Carriers Traffic Service, Inc. v. Toastmaster, Inc.

707 F. Supp. 1498, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15297, 1988 WL 143267
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 29, 1988
Docket84 C 7338, 88 C 5167
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 707 F. Supp. 1498 (Carriers Traffic Service, Inc. v. Toastmaster, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carriers Traffic Service, Inc. v. Toastmaster, Inc., 707 F. Supp. 1498, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15297, 1988 WL 143267 (N.D. Ill. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, District Judge.

Carriers Traffic Service, Inc. (“CTS”) has petitioned this court to set aside the March 14, 1988 decision of the Interstate Commerce Commission (“ICC”) in Toastmaster, Inc. v. Orscheln Bros. Truck Lines, Inc., No. MC-C-10988 (the “Opinion”). Toastmaster, Inc. (“Toastmaster”) and ICC and the United States (collectively “ICC” for convenience) seek affirmance of the Opinion. All the parties have filed motions for summary judgment. For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, ICC’s decision is upheld — though not always for the reasons it has stated.

Parties and Procedural History

In 1984 Barry Schermer as Trustee for Orscheln Bros. Truck Lines, Inc. (“Or-scheln”) sued Toastmaster in this District Court 1 pursuant to the Interstate Commerce Act (“Act”), 49 U.S.C. § 10761, 2 seeking to collect alleged freight undercharges for interstate transportation service provided to Toastmaster between 1981 and Orscheln’s 1983 filing in bankruptcy. Those claimed undercharges stemmed from the differences between (1) published tariff rates on the basis of which Toastmaster was actually billed and (2) the published rates Orscheln assertedly should have used in its billing.

On November 8, 1985 Judge Leighton issued an order staying proceedings in this District Court and directing Toastmaster to file a petition with ICC to determine whether the collection of such undercharges would be “unreasonable” in this case. 3 Toastmaster did so on January 23, 1986. 4 After conducting evidentiary proceedings ICC issued its Opinion, ruling partially in favor of Toastmaster and partially in favor of CTS.

When CTS returned to this District Court seeking to set aside and annul ICC’s decision, this Court expressed concern as to whether its jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1336(b) called for the institution of a new action rather than merely a filing under the old 1984 case number (see this Court’s brief May 19, 1988 memorandum order). To avoid any possible procedural risks in that respect, CTS brought such a new action (88 C 5167), adding as parties defendant ICC and the United States (they had also been named as respondents in CTS’ post-Opinion petition in the 1984 lawsuit). Then the two cases were consolidated, and they have proceeded in tandem to this stage.

ICC’s Decision 5

ICC was called on to deal with the “reasonableness” of Orscheln’s claimed undercharges on 458 shipments 6 for Toastmaster’s account, made from various locations to its Missouri manufacturing facilities at *1501 Boonville, Clarence, Columbia, Macon and Moberly. ICC classified the shipments into five groups and discussed the rate applicability and resultant findings as to each group.

Group 1

Group 1 comprised 325 truckload and less-than-truckload (“LTL”) shipments of freight-all-kinds (“FAK”) between March 19, 1981 and August 15, 1983. Charges were assessed according to rates described in Tariff ICC OBTL 600 (“OBTL 600”) or ICC OBTL 600-A (“OBTL 600-A”).

OBTL 600, effective June 13, 1982, applied only to “consolidated” shipments. OBTL 600-A, which cancelled and superseded OBTL 600 effective July 2, 1983, contained the same limiting language. However, it also contained a new “Item 200,” listing a rate conditioned on the trailer being loaded to capacity and “shipper load/consignee unload.”

Effective October 28,1982, Supplement 1 to OBTL 600-A cancelled Item 200 and replaced it with Item 200-A. All that new item did was to repeat the former provisions of Item 200 and add the phrase “Item subject to a $50.00 stop charge.” However, neither OBTL 600 nor OBTL 600-A actually authorized stop-off service.

Effective February 5, 1983, Supplement 2 to OBTL 600-A cancelled Supplement 1 (making no separate reference to Supplement l’s Item 200-A). Supplement 2 did include its own Item 200-A that simply “cancelled” Item 200 (an obvious anomaly, given the fact that Item 200 had already been cancelled by Supplement 1).

All 325 shipments in Group 1 were single, non-consolidated shipments. Opinion at 4 therefore found OBTL 600 did not apply to them. That left the more complex issue of whether Item 200 in the original OBTL 600-A (before its two supplements were promulgated) applied to such shipments.

On that score, Opinion at 4 found Item 200 — which by its terms covered only shipments where the shipper loaded and the trailer was loaded to capacity — did refer to single shipments. Because OBTL 600-A specified it was limited to consolidated shipments, ICC found a resultant ambiguity, which it resolved in favor of Toastmaster. Thus ICC found the rate in Item 200 was applicable to single shipments.

ICC also found that although the exact effect of Supplements 1 and 2 was unclear, the Item 200 rate applying to single shipments was effectively cancelled on February 5, 1983. Nonetheless, exercising its “reasonable practice” jurisdiction, ICC concluded that the parties did not intend that the tariff would no longer be applicable to single shipments. Instead Opinion at 5 found another provision of the OBTL 600 series, Item 120, was intended to cover single shipments even though its language indicated otherwise. Indeed, Orscheln’s representative who drafted Supplement 2 specifically explained “he did not intend to remove the single shipment provision” that Item 200 had embodied (Opinion at 5).

In summary, ICC concluded it would be unreasonable for CTS to collect (1) anything in excess of the Item 200 rate when it was in effect (until February 5, 1983) and (2) anything in excess of the Item 120 rates thereafter. Toastmaster thus effectively won as to Group 1, the bulk of the shipments in dispute.

Group 2

Group 2 comprised 11 LTL shipments of FAK. Those shipments were consolidated by another carrier, and Orscheln then transported them to Missouri. CTS claims those charges were assessed under Item 19250-A of ICC MWB 201-D (“MWB 201”), applicable only to (.1) “mixed shipments” (2) loaded by the shipper and unloaded by the consignee (Opinion at 6). That shipper-load/consignee-unload condition was subject to Item 578 of Rules Tariff ICC MWB 125 (“MWB 125”), which required bills of lading to be endorsed by the shipper at the time of tender to show fulfillment of the condition (id.).

ICC found as to those shipments:

1. All shipments were in fact mixed.
2. Bills of lading were not endorsed as required.
3. It was unclear as to who actually loaded and unloaded the shipments.

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707 F. Supp. 1498, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15297, 1988 WL 143267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carriers-traffic-service-inc-v-toastmaster-inc-ilnd-1988.