Combustion Engineering, Inc. v. Consolidated Rail Corporation

741 F.2d 533, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19582
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1984
Docket1369, Docket 84-7222
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 741 F.2d 533 (Combustion Engineering, Inc. v. Consolidated Rail Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Combustion Engineering, Inc. v. Consolidated Rail Corporation, 741 F.2d 533, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19582 (2d Cir. 1984).

Opinion

CARDAMONE, Circuit Judge:

The question on this appeal is whether the notice of disallowance of a claim made pursuant to a Uniform Straight Bill of Lading started the running of the limitations period. Plaintiff Combustion Engineering, Inc. (Combustion) appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Dorsey, J.), entering summary judgment for the defendant Consolidated Rail Corporation (Conrail) on the ground that plaintiffs claim for damages was time-barred. We reverse the grant of judgment and remand this case.

I

In May 1977 certain equipment belonging to Combustion was damaged in the course of transport by Conrail. As a result during the next six months, the following correspondence passed between Combustion and Conrail. On July 29, 1977 Combustion filed with Conrail a notice of claim regarding the damage to its goods. This initial notice did not include any details as to the amount of damages sustained. On August 3 Combustion wrote that its load of fuel economizers had been damaged to the extent of “$1000, or more or less” and that supporting documentation would follow. On October 5 Conrail acknowledged Combustion’s claim for $1000 in a written “Statement of Loss and Damage Claim Activity” form (Claim Activity form), which classified the claim as an “interim statement of a new claim.” Later in October Conrail issued another Claim Activity form, changing the classification of Combustion’s claim to “active.” On November 15 Conrail wrote to Combustion and — referring to the July 29 claim— stated that “[i]t is necessary that we have itemized bill together with required documents to support your claim. Claim as presented is disallowed.” Combustion answered two weeks later, on November 29, and said that it was “still in the process of gathering [its] paperwork together. As soon as the supporting documents are assembled and the total costs are determined they will be forwarded to you.” Aside from subsequent periodic Claim Activity forms issued by Conrail, which continued to classify Combustion’s claim as “active,” there was no further correspondence over the next 11 months. Then, in the last three months of 1978, four exchanges occurred.

On October 20, 1978 Combustion filed a statement claiming total damages of $19,-986.91. Conrail promptly responded on October 31 sending the first page of a Freight Claim Investigation Inquiry Form (Form FC-3) and requesting that Combustion “[p]lease furnish detailed breakdown showing how repair cost determined. This should include number of men worked, hours worked, rate per hour, cost of material used supported with invoices.” In response, Combustion on December 18 said it was unable to furnish a more detailed breakdown of the repair costs and that it hoped the invoices and supporting documents previously sent would be sufficient to conclude the processing of the claim. On December 28 Conrail’s answer to this inability to supply a breakdown was:

Your reply ... stated you unable to furnish breakdown of material and men and also labor cost. These items are required so as we can verify the validity of *535 the claim. Also the invoice you furnished shows $18,630, does this cover items damaged or the total price to you, as claim covers repairs or replacement to parts. If just for damage please furnish copy or original invoice showing amount you were billed for this shipment. Upon receipt of the above requested documents claim will be given further consideration.

A flurry of more of the same type of correspondence continued through the first half of 1979. On January 5, 1979, the date that Combustion received the December 28 letter, it also received the second page of a Form FC-3. Labeled as a “tracer”, the FC-3 was a copy of the October 31 form and it indicated that no response had been received from the original inquiry and that “if no response is received, claim is considered disallowed effective thirty days from date of this tracer.” On January 10, Combustion received yet another Claim Activity form from Conrail showing that its claim was “active.” On March 19 Conrail again wrote to Combustion advising that it had not received a reply to its letter of December 28. In attaching a copy of the December 28 letter, Conrail indicated that “Without the information requested, we cannot progress the handling of this claim; therefore, I regret to advise it is respectfully disallowed ”

Combustion responded on May 7. In its letter Combustion stated that it could not provide a detailed breakdown of the labor hours because this was proprietary information; nonetheless, Combustion certified that its invoice was true and correct in every respect. Combustion concluded by stating that Conrail should forward a draft in the amount of $19,986.81. Conrail evidently did not view this information as sufficient since, on June 13 and again on July 19, it sent identical copies of another Form FC-3 to Combustion stating: “In order to further process claim we must have a breakdown of labor charges, rates per hour, etc. Also invoice to cover material used and advise if scrapped material has a salvage value or what disposition was made of it.” Conrail received no response to these inquiries. Nevertheless, as late as August 31 it sent another Claim Activity Form advising Combustion that its claim was still “active.”

II

^ , ...... 0n “ 17’ 1981 “ustión filed suit f 9 Fíf' § 11707 for damages m the amount of $19'‘ 986.81. Conrail s answer interposed the affirmative defense that the lawsuit was untimely because it was not instituted within tw0 years and one day from the date Conrad disallowed Combustion s claim. Conrail thereafter filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that there was no issue of material fact regarding the untimeliness of Combustion’s complaint. In opposing the motlon> Combustion argued that mater*al 'ssues ob ^acb ex^s^ed’ ^e-’ ^bat the action was timely because “the totality of [Conrail’s] conduct”, including Conrail’s notices and letters’ did not afford ib clearfina1’ and unequivocal notice that its claim had been disallowed. The matter was submitted t0 a magistrate who recommended that Conrail’s motion be denied. In his view a continuing course of communications had existed from July 1977 through August of 1979. In viewing the inferences favor of the Party opposing summary judgment, the magistrate found it unc^ear ’ Prec>sely when the claim was disallowed. Therefore, he concluded that a question of fact existed as to whether there was a clear an(! unequivocal disallowance more than two years and one day prior to the commencement of this lawsuit,

Upon the motion to confirm, the district court refused to adopt the magistrate’s recommendation and conducted a de novo review of the motion. Following its review the district court judge granted summary judgment to Conrail. The court held that it *536 was not inconsistent for a carrier to invoke the protection of a cutoff date and at the same time continue to process the claim. Focusing on whether the November 15, 1977 notice adequately informed Combustion that the period of limitations had begun, the district court found that letter to be sufficient and rejected the suggestion that the carrier’s post-notice conduct contra-indicated that the time period for filing suit was running. Since the lower court found the lawsuit untimely, it entered a judgment dismissing Combustion’s claim. This appeal followed.

III

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Bluebook (online)
741 F.2d 533, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 19582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combustion-engineering-inc-v-consolidated-rail-corporation-ca2-1984.