Anodizing, Inc. v. OK Delivery System, Inc.

613 P.2d 41, 46 Or. App. 415, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2849
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 2, 1980
DocketA7809-14503, CA 15591
StatusPublished

This text of 613 P.2d 41 (Anodizing, Inc. v. OK Delivery System, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Anodizing, Inc. v. OK Delivery System, Inc., 613 P.2d 41, 46 Or. App. 415, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2849 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

THORNTON, J.

This appeal involves a dispute as to which of two tariffs (and the classification therein), the local tariff or the national tariff, applies to the shipment of a quantity of aluminum products by common motor carrier.

Plaintiff, a manufacturer and shipper, brought an action in the Circuit Court of Multnomah County against defendant, a motor carrier operating in the city of Portland and elsewhere in Oregon, to recover some $10,930 in claimed motor common carrier overcharges. The goods shipped by plaintiff are called aluminum extrusions and are a product which results from an ingot of molten alvuninum being forced over and through a die which forms the aluminum into a definite shape. These shapes are then cut into various smaller shapes and lengths before sale and shipment.

Defendant carrier appeals from a money judgment in the above amount in favor of plaintiff, assigning as error the finding that the items in question were properly classified as aluirdmun lineal shapes NOI and in concluding that the applicable rating thereon was in the national classification, rather than the local tariff filed with and approved by the Oregon Public Utility Commissioner.

The essential facts may be summarized as follows: Between September, 1972, and October, 1977, defendant OK Delivery System, Inc., a common carrier, transported locally in Oregon various shipments of aluminum articles for plaintiff manufacturer, Anodizing, Inc.

The shipments consisted of bundles of extruded aluminum items of various lengths. In its shipping documents tendered to defendant, plaintiff variously described the articles as "bundles of ahiminum extrusions,” "bundles of aluminum extrusion windows,” [418]*418"aluminum extrusion door frames” and "aluminum lineal shapes.” The record provides no basis for determining the frequency with which plaintiff used any particular description.

Defendant rated the shipments at 85 under Item 1020 of Oregon Draymen and Warehousemen’s Tariff No. 3-D, pertinent parts of which provide:

EXCEPTIONS TO GOVERNING CLASSIFICATION
LTL
Item No. Article Rating
1020 Aluminum, Viz.:
Angles, Loose (only if weighing 25 lbs. each or over) or in packages. 70
Bars, loose (only if weighing 15 lbs. each or over) or in packages. 70
Blanks, stampings, or unfinished shapes NOI, nested or flat, or Extrusions, NOI.:
Loose 150
In Packages 85
Plate or Sheet 70
Rods, in packages 70

The trial judge concluded that "[b]y its forming process the plaintiff’s product is an aluminum extrusion. However, it is not an Extrusion NOI ['not otherwise indexed more specifically by name in the classification’], as defined in Item 1020 of the Oregon Draymen & Warehousmen’s Association City Cartage Tariff because the National Motor Freight Classification A-13 tariff, which is also binding upon the defendant does, in fact, otherwise index the product as a 'lineal shape.’”1

[419]*419The trial judge accordingly found that plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for the amount of excess charges alleged in the complaint.

For reasons which follow, we conclude that the trial court erred in applying the national tariff rather than the local tariff.

An examination of the decisions in this highly technical and complex field of the law indicates the following:

The National Motor Freight Classification is a large national publication establishing ratings for thousands of articles moving in commerce via motor carrier throughout the nation generally. It functions as a national price list of motor common carrier services. Most motor common carriers, in publishing rate tariffs, adopt the national classification by reference as a general standard for rating items placed with them for transport. Rating the items is the first step preliminary to calculation of applicable rates and charges.

In addition, most motor carriers also publish, as part of rate tariffs applying locally within their own service areas, various exceptions to the national classification rating to accommodate local transportation conditions. The Oregon Draymen 9 warehousmen’s Cartage Tariff referred to earlier is such an exception. Local exceptions ratings published in the local tariff of a motor common carrier take precedence over and displace a rating appearing in the National Motor Freight Classification. Such local ratings continue to [420]*420enjoy precedence over national rating so long as they remain in the local tariff.

The applicable rule was stated in Vegetable Oil Shortening-Ivory-Dale-Chicago, 49 MCC 715, 718 (1949), as follows:

"It is elementary that generally, on the same articles and between the same points, rates derived from classification exceptions ratings supersedes (sic) rates derived from classification ratings, and that rates contained in commodity-rate tariffs supersede the other two. * * *”

Again, in Descriptions, Castings and Forgings, Central Territory, 51 MCC 441, 446 (1950):

"* * * So long as an article is clearly embraced in an exceptions item, and where neither the tariff nor the governing classification indicates a contrary intention, the exceptions item takes precedence, even though the description in the classification is more specific.”

Plaintiff relies on Line Material Co. v. Hinchcliff, 43 MCC 323 (1944), for the proposition that more specific descriptions in the National Classification supersede local exception ratings. Assuming arguendo that this case actually holds that "more specific” descriptions in the National Classification supersede local ratings, it is clearly contrary to the rule expressed in Vegetable Oil Shortening-Ivorydale-Chicago, and Descriptions, Castings and Forgings, Central Territory. Both of the latter are later cases and must be deemed to have overruled Line Material v. Hinchcliff, supra on this point. Certainly the majority of the cases we have examined support the rule followed in Vegetable Oil Shortening and Descriptions, Castings and Forgings, both discussed supra. See Barrows Porcelelain Enamel Co. v. Cushman, 11 MCC 365, 369 (1939); Glen L. Martin Co. v. W. T. Cowan, Inc., 44 MCC 728 (1945); Bendix Aviation Corp. v. Tucker Frt. Lines, 47 MCC 215 (1947); Park and Tilford Distrs. v. United Frt. Lines, 46 MCC 735 (1947).

[421]*421Plaintiff also contends that where two descriptions and tariffs are equally appropriate, the shipper is entitled to have applied the one specifying the lower rates, citing United States v. Gulf Refining Co., 268 US 542, 45 S Ct 597, 69 L Ed 1082 (1925).

An examination of the above case shows that the rule stated has no application here, since it involved the internal interpretation of general-versus-specific provisions of a single tariff, rather than the rule of national classification-versus-local tariff-exceptions we are dealing with here.

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Related

United States v. Gulf Refining Co.
268 U.S. 542 (Supreme Court, 1925)
Buschke v. Dyck
251 P.2d 873 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1952)

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613 P.2d 41, 46 Or. App. 415, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anodizing-inc-v-ok-delivery-system-inc-orctapp-1980.