Kaiser Aluminum v. ILL. CENT. GULF R. CO.

468 F. Supp. 615
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 22, 1979
Docket77-976C(B)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 468 F. Supp. 615 (Kaiser Aluminum v. ILL. CENT. GULF R. CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaiser Aluminum v. ILL. CENT. GULF R. CO., 468 F. Supp. 615 (E.D. Mo. 1979).

Opinion

468 F.Supp. 615 (1979)

KAISER ALUMINUM & CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
ILLINOIS CENTRAL GULF RAILROAD COMPANY, Defendant.

No. 77-976C(B).

United States District Court, E. D. Missouri, E. D.

March 22, 1979.

Edwards, Seigfreid, Runge & Leonatti, Jerome W. Seigfreid, Lewis J. Leonatti, Mexico, Mo., W. Munro Roberts, Jr., Roberts, Heneghan & Coffelt, Inc., St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiff.

Greenfield, Davidson, Mandelstamm & Voorhees, Alphonso H. Voorhees, Lawrence *616 N. Doreson, St. Louis, Mo., Daniel M. Dibble, Kansas City, Mo., for defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

REGAN, District Judge.

In this action brought under the Carmack Amendment (49 U.S.C. Section 20(11), the issue is whether, and if so to what extent, a shipment of calcined refractory bauxite became contaminated and worthless to plaintiff while in the custody and control of defendant, a common carrier by rail. It is plaintiff's contention that the railroad cars furnished by defendant to transport the bauxite had not been adequately cleaned of their previous cargos, with the result that the bauxite became contaminated.

Calcined bauxite is the principal material used in the manufacture of refractory brick. Plaintiff, which manufactures refractory brick at its plant in Mexico, Missouri, purchased the bauxite through Philipp Brothers from the Guyana Bauxite Company, Ltd. in Guyana, South America, for delivery FOB railcars at Mobile, Alabama.

The parties have stipulated that on May 16, 1975, the motor vessel Arrow Crane was loaded in Guyana with 16,000 metric tons of calcined bauxite. Of this load, 4,272.158 metric tons were consigned to plaintiff's Mexico, Missouri, plant, the balance being consigned to other companies purchasing bauxite through Philipp Brothers. Prior to the vessel's arrival, Philipp Brothers notified defendant as to the time the ship would arrive, requesting that the railroad arrange to furnish clean, covered, hopper cars suitable for transporting the cargo of bauxite ore. Calcined bauxite is highly susceptible to contamination.

The Arrow Crane arrived at the Port of Mobile on May 23, 1975. By that time, defendant had assembled a number of cars and had them on hand, empty, ready for loading when the ship came in. It was the normal practice of defendant to inspect and clean its cars before furnishing them to its customers. There is no affirmative evidence as to whether it did so as to the cars assembled on this occasion. However, it had been the custom and practice of Philipp Brothers over a period of years to have one of its representatives (in this instance Stanley Malabud) personally inspect each car tendered by defendant for loading to determine its suitability for shipping bauxite, rejecting those he felt were unclean and not suitable. Of those tendered in this case, Malabud rejected five to ten cars as containing impurities or foreign matter, and these were accepted back by defendant. The remaining cars were approved by Malabud for loading.

The entire dock and storage area where the Arrow Crane docked and where the railroad cars were loaded, as well as all equipment and vehicles used in the loading and storage of ore, were wholly owned, controlled and operated by the Alabama State Docks, a public agency of the State of Alabama.[1] The railroad cars which were accepted by Philipp were, as was the practice, initially brought to a designated joint interchange track, approximately a mile from the actual loading site.

No representative of the defendant is present or participates in the loading process. The practice is for Alabama State Docks personnel, under the supervision of the shipper or its agent, including Philipp Brothers, to load the cars from the ship, and weigh and count the cars. After they are loaded, the rail cars are then interchanged to the defendant by Alabama State Docks personnel at the joint interchange track. Not until this is done does the railroad receive the bill of lading from the shipper or its agent.

For whatever reason, the total number of cars initially assembled by defendant was not sufficient to load the entire cargo of the Arrow Crane,[2] so that although sixty-three *617 cars were necessary to load plaintiff's portion of the cargo,[3] only fifty (covered hopper) cars consigned to plaintiff were loaded from the ship. After all available cars were loaded, the remainder of the ore was removed from the bottom of the ship's hold into dump trucks and deposited a short distance away on a concrete pad and covered, at the instance of Malabud, with a plastic sheet. Malabud then departed Mobile to attend to other business without making any arrangements either for an inspection of the cars which defendant was to furnish later or to supervise the loading of the remainder of the bauxite for shipment to plaintiff.

Several days later, plaintiff was advised by defendant that the only cars then available were open top hoppers. Although covered hopper cars are the only ones customarily used for transporting bauxite, the use of the open top hoppers were acceptable to plaintiff. Thereafter, the remaining bauxite ore was loaded from the concrete pad by Alabama State Docks' personnel onto 13 open top hopper cars which, after the usual interchange, transported the bauxite to plaintiff's plant at Mexico, Missouri.

Of the 50 cars which had been loaded directly from the ship for plaintiff, only one was the subject of a contamination claim. When that car was unloaded, a white substance (later determined to be tripoli) was observed.[4] This car was one of those which Malabud had personally inspected and found by him to be clean and suitable for loading.

Of the second group of cars (those which transported the ground stored bauxite), eleven (eight of which were unloaded) were the subject of a contamination claim. A red rock substance, later determined to be iron ore, was observed by plaintiff's employees in the contents of some of the eight cars during the unloading process. As held infra, we do not credit the trial testimony of witness Charles Jackson that he observed red contaminants in all eight of the cars.[5]

The other three open hopper cars were not unloaded, and although plaintiff's employees had observed no evidence of contamination in them upon a visual topside inspection, they were nevertheless claimed to be contaminated. Based solely on plaintiff's representation that the contents of these cars were also contaminated, defendant authorized plaintiff not to unload them in order to avoid the expense of reloading them as was done with the other eight cars. Defendant had no knowledge, and was not informed, that plaintiff had inspected the cars and had seen no evidence of contamination.

The contents of the cars rejected by plaintiff were thereafter sold by defendant to a salvage company for $17,887.87 on October 23, 1975. The proceeds of the sale are held by defendant but are admittedly owing to plaintiff unless, as contended by plaintiff, it is entitled to the full purchase price and expenses paid and incurred by it, together with interest.

The initial question is whether plaintiff made a prima facie case of liability under the Carmack Amendment. To recover thereunder, the evidence must sufficiently prove that at the time the bauxite ore *618 was delivered to defendant, it was in good, that is, an uncontaminated, condition and that it was in damaged, that is, a contaminated, condition when it was delivered to plaintiff.

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468 F. Supp. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-aluminum-v-ill-cent-gulf-r-co-moed-1979.