Falls Industries, Inc. v. Consolidated Chemical Industries, Inc., and D. C. Hall Transport, Inc.

258 F.2d 277, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5458
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 1958
Docket16887
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 258 F.2d 277 (Falls Industries, Inc. v. Consolidated Chemical Industries, Inc., and D. C. Hall Transport, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falls Industries, Inc. v. Consolidated Chemical Industries, Inc., and D. C. Hall Transport, Inc., 258 F.2d 277, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5458 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This is a three-cornered dispute involving a seller, a buyer, a carrier — and goods damaged in transit. Besides the basic question of liability, the appeal presents a serious procedural question: Is a third-party defendant properly before this Court on appeal, when the original plaintiff did not assert a claim against the third-party defendant by amending its complaint or by filing a new pleading and the third-party plaintiff has not appealed from the judgment of the lower court dismissing the third-party action?

Falls Industries, Inc., the manufacturer-seller, filed suit against Consolidated Chemical Industries, 1 the buyer, in the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Object of the suit was to recover the balance due on the purchase price ($4,913.23) and the cost of repairing three heat exchangers purchased by Consolidated, damaged in transit, repaired by Falls ($21,873.97). Consolidated removed the suit to the District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, then brought a third-party action, under the Carmack Amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act, against D. C. Hall Transport, Inc., the connecting carrier. 49 U.S.C.A. § 20(11).

The district court, sitting without a jury, denied Falls’ claim against Consolidated. The court found that Falls had breached its contract to crate and skid the heat exchangers so that they would be shipped securely “without breakage”. Falls, therefore, could not recover from Consolidated the balance due on the purchase price or the cost of repairs necessary to put the equipment in usable condition. Consolidated’s claim against Hall Transport, the third-party, was dismissed “without prejudice to any claim which Falls Industries or Consolidated may have against [the] carrier”.

Consolidated, the buyer, contends that in the pretrial conferences, during the trial, and on this appeal, the real quarrel has always been between Falls, the seller, and Hall Transport, the carrier. Falls contends that the carrier is responsible for the goods being damaged, and that Consolidated’s reliance upon the damaged condition of the equipment might support its demand as third-party plaintiff against the carrier, but it is not a valid defense against Falls’ demands. Hall Transport contends that the damage was caused by Falls’ failure to “crate, brace, and cushion the exchangers properly”; that Falls’ has never asserted any claim whatever against it, that Consolidated has not appealed from the judgment dismissing its third-party complaint, that the un-appealed judgment in favor of the third-party defendant is not here subject to review and, consequently, Hall Transport is not properly a party to this appeal.

I.

Falls manufactures chemical processing equipment at its plant in Solon, near Cleveland, Ohio. February 3, 1954 Consolidated ordered from Falls, for delivery to its Baton Rouge plant, three heat exchangers to be fabricated according to the purchaser’s plans and specifications. The price was $12,500 each, f. o. b. Solon, Ohio.

Consolidated's purchase order, accepted April 1, 1954, contained the following provision:

*280 “Delivery: 50 to 60 days from receipt of verbal order and approval to fabricate. To be securely crated and skidded so as to be shipped without breakage.
“Guarantee: Falls Industries guarantee materials and workmanship for a period of one year after receipt and acceptance of the exchangers.”

Correspondence between Falls and Consolidated spelled out the seller’s obligation to pack and ship the goods.

Each heat exchanger consists of 685 brittle graphite tubes housed in what is known in the industry as a Haveg shell. This shell is four feet in diameter, ten feet long, an inch and a half thick, and weighs about 1,400 pounds. It is made of a plastic material impregnated with asbestos. The shells were manufactured by the Haveg Company of Marshalltown, Delaware, and sold and shipped to Falls at Solon, Ohio. When shipped to Falls, each shell was skidded on a separate cradle consisting of two wooden crosspieces, notched so that the rounded form of the shell rested in the notches. Two runners connected the crosspieces. After fabrication by Falls, the total weight of a heat exchanger, including its steel collar, is 5,200 pounds. The assembled unit, though large and heavy, is fragile and must be air-tight and water-tight.

When Falls cradled and skidded the heat exchangers, it used the same cradles used by the Haveg Company in shipping the empty shells, but it made certain modifications to compensate for the added weight of the fabricated exchangers. Because the steel collar exceeded the shell by several inches in diameter, the cradle was raised to compensate for the overhang. This was done by adding an additional longer runner under each of the two original runners. Then a 4 x 4 was placed under the steel collar perpendicularly between the runners so as to brace the added overhang. An additional 4x4 was bolted under each crosspiece to give it support. Each exchanger was bound onto its skid by one inch steel bands.

Falls employed Hayes Motor Freight Lines to make the shipment by motor carrier, and paid for the exclusive use of the trailer in which the exchangers were loaded. 2 Hall Transport was the connecting carrier.

June 7, 1954, the heat exchangers,, cradled and skidded, were loaded by employees of Falls into a 35-foot trailer of the Hayes Freight Lines. The heat exchangers, with their skids, were almost twelve feet long so, with the exception of space on each side, every available portion of the trailer was taken up by the heat exchangers. The runners rested directly on the bottom of the trailer. They were cleated into place by the Hayes driver. Witnesses for Falls testified that shipments similarly loaded had been made safely for ten years. They testified also that the method of shipment was plainly visible to the Hayes driver who signed the bill of lading: the shells, the graphite tubes, the way the skids were made, how the exchangers were cushioned, how the exchangers were fastened to the skids. The trailer was sealed, and the seal not broken until the exchangers were unloaded at Baton Rouge. The drivers testified that the trip was uneventful.

When the trailer was opened June 10, 1954, one heat exchanger was visibly damaged. The Haveg shell was crushed. Repairs to the damaged exchanger were made at the plant in Baton Rouge by employees of Falls. The three exchangers were then placed in operation. *281 Later, it was discovered that none of the exchangers functioned properly. An inspection by employees of Falls showed that all exchangers had damaged graphite tubes requiring the replacement of 1,042 tubes. The exchangers were repaired and put in operation once more, but they have never functioned to the complete satisfaction of Consolidated.

The purchase price of the exchangers was $37,500. The cost of repairs was $21,873.97. After suit was filed, the parties agreed that Consolidated had expended sums totalling the balance due on the purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
258 F.2d 277, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 139, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falls-industries-inc-v-consolidated-chemical-industries-inc-and-d-c-ca5-1958.