Emmert Industrial Artisan Associates

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2007
Docket05-35622
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Emmert Industrial Artisan Associates, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

EMMERT INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION,  an Oregon corporation, No. 05-35622 Plaintiff-Appellant, v.  D.C. No. CV-03-00782-AJB ARTISAN ASSOCIATES, INC., a OPINION Michigan corporation, Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon Anna J. Brown, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted July 12, 2007—Portland, Oregon

Filed August 13, 2007

Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Stephen Reinhardt, and Milan D. Smith, Jr., Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Goodwin

9741 9744 EMMERT INDUSTRIAL v. ARTISAN ASSOCIATES

COUNSEL

Jeffry S. Garrett, Vicki L. Smith, Lane Powell PC, Portland, Oregon, for the plaintiff-appellant.

Frederick R. Damm, Clark Hill PLC, Detroit, Michigan, for the defendant-appellee.

OPINION

GOODWIN, Senior Circuit Judge:

Emmert Industrial Corporation (“Emmert”) appeals a sum- mary judgment in favor of Artisan Associates, Incorporated (“Artisan”) on Emmert’s three contract claims arising from the parties’ agreement for the transportation of industrial metal-stamping presses and press components. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the district court for fur- ther proceedings.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

An Oregon corporation, Emmert is an engineering and transportation company that specializes in transporting objects weighing in excess of 100,000 pounds. Artisan is a Michigan EMMERT INDUSTRIAL v. ARTISAN ASSOCIATES 9745 corporation and transportation broker engaged primarily in coordinating complex “heavy haul” projects on behalf of its clients, a business in which Artisan routinely contracts with carriers such as Emmert.1 In May 1996 Artisan, under a bro- ker’s contract with General Motors (“GM”), solicited bids for the “Press Project,” a complex undertaking that involved the transportation and delivery of six industrial metal-stamping presses from Japan to GM plants in Georgia, Michigan, and Missouri. Emmert submitted the winning bid for transporting the major components of six presses, subsequently receiving a 46-word notification letter from Artisan stating that Emmert would serve as “the primary carrier” on the Press Project for transportation of “all components that weigh more than 100,000 pounds.” Upon receipt of this letter, which also instructed Emmert to “proceed with the necessary planning,” Emmert took a number of actions. Emmert sent employees to Japan to inspect the goods to be moved, surveyed port facili- ties, prepared a pre-moving analysis and route survey, and put together route plans for the Georgia phase of the project. Emmert assigned personnel and equipment to the Press Proj- ect, and paid a third party to monitor and detect “strain” on bridges over which loaded Emmert vehicles would pass.

Under Artisan’s master operating agreement with GM, the “volume of business tendered to [Artisan] is contingent upon GM’s requirements for such Heavy Haul, Rigging, and Flat- bed services.” Although GM retained control over the flow of work to Artisan in the first instance, once a move had been authorized, Artisan became primarily responsible for on-the- ground oversight and management. Specifically, the Artisan- GM contract provided that Artisan “is required to select and 1 The term “broker” is statutorily defined as “a person, other than a motor carrier or an employee or agent of a motor carrier, that as a princi- pal or agent sells, offers for sale, negotiates for, or holds itself out by solicitation, advertisement, or otherwise as selling, providing, or arranging for, transportation by motor carrier for compensation.” 49 U.S.C. § 13102(2). 9746 EMMERT INDUSTRIAL v. ARTISAN ASSOCIATES manage a network of certified and permitted carriers and rig- gers . . . to meet the needs of GM,” and that Artisan “shall arrange transportation for GM, including the hiring of carriers and riggers . . . .” The GM contract also provided that:

Operational Control. [Artisan] shall have sole and exclusive control over the manner in which [Artisan] and its employes [sic] and/or sub-contractors per- form their Services. [Artisan] shall engage and employ and/or sub-contract with, such individuals or carriers as it may deem necessary in connection therewith. Such individuals shall be considered employes [sic] or sub-contractors of [Artisan] only and shall be subject to employment, discharge, disci- pline and control solely and exclusively by [Artisan].

Emmert completed two phases of the Press Project, trans- porting and delivering press components to GM plants in Georgia and Missouri, and invoiced Artisan approximately $4.9 million for this work and for services in preparation for a third project phase involving transportation to GM plants in Michigan. However, before Emmert performed any further Press Project work, GM reminded Artisan in writing that Arti- san was scheduled to broker the move of another press in early 1998, and requested a quote for this move “using carri- ers other than Emmert.” GM’s logistics liaison also instructed Artisan orally not to engage Emmert on any further Press Project moves. At that point, the remaining Press Project moves consisted of (1) parts of two presses to be moved to Michigan; (2) one press to be moved to Missouri; and (3) var- ious press component shipments.

On the same day it received GM’s letter, Artisan notified Emmert that Emmert did not receive the contract to transport the remaining press parts to Michigan and Missouri, moves that Artisan ultimately brokered through another carrier. Arti- san also notified Emmert that Artisan did not receive the con- EMMERT INDUSTRIAL v. ARTISAN ASSOCIATES 9747 tract from GM to broker the remaining component shipments, which GM eventually awarded to a different broker.

Artisan objected to numerous individual charges contained in the approximate $4.9 million claimed due by Emmert. After protracted negotiations, Artisan paid Emmert approxi- mately $4.2 million and advised Emmert in October 1997 that it would make no further payments.

Emmert brought this action in June 2003. In its amended complaint Emmert (1) claimed that Artisan breached the con- tract by failing to pay the remaining balance; (2) attempted to state a claim in quantum meruit for the same amount; and (3) claimed that Artisan’s failure to broker any further work to Emmert in the wake of GM’s letter constituted an additional, independent breach of the contract. The district court granted Artisan’s motion for summary judgment with respect to all three claims, reasoning that Emmert’s first two claims were time-barred under the Interstate Commerce Commission Ter- mination Act (“ICCTA”), and that because Emmert had no exclusive contractual right to handle the Press Project moves, Artisan did not breach the parties’ contract by ceasing to fun- nel work to Emmert after July 31, 1997. Emmert now appeals, invoking our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.

II. DISCUSSION

This is a diversity action in which none of Emmert’s affir- mative claims presents a federal question, and Emmert con- tends the district court erred on two grounds in concluding that its first two claims are barred by the ICCTA limitations period codified at 49 U.S.C. § 14705(a). Emmert first argues that the statute applies solely to a carrier’s claims against a shipper for charges owed under a filed tariff. Because Emmert has no filed tariff, it asserts that § 14705(a) is inapplicable to its first two claims as a matter of law.

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