Venetian Terrazzo Co. v. Chicago, RI & PR Co.
This text of 453 F. Supp. 1021 (Venetian Terrazzo Co. v. Chicago, RI & PR 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.
Opinion
VENETIAN TERRAZZO COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, et al., Defendants.
United States District Court, E. D. Missouri, E. D.
*1022 J. Dennis O'Leary, William Sitzer, Dubail, Judge, Kilker & Maier, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiff.
Fordyce & Mayne, James Eckhoff, St. Louis, for defendants.
MEMORANDUM
REGAN, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on motion of defendants for summary judgment and on cross-motion of plaintiff for summary judgment on the issue of liability.
On October 2, 1975, a load of 1,122 boxes of Terrazzo tile on railroad car SP-673397 consigned to plaintiff at Chesterfield, Missouri, was shipped from Laredo, Texas. Thereafter, on October 10, 1975, a load of 1,128 boxes of Terrazzo tile on railroad car MP-252415 was shipped to plaintiff over another route. In each instance the delivering carrier was defendant Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Company. At all relevant times, defendant William Gibbons operated the railroad as Trustee appointed in reorganization proceedings. This action was brought to recover for alleged damage to the tile in transit.
The controverted issue on defendants' motion for summary judgment is whether plaintiff timely complied with the mandatory notice requirement of Section 2(b) contained in each of the uniform straight bills of lading which provides in relevant part:
"As a condition precedent to recovery, claims must be filed in writing with the . . . carrier . . . within nine months after delivery of the property."
The facts which in the judgment of the parties might have any bearing upon the issue have been stipulated by the parties. In addition, plaintiff has submitted an affidavit of its president.
Each bill of lading contains the standard printed receipt of the initial carrier for the boxes of Terrazzo file listed thereon, expressly noting, however, that the condition of the contents of the boxes was unknown. In each instance, the railroad car was delivered to the railroad's team track at Chesterfield, Missouri, where it was subsequently unloaded by plaintiff at some time between October 20, 1975 and October 24, 1975, and trucked to the construction site where the tile was later to be laid. The exact dates of delivery of the cars are not stipulated, but in any event, delivery was effected not later than October 24, 1975, so that, at the very latest, the nine-month period for filing a written damage claim expired on July 24, 1976.
At some time between October 20, 1975 and October 24, 1975, and again on November *1023 12, 1975, the railroad was orally advised by plaintiff of what appeared to it to be damage to the 2500 boxes of Terrazzo tile. Pursuant to plaintiff's oral request, the railroad inspected car SP-673307 on October 24, 1975. The Exception Report # 225, prepared in connection with that inspection (which was made after the car was partly unloaded), after noting that there was "visible damage," states "Damage caused by boxes of tile tilting on skids and breaking off corners of tile. The bands broke on one skid and two boxes broke open."
After plaintiff unloaded the cars and trucked the boxes of tile to the construction site, it stored them in a trailer until May, 1976, at which time plaintiff began its work of installing the tile. Subsequently, on June 2, 1976, at plaintiff's oral request, the railroad made an inspection of the material which had been unloaded from car SP-673307.[1] The Exception Report # 225A made pursuant to this June 2, 1976 inspection as a supplement to the October 24, 1975 Report (this time noting that the damage was "concealed"), states:
"Inspection requested by the above consignee 6/2/76 and made 330 pm same date at the job site Chesterfield Maul of material stored in a Highway Trailer said to have been removed from SP673307 on or about October 20th to 24th 1975 at the Rock Island Chesterfield, Mo. siding and trucked to the above job site. Inspection made on 10 palletts containing 54 ctns. 8 ps per ctn ¾" tile Roman Terrazzo color m-64 TOFEE per pallet. Many of the steel bands holding the ctns together and on pallet were broken, most ctns were leaning on pallet, ctns showed considerable scuffing and abrasion marks. Consignee advised no damage visible until cartons opened to be used which revealed that many tile had corners broken off and some tile broken in half. Consignee advised that he was able to use many of the broken tile where cutting was necessary but would not be able to make use of all the damage. The pallets of tile had been transferred from car to trucks and hauled approx. one mile to construction site and stored in hiway trailer until time for use."
Each of the Inspection Reports specifically states: "This report is NOT (sic) an admission of Liability, Notice of Claim or Notice of Intent to File Claim."
The first (and only) written communication addressed or delivered by plaintiff to defendants within the nine-month period is a letter dated June 7, 1976.[2] This letter, written by plaintiff's president to attention of the inspector who prepared the June 2 Exception Report reads as follows:
"Re: Exception Report # 225A 10/24/75
Dear Sir:
There are two railroad cars involved in this damage inspection.
The car numbers are SP 673307 as mentioned in the above report and car number MP 252415.
The second car should also be inspected for damages.Yours very truly,"
It is plaintiff's contention that this letter, read in the light of the other facts, suffices as a compliance with Section 2(b) of the Bills of Lading. Commendably, plaintiff concedes that "oral notice and the carrier's actual knowledge of the loss or damage clearly are not sufficient to constitute a written claim," but argues that in view of the various oral communications, the Exception Reports, and several written communications from railroad personnel "acknowledging" the existence of a claim, the *1024 June 7 letter qualifies as a "claim in writing" within the purview of Section 2(b). We do not agree.
In Am.Jur.2d Carriers, § 585, page 106, it is said:
"The claim in writing must be, at the minimum, a written document, however informal in expression, expressing an intention on the shipper's part to claim reimbursement from the carrier for a loss asserted to have incurred in the past, . . . In other words, the notice, whatever its form, must be more than a notice that the goods have been damaged, it must contain a claim for compensation or indicate an intent to claim."
And in § 1005.2(b), C.F.R., (in effect at the times here in question) the Interstate Commerce Commission has mandated that to qualify as a notice of claim, the communication in writing must as a minimum, assert liability for the alleged damage to the property and make claim for the payment of the amount thereof.
It is thus apparent that the writing relied on as a notice of claim must be more than a mere notice of damage. That is, no matter how informally worded, the writing must indicate the shipper's intent to claim reimbursement from the carrier for damages for which the carrier is alleged to be liable. The June 7, 1976 letter does not do so. Hence, even if it be true, as plaintiff asserts, that the amount
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453 F. Supp. 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venetian-terrazzo-co-v-chicago-ri-pr-co-moed-1978.