Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge ERVIN wrote the opinion, in which Judge HALL and Judge BLAKE joined.
OPINION
Appellant McCall-Thomas Engineering Co., Inc.-, engaged appellee Federal Express Corporation to deliver a shipment C.O.D. and instructed the carrier to collect a cashier’s cheek. The cashier’s check Federаl Express returned to McCall-Thomas turned out to be fraudulent. In McCall-Thomas’s suit to recover the amount of the bogus check, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Federal Express on the ground that Federal Express fully performed under the. terms of the contract. Finding no error in the decision below, we affirm.
I.
McCаll-Thomas is a South Carolina company that sells computers and computer equipment. In February, 1993, it accepted an order for twenty computеrs from Medicomp Medical Supplies, which was in fact a sham operation. McCall-Thomas contracted with Federal Express to ship the computers C.O.D. to Medicomp. By way of Federal Express’s standard C.O.D. Airbill, a pre-printed form, McCall-Thomas instructed Federal Express to collect a cashier’s check in the amount of $84,464.55. The Airbill directed delivery to Ron Stevens, Medicomp Medical Supplies, 1250 Long Beach Blvd., Los Angeles, CA, 90021.
The face of the Airbill speсifically incorporated the terms printed on the back of the form, as well as the terms of a separate publication: “Use of this airbill constitutes yоur agreement to the service conditions in our current Service Guide available upon request. SEE BACK OF SENDER’S COPY OF THIS AIRBILL FOR INFORMATION.” The back of the Airbill included the following terms:
AGREEMENT TO TERMS
By giving us your package to deliver, you agree to all the terms on this Airbill and in our current Service Guide, which is available on request. If there is a conflict between' the currеnt Service Guide and this Airbill, the Service Guide will control.
*30 No one is authorized to alter or modify the terms of our Agreement.
C.O.D. SERVICE/C.O.D. AMOUNT
C.O.D.- Service consists of our carriage of goods to your recipient, collection of a check or money order issued by or on behalf of your recipient made payable tо you, and return delivery of the cheek or money order to you..... All checks and money orders are collected at your risk, including risk of non-payment and forgery....
The Service Guide contained a similar provision relating to the C.O.D. Service, and further provided that “Performance of the C.O.D. Service will not constitute us as the shipper’s agent for any purpose, including, but not limited to, completion of the sale of the goods by the shipper to the recipient.”
On Saturday, February 6, and again on Monday, February 8, Federal Express unsuccessfully attempted to deliver the computers. The budding located at 1250 Long Beach Blvd. was аn office complex surrounded by a locked gate; entry was to be obtained by calling a specific suite number. The Airbill did not list a suite number, and the office сomplex directory included no listing for Medicomp or Ron Stevens. Someone apparently called Federal Express looking for the computers later that day, so Federal Express again tried to deliver. The carrier, Marc Wilson, met someone outside the office complex’s locked gate; this person identified himself as T. Johnson and said he was expecting the shipment. He presented a cashier’s check in the amount of $85,000, drawn on Pacific Overseas Bank, Port Vila, Vanuatu (in the Fiji Islands). After attempting to cash the cheek, McCall-Thomas learned that the check was bogus and the bank nonexistеnt.
Federal Express denied McCall-Thomas’s claim for reimbursement based on the waiver printed on the Airbill. McCall-Thomas filed suit in the Court of Common Pleas of Orangеburg County, South Carolina, on March 11, 1993. Federal Express removed to the district court based on federal question jurisdiction * and on March 29, 1995, the district court granted summаry judgment in favor of Federal Express. The court concluded that “Federal Express fully complied with its contractual obligations by collecting a cashiеr’s check in an amount sufficient to cover the specified C.O.D. Amount.” McCall-Thomas timely filed its notice of appeal.
II.
Summary judgments are reviewed
de novo
on appeal.
Higgins v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
Both parties agrеe that forms such as Federal Express’s Airbill may constitute the contract between the shipper and the carrier.
See Southern Pac. Transp. Co. v. Commercial Metals Co.,
■ Federal Express’s only duty under this contract was to collect a facially valid cashier’s check.
See, e.g., National Diamond
*31
Syndicate, Inc. v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
McCall-Thomas assumed all risk of fraud in connection with Federal Express’s C.O.D. service. The Restatement of Agency’s rule that “[ujnless otherwise agreed, an аgent employed to collect ... has a duty of using reasonable care and skill,”
Restatement 2d of Agency
§ 426 (1957), does not apply because Federal Express expressly deсlined to act as McCall-Thomas’s agent for the purpose of this C.O.D. delivery.
See Littleton Stamp & Coin Co. v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
Federal Express’s unambiguous contractual provisions are to be given effect. Here, as in the usuаl case, the shipper was in a far better position to verify the honesty and creditworthiness of its customers; if questions had arisen, the shipper could havе insisted on advance or cash payment. Federal Express was contractually obligated to collect a facially valid and authorized form of payment, but not to take independent steps to verify the instrument. Federal Express performed its end of the bargain, and is not liable for losses that McCall-Thomas sustained because of the Medicomp fraud.
III.
Because Federal Express fully performed under the terms of its C.O.D. contract with McCall-Thomas, we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Federal Express.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Claims involving shipments . in interstate commerce by air carriers are governed by federal law.
See Arkwright-Boston Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Great W. Airlines, Inc.,
