United States Court of
Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
SASSY DOLL CREATIONS, INC., Plaintiff_Appellee,
v.
WATKINS MOTOR LINES, INC., Defendant_Appellant.
May 23, 2003.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern
District of Florida.
Before BIRCH, CARNES and BRUNETTI [FN*], Circuit Judges.
CARNES, Circuit Judge:
Somewhere between Florida and Texas, Watkins Motor Lines,
Inc. lost a shipment of perfume it was carrying for Sassy Doll Creations, Inc.
The parties agree that Watkins is liable for the lost shipment, but they
disagree about the amount of that liability. Sassy Doll contends that Watkins
owes it $28,273.60, the full value of the shipment and the amount Sassy Doll
wrote on the bill of lading Watkins supplied. Watkins contends that it owes
Sassy Doll only $10,000, the limit of liability according to the formula
contained in Watkins' tariff, because Sassy Doll did not request excess
liability coverage.
The dispute, which is governed by the Carmack Amendment, 49
U.S.C. § 14706, resulted in a bench trial and a decision by the district court
in Sassy Doll's favor for the full value of the shipment. We affirm, because the
bill of lading Watkins supplied did not give Sassy Doll " 'a reasonable
opportunity to choose between two or more levels of liability.' " Bio_Lab,
Inc. v. Pony Express Courier Corp., 911 F.2d 1580, 1582 (11th Cir.1990) (quoting
Hughes v. United Van Lines, Inc., 829 F.2d 1407, 1415 (7th Cir.1987)).
I.
This appeal turns primarily on the contents of Watkins' bill
of lading and its tariff. We begin with the bill of lading, which is a
pre_printed form created by Watkins, which it provided to Sassy Doll. Manzoor
Awan, who is Sassy Doll's president, filled in the blanks on the bill of lading
before the shipment of perfume left Florida for Texas.
he bill of lading is a one_page document with several blank
spaces for the shipper to fill in with information about the shipment. The
paragraph directly below the blanks for shipment and destination addresses on
the bill of lading reads:
RECEIVED subject to individually determined rates or
contracts that have been agreed upon in writing between the carrier and
shipper, if applicable, otherwise to the rates, classifications, and rules
that have been established by the carrier and are available to the shipper, on
request.... The shipper hereby certifies that he is familiar with all the
terms and conditions of the [Uniform Bill of Lading set forth in the National
Motor Freight Classification 100_X], and the said terms and conditions are
hereby agreed to by the shipper and accepted for himself and his assigns.
Below that paragraph, the bill of lading contains an area
marked off into boxes beneath each of these (unnumbered on the form) headings:
(1) "Handling Units," (2) "Number [of] Packages," (3)
"HM" (hazardous materials), (4) "Kind of Packaging, Description
of Articles, Special Marks and Exceptions, NMFC Item Number and Class (Subject
to Correction)," and (5) "Weight (Subject to Correction)."
Beneath each heading are spaces to be filled in with information corresponding
to it. Awan filled in the spaces underneath the first four headings with the
words: "16 Boxes of Toiletries Preparation." Under the fifth heading,
"Weight," he wrote "400 Lbs."
On the form, a box adjacent to the headings states:
"Where the rate is dependent on value, shippers are required to state
specifically in writing the agreed or declared value of the property. The agreed
or declared value of the property is specifically stated by the shipper to be
not exceeding $___ per ___." Awan filled in that space declaring the value
as: "$28,273.60 per___." Below the shipment description and the
declared value lines, the bill of lading states in bold: "Liability
Limitation for loss or damage on this shipment may be applicable. See 49 U.S.C.
§ 14706(c)(1)(A) and (B)."
The other relevant document is Watkins' Rules Tariff WWAT
100_D. Item 780 of the tariff contains a section entitled "Property of
Extraordinary Value," Part B of which states that "articles of
extraordinary value, as defined below, will be accepted for shipment or as
premiums accompanying other articles, providing the shipper requests excess
liability coverage as provided below." The tariff defines articles of
extraordinary value as "[a]rticles tendered with an invoice value exceeding
the maximum value provided in Part (C)," which is "$ 25.00 per pound,
per package." The tariff then states that "[s]uch articles will not be
accepted for transportation unless the shipper requests excess liability
coverage. Articles inadvertently accepted with an invoice value exceeding such
maximum, but without excess coverage will be considered to have been released by
the shipper at the maximum value provided in Part (C)," which again, is
"$ 25.00 per pound, per package." The tariff also provides that
"[i]n the event of loss of and/or damage to any shipment, carrier's
liability will not exceed the maximum value provided in Part (C), unless the
shipper has requested excess liability coverage."
Part (C) contains provisions for requesting excess liability
coverage. The first paragraph states in part: "If shipper desires to tender
a shipment requiring carrier liability in excess of the maximum value provided
below, then shipper must indicate in writing on bill of lading at time of
shipment the total dollar amount of excess coverage requested (See
EXAMPLE)." At the bottom of the paragraph the tariff states: "EXAMPLE:
Customer requesting $10,000 additional excess coverage would enter on the bill
of lading as follows: '$10,000.00 excess liability coverage requested,' or
'Excess liability coverage requested: $10,000.' " Unfortunately for
Watkins, and importantly for purposes of our decision, the tariff does not state
where on the bill of lading the shipper is supposed to indicate its request for
excess liability coverage, and the bill of lading does not contain a section
where the shipper can properly request excess liability coverage. As the
district court found, "in order to comply with [the tariff] a shipper would
have to write and fit its request for additional coverage somewhere on the bill
of lading__in a section or box meant for something else."
Mr. Awan, who filled in the bill of lading for Sassy Doll,
was not aware of the tariff's limitation of liability, and Watkins did not offer
him a choice of freight rates beyond what its tariff said. The freight rate to
be charged did not concern Awan, however, because it was to be paid by the
consignee. Awan believed that Watkins would charge a rate that reflected the
stated value of the shipment, and the value he stated on the bill of lading was
$28,273.60.
After Watkins lost the shipment, Sassy Doll filed a claim
with Watkins for $28,273.60. Watkins offered to pay only $10,000, however,
explaining that its tariff limited liability to that amount based on the
400_pound weight of the shipment multiplied by $25.00. Several days after the
shipment was lost, Watkins generated a "bill of inquiry" which stated
that the freight rate was $156.48, and during the claims process Watkins
explained to Sassy Doll that the freight rate would have been an additional
$139.00 if Sassy Doll had requested excess liability coverage in an amount
sufficient to cover the value claimed. Neither Sassy Doll nor the consignee ever
received an invoice or were told what the cost of shipping would be before Sassy
Doll filed the loss claim.
II.
Sassy Doll sued Watkins for $28,273.60 in state court under
the Carmack Amendment, and Watkins removed the case to federal court under 28
U.S.C. §§ 1337(a) and 1441. Watkins defended on the ground that its liability
was limited under the Carmack Amendment to $10,000 because Sassy Doll did not
request excess liability coverage on the bill of lading. The case went to a
bench trial, and the district court ruled in favor of Sassy Doll for the full
$28,273.60, which is the value of the perfume it had declared on the bill of
lading. This is Watkins' appeal.
III.
We begin our analysis with the statutory framework. Under the
current version of the Carmack Amendment a carrier of property in interstate
commerce that loses a shipment generally is liable "for the actual loss or
injury to the property caused by" the carrier. 49 U.S.C. § 14706(a)(1).
However, a carrier may limit its liability "to a value established by
written or electronic declaration of the shipper or by written agreement between
the carrier and shipper if that value would be reasonable under the
circumstances surrounding the transportation." Id. § 14706(c)(1)(A). In
addition to a "declaration" or an "agreement," the statute
requires the carrier to provide "to the shipper, on request of the shipper,
a written or electronic copy of the rate, classification, rules, and practices
upon which any rate applicable to a shipment, or agreed to between the shipper
and the carrier, is based." Id. § 14706(c)(1)(B); see also id. § 13710.
In Bio_Lab, Inc. v. Pony Express Courier Corp., 911 F.2d
1580, 1582 (11th Cir.1990), we interpreted the prior version of the Carmack
Amendment and set out a four_step inquiry for determining whether a carrier has
effectively limited its liability. In order to do that, we said, the carrier
must:
"(1) maintain a tariff within the prescribed
guidelines of the Interstate Commerce Commission; (2) obtain the shipper's
agreement as to his choice of liability; (3) give the shipper a reasonable
opportunity to choose between two or more levels of liability; and (4) issue a
receipt or bill of lading prior to moving the shipment."
Bio_Lab, 911 F.2d at 1582 (quoting Hughes, 829 F.2d at 1415).
We held specifically that:
where the shipper has declared the value of his goods in a
bill of lading a provision to the contrary in the printed portion of the
document [or in a tariff] cannot operate as an agreement of the parties
establishing a different value unless it is reasonably clear that the shipper
was specifically aware of that provision.
Id. at 1583.
The shipper in Bio_Lab had declared the value of its shipment
on the carrier's bill of lading as approximately $10,000, but the bill of lading
and an applicable tariff provided for a liability limitation of $250
notwithstanding the declared value, unless the carrier and shipper executed a
separate contract increasing the carrier's liability. Because there was no
evidence that the shipper was actually aware of the liability limitation, we
concluded that the carrier's printed bill of lading and tariff provisions did
not trump the declared value the shipper had written on the bill of lading. Id.
at 1582.
In Siren, Inc., v. Estes Express Lines, 249 F.3d 1268 (11th
Cir.2001), the shipper drafted a bill of lading which incorporated
industry_specific terminology that included a limitation of liability. The
shipper relied on Bio_Lab, but we distinguished it because in Bio_Lab the
carrier had drafted the bill of lading. We held that in a case like Siren
"where the shipper drafted the bill of lading and incorporated industry
specific terminology which ... undisputably includes a limitation of
liability," the shipper cannot avoid the liability limitation even if the
shipper did not know what the industry term meant. Siren, 249 F.3d at 1272. In
those circumstances, we concluded that the fact the shipper did not have actual
knowledge of the liability_limiting attribute of an industry term was a
unilateral mistake, which meant the contract was not subject to reformation
without the carrier's consent. Id. (citing Hughes, 829 F.2d at 1418_19). And, of
course, the carrier did not consent, or there would have been no lawsuit.
So, the pivot on which this type of case turns is that formed
by the Bio_Lab/Siren ridge line. Watkins contends that this case falls on the
Siren side, because Sassy Doll prepared the bill of lading. That depends on what
"prepared" means. When we spoke in Siren of the shipper
"preparing" or "drafting" the bill of lading, we were
speaking of creation and not completion. The cases cited in the Siren opinion
bear out that a shipper "prepares" or "drafts" the bill of
lading for purposes of this rule when the shipper actually creates the bill of
lading, not when it merely fills in the blanks on one the carrier has created.
See id. at 1271_72 (citing Swift Textiles, Inc. v. Watkins Motor Lines, Inc.,
799 F.2d 697, 703 (11th Cir.1986) ("[I]t is the shipper's own agent who
prepared the short form bill of lading on its own preprinted standardized
contract form."); Am. Cyanamid Co. v. New Penn Motor Express, Inc., 979
F.2d 310, 314 (3d Cir.1992) (stating that "[t]he released value was
specified on [the shipper's] own form of bill of lading"); Hughes Aircraft
Co. v. N. Am. Van Lines, Inc., 970 F.2d 609, 612 (9th Cir.1992) (stating that
the shipper "drafted the contract and directly negotiated its terms");
Mech. Tech. Inc. v. Ryder Truck Lines, Inc., 776 F.2d 1085, 1086 (2d Cir.1985)
(describing the bill of lading as "one of [the shipper's] own forms");
Nieman Marcus Group, Inc. v. Quast Transfer, Inc., 1999 WL 436589, Fed. Carr.
Cas. ¶ 84,108 (N.D. Ill. June 21, 1999) (describing the bill of lading as a
"pre_printed Nieman Marcus [the shipper's] form")).
Besides, in Siren we distinguished Bio_Lab on the ground that
in that case, unlike in Siren itself, it was the carrier which had drafted the
bill of lading, Siren, 249 F.3d at 1271 n. 4, and all the shipper had done to
the bill of lading was to fill in the blanks, Bio_Lab, 911 F.2d at 1581. In the
present case, as in Bio_Lab, the carrier "drafted" or
"prepared" the bill of lading and the shipper filled in the blanks.
That puts this case on the Bio_ Lab side of the ridge, not on the Siren side.
We also disagree with Watkins' contention that the bills of
lading and tariffs in Bio_Lab and this case are distinguishable. The bill of
lading and tariff in Bio_Lab are almost identical to the ones in this case. In
Bio_ Lab, the bill of lading had a space to declare the value of the shipment, a
paragraph in the tariff purporting to limit liability to a certain amount
notwithstanding the declared value on the bill of lading if higher_valued goods
were "inadvertently" accepted for shipment, and a provision stating
that the shipper could request excess coverage in a separate agreement. Id. at
1581_ 82. The only difference between the relevant documents in Bio_Lab and this
case is that the tariff in this case allows the shipper to request excess
coverage on the bill of lading instead of requiring a separate document. Before
deciding whether the documents in this case were sufficient under Bio_Lab to
have provided the shipper with a reasonable opportunity to choose excess
liability coverage, we need to deal with the possibility that the reasonable
opportunity requirement of Bio_Lab is no longer good law.
We noted in Siren that the entire decision in Bio_Lab might
need to be reconsidered in light of the changes Congress has made to the Carmack
Amendment since the Bio_Lab decision came out. Siren, 249 F.3d at 1271 n. 4.
"[I]n a situation ... where our authority derives from Congress, ... a
clear change in the law by Congress could ... justify a panel of this court in
not following an earlier panel's decision, where the prior panel's decision was
based on legislation that had been changed or repealed." United States v.
Woodard, 938 F.2d 1255, 1258 n. 4 (11th Cir.1991). [FN1] For purposes of this
case, the question is whether the reasonable opportunity to choose requirement
applied in Bio_Lab survives the intervening congressional actions. [FN2]
When we decided Bio_Lab, the Carmack Amendment was contained
in 49 U.S.C. § 11707 (1988) and 49 U.S.C. § 10730 (1988). Congress has amended
the statutory frameworks twice since that decision. First, the Trucking Industry
Regulatory Reform Act of 1994 ("TIRRA"), Pub.L. No. 103_311, tit. II,
§ 206, 108 Stat. 1673, 1684_85, eliminated the requirement that non_household
goods carriers file tariffs with the Interstate Commerce Commission
("ICC"), 49 U.S.C. §§ 10702, 10762(a)(1) (1988). Second, the ICC
Termination Act of 1995 ("ICCTA"), Pub.L. No. 104_88, tit. I, § 103,
ch. 147, sec. 14706, 109 Stat. 803, 907_10, replaced § 11707 and § 10730 with
§ 14706. The ICCTA also added the subsection which requires carriers to
"provide to the shipper, on request of the shipper, a written or electronic
copy of the rate, classification, rules, and practices, upon which any rate
applicable to its shipment or agreed to between the shipper and carrier is
based." 49 U.S.C. § 13710(a)(1); see also id. § 14706(c)(1)(B). The
legislative history of the ICCTA states that § 14706(c)(1) "is intended to
return to the pre_TIRRA situation where shippers were responsible for
determining the conditions imposed on the transportation of a shipment."
H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 104_422, at 223 (1995), reprinted in 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. 850,
908.
Those legislative changes are not inconsistent with the
reasonable opportunity requirement, which has been part of Carmack Amendment
jurisprudence for at least the past fifty years, see Hollingsworth & Vose
Co. v. A_P_A Transp. Corp., 158 F.3d 617, 619_20 (1st Cir.1998) (citing New
York, New Haven & Hartford R.R. v. Nothnagle, 346 U.S. 128, 135_36, 73 S.Ct.
986, 990, 97 L.Ed. 1500 (1953)), and has been applied throughout the circuits
since that time. [FN3] "Congress is presumed to know the federal courts'
interpretation of a statute that it intends to amend," and "[w]here
there is no indication that Congress intended to change the meaning courts have
given to the statute, we are to presume that it did not intend any such
change." Iraola & CIA, S.A. v. Kimberly_Clark Corp., 232 F.3d 854,
859_60 (11th Cir.2000). The statutory language concerning liability
"limited to a value established by written or electronic declaration of the
shipper or by written agreement between the carrier and shipper," 49 U.S.C.
§ 14706(c)(1)(A), is identical in all material respects in the current and
previous versions of the Carmack Amendment.
As it concerns this case, the most that can be said about the
latest version of the statute is that a carrier is now required to provide a
shipper with the carrier's tariff if the shipper requests it, instead of the
shipper filing its tariff with the now_defunct ICC. See Opp v. Wheaton Van
Lines, Inc., 231 F.3d 1060, 1063 (7th Cir.2000) (applying 49 U.S.C. § 14706
with the same four part test as Bio_Lab with the first part modified to reflect
the statutory changes). Nothing about that change is inconsistent with the half_
century old reasonable opportunity requirement. Notwithstanding the amendments
to the Carmack Amendment, a carrier wishing to limit its liability is still
required to give the shipper a reasonable opportunity to choose between
different levels of liability.
That conclusion leads back to the issue of whether Watkins'
documents did give Sassy Doll the requisite opportunity to choose between two or
more levels of coverage. Some cases upholding carrier liability limitations
under the reasonable opportunity requirement deal with situations where the bill
of lading contains a declared value box, similar to the one on Watkins' tariff,
but where the shipper left the box blank. See, e.g., Hollingsworth, 158 F.3d at
621; Norton v. Jim Phillips Horse Transp., Inc., 901 F.2d 821, 824_25 (10th
Cir.1989); Hughes v. United Van Lines, Inc., 829 F.2d 1407, 1423_24 (7th
Cir.1987); Mech. Tech. Inc. v. Ryder Truck Lines, Inc., 776 F.2d 1085, 1088 (2d
Cir.1985).
The theory behind those cases is unremarkable: If the shipper
fails to fill in the blanks on the bill of lading, there is no "value
established by written or electronic declaration of the shipper." 49 U.S.C.
§ 14706(c)(1)(A). Because the shipper is charged with notice of the carrier's
tariff, a provision in a tariff which limits liability to a certain amount
absent a declaration of value in the bill of lading constitutes a "written
agreement between the carrier and shipper," id., limiting the carrier's
liability to the value provided in the tariff. See Hollingsworth, 158 F.3d at
619. In that situation, the declared value box provides the reasonable
opportunity to choose a higher level of liability, and the shipper's expectation
that the carrier would be fully liable for any potential loss despite a failure
to declare the actual value of the shipment is no more than a unilateral
mistake. See Am. Express Co. v. U.S. Horse Shoe Co., 244 U.S. 58, 61_62, 37 S.Ct.
595, 596_97, 61 L.Ed. 990 (1917); Norton, 901 F.2d at 826_ 27; Hughes, 829 F.2d
at 1411; Hopper Furs, Inc. v. Emery Air Freight Corp., 749 F.2d 1261, 1264_65
(8th Cir.1985); Schweitzer Aircraft Corp. v. Landstar Ranger, Inc., 114
F.Supp.2d 199, 200_01 (W.D.N.Y.2000).
On the other hand, where the bill of lading or other relevant
document does not contain a declared value box, an attempted liability
limitation contained in the carrier's tariff is not effective because the
carrier has not given the shipper a reasonable opportunity to choose a higher
level of liability. See, e.g., Camar Corp. v. Preston Trucking Co., 221 F.3d
271, 276 (1st Cir.2000); Rohner Gehrig Co. v. Tri_State Motor Transit, 950 F.2d
1079, 1082, 1084 (5th Cir.1992) (en banc). In those cases there is no unilateral
mistake on the part of the shipper; instead, there is the absence of a
reasonable opportunity for the shipper to choose different levels of coverage.
See Rohner Gehrig, 950 F.2d at 1084.
This case is different from either of those scenarios,
because here the bill of lading does contain a declared value box which the
shipper filled in with the actual value of the shipment, but the tariff requires
the shipper to do something more in order to receive full protection for that
declared value. The additional requirement might not be a problem if the shipper
could determine from looking at the tariff and the bill of lading exactly how to
indicate a desire for full value coverage. The problem arises because neither
the tariff nor the bill of lading tell the shipper where on the bill of lading
it can request more coverage. Even in Bio_Lab, the only case we are aware of
where there was an attempt to have the tariff's liability_limitation clause
trump the value declared on the bill of lading, the tariff and bill of lading
told the shipper exactly how to request excess liability coverage. They
instructed the shipper to notify the carrier in writing of the request at least
72 hours in advance, and they specified what that notification must contain.
Bio_Lab, 911 F.2d at 1581_82.
As Watkins describes it, the tariff in this case requires the
shipper to complete a two_step process in order to obtain excess liability
coverage: First, declare the value of the shipment on the bill of lading, and
second, enter on the bill of lading a request for excess liability coverage. The
problem is not with the first step, but with the second. The bill of lading
contains a space specifically for declaring the value and Sassy Doll used it,
but the bill of lading does not contain any space for requesting excess
liability coverage. There is nowhere on the bill of lading in which a request
for such coverage would not be out of place. And nowhere in the record or in
Watkins' briefs on appeal is there any suggestion where on the bill of lading
the shipper should write "excess liability coverage requested."
Not until he was pressed at oral argument did counsel for
Watkins come forth with an idea about where on the bill of lading a shipper
could indicate its request for excess liability coverage. His late_springing
idea is that the shipper could place the request in the box beneath the heading
marked: "Kind of Packaging, Description of Articles, Special Marks and
Exceptions, NMFC Item Number and Class (Subject to Correction)." However,
that box in the bill of lading, particularly when considered in the context of
the section containing it, appears to be intended primarily for a physical
description of the shipment, and there is nothing to tip off shippers that it is
the correct place to ask for more coverage.
We cannot say that the district court's finding that the
tariff requires the shipper "to write and fit its request for additional
coverage somewhere on the bill of lading__in a section or box meant for
something else" is clearly erroneous. A shipper understandably would be
hesitant to indicate its request for excess liability coverage in a space on the
bill of lading meant for other information, for the same reasons that people
naturally prefer to avoid disobeying instructions on a form. Forcing the shipper
to express a choice where there is no proper place to do so is not providing the
shipper with a reasonable opportunity to choose. Our sympathy does not go out to
the drafter of a bill of lading who blames another party for the results that
flow from defects in that document.
That said, we decide only the case before us. The result
might well be different if the tariff indicated where on the bill of lading the
shipper should indicate its request for excess liability coverage. For example,
if counsel's idea at oral argument had more than advocacy_born inspiration
behind it, the tariff might have stated that the shipper could indicate its
excess coverage preference in the box marked "Kind of Packaging,
Description of Articles, Special Marks and Exceptions, NMFC Item Number and
Class (Subject to Correction)." That probably would have puzzled shippers
somewhat, but some guidance is better than none. Of course, the simplest
thing__however foreign simplicity is to this area of the law__would be for the
carrier to add an excess coverage box to its bill of lading. Carriers take heed.
IV.
AFFIRMED.
FN* Honorable Melvin Brunetti, United States Circuit
Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
FN1. Watkins contends that Bio_Lab should be revisited
for the additional reason that a First Circuit case upon which it relied,
Anton v. Greyhound Van Lines, Inc., 591 F.2d 103 (1st Cir.1978), was
expressly overruled by the First Circuit in Hollingsworth & Vose Co. v.
A_P_A Transp. Corp., 158 F.3d 617, 620 (1st Cir.1998) (applying the old
version of the Carmack Amendment), after Bio_Lab was decided. That does not
matter to us as a panel, because the binding effect of our prior precedents
in this circuit is impervious to the decisions of other circuits. See DeLong
Equip. Co. v. Washington Mills Electro Minerals Corp., 997 F.2d 1340, 1342
n. 1 (11th Cir.1993) (Fifth Circuit decision overruling earlier decision of
that circuit did not change status of that earlier decision as binding
precedent in this circuit). We are bound to follow the Bio_Lab panel's prior
decision unless the subsequent legislative overhaul of the Carmack Amendment
frees us from doing so.
FN2. We need not decide whether Bio_Lab 's requirement
that the shipper be subjectively aware of a liability limitation in a tariff
is still good law, because even if it is not this case comes out the same
way. Sassy Doll still wins, even if its subjective unawareness of Item 780
of Watkins' tariff is irrelevant, because Watkins failed to provide a
reasonable opportunity for Sassy Doll or any other shipper using the same
bill of lading to choose between two or more levels of coverage. In other
words, Watkins' documents fail the reasonable opportunity to choose
requirement even if the changes to the Carmack Amendment render the
pertinent inquiry a purely objective one.
FN3. See Hughes Aircraft Co. v. N. Am. Van Lines, Inc., 970
F.2d 609, 611_12 (9th Cir.1992); Rohner Gehrig Co. v. Tri_State Motor Transit,
950 F.2d 1079, 1083 (5th Cir.1992) (en banc); Carmana Designs Ltd. v. N. Am. Van
Lines Inc., 943 F.2d 316, 319 (3d Cir.1991); Bio_Lab, 911 F.2d at 1582; Norton
v. Jim Phillips Horse Transp., Inc., 901 F.2d 821, 824 (10th Cir.1989); Hughes
v. United Van Lines, Inc., 829 F.2d 1407, 1415_16 (7th Cir.1987); Mech. Tech.
Inc. v. Ryder Truck Lines, Inc., 776 F.2d 1085, 1088 (2d Cir.1985); Anton, 591
F.2d at 108; Chandler v. Aero Mayflower Transit Co., 374 F.2d 129, 135 (4th
Cir.1967).