The common law has long recognized a rebuttable presumption that an item properly mailed was received by the addressee.
Nunley v. City of Los Angeles,
This case is on appeal from the district court’s order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Thus, we will review the grant of summary judgment de novo applying the same legal standard applied by the district court in the first instance.
Cox v. Administrator U.S. Steel & Carnegie,
In March of 1990, appellants Harry and Kalianthe Konst (“the Konsts”) contracted for the shipment of their furniture by rail from Tucson, Arizona, to Jupiter, Florida. Mr. Konst signed a bill of lading which constituted the contract of carriage. Section 2(b) of the bill of lading required that any claim for damages be filed with either the delivering or receiving rail carrier within nine months after delivery of the shipment to its destination. 2
The Konsts received their belongings on March 21,1990, after having sustained heavy water damage in transit. Under the bill of lading, the Konsts had until December 21, 1990 (nine months) to file their claim with one of the rail carriers. In this case, the “receiving” rail carrier was Southern Pacific Transportation Company (“SP”) and the “delivering” rail carrier was Florida East Coast Railway Company (“FEC”). Both are defendants-appellees. Both SP and FEC deny receiving a timely claim. 3 The Konsts argue that their claim should be deemed filed because they mailed a claim 4 on September 10, 1990, well within the nine month period, to SP at an address in San Francisco, California.
In their Memorandum in Opposition to Summary Judgment and in another document filed with the court entitled “Concise Statement of Material Facts Which Create an Issue,” the Konsts asserted that the September 10, 1990, letter along with an attached loss and damage claim form were filed with SP. 5 Both pleadings were signed by Mr. Konst himself because the Konsts were proceeding pro se at the time. The defendants filed the affidavit of Byron MacDonald, an employee working in SP’s Denver Claims Department. The affidavit stated that it was MacDonald’s responsibility to “acquire each and every document involved in the carriage of a shipment which pertains to a freight claim case,” that he searched his files, that he did not find the Konst’s September 10 form, and that the company never received that form.
The defendants moved for summary judgment on the grounds that no claim form had been timely filed. The magistrate judge entered an order denying the defendants’ sum
On appeal, the appellees do not contend that the Konsts did not set forth facts sufficient to raise the presumption. Rather, the appellees argue that the presumption is not applicable in the instant context — i.e., where the “applicable federal regulation requires that claims be filed with the carrier.” The appellees argue that delivery can never be sufficient to constitute filing. We are not persuaded by this argument.
The federal regulations governing the minimum requirements for making a damages claim against a common carrier describe the process as “filing” a claim.
6
However, the same regulations indicate that
it is the receipt
of the claim by the carrier, not the physical filing of the claim, which triggers the carriers’ responsibilities to the claimant. The regulations establish the following: (1) the duty to acknowledge the receipt in writing or electronically within 30 days after the date of its receipt, 49 C.F.R. § 1005.3(a); (2) the duty to create a separate file, 49 C.F.R. § 1005.3(b); (3) the duty to cause the date of receipt to be recorded on the face of the claim; (4) the duty to “cause the claim file number to be noted on the shipping order,” 49 C.F.R. § 1005.3(b)
7
; (5) the duty promptly to investigate the claim if such has not been done prior to receipt of the claim, 49 C.F.R. § 1005.4(a); (6) the duty to “pay, decline or make a firm compromise settlement offer in writing or electronically to the claimant within 120 days after receipt of the claim,” 49 C.F.R. § 1005.5(a); and (7) the duty to record the amount of money and other details relevant to shipments which were salvaged, 49 C.F.R. § 1005.6(c). Because receipt triggers all of the carriers’ duties toward the claimant under the federal regulations, we construe the word “filing” in the bill of lading to mean receipt. This construction is consistent with
Pathway Bellows, Inc. v. Blanchette,
Having determined that the governing regulations contemplate receipt as the trigger for processing a claim, we see no reason that the presumption of receipt should not apply in this case.
9
It is simply a traditional means of weighing evidence in order to determine whether receipt occurred. The presumption is applied in many different contexts.
See Nunley v. City of Los Angeles,
Some courts have not applied the rebutta-ble presumption of receipt in cases involving filing requirements. However, the cases doing so are distinguishable from the case at bar. In some cases, courts have construed filing to mean more than mere receipt, and, thus, have refused to apply the presumption as evidence of filing. For example, in
Premiere Wine Merchants, Inc. v. Western Carriers, Inc.,
No. 89 Civ. 0270,
These eases can be distinguished on their facts, i.e., either that more than mere receipt was required or that a special need for speedy handling was involved.
10
These cases can also be distinguished because they all involve the filing of documents with courts or
Finding no reason that the usual presumption of receipt should not apply in this case, we hold that it does apply. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The presumption so arising is not a conclusive presumption of law, but a mere inference of fact, founded on the probability that the officers of the government will do their duty and the usual course of business; and, when it is opposed by evidence that the letters never were received, must be weighed with all the other circumstances of the case, by the jury in determining whether the letters were actually received or not.
Rosenthal
v.
Walker,
.Section 2(b) of the bill of lading, a Domestic Uniform Bill of Lading (according to the defendants), reads as follows:
As a condition precedent to recovery, claims must be filed in writing with the receiving or delivering carrier, or carrier issuing this bill of lading, or carrier on whose line the loss, damage, injury or delay occurred, 'within nine months after delivery of the property....
This is a standard bill of lading and conforms to the Carmack Amendment which requires, in relevant part, that "a carrier or freight forwarder may not provide by rule, contract, or otherwise, a period of less than 9 months for filing a claim against it....” 49 U.S.C. § 11707(e).
. On January 2, 1991, FEC and SP received a claim from the Konsts dated December 17, 1990. The Konsts do not contend that this claim, which was apparently not received until 12 days after the nine month deadline, was timely filed.
. On appeal, the defendant-appellees do not contend that the September claim for damages was inadequate.
. The September letter is addressed to “Southern Pacific Transportation Co., Attention: Freight Claims Dept., One Market Plaza, San Francisco, California, 94105.” The claims form bears the same address. The appellees do not contend on appeal that the address was erroneous.
. 49 C.F.R. § 1005.2, entitled "Filing of Claims," uses that term several times.
. Although this portion of the subsection does not contain the phrase, "at the time such claim is received,” such a requirement can be inferred from the structure of the subsection as a whole.
. At the initial stages of this litigation, the defendants contended that Pathway Bellows supported their proposition because it held that the date of mailing was not the date of filing. However, the issue here is not whether mailing itself is tantamount to filing for the purposes of determining the date a claim is filed. Rather, the issue is whether a claimant can invoke the presumption of receipt when filing is required.
.In doing so we expressly decline to follow the guidance of the cases cited by the appellees—
Elroy Enterprises, Inc. v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
. To the extent that
Elroy Enterprises, Inc. v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
. However, it should be noted that the presumption of receipt has been applied in many situations in which a governmental entity is the intended recipient of the document in question.
See, e.g., Anderson v. United States,
