
Formosa Plastics Corp., USA v. Kajima Intn’l, Inc.,
A fact issue exists as to the market value of the transformer when it was allegedly damaged. Shippers Stevedoring argues that the market value as of March 2007 was $1,264,135.00. Shippers Stevedoring bases the market value on the Crompton Greaves’s January 25, 2007 invoice for the sale of the transformer. The invoice shows that Tucson Power ordered the transformer on August 31, 2006. The record does not show whether the price was negotiated when the transformer was ordered or at a later date. There is evidence, however, that beginning in 2006, the transformer’s market value continuously increased. Crompton Greaves’s expert, Edmund Feloni, testified that the cost of producing transformers increased beginning in 2006 through 2007. He testified that “in some cases,” the costs “almost doubled or tripled,” due in part to price increases for commodities such as copper. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 7, Edmund Feloni Depo. at 145A6). Feloni’s testimony creates a fact issue as to whether Crompton Greaves’s damages are limited to the invoice price. Shippers Stevedoring is not entitled to summary judgment that Crompton Greaves’s damages are limited to $1,264,135.00 less the amount it obtained through salvage.
Shippers Stevedoring has only moved for summary judgment that Crompton Greaves’s damages are limited to $1,264,135.00 less the amount it obtained through salvage. In their briefing, the parties vigorously dispute whether Crompton Greaves may recover both the $748,428.76 for initial repair costs and the additional $2,749,858.76 for rebuilding the transformer in Canada. Neither party has produced cases discussing whether, under Texas law, damages in excess of the market value can be recovered. Crompton Greaves cites the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Toledo Peoria and Western Ry. v. Metro Waste Sys., Inc.,
Toledo does not support Crompton Greaves’s full damage claim. In that case, once Toledo Railway knew that the combination of the repair costs already incurred with the expected additional repair costs would exceed the engine’s fair market value at the time of damage, the decision was made not to pursue additional repairs and instead to seek replacement damages. The court found that Toledo Railway had acted consistent with its duty to mitigate damages. In the present case, by contrast, there is no evidence as to whether Crompton Greaves decided to incur the costs to rebuild the transformer because those costs, combined with the $748,428.76 already incurred, would be less than the transformer’s fair market value when it was damaged. 13 Under Toledo, Crompton Greaves would be entitled to damages for both the initial repair costs and the costs of rebuilding the transformer only if they were less than the transformer’s fair market value when it was damaged. Crompton Greaves has not produced this evidence.
Texas law, like Illinois law, requires plaintiffs to mitigate damages,
Formosa Plastics Corp.,
b. The Real Party in Interest
Under Rule 17(a)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, “[a]n action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” The real party in interest is “the person holding the substantive right sought to be enforced, and not necessarily the person who will ultimately benefit from the recovery.”
In re Signal Intern., LLC,
The record evidence shows that Pauwels America, not Crompton Greaves, incurred most of the costs to ship the transformer to Edison and repair it. Chakravarty testified that “most of the charges were paid by ... Pauwels America,” which paid at least $748,000.00 for shipping the transformer to Edison and paying for the repairs. (Docket Entry No. 74, at 23). Crompton Greaves argues that because it bore the risk of loss, it was the real party in interest. But Crompton Greaves provides no authority that the mere risk of loss is the same as incurring the loss. Pauwels America is the real party in interest with respect to the claim to recover these costs. 14
*398 D. Crompton Greaves’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Liability
Crompton Greaves argues that because a bailment existed, there is “a rebuttable presumption of negligence” that shifts the burden to Shippers Stevedoring to show “that the damage resulted from some other cause consistent with due care on [its] part.”
Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Wilson,
Rick Bonyata’s expert report explained why he concluded that the Shock-log on the transformer had been installed incorrectly and was in an improper position, making it susceptible “to extraneous external influences including worker activity and lashing equipment.” (Docket Entry No. 84, Ex. A, Bonyata Aff. and Expert Report). The report concluded that “it is more likely than not that shock measurements in this case are not reliable.” (Id.). Bonyata’s report stated further that the transformer had “inadequate internal core structural support for the type of shipping support and lashing used to secure” it for shipping. Based on these findings, and the absence of evidence corroborating the data on the Shock-log recorder, Bonyata reached the following opinions:
1.Reliable shock data is not available to determine which recorded event, if any caused the observed damage to the transformer.
2. There is inadequate internal core structural support for the type of shipping support and lashing used to secure the transformer.
3. The lack of personnel-reported shock events during transformer movements and handling activities make it unreasonable to rule out internal transformer damage before reaching the Port of Houston.
(Id.). Another expert, Robert Ganser, testified that Crompton Greaves, through “a more robust design, additional bracing, additional insulation, [and] perhaps other methods,” could have ensured the transformer’s safe arrival. (Id., Ex. 2, Robert Ganser Depo. at 60). This evidence raises a triable issue of fact as to whether negligence by Shippers Stevedoring caused the transformer damage.
Crompton Greaves argues that Shivakumar’s testimony that he performed IEEE electrical-function tests on the transformer before it left India conclusively rebuts these expert opinions. Shivakumar’s testimony that the transformer passed electrical-function tests before any transport does not rebut the expert testimony presented by Shippers Stevedoring. Neither Bonyata nor Ganser testified about the transformer’s condition before shipment. Instead, the experts testified that the transformer was not properly designed or manufactured and equipped to withstand shipping. Shivakumar’s testimony does not establish the absence of fact issues.
Crompton Greaves also argues that testimony from its expert, Dr. David Hullender, conclusively demonstrates that the transformer was damaged on March 7 and March 13. Dr. Hullender only testified that the transformer damage was eonsis *399 tent with the readings from the Shock-log recorder. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 6, Dr. David Hullender Depo. at 50). Dr. Hullender’s testimony does not conclusively disprove Bonyata’s and Ganser’s testimony that the damage could have occurred before these dates.
Neither Shippers Stevedoring nor Crompton Greaves is entitled to summary judgment on Crompton Greaves’s breach of contract claim.
E. Union Pacific’s Motion for Summary Judgment
The third-party defendant, Union Pacific, moved for summary judgment against Shippers Stevedoring. Union Pacific argues that as a matter of law, Shippers Stevedoring cannot obtain contribution or indemnification for damages attributable to the fourth shock on the Shock-log because Shippers Stevedoring was not a party to Union Pacific’s bill of lading, 15 or alternatively, because Shippers Stevedoring filed its claim after the 18-month deadline set out by the bill of lading. Union Pacific also argues that the $25,000.00 liability limit applies.
The parties do not dispute that when the fourth shock shown on the Shock-recorder occurred, Union Pacific was transporting the transformer by rail. Because this was an interstate transfer of goods, the Carmack Amendment applies. The Amendment, now found at 49 U.S.C. § 11706, creates a national scheme to compensate shippers for goods damaged or lost during interstate shipping.
See New York, New Haven & Hartford R.R. v. Nothnagle,
The Carmack Amendment also allows carriers to require written notice before claims are filed and to limit the period for filing civil actions. Section 14706(e)(1) of the Carmack Amendment states:
A carrier may not provide by rule, contract or otherwise, a period of less than *400 9 months for filing a claim against it under this section and a period of less than 2 years for bringing a civil action against it under this section. The period for bringing a civil action is computed from the date the carrier gives a person written notice that the carrier has disallowed any part of the claim specified in the notice.
The Fifth Circuit has held that “Congress intended for the Carmack Amendment to provide the exclusive cause of action for loss or damages to goods arising from the interstate transportation of those goods by a common carrier.”
Hoskins v. Bekins Van Lines,
Union Pacific has not cited authority supporting its contention that a nonparty to a bill of lading cannot sue a party to that bill of lading for contribution or indemnification. The district court’s decision in
AIDA Dayton Techs. Corp. v. I.T.O. Corp. of Balt.,
In the present case, the record is unclear as to the relationship between Vision Logistics and Shippers Stevedoring. Alomex hired both Vision Logistics and Shippers Stevedoring for the inland transport of the transformer. There is evidence that Vision Logistics instructed Shippers Stevedoring about arranging for delivery of the transformer to Union Pacific’s rail-car. The record is inadequate for this court to determine whether Union Pacific is entitled to judgment that Shippers Stevedoring has a right to seek its indemnification and contribution even though it was not a party to the bill of lading. 17
*401
Assuming that Shippers Stevedoring has standing to assert claims for indemnification and contribution against Union Pacific, the record shows that those claims are not barred by the claim filing and limitation requirements in Union Pacific’s bill of lading. While the Carmack Amendment allows a carrier to require a claim to be filed in writing and to limit the time for filing a claim, courts have held that these limits do not apply to nonparties to the bill of lading.
See AIDA,
The bill of lading’s liability limits are enforceable. Courts have held that a bill of lading’s liability limits are enforceable against nonparties.
See Carman Tool & Abrasives, Inc. v. Evergreen Lines,
F. The Motion to Sever
Crompton Greaves moved for a separate trial of Shippers Stevedoring’s third-party complaint against Union Pacific under Federal Rule of Civil 42(b). 18 Crompton *402 Greaves argues that severance is appropriate because extensive discovery has concluded on the underlying claim and dis-positive motions have been filed. Union Pacific joined in Crompton Greaves’s motion, arguing that without severance, it will be prejudiced because it could not designate experts or conduct discovery. Union Pacific emphasizes that it needs time to prepare its defense. Shippers Stevedoring opposes severance as both inefficient and prejudicial to it.
Rule 42(b) allows a district court to order separate trials “to expedite and economize, for convenience, or to avoid prejudice.”
Alaniz v. Zamorar-Quezada,
The provisions for separate trials in Federal Rule 42(b) is intended to further many significant policies — the parties’ convenience, the avoidance of delay and prejudice, and the promotion of the ends of justice. It is in the interest of efficient judicial administration that is to be controlling under the rule, rather than the wishes of the parties. The piecemeal trial of separate issues in a single lawsuit or the repetitive trial of the same issue in severed claims is not to be the usual course.
Id. § 2388.
Efficient judicial administration weighs heavily in favor of denying the Rule 42(b) motion. While extensive discovery has been conducted in the underlying lawsuit, much of that discovery relates to Shippers Stevedoring’s claims against Union Pacific. Shippers Stevedoring’s claims against Union Pacific will also involve many of the same witnesses, including experts, that might testify at the underlying trial. The need to allow Union Pacific to designate experts or otherwise complete its trial preparations may be addressed without separate trials. The motion is denied.
IV. Shippers Stevedoring’s Motion for an Adverse Inference Instruction
Shippers Stevedoring moved for an adverse inference instruction against Crompton Greaves that a second shock recorder, a “LoGee 10” existed and that the data that would have been recovered from the LoGee 10 would conflict with the data from the Shock-log. (Docket Entry No. 77, at 3). Shippers Stevedoring bases its motion on the photograph taken by Captain Rego on March 7 showing two shock recorders on a transformer. Shippers Stevedoring’s photography expert, Dr. Carey Murphy, testified that this photograph was taken “in sequence” with other photographs of the transformer at issue in this case. Shippers Stevedoring also points to testi *403 mony from Crompton Greaves’s experts, Dr. Hullender and Feloni, that transformers shipped overseas should be equipped with two shock recorders. (Id., Ex. F, Dr. Hullender Depo. at 66; Ex. G, Edmund Feloni Depo. at 21).
Crompton Greaves responds that testimony from its Bhopal-plant manager, Shivakumar, that only one Shock-log was attached to the transformer, establishes a disputed fact issue as to whether there was a second shock recorder. Crompton Greaves points to Captain Rego’s testimony that he was surveying multiple Crompton Greaves shipments on the day he took the photographs, and that he believed the picture showing two shock recorders was of a different transformer than the one at issue here. Captain Rego also testified that he was not sure he took the photograph because it showed a shock recorder that did not have a case, which is different from Crompton Greaves shock recorders he has photographed. (Docket Entry No. 85, Ex. 1, Captain Rego. Depo. at 52-53, 165-69).
“Spoliation is the destruction or the significant and meaningful alteration of evidence.”
Rimkus Consulting Grp. v. Cammarata,
Crompton Greaves argues that there is insufficient evidence to find that a second shock recorder was ever on this transformer or that, assuming it existed, Crompton Greaves destroyed it in bad faith. As a general rule, in the Fifth Circuit, the severe sanctions of granting default judgment, striking pleadings, or giving an adverse inference instruction may not be imposed unless there is evidence of “bad faith.”
Condrey v. SunTrust Bank of Ga.,
The present record is insufficient to support a finding of intentional, bad *404 faith destruction as needed for an adverse inference instruction. There is conflicting testimony as to whether the photograph Shippers Stevedoring relies on was a photograph of the transformer at issue in this litigation. Dr. Murphy testified that the photograph was taken “in sequence” with other photographs of the transformer at issue and that it was taken between 12:41 and 3:38 p.m. on March 7, 2007. (Docket Entry No. 77, Ex. B, Dr. Murphy Report). Captain Rego testified that he did not believe the photograph was of the same transformer, noting that he surveyed other transformers as well as other cargo on March 7 and that pictures of different cargo pieces often get mixed up. (Docket Entry No. 85, Ex. 1, Captain Rego Depo. at 52). Captain Rego also testified that he did not recognize the second shock recorder shown in the photograph as one he had seen before because it was not covered with a protective case. (Id., 53-54; 168-69). 20 Testimony from Crompton Greaves’s designated expert, Chakravarty, and its Bhopal-plant manager, Shivakumar, further supports Crompton Greaves’s position that only one shock recorder was attached to the transformer. Chakravarty testified that while he was certain the Shock-log recorder was attached to the transformer, he did not believe the Logee 10 was attached. (Docket Entry No. 77, Ex. E, Chakravarty Depo. at 33-35, 51-52). Shivakumar testified that he installed only one shock recorder on the transformer. (Docket Entry No. 85, Ex. 2, Shivakumar Depo. at 77). Shippers Stevedoring points out that the transformer was designed to have two shock recorders attached and that Crompton Greaves’s own experts testified that attaching two shock recorders is necessary. (Docket Entry No. 77, Exs. D, Shivakumar Depo. at 167-68; F, Dr. Hullender Depo. at 66-67; G, Feloni Depo. at 21). None of this evidence demonstrates that a second shock recorder was attached. Given the record, Shippers Stevedoring is not entitled to the adverse inference instruction it seeks.
V. Conclusion and Order
Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for partial summary judgment that COGSA’s one-year statute of limitations bars the plaintiffs claims or that COGSA limits the plaintiffs damages to $500.00 is denied, (Docket Entry No. 65). Shippers Stevedoring’s motion to strike is denied, (Docket Entry No. 71). Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for summary judgment on Crompton Greaves’s claims is denied, (Docket Entry No. 74). Shipper Stevedoring’s motion for an adverse inference instruction is denied, (Docket Entry No. 77).
Crompton Greaves’s motion for partial summary judgment on liability is denied, (Docket Entry No. 76). Crompton Greaves’s and Union Pacific’s motion to sever is denied, (Docket Entry No. 75).
Union Pacific’s motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part, (Docket Entry No. 99). Union Pacific’s motion for summary judgment is denied as to its arguments that Shippers Stevedoring does not have standing and that Shippers Stevedoring’s claims are barred by limitations provision in Union Pacific’s bill of lading. It is granted as to *405 Union Pacific’s argument that its damages are limited to $25,000.00.
Notes
. "A bill of lading 'records that a carrier has received goods from the party that wishes to ship them, states the terms of carriage, and serves as evidence of the contract for carriage.' "
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. v. Regal-Beloit Corp.,
- U.S. -,
. COGSA was previously codified in the appendix to Title 46 of the U.S.Code. When Title 46 was recodified in 2006 by Pub. L. 109-304, Oct. 6, 2006, 120 Stat. 1485, COGSA was not included except as a statutory note to the first section of the Harter Act, 46 U.S.C. § 30701.
See
David W. Robertson & Michael F. Sturley,
Recent Developments in Admiralty and Maritime Law at the National Level and in the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits,
32 Tul. Mar. L.J. 493, 500 (2008) (explaining the codification issues). COGSA was not repealed by the recodification.
See, e.g., Ambraco, Inc. v. Bossclip B.V.,
. On March 8, 2007, Biehl & Co., agents for NSCSA, (Docket Entry No. 65, at 8), issued a "steamship release” to Shippers Stevedoring. Derlin Marsh, a Shippers Stevedoring employee, testified that the owner of cargo cannot take cargo out of port until a steamship release is issued. (Id., Ex. 8, Derlin Marsh Depo. at 188-89).
. An amended complaint asserted claims against Alomex, Vision Logistics, and Time Marine. (Docket Entry No. 19). These parties have since been dismissed from the lawsuit.
. Exhibit 2 is an email from NSCSA discussing the terms of its bill of lading. Exhibit 8 is a two-page printout entitled "ShipperConnect Port Terminal Railroad Association.”
. Shippers Stevedoring also acknowledges that Alomex paid it to place the transformer onto the railcar. (Docket Entry No. 74, at 4).
. Shippers Stevedoring also argues that Crompton Greaves's position is inconsistent with its bailment argument. Because Crompton Greaves’s motion for liability based on bailment is denied without deciding whether a bailment existed, it is not necessary to reach this argument.
.Because this court finds that Crompton Greaves has demonstrated a fact issue as to whether Shippers Stevedoring’s negligence damaged to transformer on March 7, 2007, it does not consider whether Shippers Stevedoring’s negligence also damaged the transformer on other dates.
. In response to Crompton Greaves’s motion for summary judgment on liability, Shippers Stevedoring argues that there was no implied contract for bailment of the transformer because delivery of the transformer was incomplete until it was released by NSCSA and customs. To the extent Shippers Stevedoring argues that its delivery argument responds to Crompton Greaves's negligence claim, the argument does not provide a basis to Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for summary judgment. Shippers Stevedoring admitted that it had custody of the transformer on March 7, 2007. It may be liable for its negligence even if it did not have an implied contract for bailment of the transformer.
. Shippers Stevedoring also cites
Hammerly Oaks, Inc. v. Edwards,
. Chakravarty is Crompton Greaves’s corporate representative. His testimony does not bind Crompton Greaves, but does provide evidence either party may use. A Rule 30(b)(6) deposition is admissible against the party designating the representative but is not "binding” on the entity for which the witness testifies in the sense of preclusion or judicial admission. Charles A. Wright
bt al„
Federal Practice & Procedure § 2103 (2d ed. 1994). Rule 30(b)(6) does not bind an entity to its designee’s recollection unless it shows that contrary information was not known or unavailable. Testimony given in a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition is evidence, which, like other deposition testimony, can be contradicted and used for impeachment purposes.
See A.I. Credit Corp. v. Legion Ins. Co.,
. Because there are fact issues as to the breach of contract claim, Shippers Stevedoring’s motion for summary judgment on attorneys' fees is also denied.
. The relevant record evidence appears to indicate that Crompton Greaves decided to incur additional repair costs based on the fair market value of the transformer when it made the decision, and not based on the fair market value at the time of damage. Feloni, testified that at the time Crompton Greaves elected to rebuild the transformer, it would have cost between $1,800,000.00 and $2,200,000.00 and taken over fourteen months to rebuild the transformer from Crompton Greaves's plant in Bhopal. (Docket Entry No. 87, Ex. 7, Edmund Feloni Depo. at 145-46, 148). To the extent Crompton Greaves knowingly incurred repair costs in excess of the transformer’s fair market value, Toledo does not provide a basis to recover those damages.
. Although an action must be prosecuted by the real party in interest, "[t]he court may not dismiss an action for failure to prosecute in the name of the real party in interest until, after an objection, a reasonable time has been allowed for the real party in interest to ratify,
*398
join, or be substituted into the action.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(a)(3). “This provision requires the defendant to object in time to allow the opportunity for joinder of the ostensible real party in interest, and the defense may waived if the defendant does not timely object.”
In re
Signal,
. Union Pacific also alleges that the fourth shock was a "separate event,” but does not explain further why this entitles it to summary judgment. Its motion is denied as to this basis.
. The law states:
a carrier providing transportation or service ... may, subject to the provisions of this chapter ... establish rates for the transportation of property ... under which the liability of the carrier for such property is limited to a value established by written or electronic declaration of the shipper or by written agreement between the carrier and shipper if that value would be reasonable under the circumstances surrounding the transportation.
49 U.S.C. § 14706(c)(1)(A).
. Because the record and briefing is limited as to this issue, Union Pacific's motion for summary judgment that Shippers Stevedoring does not have standing to assert claims for indemnification and contribution is denied *401 without prejudice to reurging if appropriate at a later stage in this case.
. “The procedure authorized by Rule 42(b) should be distinguished from severance under *402 Rule 21. The difference between the two is stated easily. Separate trials of claims originally sued upon together will result in the entry of one judgment, but severed claims become entirely independent actions to be tried, and judgment entered thereon, independently.” 9A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc. (3d ed.) § 2387 (2010). Crompton Greaves labels its motion as one for severance, but it only argues for separate trials under Rule 42(b). This court considered Crompton Greaves’s motion under the Rule 42(b) standard.
. In diversity suits, federal courts apply federal evidence rules rather than state spoliation law.
Condrey v. SunTrust Bank of Ga.,
. Shippers Stevedoring points out that Captain Rego testified that he inspected a transformer manufactured by Siemens aboard the Industrial Destiny. Shippers Stevedoring argues that this transformer could not be the transformer in the photograph because the Siemens transformer was encased in a wooden frame. Captain Rego testified that the Siemens transformer was one of several transformers he surveyed on that date. He also testified that pictures can be mixed up. Even if the picture was not of the Siemens transformer, a fact issue exists.
