BURLINGTON NORTH. & SANTA FE RY, CO. v. Kansas City Ry.

73 F. Supp. 2d 1274
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedAugust 16, 1999
Docket98-2307-JWL
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 F. Supp. 2d 1274 (BURLINGTON NORTH. & SANTA FE RY, CO. v. Kansas City Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BURLINGTON NORTH. & SANTA FE RY, CO. v. Kansas City Ry., 73 F. Supp. 2d 1274 (D. Kan. 1999).

Opinion

73 F.Supp.2d 1274 (1999)

The BURLINGTON NORTHERN AND SANTA FE RAILWAY COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
KANSAS CITY SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Defendant.

No. 98-2307-JWL.

United States District Court, D. Kansas.

August 16, 1999.

*1275 *1276 William P. Coates, Jr., Holman, Hansen & Colville, P.C., Prairie Village, KS, for plaintiff.

James F. Duncan, Robert B. Best, Jr., Brian Edward Engel, Armstrong Teasdale LLP, Kansas City, MO, for defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

LUNGSTRUM, District Judge.

Plaintiff Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company ("BNSF") instituted this diversity action to recover damages arising from defendant Kansas City Southern Railway Company's ("KCS") alleged breach of the parties' contract. In its memorandum and order dated March 2, 1999, this court denied defendant KCS' motion for summary judgment, and entered summary judgment in favor of plaintiff BNSF, finding plaintiff entitled to damages in the amount of $751,845.46. Additionally, the court ordered the parties to file briefs on the issue of plaintiff's entitlement to prejudgment interest.

On May 12, 1999, the court granted plaintiff BNSF's motion for reconsideration, finding the parties' agreement ambiguous with respect to the amount of payment owed by defendant. A trial to the court was held on that limited issue on July 12, 1999. This Memorandum and Order constitutes the court's findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

After careful consideration of all of the evidence, as well as the arguments of counsel, the court finds in favor of defendant KCS on the contract interpretation issue. Additionally, the court has considered the parties' respective memoranda with respect to the issue of prejudgment interest, and finds plaintiff entitled to prejudgment *1277 interest accruing from February 1, 1998 at a rate of nine percent per annum.

I. Background

The following underlying facts of the parties' dispute are uncontroverted. In January 1991, BNSF's predecessor in interest, Burlington Northern Railroad Company, and KCS entered into a "run-through" or locomotive interchange contract, whereby both parties strove to "obtain maximum utilization of locomotive units." The purpose of this contract was to facilitate the parties' sharing of units of power, known as "horsepower hours" in the railroad industry, and, according to the contract, "to provide for the uniform settlement of such matters as are customarily related to the operation and run-through of locomotive units."

Section III of the parties' agreement governs "Locomotive Unit Equalization and Caboose Rental." Section 3.4 provides, in pertinent part:

The parties agree that not less than every three (3) months and upon request of either of the parties to whom locomotive horsepower hours are owing, the party owing said locomotive horsepower hours shall promptly place in service hereunder an additional locomotive unit or units as may be agreed are necessary to overcome any such deficit within the subsequent three-month period. The party not having a horsepower hour deficit shall withdraw an appropriate number of locomotive units to permit the assignment of the agreed upon number of additional locomotive units by the party in deficit. In the event of the inability or failure of the owing party to so place in service sufficient additional locomotive units to overcome the horsepower hour deficit, the party to whom the horsepower hours are owed shall have the option of (1) receiving the horsepower hours in kind over an additional period of time as may be agreed upon by the Chief Operating/Transportation Officers of the parties hereto, or (2) receiving payment for any remaining unequalized horsepower hours at a rate to be calculated by applying the formula contained in the statements marked Exhibit "A," attached hereto and made a part hereof, to the appropriate accounts of [Burlington Northern] or KCS, as the case may be, for the latest calendar year for which annual figures are available. In the event of termination of this Agreement, settlement for any unequalized horsepower hours shall be paid for at the above mentioned rate....

In the latter months of 1997, KCS began to accumulate a horsepower hour deficit, and on October 31, 1997, KCS owed BNSF 43,459,275 horsepower hours. On November 5, 1997, BNSF issued written notice to KCS regarding KCS' then-existing deficit. On January 31, 1998, at the end of the ninety-day period within which KCS was to settle its horsepower hours balance pursuant to the November 5, 1997 notice, the number of horsepower hours owed by KCS to BNSF totaled 135,854,985. At that time, plaintiff chose to exercise its option to demand cash payment for the remaining unequalized horsepower hours, and presented defendant a demand for the cash equivalent of 135,854,985 horsepower hours. Defendant refused to remit the requested payment to plaintiff, and this lawsuit ensued. At no time did plaintiff issue an additional notice for the supplemental deficit accumulated by defendant during the cure period.

In its summary judgment papers, plaintiff argued that pursuant to its option to demand cash payment for any deficit remaining at the end of the three-month cure period, plaintiff was entitled to cash payment for the entire balance then outstanding as of January 31, 1998, or 135,854,985 hours, rather than the outstanding balance of 43,459,275 hours for which notice was originally issued on November 5, 1997. In its response, defendant claimed that if plaintiff was entitled to cash payment for any horsepower hours at all, the amount of plaintiff's recovery was limited to the original deficit of 43,459,275, the *1278 number of hours for which BNSF issued the November 5, 1997 deficit notice.

At the summary judgment stage, the court found that only one meaning of the term "remaining" was possible, i.e., that which related back to the previous clauses contained in that portion of the contract, such that the option to "receiv[e] payment for any remaining unequalized horsepower hours" necessarily described the hours for which the original notice was issued. Thus, although the court granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiff BNSF, BNSF's contractual damages were limited by the court to the cash equivalent of 43,459,275 horsepower hours.

Upon review of plaintiff's motion to reconsider, however, the court found that it had not fully apprehended plaintiff's argument that "any remaining unequalized horsepower hours" required payment of any hours owing at the time of the demand for payment and, as a result, the court granted the motion to reconsider. As noted by the court at that time, the words "remaining" and "unequalized," when read in conjunction, caused the court to conclude that it was at least as plausible that the term "unequalized" provided context to the term "remaining," such that plaintiff's construction that, once the ninety-day cure period elapsed, the cash equivalent for any hours then owing, as opposed to merely those for which notice was issued, was to be paid in full by the owing party. Thus, on May 12, 1999, the court granted plaintiff's motion for reconsideration, finding that, according the contract terms their plain and ordinary meaning, both KCS and BNSF had presented reasonable interpretations of the contract's "any remaining unequalized horsepower hours" language.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F. Supp. 2d 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burlington-north-santa-fe-ry-co-v-kansas-city-ry-ksd-1999.