the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company v. Lynden Air Freight D/B/A Skytrack

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2006
Docket02-05-00069-CV
StatusPublished

This text of the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company v. Lynden Air Freight D/B/A Skytrack (the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company v. Lynden Air Freight D/B/A Skytrack) 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.

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the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company v. Lynden Air Freight D/B/A Skytrack, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                                                COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                                 FORT WORTH

                                        NO.  2-05-069-CV

THE BURLINGTON NORTHERN                                               APPELLANT

AND SANTA FE RAILWAY COMPANY

                                                   V.

LYNDEN AIR FREIGHT D/B/A                                                    APPELLEE

SKYTRACK

                                              ------------

            FROM THE 67TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I. Introduction


In two issues, the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company (ABNSF@) asserts that the trial court erred by (1) granting the motion for summary judgement filed by Lynden Air Freight d/b/a Skytrack and denying BNSF=s corresponding motion and, alternatively, (2) failing to find that a contractual ambiguity created a fact question to be determined by the trier of fact.  We reverse and remand.

II. Background

In 2001, BNSF was exploring ways that it could more efficiently transport goods it purchased for its own use from one location to another.  An example posited by BNSF is air filters purchased in Baltimore for use in Barstow, California, that needed to be transported, from Baltimore to California.  Under the then-existing system, a contracted trucking company would simply ship the air filters for BNSF either TL (truckload) or LTL (less than truckload).

BNSF issued a Arequest for proposal@ to several companies for a cheaper way to inventory, warehouse, and distribute such items, including an estimated savings to BNSF from the responding companies.  Skytrack responded with a proposal that would Areduce BNSF=s overall hard costs at least 30% over direct LTL/TL services@ and anticipated A[s]ubstantially reduced LTL, [TL], air freight, and expedited transportation charges B overall estimated savings of at least 30%.@


According to BNSF, Skytrack=s proposal would work thusly:  Skytrack would arrange for local cartage, regional LTL, or other contracted service to transport the air filters from the supplier in Baltimore to a centrally located ASkytrack Consolidation Center,@ for example, in Chicago.  Skytrack would then consolidate those materials with materials that BNSF had purchased from other suppliers bound for the same regional destination, place the consolidated goods on a trailer, and then transport the consolidated material via another cartage company retained by Skytrack from the consolidation center to a railroad terminal.  The trailer would then be loaded on one of BNSF=s own trains and transported to another Skytrack consolidation center located nearer the point of use, for example, in Los Angeles.  Skytrack would then unload the trailer and sort the goods for delivery to various final end-use destinations, like the air filters for Barstow.  The final delivery to Barstow would be made by Skytrack through its use of third-party local cartage, regional LTL, or other contracted services.


Skytrack=s explanation of their proposal is similar:  instead of having BNSF pay for the air filters to be transported separately LTL from point of shipment, Baltimore, to point of delivery, Barstow, BNSF would pay for the goods to be trucked to a consolidation center, Chicago, run by Skytrack.  Skytrack would then consolidate the air filters into a single trailer, if possible, along with other BNSF goods destined for the same geographical area.  This trailer of consolidated freight would next be loaded on BNSF=s own flat cars (called AIntermodal@ or Trailer On Flat Car (TOFC)) to be transported by train to another Skytrack consolidation center, say Los Angeles, near its destination, Barstow.  Skytrack would then arrange for final delivery, for which it invoiced BNSF.

After negotiations, BNSF and Skytrack entered into a contract, effective August 8, 2001, regarding Skytrack=s proposal.  Under the contract, Skytrack charged BNSF for five different services, set forth in Exhibit A to the contract: (1) a Aterminal service charge@ at the initial consolidation center to consolidate into trailers the separate cargoes that arrived there; (2) Adrayage@ to move the trailers from the Skytrack consolidation center to the nearest BNSF terminal, where it was loaded for TOFC transportation on BNSF=s flatcars, and then from the BNSF terminal to the Skytrack center for deconsolidation; (3) Acartage,@ also called A

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