Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Union Pacific Railroad Company v. Escanaba and Lake Superior Railroad Company

897 F.2d 210, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518, 1990 WL 16375
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1990
Docket89-1749
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 897 F.2d 210 (Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Union Pacific Railroad Company v. Escanaba and Lake Superior Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Union Pacific Railroad Company v. Escanaba and Lake Superior Railroad Company, 897 F.2d 210, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518, 1990 WL 16375 (6th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

MILBURN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal presents the question of whether a smaller, Class III railroad holds “interline freight revenue” for larger, Class I railroads in trust, or as an unsecured business debt. We have held that interline freight revenue is held in trust, see Chase v. Committee of Interline R.Rs. (In re Ann Arbor R.R. Co.), 623 F.2d 480, 483 (6th Cir.1980), but in rendering that decision, we did not consider the size of the railroads involved. In this case, defendant-appellant Escanaba and Lake Superior Railroad Company (“E & LS”), a Class III railroad, arguing that the size of the railroads involved is a distinguishing and/or determining factor, appeals the summary judgment granted by the district court that it held interline freight revenues in trust for the plaintiffs-appellees, Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Union Pacific Railroad Company, Class I railroads. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

A.

Interline freight revenue is generated in the interline freight network, in which the nation’s many railroad lines function as a single system. The network allows shippers to make one payment to ship freight across the country, even though the load may travel on several railroad lines over the course of its journey.

*211 In an interline shipment, the shipper pays the shipping fee either to the railroad to whom he delivers the load (the “origin carrier”) or the railroad that will deliver the load to its final destination (the “destination carrier”). Regardless of which carrier receives payment, the origin carrier generates a bill of lading and a waybill for the shipment. The bill of lading is a title document, while the waybill describes the freight, its route, and the carriers involved in its shipment. The waybill accompanies the freight throughout the shipment and into the hands of the destination carrier.

All railroads, regardless of their size, can and do serve as origin and destination carriers for various shipments. Every month, each railroad prepares “waybill abstracts” for the shipments on which it served as the destination carrier. The abstracts list the portion of the shipment fee that is due each railroad that participated in each particular shipment. The railroads distribute the abstracts to each other by the eighteenth of each month and use them to calculate their interline balances — how much they owe other railroads, and how much they are owed.

The Interstate Commerce Commission classifies railroads by size and requires certain classes to follow certain interline balance accounting practices. See 49 C.F.R. § 1201(1-1) (1988). Railroads with annual operating revenues of $50 million or more are classified as Class I railroads, while railroads with annual operating revenues of $10 million or less are Class III railroads. The regulations require Class I railroads to treat interline revenues owing from other railroads as accounts receivable, and interline revenue owed to other railroads as accounts payable. See 49 C.F.R. 1201, Rules 705, 752. The regulations impose no similar accounting requirements upon Class III railroads. In addition, the ICC regulations do not mention whether interline balances are, or should be considered to be, held in trust or as unsecured business debts by any railroad.

Railroads generally use one of two methods to pay their interline debts. Members of the American Association of Railroads (“AAR”), and nonmembers who choose to, use the “sight draft” method, while other railroads use the “bill and voucher” method. Under the sight draft method, the railroads pay any net interline fees they owe immediately upon receipt of the waybill abstracts. Immediate payment is made through the use of microencoded cards that allow railroads to draw sight drafts against other railroads’ bank accounts. The plaintiffs are AAR members and use this method when possible.

Defendant E & LS is not an AAR member, and like many other railroads, it uses bills and vouchers. Under this method, railroads send monthly bills based upon waybill abstracts. Railroads are expected to make payment immediately upon receipt of the bills.

Under either method of payment, interline freight debts are balanced without interest. That is, a railroad that accepts a shipping fee does not pay interest to the other carriers involved in the shipment, despite the fact that it might hold the fee for up to a month before the railroads balance their interline accounts.

It is undisputed in this case that defendant E & LS owes plaintiffs approximately $1.26 million in past-due interline freight fees — money E & LS collected from shippers and never paid plaintiffs for their participation in interline shipments. E & LS argues that the debt is an unsecured business debt that accrued for services the plaintiffs rendered to it. Plaintiffs contend that they are due the money for services they rendered to the shippers, and that E & LS holds in trust any fees it collected from shippers on their behalf.

B.

Missouri Pacific, a Nebraska corporation, and Union Pacific, a Delaware corporation, filed parallel complaints in this diversity action against E & LS, a Michigan corporation, on June 16,1988. They sought injunc-tive relief and the imposition of a trust upon E & LS’ operating accounts to pay pastdue interline freight fees. Plaintiffs also sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction prohibiting E & *212 LS from spending or otherwise transferring certain accounts and funds.

On June 21, 1988, the district court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order. Three days later, on June 24, 1988, the district court determined that plaintiffs had adequate remedies at law and vacated its order of injunc-tive relief.

On July 12, 1988, E & LS answered the complaints, admitting that it owed plaintiffs interline freight revenue but questioning the actual dollar amounts due. It requested that the district court calculate its debt to plaintiffs, but that it deny plaintiffs’ request to impose a trust upon its operating accounts. E & LS insisted that its debts arose from its failure to pay bills, not from conduct so heinous as to justify the imposition of a trust.

On October 5, 1988, plaintiffs moved for summary judgment, arguing that our decision in Ann Arbor R.R., 623 F.2d at 480, supra, controlled the case in their favor. E & LS opposed the motion. On December 15, 1988, the district court issued an opinion and order in which it granted plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment, but reserved decision on the issue of the dollar amounts of liability. 702 F.Supp. 630.

On January 12, 1989, E & LS filed a notice of appeal with this court. The parties subsequently stipulated to a dismissal of the appeal because of the nature of the district court’s December 15 order.

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897 F.2d 210, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518, 1990 WL 16375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pacific-railroad-company-and-union-pacific-railroad-company-v-ca6-1990.