Banos v. Eckerd Corp.

997 F. Supp. 756, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3292, 1998 WL 113945
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 11, 1998
DocketCIV. A. 96-4089
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 997 F. Supp. 756 (Banos v. Eckerd Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banos v. Eckerd Corp., 997 F. Supp. 756, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3292, 1998 WL 113945 (E.D. La. 1998).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

LIVAUDAIS, District Judge.

Defendant RPS, Inc., has filed a motion for partial summary judgment, seeking dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint against it or, alternatively, limiting RPS’s liability to Banos to $ 100.00, and against Eekerd Corp., co-defendant in the main demand and cross-defendant, limiting its liability to Eekerd to $ 100.00. Eekerd has filed a detailed opposition memoiandum to the motion, which plaintiff has adopted.

Defendant Eekerd owns and operates a multi-state chain of drug stores. In many of the drug stores, Eekerd operates Eekerd Express Photo Labs. For certain orders, the store provided one hour photo processing on the premises, but other jobs were sent to other locations for processing. On December 13, 1995, plaintiff Victoria Banos decided to order a personalized computer screen saver for her father for Christmas through a promotion marketed by Eekerd. She placed the order with Tanya Larson, an Eekerd Photo Lab Manager, at the Eekerd Express Photo Lab in the Eekerd drug store located at 3535 Severn Avenue, Metairie, Louisiana. In connection with this order, Banos provided 28 old, original family photographs, many of which had no negatives, to be used to create the computer screen saver.

In order to create a personalized computer screen saver, the customer’s personal photographs would be processed at an Eekerd facility in Clearwater, Florida. The Eekerd photo lab used defendant RPS to ship the photographs provided by the customers who placed screen saver orders to the Clearwater location.

Eekerd had previously entered into a “Service Agreement” with RPS for the transportation of small packages. On April 28, 1994, Eekerd Express Photo Lab in Austin, Texas, entered into this Service Agreement, which governed the relationship pursuant to which shipping services were provided to many of the Eekerd Express Photo Labs, including the Severn Avenue store in Metairie. The 15-page Invoice Summary for the week ending December 15, 1994 reflects centralized billing of numerous Eekerd accounts, and the shipments made by each were all billed to the Eekerd corporate offices at 8333 Bryan Dairy Road in Largo, Florida.

Eekerd used RPS to ship not only small packages containing film, negatives, and photographs to other locations for processing in connection with the photo labs it operated in its stores, but also used RPS to ship large, heavy silver cartridges, resembling helium *759 tanks in shape, to the manufacturer for recycling or for environmentally-appropriate disposal. These cartridges are used for in-house photo processing, and on the average, one or two silver cartridges are shipped back to the manufacturer per month.

The Service Agreement entered into by shipper Eckerd and carrier RPS states the terms and conditions of the arrangement. The Service Agreement provides in pertinent part that:

1. RPS agrees to transport packages tendered by the Shipper between the ZIP code pairings listed in RPS tariff ICC RPSI 100 and to provide such transportation and related accessorial services in accordance with RPS tariff ICC RPSI 200....
2. Shipper agrees to the rules and provisions set forth in RPS tariff ICC RPSI 200 and to the Terms and Conditions of Transport stated on the RPS Pick-Up Record____
4. Shipper agrees to pay RPS the base rates and accessorial or other charges published in the RPS Rate Schedule, as modified by the latest addendum(s) to this Service Agreement.
5. If authorized by RPS to ship packages “collect”, Shipper agrees to pay to RPS the weekly charge for Pickup Service, and any charges for Acknowledgment of Delivery, C.O.D. Service, Address Corrections, and Declared Value in excess of $ 100.00 per package in accordance with RPS tariff ICC RPSI 200.
7. If authorized by RPS to participate in the Retum-to-Vendor Program, Shipper agrees not to file claims for loss or damage resulting from the transportation services provided by RPS in connection with the Retumto-Vendor Program.

Attachment 2 to Eckerd’s Memorandum in Opposition.

RPS is an interstate common carrier of merchandise specializing in the transportation of small packages. Prior to January 1, 1996, in accordance with federal statutes and regulations, RPS filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) a tariff setting forth its freight rates and limitations of liability. This tariff is referred to as Tariff ICC RPSI 200-G, effective February 6,1995, filed by RPS with ICC. Tariff 200-G states that RPS shall assess its freight charge on a package depending on whether the consign- or-shipper declares a value not exceeding or exceeding $100.00 per package. The shipper must pay, in addition to the base rate, a $ .35 per package charge for each $100.00 of additional declared valuation on the goods shipped.

In connection with its shipping services, RPS had two forms to be completed by shippers who used its services, here specifically Eckerd. One was an “RPS Pick-Up Record”, and it contains a space entitled “Declared Value per package”, and also contains the statement on the front, and on the back in bold letters that RPS’s liability is limited to $ 100.00 per package unless a higher value is declared by the shipper and an additional charge is paid at the rate stated in the Tariff. Exhibit D to RPS’s Reply Memorandum. .The “Vendor Returns Pick-Up Record”, which apparently was specifically designed to return the cartridges to the manufacturer, also contains a space entitled “Declared Value”, but does not contain the statement that liability is limited to $100.00 per package unless a higher value is declared and an additional charge is paid. RPS does have a customer service guide, which provides copies and explanations of its forms, guidelines for Cash on Delivery, Acknowledgment on Delivery, Proof of Delivery, package preparation, restrictions and liabilities, and specifically RPS’s standard liability and Declared Value.

When Eckerd Photo Lab Manager Tanya Larson took Banos’ order, she filled out a Vendor Returns Form, which to her knowledge was the only form and the only type of receipt book provided by RPS for any type of package. The Vendor Return Form (“Vendor Returns Pick-Up Record”) are pre-printed and contained in a bound booklet of 25 to 50 forms each. Each form is sequentially numbered and there are three carbon-type copies of each numbered receipt. Only the *760 top two sheets were used, the first being marked “original” and the second identified as “Shipper Rep Copy”. The reverse side was blank, but the front does contain a space for “Declared Value”. Each could be used for multiple packages.

Eekerd Photo Lab manager Larson filled out the Vendor Return Form No. 637382 for Banos’ package containing photographs as well as for another customer’s screen saver order package also containing photographs. She would customarily use this same form to return silver cartridges to the manufacturer as well as to send all packages in connection with photo processing. Larson stated she was unaware of any limitation of liability and was never provided with any other forms for shipments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 F. Supp. 756, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3292, 1998 WL 113945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banos-v-eckerd-corp-laed-1998.