E.W. Wylie Corporation (Wylie) appeals from a judgment denying it collection of unpaid freight charges from Menard, Inc. (Me-nard). Because contract law governs, we affirm.
Menard, located at Eau Claire, WI, is a retailer of building materials and home improvement products. Menard contracted with IKA Lumber Specialties Inc. (IKA) of Lackawanna, NY, for the purchase of lumber. The purchase orders dated January 11, 1993, called for delivery “F.O.B. Eau Claire” with “freight prepaid.” The contract thus required IKA to pay the freight charges for transporting the shipments to Menard’s Eau Claire facility. IKA then negotiated a contract with Wylie, an interstate motor carrier based in Fargo, to transport the lumber from Lackawanna to Eau Claire for $900 per load. IKA told Wylie to 'bill IKA for the freight charges.
During February and March 1993, Wylie carried seven shipments of lumber from IKA in Lackawanna to Menard in Eau Claire. Upon delivery, each bill of lading was signed by a Menard employee. The bills of lading did not indicate the amount of the freight charges or who was liable for them.
Menard paid IKA for each lumber shipment after the shipment was received. These payments included compensation for the freight charges. After each delivery, Wylie billed IKA for the freight charges, but received no payments. In May 1993, IKA informed Wylie that it was ceasing operations immediately and that there were few assets available to pay its unsecured debts. Wylie then demanded payment of the freight charges from Menard, who refused to pay.
Wylie sued Menard for $6,300 in unpaid freight charges for the seven shipments of lumber between Lackawanna and Eau Claire. Following a trial without a jury, the court concluded, because no contract existed between Wylie and Menard, Menard was not hable to Wylie for IKA’s unpaid freight bills.
In this appeal from that judgment, Wylie asserts that the trial court erred in refusing to hold Menard, as consignee, hable because, under both the common law and the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. §§ 10101 et seq., consignors and consignees are jointly and severahy hable to an interstate freight carrier for unpaid shipping charges, regardless of contract law. We reject Wylie’s argument that contract law does not apply to this case.
I
The Interstate Commerce Act declares, “[ejxcept as otherwise provided in this subtitle, the remedies provided under this subtitle are in addition to remedies existing under another law or at common law.” 49 U.S.C. § 10103. Wyhe’s claim that a consignor and consignee of shipped goods are always jointly and severally hable for a carrier’s freight charges overstates the common law.
The eases relied on by Wylie to support its argument stem from these three early Supreme Court cases,
Fink, York & Whitney,
and
Central Iron.
But the Supreme Court’s statements of the general common law rule in those cases must be considered in context. In
Fink,
the carrier undercharged the consignee at the time of delivery of a shipment of goods and later sued him for the unpaid balance of the lawful tariff rate. Although the consignor and consignee had apparently not agreed on who should pay the freight charges, the consignee paid the incorrect freight bill when presented to him. The Court held that the consignee was liable for the full sum fixed by the filed tariff, even though the carrier mistakenly charged the consignee a lower, illegal rate, and that the consignee could not invoke estoppel principles to defeat collection of the legal rate because to do so would thwart the major purpose of the Interstate Commerce Act— the prevention of unjust rate discrimination. Likewise, in
York & Whitney,
the consignee, who had accepted delivery and paid the carrier less than required under the carrier’s filed tariff, was found hable for the undercharge. Relying on
Fink,
the Court rejected the consignee’s argument that it could “escape the liability imposed by law through any contract with the carrier.”
York & Whitney,
Fink
and
York & Whitney
better illustrate the “filed rate doctrine” than any common law. rule. Simply put, the filed rate doctrine, deeply lodged in the complex history and turgid language of the Interstate Commerce Act, dictates that the rate a common carrier duly files with the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) is the only lawful rate it can charge for its services, and that deviation from the filed rate is not permitted under any pretext.
See Security Services, Inc. v. K Mart Corp.,
— U.S.-, -,
This distinction is emphasized in
Central Iron,
where the Court examined contractual terms in the bills of lading to determine whether the consignor was hable for the uncollected balance of the legally required tariff. The bills of lading expressly placed primary responsibility for payment of freight charges on the consignee. The Court explained that, although a consignor ordinarily had the primary obligation to pay freight charges if the tariff did not say when or by whom the payment should be made, “[a]s to
We agree with those courts that have concluded that, because liability for payment of freight charges is largely a matter of contract, any common law presumption about responsibility for freight costs may be rebutted by evidence that the parties intended something else.
See In re Roll Form Products, Inc.,
II
Wylie argues that an independent basis for Menard’s liability is given in 49 U.S.C. § 10744 (part):
Liability for payment of rates
(a)(1) Liability for payment of rates for transportation for a shipment of property by a shipper or consignor to a consignee other than the shipper or consignor, is determined under this subsection when the transportation is provided by a rail, motor, or water common carrier under this subtitle. When the shipper or consignor instructs the carrier transporting the property to deliver it to a consignee that is an agent only, not having beneficial title to the property, the consignee is liable for rates billed at the time of delivery for which the consignee is otherwise liable, but not for additional rates that may be found to be due after delivery if the consignee gives written notice to the delivering carrier before delivery of the property—
(A) of the agency and absence of beneficial title; and
(B) of the name and address of the beneficial owner of the property if it is reconsigned or diverted to a place other than the place specified in the original bill of lading.
(2) When the consignee is liable only for rates billed at the time of delivery under paragraph (1) of this subsection, the shipper or consignor, or, if the property is reeonsigned or diverted, the beneficial owner, is liable for those additional rates regardless of the bill of the lading or contract under which the property was transported. The beneficial owner is liable for all rates when the property is reconsigned or diverted by an agent but is refused or abandoned at its ultimate destination if the agent gave the carrier in the reconsignment or diversion order a notice of agency and the name and address of the beneficial owner. A consignee giving the carrier, and a reconsignor or diverter giving a rail carrier, erroneous information about the identity of the beneficial owner of the property is liable for the additional rates.
Judicial interpretations of § 10744 and its antecedents have not been uniform.
Some courts have strictly construed § 10744 and its antecedents, as well as other related parts of the Interstate Commerce
A carrier has under the law two sources from which to seek payment of shipping charges. The first source is the consignor, the one who shipped the goods and who is generally primarily liable, and the second is the one who received the goods, called the consignee. They both, as a matter of law, are liable for the shipping charges....
Another line of cases has refused to accept the interpretation that the Interstate Commerce Act guarantees payment to a carrier under all circumstances. These courts conclude that the policy underlying § 10744, and the Interstate Commerce Act in general, is simply to prevent unjust rate discrimination against shippers. These eases have fashioned a limited exception to the consignee’s liability through estoppel, and thus hold that, when a carrier falsely represents to a consignee upon delivery that the freight charge has been prepaid by the consignor, and when the consignee, in reliance on this representation, pays the consignor for the freight charge, the carrier is estopped from later collecting the unpaid freight charge from the consignee.
Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Campbell Soup Co.,
Section 223 (the predecessor statute to § 10744) was not intended to fasten a rigid liability upon a consignee. Congress left the initial determination of a party’s liability for freight charges to express contractual agreement or implication of law.... So long as payment of the full tariff charges may be demanded from some party, the anti-discrimination policy of the Section is satisfied. Congress did not undertake to settle all issues of collection with the enactment of Section 223. Nor did Congress intend to fashion a sword to insure collection in every instance and a shield to insulate the carrier from the legal consequences of otherwise negligent or inequitable conduct.
Yet another line of cases has gone further than the double-payment cases and simply held that a consignor and common carrier may agree that the consignor will be exclusively hable for the payment of freight charges, thus relieving the consignee of any liability.
In re Roll Form Products, Inc.,
Ill
The two principal forms of transportation in the interstate trucking industry are motor common carriage and motor contract carriage.
See Global Van Lines, Inc. v. I.C.C.,
After the Supreme Court expansively interpreted the definition of motor contract carrier in
United States v. Contract Steel Carriers, Inc.,
That definition of contract carriage remained virtually unchanged until passage of the Motor Carrier Act of 1980, Pub.L. 96-296, 94 Stat. 793, that “substantially deregulated the motor carrier industry in many ways in an effort to ‘promote competitive and efficient transportation services.’ Pub.L. 96-296, § 4.”
Maislin Industries,
Specifically, the 1980 Act made contract carriage more attractive to motor carriers by (1) removing the prohibition against dual operations (thereby allowing the same carrier to operate as both a contract and a common carrier), (2) removing the limit on the number of shippers a contract carrier could serve, (3) removing restrictions on the nature of shippers, commodities shipped, and permissible geographic scope of contract carrier permits, (4) allowing contract carriers to serve freight forwarders, and (5) allowing contract carriers to utilize trailer-on-flatcar service. Many of these provisions ratified prior decisions of the Commission.
Since the 1980 Act, a motor carrier has been able to act either as a “motor common carrier,” defined in 49 U.S.C. § 10102(14) as “a person holding itself out to the general public to provide motor vehicle transportation for compensation over regular or irregular routes, or both,” or as a “motor contract carrier,” defined in 49 U.S.C. § 10102(15)(B) as “a person providing motor vehicle trans
In effect, the 1983 deregulation has decreased the importance of rate discrimination, and has encouraged rate competition through contract carriage. Even more deregulation ensued.
The ICC had defined “continuing agreements” for contract carrier status in 49 C.F.R. § 1053.1:
No contract carrier by motor vehicle, as defined in 49 U.S.C. 10102(15) shall transport property for hire in interstate or foreign commerce except under special and individual contracts or agreements which
shall be in writing, shall provide for transportation for a particular shipper or shippers, shall be bilateral and impose specific obligations upon both carrier and shipper or shippers, shall cover a series of shipments during a stated period of time in contrast to contracts of carriage governing individual shipments, and copies of which contracts or agreements shall be preserved by the carriers parties thereto so long as such contracts or agreements are in force and for at least one year thereafter.
However, effective June 20, 1992, the ICC repealed regulation 1053.1, thus eliminating the requirement that contracts be in writing and the other technicalities to be met for contract carriage.
See
ICC Ex Parte No. MC-198,
Contracts for Transportation of Property, 8
I.C.C.2d 520 (1992),
appeal dismissed sub nom. Central States Motor Freight Bureau, Inc. v. United States,
No. 92-1258,
the circumstances surrounding the particular transportation service to determine whether the shipment or shipments at issue moved under a continuing agreement, and whether the transportation involved the use of dedicated equipment or a service tailored to meet the distinct needs of the shipper. But it is the totality of the circumstances surrounding any particular movement, not the presence or absence of a written contract, that determines whether the transportation is contract carriage.
Contracts for Transportation of Property, 8 I.C.C.2d at 529. This additional deregulation development affects this case.
The elimination of the technical requirements of 49 C.F.R. § 1053.1 was relatively short-lived, however. Effective December 3, 1993, the regulatory requirements were reinstated and codified by the Negotiated Rates
Because the shipping contract between IKA and Wylie was entered into, and the shipments were made, during early 1993, the deregulated environment between June 20, 1992 and December 3, 1993, controls this ease. We must therefore apply the totality-of-the-circumstances test, rather than any reinstated regulatory requirements, to determine whether. Wylie acted as a motor contract carrier in its relationship with IKA.
See F.P. Corp. v. Golden West Foods, Inc.,
IV
Contract carriage is transportation provided under a continuing agreement by either assigning motor vehicles for the exclusive use of a shipper or by providing services designed to meet that shipper’s distinct needs. 49 U.S.C. § 10102(15)(B). “Distinct needs,” as interpreted by the courts, is “ ‘a need for a different or a more select or a more specialized service than common carriage provides.’ ”
Transrisk Corp. v. Matsushita Elec. Corp.,
In this case, Wylie apparently has authority to operate as both a common carrier and a contract carrier. Wylie’s director of finance testified that its filed tariff rate was approximately nine cents per mile more expensive than its negotiated contract rate with IKA, a contract rate that did “not have to be published with the ICC.” Wylie sent a written “standard contract” signed by Wylie representatives to IKA covering the shipments, but IKA did not return it and Wylie had no record of it. The trial court found that Wylie and IKA had entered into an agreement to transport the lumber to Menard at a rate of $900 per load. According to Wylie’s director of finance, part of the terms of the agreement was that IKA would pay the freight charges within 30 days of shipment. Wylie hauled seven loads of lumber on its trucks for IKA to Menard during a two-month period under this agreement.
Under the relaxed regulatory standards of the ICC at the time, and given Wylie’s concession that its charges were based on a negotiated rate, not a filed rate, we conclude in this case that the relationship between Wylie and IKA was contract carriage. The evidence reflects “that equipment was dedicated and that distinct needs were being met on a committed basis over a continuing period. And that is enough.”
Brizendine v. Reliable Corp.,
Because Wylie operated as a motor contract carrier rather than a motor common carrier during its relationship with IKA,
see Fikse,
We also conclude that the common law presumption of secondary liability of a consignee, who accepts delivery, for unpaid freight charges has been rebutted in this case. Three cases are particularly helpful in resolving this question.
In
Schneider Nat’l Carriers,
The court, holding that the common law presumption can be altered by contract, first determined that the agreement between the consignor and consignee, making the consignor responsible for the freight charges, did not constitute an “agreement on [the consignees’] part to incur liability to [the carrier].” Id. at 273. In response to the carrier’s argument that the agreement between the consignor and consignees could not limit its common law rights because it was not a party to the agreement, the court said that the omission of liability terms from the bills of lading “suggested] that these bills were not intended to function as contracts of carriage, and that therefore they were not intended to convey liability for payment of freight charges.” Id. at 274. Instead, the court said, the bills simply “told [the consignees] what they thought they already knew ...: that payment of [the carrier’s] freight charges was a matter of contract between [the carrier] and [the consignor], and that it therefore did not concern them.” Id. The court, id. at 275, concluded
as a matter of law that the bills expressed an intention on the part of [the carrier] and the other parties that [the carrier] would look exclusively to [the consignor] for payment of freight charges. The common-law presumption of consignee liability has therefore been rebutted, if indeed it ever arose.
In
Chateaugay Corp.,
In
Fikse & Co. v. United States,
The court rejected the carrier’s argument that the consignee’s acceptance of the bill of lading created an implied-in-fact contract between the carrier and consignee. Apparently, the bills of lading contained only rate and payment terms and were not marked “prepaid.” Noting that the bill of lading has traditionally been viewed as a transportation contract between the carrier and the shipper-consignor, and not with the consignee, the court said “[t]he fact that the consignee must take notice of rate and payment terms for the delivery does not mean that a contractual obligation springs up in the consignee to pay shipping charges in the absence of an agreement by it to do so.” Id. at 203. The court also rejected the argument that the consignee could not extricate itself from the common law consignee liability rule because the bills of lading were not marked “prepaid.” After reviewing the case law, the court concluded that “liability allocation presumptions are unnecessary in the face of other provisions for payment. In the present case there was another provision for payment of shipping charges, the contract between [the consignor] and [the carrier].” Id. The court granted the consignee’s motion for summary judgment, ruling that “no implication of an agreement to pay could arise by acceptance in view of the express provisions obligating [the consignor] to pay shipping charges.” Id.
Although the consignee-defendant in Fikse was the United States, which “enjoys a unique status as the sovereign,” id. at 202, the court’s analysis conforms with the analy-ses of the courts in Schneider Nat’l Carriers and Chateaugay Corp. Given Wylie’s status as a contract carrier in its business relationship with IKA, and the ICC’s relaxation of its regulation of contract carriage during this period of time, we believe that the Schneider Nat’l Carriers, Chateaugay Corp., and Fikse precedents approving contractual allocation of liability for freight charges frame the proper analysis for this case.
Here, the trial court found that Me-nard’s contract with IKA required IKA to pay Wylie’s freight charges at its agreed rate of $900 per load. The trial court further found that Menard did not contract to pay Wylie for its services in transporting the lumber, and that Menard’s payments to IKA included “imputed freight charges.” Under NDRCivP 52(a), these findings are clearly correct.
We believe the circumstances of this case evidence an arrangement establishing IKA’s exclusive liability for freight charges. Although Wylie was not a party to Menard’s agreement with IKA, IKA directed Wylie to bill it for transportation costs in a manner that conformed to the agreement between IKA and Menard. During their entire business relationship, Wylie looked solely to IKA for payment and billed it for freight charges after each delivery.
See Chateaugay Corp.,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment denying Wylie’s complaint.
