Travel Committee, Inc. v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.

603 A.2d 1301, 91 Md. App. 123, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 1992
Docket848 September Term, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 603 A.2d 1301 (Travel Committee, Inc. v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travel Committee, Inc. v. Pan American World Airways, Inc., 603 A.2d 1301, 91 Md. App. 123, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 68 (Md. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

ALPERT, Judge.

From Daedalus and Icarus, to Orville and Wilbur Wright, mortals have dared to dream of flying. It is the realization of that dream that brought us the airline travel industry. A conflict between participants in that industry brings us this appeal.

We face the task of untangling this case’s factual context and procedural background with no small amount of trepidation, and caution the reader that we have pursued clarity at the expense of brevity.

*131 The dispute evolved from a series of business transactions between one of the best known airlines, here and abroad, and a large-volume travel agency. Eventually, the parties took their differences to court, litigating a fifteen-count complaint, and a fourteen-count counterclaim. Judgment eventually was entered against the travel agency, which now appeals. Additionally, the appellees noted a cross appeal.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Pan American World Airways, Inc. (Pan Am) filed a fifteen-count Fifth Amended Complaint against Travel Committee, Inc. (TCI), Travel Destinations Unlimited, Inc. (TDU), Travel Destinations, Inc. (TDI), and their principals, Ira Weiner and Stanley Levin. 1 TCI and TDU filed a fourteen-count Amended Counterclaim.

A three week trial was held in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, Murphy, J., presiding, and on August 20, 1990, and August 24, 1990, the court entered certain judgments on the plaintiffs Fifth Amended Complaint and on the defendant’s Counterclaim. On October, 11, 1990, the court ruled upon certain motions, and entered judgments in the amounts of $404,726.77 against TCI, and $1,570,083.26 against TDU, TCI, Weiner, and Levin. No judgment was entered on several of the claims and counterclaims, and, by virtue of a clerical error, no judgment was entered for or against TDI. On October 1, 1991, this court ordered the trial court to enter an Order, which it did on October 7, 1991, directing the clerk of the Circuit Court to enter a judgment of $1,974,810.03, the sum total of the monetary judgments, against TDI on count fourteen of Pan Am’s Fifth Amended Complaint. The defendants appealed on *132 November 9, 1990; Pan Am filed a cross appeal on November 16, 1990.

FACTS

a. Travel Industry Background Information

Retail agencies sell airline seats to the public at published airline prices, then pay the airline those prices minus a commission. Wholesalers, who market air tours that include rooms and land travel, and consolidators, who deal only in high-volume air travel, sell bulk blocks of tickets to retail agencies. Wholesalers and consolidators buy “net tickets” in bulk from the airlines at reduced prices, and sell them through retail agencies that book reservations for their customers. The wholesaler/consolidator and the airline enter “net ticketing agreements” that set net prices and restrictions for tickets bought in bulk.

The Airlines Reporting Commission (ARC), an organization owned by 130 airlines, accredits travel agencies and furnishes them standard ticket stock to use in writing tickets for any of the airlines in the ARC system. An airline that appoints an ARC-accredited travel agency to act as its agent gives the agency an “ARC plate,” 2 to use in validating tickets the agency writes. These tickets are valid for any airline in the ARC system.

An ARC agency must file with ARC a weekly report of tickets it wrote during the previous week. Ten days after the end of each reporting period, ARC gives the airlines a draft on the agency’s bank account for the net remittance, minus the agency’s commission: this means that member agencies make only one payment for tickets sold. Agencies must make full payment of all amounts owed to airlines. Agents hold ticket sale proceeds, minus the agent’s commission, in trust for the carrier. ARC does not require agencies to segregate into separate accounts the money an agency collects from passengers, and ARC does not segre *133 gate the funds it collects that are destined for the individual airlines.

If an agent defaults on its payments to ARC, ARC or the airlines may repossess the agent’s ARC plates for writing tickets. Alternatively, an airline may agree to a “direct form of payment” for a particular weekly report, in which case, the agent and the airline settle collection issues between themselves, and the agent pays the airline directly for tickets written through ARC.

The airlines and the agents each audit ARC’S reports. If an airline has been underpaid, the airline issues a debit memo showing the additional amount due. An agency that makes an overpayment submits a sales summary adjustment showing the refund the carrier owes the agency. If an agent writes a new ticket to replace a lost ticket, the agent submits to the airline a “lost ticket advice” to obtain reimbursement for the duplicate payment.

According to the appellants, wholesalers routinely “batch” reservations by booking the reservations into the airline’s reservation system and collecting the fares in advance of a tour, but they write and deliver the tickets to passengers just two or three weeks before the tour departs. This practice exposes the passengers or the agency to the risk that in the interim, the airline will raise its rates. According to Pan Am, “in the airline industry, the ticketing is what guarantees the fare.”

b. The Case

Stanley Levin and Ira Weiner, the appellants/counterappellees, began a travel business in 1968, and in 1970 incorporated Travel Destinations Unlimited, Inc. (TDU), 3 a retail travel agency, and Travel Committee, Inc. (TCI), a wholesaler/consolidator travel agency. TCI is a wholly owned subsidiary of TDU. TDU was ARC-accredited, and had ARC plates for every major airline. ARC viewed TCI *134 as a “branch office” of TDU, and permitted it to use TDU’s plates.

TCI began selling Pan Am charter flights in 1975 or 1976, but as the charter business dissipated in the mid-1980s, airlines began to offer surplus seats on regularly scheduled flights at prices the airlines classified as “B class” fares. TCI began selling “B class” seats; Pan Am was TCI’s major carrier.

After June, 1986, TCI’s consolidator business improved, and during the summer and fall of 1986, Pan Am urged TCI to sell as many of the new “B class” fares as it could.

In December 1986 or January 1987, Pan Am gave TCI its 1987 summer schedule of net ticket prices for “B class” fares. TCI used this information to produce its summer brochure, and began marketing “B class” seats for the summer, and taking reservations at the prices Pan Am set in the summer schedule. TCI alleges that it did this with Pan Am’s blessing, and that Pan Am urged TCI to sell as many “B class” seats as possible. We note, however, testimony acknowledging that Pan Am indicated to TCI that it was “thinking about, but ... hadn’t at that time, put in some form of different class air service____”

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Bluebook (online)
603 A.2d 1301, 91 Md. App. 123, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travel-committee-inc-v-pan-american-world-airways-inc-mdctspecapp-1992.