FFE Transportation Services, Inc. v. Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, Individually and D/B/A Cedimexa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 2010
Docket04-09-00479-CV
StatusPublished

This text of FFE Transportation Services, Inc. v. Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, Individually and D/B/A Cedimexa (FFE Transportation Services, Inc. v. Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, Individually and D/B/A Cedimexa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FFE Transportation Services, Inc. v. Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, Individually and D/B/A Cedimexa, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-09-00479-CV

FFE TRANSPORTATION SERVICES, INC., Appellant

v.

Luis MARTINEZ and Julio Martinez, Individually and d/b/a Cedimexa Forwarding, Appellees

From the 111th Judicial District Court, Webb County, Texas Trial Court No. 2007-CVQ-001724-D2 Honorable Raul Vasquez, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice

Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice Rebecca Simmons, Justice

Delivered and Filed: October 27, 2010

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED

FFE Transportation Services, Inc. sued Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, individually

and d/b/a Cedimexa Forwarding, (collectively, “Cedimexa”), for the loss of a trailer. A jury

found in favor of FFE on its claims for negligence and breach of a bailment agreement. The trial

judge rendered judgment in favor of FFE and against Cedimexa, but awarded no attorney’s fees

and reduced FFE’s compensatory damages based on the jury’s contributory negligence and

apportionment of liability findings. FFE appealed. In two issues, FFE argues the trial judge erred 04-09-00479-CV

by failing to award it full compensation for the loss of the trailer and attorney’s fees in

accordance with the jury’s findings. We sustain FFE’s issues, modify the judgment to authorize

full compensation for the loss of the trailer and payment of attorney’s fees, and affirm the

judgment as modified.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

FFE is an interstate motor carrier based in Dallas, Texas. Cedimexa is a forwarding

company based in Laredo, Texas. As a forwarding company, Cedimexa facilitates the export of

goods into Mexico.

In April 2005, FFE was hired to drive a trailer of merchandise from Miami, Florida to

Laredo, Texas. The trailer was owned by FFE. The merchandise, which belonged to a third party

not involved in this case, was ultimately destined for Mexico City. Accompanying the

merchandise was a bill of lading. According to the instructions on the bill of lading, the

merchandise was to be delivered to Cedimexa’s facility in Laredo, Texas. Thereafter, the

merchandise was to be driven across the Texas-Mexico border and delivered to Mexico City.

The merchandise was delivered to Cedimexa’s Laredo facility on April 28, 2005. A

Cedimexa employee signed the bill of lading. The trailer containing the merchandise was left on

Cedimexa’s premises so its employees could unload the merchandise in the trailer, count and

categorize the merchandise, and prepare documentation for the merchandise to pass through

customs. Seven days later, on May 5, 2005, after Cedimexa had prepared the customs

documentation and was ready to reload the merchandise for transfer, a Cedimexa employee

noticed that FFE’s trailer was gone. The Cedimexa employee contacted FFE and reported the

missing trailer to the police. The trailer was never recovered.

-2- 04-09-00479-CV

FFE sued Cedimexa for negligence and breach of a bailment agreement. 1 In its petition,

FFE alleged separate facts to support each claim. However, as to both claims FFE sought to

recover the value of the trailer plus the attorney’s fees it incurred in prosecuting the lawsuit.

Cedimexa answered the suit, raising the affirmative defense of contributory negligence. The case

was tried to a jury.

At trial, witnesses testified about the customs and practices in this area of commerce and

the arrangement between FFE and Cedimexa. Martin Gomez, an FFE employee, testified as

follows. At the time FFE’s trailer disappeared, FFE had been driving loads from Miami to

Laredo for about a year, and had been delivering two or three trailers per week to Cedimexa. The

bill of lading in this case stated it was “door to door,” which meant the merchandise in the trailer

was supposed to go from its origin to its final destination in the same trailer, without switching

trailers before crossing the border. The bill of lading also stated that the driver was not to unload

the merchandise. Additionally, Gomez testified that it was common knowledge that empty

trailers in Laredo were subject to theft, and security measures were taken by forwarding

companies to protect trailers left in their yards. These security measures included special devices

called “pin locks” that were placed on the trailers to prevent theft.

Another FFE employee, Tom Goudie, testified that leaving the trailer on Cedimexa’s

premises allowed Cedimexa to unload the merchandise at its convenience. Goudie further

testified that generally in this area of commerce whoever signs the bill of lading is responsible

for the trailer until the transfer company comes to retrieve the trailer.

Joseph Martinez, an expert witness, also testified on FFE’s behalf. Martinez testified that

when, as here, the bill of lading indicates the delivery is “door to door,” the driver delivers the

1 FFE also sued for loss of use of the trailer and conversion; however, the trial judge granted Cedimexa’s motion for directed verdict on these claims.

-3- 04-09-00479-CV

trailer and its merchandise to the forwarding company, then leaves the trailer with the forwarding

company until further notice. Under these circumstances, the responsibility for the merchandise

and the trailer falls on the forwarding company for as long as it has the trailer in its possession.

While the forwarding company has the trailer in its possession, it classifies the merchandise and

prepares the necessary documentation for customs. Typically, this takes several days. This

arrangement benefits the forwarding company, allowing it to unload the trailer, classify the

merchandise, and reload the trailer at its convenience. Once the trailer is reloaded, a drayage

company, hired by the owner of the merchandise, retrieves the trailer from the forwarding

company and drives the trailer across the border.

Julio Martinez, a manager and one of Cedimexa’s owners, testified. He testified that

under the bill of lading in this case, which was signed by a Cedimexa employee, Cedimexa

accepted delivery of the merchandise contained in FFE’s trailer, but not of the trailer itself. No

Cedimexa employee ever asked FFE to remove the trailer from the premises. Cedimexa used a

pin lock to secure a trailer left on its premises when it had a written interchange agreement with

the trailer’s owner. A pin lock was not used to secure FFE’s trailer.

Finally, Lourdes Liendo, an expert witness for Cedimexa, testified as follows. According

to Liendo, the bill of lading in this case indicated receipt of the merchandise, but not receipt of

the trailer itself. In addition, an interchange agreement is a document between the carrier and the

forwarding company that expressly places the responsibility for a trailer upon the forwarding

company. Interchange agreements, which are not used on a regular basis, are more commonly

used by maritime carriers than by trucking companies.

The trial judge submitted both the negligence and the breach of a bailment agreement

theories to the jury. Specifically, the jury was asked to answer the following questions:

-4- 04-09-00479-CV

1. Did FFE Transportation and CEDIMEXA agree to a bailment of the subject trailer?

2. Did CEDIMEXA fail to comply with the bailment?

3. Did CEDIMEXA derive a benefit from the bailment of the trailer?

4. Did the negligence, if any, of [CEDIMEXA or FFE TRANSPORTATION] proximately cause the loss of the trailer subject of this suit?

5.

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FFE Transportation Services, Inc. v. Luis Martinez and Julio Martinez, Individually and D/B/A Cedimexa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ffe-transportation-services-inc-v-luis-martinez-an-texapp-2010.