Mtb Bank v. Federal Armored Express, Inc.

175 F.3d 283, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1999
Docket98-7256
StatusPublished

This text of 175 F.3d 283 (Mtb Bank v. Federal Armored Express, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mtb Bank v. Federal Armored Express, Inc., 175 F.3d 283, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8450 (2d Cir. 1999).

Opinion

175 F.3d 283

MTB BANK, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
FEDERAL ARMORED EXPRESS, INC.,
Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Appellant,
MGH Enterprises, a Texas general partnership, Moses
Goldberg, individually doing business as MGH
Enterprises, doing business as House of
Money, Third-Party-Defendant.

Nos. 97-7668, 98-7256.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued Jan. 14, 1999.
Decided May 4, 1999.

Susan Condon, Chicago, IL (James T. Ferrini and Andrew C. Jacobson, Clausen Miller P.C., Chicago, IL, Of Counsel), for Defendant-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Appellant.

Joseph DiBenedetto, New York, N.Y. (Robert M. Buschmann and Amy B. Wagner, Winston & Strawn, New York, NY, Of Counsel), for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Before: JACOBS, LEVAL and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges.

LEVAL, Circuit Judge:

This is a suit for breach of contract arising out of an alleged misdelivery of two shipments of gold bullion and coins valued at approximately $1.9 million. The action was brought in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Sand, J.). Plaintiff MTB Bank ("MTB" or "the shipper") is a New York commercial bank engaged in the sale of precious metals. Defendant Federal Armored Express, Inc. ("Federal" or "the carrier") is a Maryland-based contract carrier. From 1991 to 1993, the shipper contracted with the carrier for delivery of gold shipments to the shipper's customers in Texas. After one of the shipper's customers failed to pay for two shipments, the shipper sued the carrier to recover its losses. The shipper alleged that by releasing the gold to the customer rather than delivering to the customer in care of the customer's bank, where it was to be held awaiting payment, the carrier negligently breached the terms of the shipping contract.

The district court granted the shipper's motion for summary judgment, finding that the carrier had negligently violated the shipper's delivery instructions. We reverse because the contract expressly precludes liability for misdelivery unless the goods were delivered "to a party other than the intended party," and the entity to which the carrier released these shipments was the "intended party."

BACKGROUND

From 1982 to 1993, MTB regularly sold gold bullion and coins to MGH Enterprises, a gold brokerage firm located in Laredo, Texas. MGH's sole proprietor was Moses Goldberg. In 1991, Federal purchased various routes from MTB's former carrier, Loomis Armored, Inc. ("Loomis"). Federal thereafter delivered MTB's shipments of gold to its customers in Texas, including MGH.

For each shipment of gold, MTB filled out a pre-printed, multiple-copy shipping receipt provided by the carrier. Each receipt contained "to" and "from" boxes in which the shipper entered the names and addresses of the sender and recipient. When the carrier's drivers arrived at the shipper's vault to pick up the shipments, MTB provided the drivers with completed shipping receipts and sealed canisters containing the gold to be shipped.

The receipts set forth the terms of the shipping contract. Pre-printed on the front and back of the receipts were the carrier's standard terms and conditions governing shipment, including several express limitations on its liability. One such provision specified that

FEDERAL shall not be liable for the incorrect delivery of a shipment unless FEDERAL delivers, or [the shipper] instructs delivery in writing, to any party other than the intended party and the incorrect delivery is due to negligence on the part of FEDERAL.

When shipping gold to MGH in Texas, MTB used a procedure known as "Bank Against Payment." Rather than await payment before shipping gold to MGH, as it had done in the first several years of their relationship, MTB agreed to send each shipment, as soon as the order was placed, to MGH in care of MGH's bank, the Laredo, Texas branch of the International Bank of Commerce ("IBC" or "the bank"). MTB instructed IBC to hold the gold pending MGH's payment to IBC of the purchase price of the gold. For each such shipment, MTB sent to IBC four copies of a standard one-page letter--one by first class mail, one by fax, one inside each sealed cannister of gold, and one in the packing slip envelope on the exterior of each cannister--instructing that the gold was not to be released to MGH until payment was received in full. Under this procedure, each shipment was addressed to:

MGH Enterprises

c/o Int'l Bank of Commerce

1200 San Bernardo

Laredo, TX 78040

At some point after July 1991, MGH's proprietor Goldberg visited Federal's offices in San Antonio, Texas, and requested a change in delivery procedures. Goldberg told the carrier to deliver directly to MGH in San Antonio, rather than to MGH in care of the IBC bank in Laredo. He introduced his agents, Juan and Javier Guardiola, and stated that the Guardiolas would henceforth sign for and pick up the shipments at the carrier's offices in San Antonio upon arrival. The carrier, which had no knowledge of the Bank Against Payment procedures employed by the shipper, complied with MGH's request. The carrier did not seek or obtain authorization from the shipper to deliver to an address other than the address specified in the shipping receipts, nor did it ask the shipper to clarify its delivery instructions.

By 1992, MGH was placing orders for gold with the shipper approximately two times per week, and, notwithstanding the delivery instructions MTB gave to the carrier to deliver in care of IBC in Laredo, the carrier delivered each of these shipments directly to MGH's personnel in San Antonio, as Goldberg had instructed.

The two shipments at issue here were ordered by MGH on May 14 and May 18, 1993. The shipments were valued and priced for sale at $949,997.50 and $929,378.00, respectively. The shipper filled out shipping receipts for each order, addressing them to "MGH Enterprises" in care of IBC in the usual fashion described above.

The carrier transported the May 14 and May 18 shipments from the shipper's vault in New York to the carrier's own offices in San Antonio. Then, instead of delivering to MGH in care of the bank, the carrier released the shipments of gold to the Guardiolas.

In a telephone conversation on May 24, 1993, Goldberg informed Alan Posnick, the shipper's senior vice president, that for some time the carrier had been releasing the shipments directly to MGH's agents in San Antonio rather than delivering them to IBC for release under the Bank Against Payment procedure. The next day, Posnick, along with the shipper's general counsel, Richard Cerick, flew to Texas to meet with Goldberg. At the meeting, Goldberg stated that MGH no longer had possession of the May 14 and May 18 shipments, and was unable to pay for either order.

The following day, Posnick and Cerick met with the carrier's San Antonio branch manager, who confirmed that the carrier had been releasing the shipments of gold directly to MGH's agents, the Guardiolas, at the carrier's San Antonio facility. He provided them with copies of the receipts from the May 14 and May 18 shipments.

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Related

MTB Bank v. Federal Armored Express, Inc.
175 F.3d 283 (Second Circuit, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 F.3d 283, 1999 U.S. App. LEXIS 8450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mtb-bank-v-federal-armored-express-inc-ca2-1999.