This is another “maritime case about a train wreck.”
Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. Kirby,
Relying on our decision in
Sompo Japan Insurance Co. of America v. Union Pacific Railroad Co. (“Sompo”),
I. BACKGROUND
Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Co., Ltd. (“Mitsui”) commenced this action as the subrogor of non-party Asmo North Carolina, Inc. (“Asmo”). Asmo imports, manufactures, and distributes motorized automotive parts. In March 2006, Asmo purchased on FOB terms a shipment of motors and other parts from an affiliate in Japan. The affiliate arranged for the cargo to be shipped from Shimizu, Japan to Asmo’s facilities in Statesville, North Carolina.
Evergreen Marine Corp. (“Evergreen”) was hired to transport the cargo. The job required ocean carriage from Japan to the Port of Los Angeles and rail carriage from the port to North Carolina. Evergreen — a vessel operating common carrier (“VOCC”) — issued an intermodal through waybill relating to the entire shipment from Japan to North Carolina (the “Waybill”).
1
The Waybill did not reference the Carmack Amendment. Instead, it contained provisions that: (1) indicated that COGSA’s terms governed the carriage, subject to certain exceptions not pertinent here; (2) authorized Evergreen to enter into subcontracts to complete the ship
Evergreen entered into a subcontract with the Union Pacific Railroad Company (“UP”), which agreed to ship the cargo by rail from the Port of Los Angeles to North Carolina under the terms of a standing contract titled the “Exempt Rail Transportation Agreement” (“ERTA”). The ERTA incorporated by reference the then-existing version of UP’s “Exempt Circular Master Intermodal Transportation Agreement” (“MITA-2A”). Like the Waybill, the MITA-2A sought to limit UP’s liability exposure in the event of damage to the cargo. It stated, inter alia, that: (1) UP’s “maximum liability for U.S. inland loss or damage shall be limited to $500.00 per package,” the same damages cap imposed by COGSA; and (2) in order to qualify for “full-value liability” coverage under the Carmack Amendment, the shipper was required to notify UP of the full value of the cargo and to prepay an increased rate.
“In practice almost all shippers decline to declare a value, because a maritime insurance company is generally willing to assume the risk of loss or damage for a cheaper price than the carrier would be.”
Royal & Sun Alliance Ins., PLC v. Ocean World Lines, Inc. (“Royal & Sun”),
Mitsui paid Asmo $385,105.70 on the insurance policy, and then brought claims against Evergreen and UP. Evergreen filed crossclaims against UP, and UP ultimately admitted liability to Mitsui and took up Evergreen’s defense. Following discovery, “[t]he only live issue in [the] case [was] the amount of damages owed.”
Mitsui Sumitomo Ins. Co.,
II. DISCUSSION
The foundation of the district court’s holding that the Carmack Amendment applies in this case was our decision in
Sompo,
The shipment in Regal-Beloit was nearly identical to the one here. The cargo owners hired “K” Line, a VOCC, to ship cargo from China to the Midwestern United States pursuant to bills of lading issued by “K” Line. Id. at 2439. 3 The bills of lading contained terms that were similar in most material respects to the terms of Evergreen’s Waybill. See id. (noting that “K” Line’s bills of lading selected COGSA as the applicable liability regime, permitted subcontracting, extended COGSA beyond the tackles, and contained a Himalaya Clause). “K” Line subcontracted with UP — a party common to Regalr-Beloit and this case — to transport the cargo over the inland United States via rail. See id. “K” Line successfully shipped the cargo from China to California and transferred it to UP, but a rail accident caused damage to the cargo while it was in UP’s possession. See id.
Answering a question it had not previously addressed,
see Sompo,
As we have noted, the Supreme Court’s application of these principles to the facts of
Regal-Beloit
was “straightforward.”
Royal & Sun,
Following
Regalr-Beloit,
decided while this appeal was
sub judice,
we invited the parties to submit supplemental briefing regarding the effect of the Supreme Court’s decision. Having reviewed the parties’ submissions, we are persuaded that the Carmack Amendment does not apply. Evergreen is not a “receiving rail carrier.” It “receive[d] the property at
In an attempt to evade the holding of
Regal-Beloit,
Mitsui presents a series of unpersuasive arguments in its supplemental brief. First, it argues that the Supreme Court reached its conclusion as to UP based on a concession at oral argument by the railroad’s counsel that UP was a “mere delivering carrier” in that case.
Regal-Beloit,
Second, Mitsui asserts that Regal-Beloit is distinguishable because, in this case, UP transported the cargo pursuant to a “separate bill of lading for the interstate rail carriage,” presumably referring to the MITA-2A and the ERTA. The Supreme Court did not describe the documents that governed UP’s carriage of the cargo at issue in Regal-Beloit. However, this is a distinction without a difference. Like “K” Line’s bills of lading in Regal-Beloit, the Waybill issued by Evergreen called for transportation between Japan and North Carolina. The Port of Los Angeles was a midpoint along that journey, not a second, separate point of origin.
The Supreme Court indicated that it “would be a quite different case if ... the bills of lading for the overseas transport
ended
at this country’s ports and the cargo owners then contracted with [UP] to complete a
neiv journey
to an inland destination in the United States.”
Third, Mitsui asserts that the Supreme Court also relied “in large part on the determination that suit could not be filed in a Carmack-compliant venue, i.e. a district court in the United States.” The observation is correct to some extent, but nevertheless unavailing. In
Regal-Beloit,
the Court reasoned that Carmack’s venue-selection provisions reinforced its conclusion.
Id.
at 2445-46. Specifically, a suit against a receiving rail carrier “that has not actually caused the damage to the
Mitsui contends that this case is different because Evergreen’s Waybill provides that “all claims arising hereunder must be brought and heard solely” in the federal or state courts of New York. But this fact does no violence to the Supreme Court’s observation that its conclusion was consistent with the Carmack Amendment’s venue provisions. Whatever the parties’ agreements may say about vénue and choice of law, Japan is the “point of origin” of the shipment at issue. There is no “judicial district,” for purposes of the Car-mack Amendment, “in which the point of origin is located.” 49 U.S.C. § 11706(d) (2) (A) (i). As such, even if we were to somehow shoehorn Evergreen or UP into the category of a receiving rail carrier, we would be left with “an awkward fit with Carmack’s venue provisions.”
Regal-Beloit,
Finally, Mitsui argues that
Regalr-Beloit
should not be applied retroactively. Although this issue was not directly addressed in
Royal & Sun,
that case was pending on direct appeal when the Supreme Court issued its decision, and we applied the holding of
Regalr-Beloit
retroactively to those parties.
See Royal & Sun,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, under Regalr-Beloit, the Carmack Amendment does not apply to the shipment at issue in this case. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court, which was entered without the benefit of the Supreme Court’s guidance, is hereby REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Notes
. A waybill typically functions in the same way as a bill of lading, except that it is nonnegotiable. See Royal & Sun Alliance Ins., PLC v. Ocean World Lines, Inc. ("Royal & Sun”), 612 F.3d 138, 142 n. 6 (2d Cir.2010).
The document serves to acknowledge that the carrier has received the goods, and it operates as a contract for the carriage. See id. at 141 nn. 3 & 5. The term ''intermodal” indicates that the waybill covered "multiple modes of transport — that is, more than one of truck, rail, sea, and air.” Id. at 141 n. 4.
. In the parlance of the maritime shipping industry, the provision of the Waybill that indicated that COGSA supplied the governing law regarding shippers’ liability is known as a “Clause Paramount.’’
See Royal & Sun,
. In
Regal-Beloit,
the Supreme Court addressed two separate disputes with similar parties. The respondents were all either cargo owners or insurance firms acting as subrogors of cargo owners.
See
. Citing
Rexroth Hydraudyne B.V. v. Ocean World Lines, Inc.,
