Imports Etc. Inc. v. ABF Freight System

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 1998
Docket98-1780
StatusPublished

This text of Imports Etc. Inc. v. ABF Freight System (Imports Etc. Inc. v. ABF Freight System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imports Etc. Inc. v. ABF Freight System, (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

No. 98-1780EM

Imports, Etc., Ltd., a Missouri Corporation, * * On Appeal from the United * * * ABF Freight System, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, * *

Submitted: September 25, 1998

___________

Imports, Etc., Ltd. brought t that ABF violated the terms of the parties’ delivery contract by ac payment not specified in their agreement. The District Court1

1 The e Eastern District of Missouri. Imports, and ABF appeals that judgment. We affirm. We hold that a shipper and a carrier may lawfully contract for a specific form of COD payment.

On July 9, 1996, Imports and ABF entered into an agreement, the Alternate Straight Bill of Lading, for ABF to deliver 511 cartons of women’s shoes to A&M Department Stores. The bill of lading included the specification that the delivery be “COD Cashiers Check,” and that ABF collect payment on behalf of Imports. The ABF driver also had to collect a COD fee and freight charges. The driver arrived at the delivery location listed on the bill of lading to find a company named Bag Bazaar, rather than A&M. Bag Bazaar representatives contacted A&M representatives. Approximately one hour later several men and two Ryder rental trucks arrived with certified checks (as opposed to cashier’s checks) for the COD and freight charges. Because the A&M representatives did not have a check for the COD fee additional telephone calls between A&M and ABF, and between A&M and Imports, followed. Eventually the ABF driver accepted the two certified checks and cash for the COD fee.

ABF endorsed and deposited the certified check for the freight charges. The check was later returned to ABF because the account upon which the check was drawn had been closed. Imports, however, neither endorsed nor deposited the certified check for the shoes. The certified check did not comply with the specific type of payment called for in the bill of lading. Additionally, Imports was suspicious of both the face of the certified check and the delivery circumstances. As it turned out, Imports’ fears were well founded. Evidently the bank certification stamped on the face of the check in question was a forgery.

Imports then filed this action against ABF, seeking damages in the amount of $53,180.90, the full value of the COD payment. The District Court awarded Imports $53,180.90, plus interest, and ABF appeals.

-2- We agree with the District Court that ABF broke its contract with Imports by accepting a bank certified check rather than a cashier’s check for the COD payment. It could be argued that virtually no difference exists between a cashier’s check and a bank certified check (assuming both instruments are genuine). Both should be equivalent to cash. See Center Video Industrial Co., Inc. v. Roadway Package System, Inc., 90 F.3d 185, 188 (7th Cir. 1996). The use of either should therefore guarantee payment to the payee.

Missouri’s Uniform Commercial Code2 defines a certified check as “a check accepted by the bank on which it is drawn.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 400.3-409(d) (1998). Acceptance of a certified check is made either by the drawee’s signature or “by a writing on the check which indicates that the check is certified.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 400.3-409(a), (d) (1998). Because the bank charges the drawer’s account for the certified check amount at the time of certification, the bank guarantees the availability of the funds for the payee. See Center Video, 90 F.3d at 189. A cashier’s check is defined as “a draft with respect to which the drawer and drawee are the same bank.” Mo. Rev. Stat. § 400.3-104(g) (1998). The customer provides payment to the bank for the cashier’s check at the time the bank issues the check. The bank therefore makes a guarantee to the payee for a cashier’s check as well. See Center Video, 90 F.3d at 188.

The primary difference between a bank certified check and a cashier’s check seems to lie in the ease with which one can create a fraudulent instrument. In order to forge a cashier’s check one would need to replicate all of the features of the bank’s form. To forge a bank certified check, on the other hand, one need only have a writing on the check indicating that the check is “certified.”

2 Neither party raised the issue of applicable state law. The District Court refers to Missouri law, and we will do the same.

-3- In any case, Imports had a right to believe that a cashier’s check is a better form of payment than a certified check. The agreement that ABF would accept only a cashier’s check reflects this belief. Imports relies on a case in which a carrier which accepted a corporate check rather than a cashier’s check as COD payment was held in breach of its contract with the shipper. See Computel, Inc. v. Emery Air Freight Corp., 919 F.2d 678, 682 (11th Cir. 1990). Although a certified check differs from an uncertified corporate check, the decision highlights the importance of Imports’ interest in the form of payment it specified, and to which ABF agreed. Imports did not agree to accept the risk that a certified check might be fraudulent. Instead, it contracted for a more secure form of COD payment.

ABF invokes what is commonly called the “filed rate doctrine,” though it does not use those words. Under the Interstate Commerce Act, the filed rate doctrine requires that a carrier “not charge or receive a different compensation for the transportation or service than the rate specified in the tariff.” See 49 U.S.C. § 13702(a) (1998). As a common carrier, ABF is subject to the requirements of the Act. See 49 U.S.C. § 13501 (1998).3

A recent United States Supreme Court decision addressing the filed rate doctrine helps highlight the issue between ABF and Imports. See American Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Central Office Telephone, Inc., 118 S.Ct. 1956 (1998). The Court analyzed the filed rate doctrine under the Communications Act. See id. at 1962. The Communications Act provisions are modeled after the Interstate Commerce Act, and

3 By contrast, the filed-rate doctrine does not apply to contract motor carriers. One court has held that the question whether a carrier is a common carrier or a contract carrier is within the primary jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission (whose functions have now been transferred to the Surface Transportation Board). Jones Truck Lines, Inc. v. Acme Frame Prods., Inc., 1994 WL 408746 (E.D. Ark.). ABF’s status as a motor common carrier is not in question in this case.

-4- both acts aim to prevent discriminatory charges. The same analysis applies in the present context.

The filed rate doctrine does not apply to rates alone, but to any terms or practices that might affect the rates as well. See id. at 1963. See also 49 U.S.C. §13702(a) (1998). American Telephone and Telegraph reversed the Ninth Circuit’s judgment that the filed rate doctrine did not apply to the case because the terms in question dealt with special services for filling orders and billing rather than directly with rates. See American Telephone and Telegraph, 118 S.Ct. at 1964. Special services can, however, affect rates. “An unreasonable ‘discrimination in charges’ . . . can come in the form of a lower price for an equivalent service or in the form of an enhanced service for an equivalent price.” Id. at 1963 (quoting Competitive Telecommunications Assn. v.

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Imports Etc. Inc. v. ABF Freight System, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imports-etc-inc-v-abf-freight-system-ca8-1998.