Courtney v. Class Transportation, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJanuary 13, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-02335
StatusUnknown

This text of Courtney v. Class Transportation, Inc. (Courtney v. Class Transportation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courtney v. Class Transportation, Inc., (D. Colo. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO Judge R. Brooke Jackson

Civil Action No 18-cv-02335-RBJ

VICTORIA COURTNEY, on behalf of Clyde Courtney, deceased,

Plaintiff,

v.

CLASS TRANSPORATION, INC., a Florida corporation CER TRANSPORT, INC., a Florida corporation, LANDSTAR SYSTEMS, INC, a Florida corporation, LANDSTAR INWAY, INC., a Florida corporation, LANDSTAR RANGER, INC., a Florida corporation, LANDSTAR TRANSPORATATION LOGISTICS, INC., a Florida corporation, STEEL KING INDUSTRIES, INC., a Wisconsin corporation, and ISIDRO ARIAS-AGUILERA, an individual,

Defendants.

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR APPLICATION OF FLORIDA AND MISSOURI SUBSTANTIVE LAW AND DEFENDANT LANDSTAR’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

This matter is before the Court on plaintiff’s motion for application of Florida and Missouri substantive law and on the Landstar defendants’ motion for summary judgment. ECF Nos. 113, 114. For the following reasons plaintiff’s motion is DENIED and defendants’ motion is GRANTED.1

1 This order also grants intervenor plaintiff YRC Freight, Inc.’s motion to join in plaintiff’s motion for application of Missouri and Florida law. ECF No. 116. 1 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The following facts are undisputed. Plaintiff filed this case as a result of an accident among three tractor trailers that occurred in the early morning hours on December 11, 2017 in Elbert County, Colorado. Clyde Courtney (“decedent”) died as a result of this accident. ECF No. 79. Decedent’s spouse, Victoria Courtney (“plaintiff”), filed this case against Class Transportation, Inc., Isidro Arias-Aguilera, CER Transport Inc., Landstar Systems, Inc., Landstar Inway, Inc., Landstar Ranger, Inc., Landstar Transportation Logistics, Inc., Steel King Industries, Inc., and Landstar Ligon, Inc. (“defendants”). Id. All defendants are engaged in the trucking industry. Ms. Courtney has brought multiple negligence, negligence per se, and respondeat superior claims against defendants for the death of her spouse. See ECF No. 79.

A. The December 11, 2017 Collision On December 11, 2017 three tractor trailers collided in Elbert County, Colorado on Interstate 70. ECF No. 113-8 at 2. Defendant Arias-Aguilera drove a truck and trailer registered to Class Transportation (“Class”). Id. at 4; ECF No. 123-8 at 4. Decedent Clyde Courtney drove a second tractor trailer registered to YRC Freight, Inc. (“intervenor plaintiff”). Id. Kenneth Morgan drove the third tractor trailer involved in the collision, although neither Mr. Morgan nor his carrier company, Averitt Express, are parties to this lawsuit. The Colorado State Patrol accident report labeled Arias-Aguilera’s truck and trailer as Vehicle 1 and Courtney’s as Vehicle 2. Id. at 4. The report reads

Vehicle 1 was traveling very slow (approx. 30 MPH) and a tarp that was covering its load was unsecure and covering the back of the trailer including its tail lights. Vehicle 2 was behind Vehicle 1 and approaching it at highway speeds (63 MPH to 64 MPH). Vehicle 2 rear-ended Vehicle 1, pushing it forward. During the collision, Vehicle 2’s fifth-wheel plate broke free from its location on the truck’s chassis allowing Vehicle 2’s trailer to come forward crushing the cab of the truck. 2 Id. Mr. Courtney died as a result of injuries he sustained when the trailer crushed the truck’s passenger cab. Id. B. Relationships among co-defendants Class Transportation is the carrier company that employed Mr. Arias-Aguilera and was the registered carrier for the truck and trailer that he drove on the night of the collision. ECF Nos. 113-8 at 2; 56 at 5. Class was formed as a Florida for-profit business on March 10, 2015, and it listed Omar Nunez as its registered agent. ECF No. 113-2 at 2. CER Transport (“CER”) was formed as a Florida corporation on March 4, 2015, and it listed Osmel Nunez as its registered agent. ECF No. 113-1 at 2. Both CER and Class operated as contract carriers and were assigned different Department of Transportation (“DOT”) registration numbers. ECF Nos. 113-3, 113-4. The Landstar enterprise is comprised of multiple entities. I refer to them collectively as Landstar. Landstar has both broker authority and motor carrier authority. ECF No. 128-8. Broker authority “allows [it] to arrange transportation between a Shipper and a

Motor Carrier.” Id. Motor carrier authority permits it to “operate trucks and transport freight.” Id. In the present case Landstar was primarily operating under its broker authority. Landstar admits that when is it acting in a motor carrier capacity—as opposed to a broker capacity—it follows strict safety protocols in hiring and training drivers. ECF No. 123-2 at 13. Although Landstar does not ask contract carriers to provide it with their internal safety, training, or hiring policies, Landstar, when acting as a broker, takes numerous steps to confirm a carrier’s safety rating prior to contracting with it. Id. On September 28, 2017 Landstar and Osmel Nunez, on behalf of CER Transport, entered 3 into a transportation brokerage agreement where Landstar was the broker and CER was the carrier. ECF No. 113-6. That agreement contained the following relevant provisions: 2. Carrier warrants that all equipment and personnel used in providing the services contemplated herein shall meet all requirements of, and be in compliance with all laws and regulations of the United States Department of Transportation “DOT” and other federal, state or provincial agencies having jurisdiction over any of the services provided pursuant to this Agreement. CARRIER further warrants that it will immediately provide BROKER with notice, in writing, of any change in its safety rating and provide BROKER copies of any FMCSA Notice of Changes or Notice of Claim related to any change in safety rating.

3. There is no minimum volume of freight contemplated by this Agreement. BROKER is not restricted from tendering freight to other carriers; Carrier is not restricted from performing transportation for third parties. . . .

8. Carrier shall be wholly responsible for performing the contemplated transportation and for all costs and expenses of such transportation, including as examples, costs and expenses of all Carrier’s transportation equipment, its maintenance, and those persons who operated it. As to BROKER, CARRIER is an independent contractor, and as such is wholly responsbile in every way for such persons as CARRIER hires, employs, or otherwise utilizes. . . .

16. CARRIER shall transport all freight tendered by BROKER only on Equipment operated under CARRIER’s authority. CARRIER shall not in any way sub-contract, broker, or arrange for the freight to be transported by a third party without BROKER’s prior written consent.

Id. at 2–4. This agreement defined the relationship between Landstar and CER at the time of the shipment that resulted in Mr. Courtney’s death. Landstar confirmed that it tendered CER as the motor carrier for the subject shipment vis-à-vis a “rate confirmation.” ECF 113-9 at 5; see also ECF No. 113-7. Mr. Scott Ray, Landstar’s representative, stated in his deposition that “a rate confirmation was sent to CER or—or someone representing themselves as CER, and it was signed and returned back to the Landstar agent. That’s our confirmation that the load was tendered to CER.” Id. at 5. However, Landstar discovered after the accident that the tractor 4 trailer involved in the collision was not registered to CER—the carrier with which they contracted—and instead belonged to Class Transportation. Id. Following the collision Landstar “went after CER because that’s who the load was tendered [sic], and then after the investigation played out, it was realized it was a Class truck. So it was very confusing.” Id. at 3.

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