CSX Trans Co v. Novolog Bucks Cty ( 2007 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2007 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    9-5-2007
    CSX Trans Co v. Novolog Bucks Cty
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 06-3431
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    "CSX Trans Co v. Novolog Bucks Cty" (2007). 2007 Decisions. Paper 354.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2007/354
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 06-3431
    CSX TRANSPORTATION COMPANY,
    Appellant
    v.
    NOVOLOG BUCKS COUNTY
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D. C. No. 04-cv-04018)
    District Judge: Hon. Thomas N. O’Neill, Jr.
    Argued on July 12, 2007
    Before: SLOVITER, ALDISERT and ROTH, Circuit Judges
    (filed: September 5, 2007)
    Paul D. Keenan, Esquire (Argued)
    Charles L. Howard, Esquire
    Keenan, Cohen & Howard, P.C.
    One Commerce Square
    2005 Market Street, Suite 3520
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellant, CSX Transportation, Inc.
    Frederick A. Tecce, Esquire (Argued)
    McShea Tecce, P. C.
    The Bell Atlantic Tower, 28 th Floor
    1717 Arch Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellee, Novolog Bucks County
    John K. Fiorilla, Esquire (Argued)
    Capehart Scatchard, P. A.
    8000 Midlantic Drive, Suite 300
    Mount Laurel, NJ 08054
    Counsel for Amici Curiae, Norfolk Southern
    Railway Company and BNSF Railway Company
    2
    OPINION
    ROTH, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal concerns the liability of entities such as
    warehousemen, pier operators, transloaders, and connecting
    carriers for demurrage charges, i.e., penalties assessed by
    railroads when shippers or recipients of freight do not timely
    return railcars to service after loading or unloading. The railroad
    in this case sought to assess demurrage charges against a
    transloader for delays in returning both inbound and outbound
    railcars to service. With respect to inbound freight, the
    transloader received loaded railcars on behalf of steel companies
    or others and forwarded the steel by ship toward mostly foreign
    destinations; with respect to outbound freight, it ordered empty
    railcars, which it then loaded with steel for transportation by the
    railroad to domestic destinations. The transloader objected to the
    assessment, arguing that it could not be subjected to charges
    under an agreement – namely, the transportation contract – to
    which it was not a party.
    We hold that the consignee-agent provision of the
    Interstate Commerce Commission Termination Act, 49 U.S.C. §
    10743(a)(1), governs this dispute as to the charges assessed
    against Novolog as the consignee of freight. Under this
    provision a transloader or other such entity, if named on the bill
    of lading as the sole consignee, is presumptively liable for
    demurrage charges arising from unloading delays, unless it
    accepts the freight as the agent of another and notifies the carrier
    of its status in writing prior to delivery. Because the factual
    3
    record was not sufficiently developed, however, we cannot
    determine what the bills of lading showed here; thus we vacate
    the District Court’s order granting judgment to the railroad as a
    matter of law and remand for further proceedings.
    With respect to the transloader’s potential liability for
    demurrage charges in its role as the shipper (consignor) of
    freight, we refrain from announcing a holding because the
    question was not fully addressed or briefed, but we will vacate
    the District Court’s grant of judgment on this claim as well and
    remand it for further consideration in light of our holding
    regarding consignee liability.
    Finally, we hold that the District Court did not abuse its
    discretion when it refused to refer an issue to the Surface
    Transportation Board (STB), where the party moving for referral
    did not invoke the doctrine of primary jurisdiction until after the
    District Court had already decided the issue and the question was
    not one on which the expertise of the STB was not crucial to the
    decision.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    The parties in this litigation are businesses engaged in the
    interstate transportation of freight. CSX Transportation, Inc.
    (“CSX”) is a rail common carrier; Novolog Bucks County
    (“Novolog”) is a private port with access to a rail-served
    industrial facility on the Delaware River.
    As relevant here, the Novolog port functioned as a transfer
    point for the import, export, and domestic transportation of steel.
    Following instructions from various steel companies, CSX
    delivered to Novolog railcars loaded with steel, which Novolog
    unloaded and transferred onto other means of transportation. In
    addition, when Novolog so requested, CSX placed empty railcars
    4
    at Novolog’s disposal for loading with imported steel and
    transportation to domestic destinations. Novolog did not have an
    ownership interest in any of the shipments at issue here, but
    rather received and forwarded cargo on behalf of others and on
    their instructions.
    According to CSX’s Tariff, a person receiving its railcars
    for unloading, or ordering empty railcars for loading, had two
    days to do so and return the cars to service; if the cars were kept
    beyond this time, demurrage charges would be assessed.1 In
    particular, CSX’s Tariff Item 8070-G provided that “[u]nless
    otherwise advised [,] consignor at origin or consignee at
    destination will be responsible for the payment of demurrage
    rates.”
    During the early part of 2003, fluctuations in the price of
    1
    Demurrage is “a charge exacted by a carrier from a shipper
    or consignee on account of a failure to load or unload cars
    within the specified time prescribed by the applicable tariffs.
    Railroads charge shippers and receivers of freight ‘demurrage’
    fees if the shippers or receivers detain freight cars on the rails
    beyond a designated number of days.” Union Pacific Railroad
    Co. v. Ametek, Inc., 
    104 F.3d 558
    , 559 n.2 (3d Cir. 1997)
    (internal quotations and citation marks omitted).
    Under prior statutory regimes, railroads’ tariffs, including
    tariffs regarding demurrage charges, had to be filed with the
    Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC). After the enactment
    of the Interstate Commerce Commission Termination Act
    (ICCTA) in 1996, the Interstate Commerce Commission was
    replaced with the Surface Transportation Board (STB) and filing
    of tariffs was no longer required. CSX’s Tariff 8100 is
    published by CSX on its web site and specifically incorporated
    into all its transportation agreements.
    5
    steel caused a significant increase in the amount of steel
    delivered for export to the Novolog facility. As a result, Novolog
    was unable to perform loading and unloading operations within
    the two-day time frame established by the Tariff, and CSX began
    charging Novolog demurrage fees, which totaled $260,304 by
    August, 2003. Novolog refused to pay, arguing it was not liable
    for demurrage since it was not a party to the bills of lading or
    other contracts regarding the shipments at issue and had no
    responsibility for or control over the volume of railcars that
    entered its facility.2 CSX then brought this action in the Eastern
    District of Pennsylvania seeking payment of the demurrage
    charges, with interest, and attorney fees. It argued that Novolog
    was liable under the tariff because it was listed in the bills of
    lading either as the sole consignee for the freight (where the
    charges arose from unloading delays) or as the shipper (where the
    charges arose from loading delays).3
    After discovery the parties filed cross-motions for
    summary judgment. CSX submitted documents appearing to
    show that in each of the instances for which CSX assessed
    demurrage charges against Novolog for delays in unloading,
    Novolog was listed as the sole consignee on the waybills, without
    any limiting designations such as “care of” or “account of,” and
    in each of the instances for which CSX assessed demurrage
    charges against Novolog for loading delays, Novolog was listed
    2
    A bill of lading is “the basic transportation contract
    between the shipper-consignor and the carrier; its terms and
    conditions bind the shipper and all connecting carriers.” S.
    Pacific Transp. Co. v. Commercial Metals Co., 
    456 U.S. 336
    ,
    342 (1982) (internal citation omitted).
    3
    Novolog filed a counterclaim, on which it eventually
    prevailed at trial. The counterclaim has no relevance to the
    issues before us.
    6
    as the shipper on the waybills.4 In addition, CSX presented to the
    District Court many pages of computer spreadsheets purporting
    to reflect the fact that Novolog was named as either the
    consignee or the shipper on the corresponding bills of lading.
    Novolog contested the admissibility of the documents
    presented by CSX and argued they were not actual bills of lading.
    It also submitted the deposition of David Reid, the CEO of
    Novolog during the relevant period, who testified that Novolog
    had not given permission to be listed as consignee for the freight
    in the railcars at issue and had not created or executed any of the
    bills of lading for the shipments that resulted in demurrage
    charges.
    On May 24, 2006, the District Court denied both parties’
    summary judgment motions regarding the demurrage dispute.
    The court rejected CSX’s theory that Novolog became subject to
    liability by accepting freight as the named consignee on the bills
    of lading or by ordering cars as the named shipper; it therefore
    declined to resolve the evidentiary issues or to make a finding of
    fact as to whether Novolog was indeed named as the consignee
    4
    A waybill is a “[w]ritten document made out by [the] carrier
    listing point of origin and destination, consignor and consignee,
    and describing goods included in shipment . . ..” Black’s Law
    Dictionary 1429 (5th ed. 1979). According to the Sixth Circuit
    Court of Appeals, “the bill of lading is a title document, while
    the waybill describes the freight, its route, and the carriers
    involved in its shipment. The waybill accompanies the freight
    throughout the shipment and into the hands of the destination
    carrier.” Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Escanaba and Lake
    Superior R. Co., 
    897 F.2d 210
    , 211 (6th Cir. 1990). The record
    does not clarify what significance, if any, the parties ascribe to
    the different role played by the waybills and the bills of lading
    that accompanied the shipments at issue.
    7
    or as the shipper in the bills of lading. See CSX Transp. v.
    Novolog Bucks County, No. 04-CV-4018, 
    2006 WL 1451280
    , at
    *3 n.3-5, *4 n.6 (E.D. Pa. May 24, 2006). It held, however, that
    summary judgment was inappropriate because there remained an
    issue of material fact as to whether Novolog had entered a
    separate contractual agreement with CSX that might make it
    liable to the charges.
    Following the issuance of the opinion denying the cross-
    motions for summary judgment, CSX filed an admission that
    “other than Novolog being the named consignee on bills of
    lading, and Novolog having accepted delivery of the loaded cars
    by CSX, CSX had no separate contractual relationship with
    Novolog governing the movement and / or disposition of the
    detained rail cars.” As a result the District Court entered
    judgment as a matter of law in favor of Novolog on July 12,
    2006.
    CSX then filed a motion for reconsideration and an
    alternative motion for referral to the STB. The District Court
    denied the motion for reconsideration as untimely and denied the
    motion for referral “because [its] memorandum and order of May
    24, 2006 [was] not tantamount to an attack upon the
    reasonableness of the tariff terms.” CSX filed this timely appeal.
    II. Discussion
    A. Jurisdiction
    We have jurisdiction of this appeal from a final order of
    the District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The District Court
    had diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and federal
    question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1337 over a cause of
    action arising under the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. §
    10101 et seq.
    8
    Although the subject matter jurisdiction of the District
    Court is not in question, before we turn to the merits we must
    address CSX’s contention that the District Court, in rendering its
    decision, usurped the primary jurisdiction of the STB. CSX
    urges that in holding that it could not exact demurrage charges
    from parties such as Novolog, the District Court implicitly
    declared its tariff unreasonable, a determination reserved
    statutorily to the STB. See 49 U.S.C. § 10702 (mandating that
    rail carriers shall establish reasonable rates, rules, and practices);
    49 U.S.C. § 10704.
    The District Court refused to refer the matter to the STB
    on the grounds that its decision did not amount to a finding that
    CSX’s rates were unreasonable. On appeal, CSX argues that
    although the District Court’s opinion may not have expressly
    held CSX’s demurrage tariff unreasonable, it nonetheless “gutted
    it and rendered it ineffective.” Novolog responds that CSX’s
    motion for conditional referral was untimely because it was filed
    beyond the time limit provided for motions for reconsideration
    and that in any event it lacks substantive merit. A district court’s
    decision not to submit an issue for initial determination by an
    administrative agency is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    Puerto Rico Mar. Shipping Auth. v. Valley Freight Sys., 
    856 F.2d 546
    , 549 (3d Cir.1988).
    Primary jurisdiction “applies where a claim is originally
    cognizable in the courts, and comes into play whenever
    enforcement of the claim requires the resolution of issues which,
    under a regulatory scheme, have been placed within the special
    competence of an administrative body . . ..” United States v. W.
    Pac. R.R. Co., 
    352 U.S. 59
    , 64 (1965). In such cases, courts may
    refer specific questions to the administrative body charged with
    their resolution. See 28 U.S.C. § 1336 (district courts may refer
    an action to the Surface Transportation Board for determination.)
    9
    Unlike objections to subject matter jurisdiction, which can be
    raised at any point, primary jurisdiction arguments can be
    waived. Baltimore & Ohio Chicago Terminal R.R. v. Wisconsin
    Cent. Ltd., 
    154 F.3d 404
    , 411 (7th Cir. 1998); see also Northwest
    Airlines v. County of Kent, 
    510 U.S. 355
    , 366 n.10 (1994)
    (declining to invoke the primary jurisdiction doctrine where the
    parties had not raised the issue). Primary jurisdiction “is
    concerned with promoting proper relationships between the
    courts and administrative agencies charged with particular
    regulatory duties.” W. Pac. R.R. 
    Co., 352 U.S. at 63
    . It does not
    strictly limit the power of the courts, but rather is intended to
    “serve as a means of coordinating administrative and judicial
    machinery and to promote uniformity and take advantage of the
    agencies’ special expertise.” Pejepscot Indus. Park, Inc. v.
    Maine Cent. R.R. Co., 
    215 F.3d 195
    , 205 (1st Cir. 2000).
    No coordination would be achieved by requiring a District
    Court, after it has rendered a judgment, to vacate that judgment
    upon motion and refer a question it has already decided to an
    agency. CSX could have filed a petition for declaratory action
    with the STB once it became clear that Novolog was contesting
    the charges or could have raised the issue of primary jurisdiction
    at any time during the preliminary phases of the litigation.
    Instead it chose to wait until judgment had been entered, and then
    requested a second bite at the apple. In addition, the STB’s
    expertise, while helpful, would not have been crucial to the
    determination of the issues here, which involve the analysis of
    precedent and statutory interpretation. We therefore hold that
    the District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying CSX’s
    motion for conditional referral to the STB.5
    5
    Our opinion in MCI Telecomm. v. Teleconcepts, 
    71 F.3d 1086
    (3d Cir. 1995), is not to the contrary. There we held that
    the doctrine of primary jurisdiction mandated referral of a
    question requiring the interpretation and application of a local
    10
    B. Liability for demurrage charges of a named
    consignee that accepts freight
    The most important and vigorously argued issue in this
    case is whether a transloader or connecting carrier such as
    Novolog can become subject to liability for demurrage charges
    by being listed as the consignee in a bill of lading and accepting
    delivery of the freight listed therein, even if it does not have a
    beneficial interest in the freight and has not authorized the
    shipper or the carrier to list it as the consignee. The District
    Court held, as a matter of law, that it cannot. We review its
    judgment de novo. A.W. v. Jersey City Public Schools, 
    486 F.3d 791
    , 794 (3d Cir. 2007).
    The District Court held, first, that whether or not Novolog
    was in fact listed as the sole consignee in the bills of lading, that
    unauthorized and unilateral designation was not sufficient to
    make it a legal consignee for purposes of imposing demurrage
    liability. CSX, 
    2006 WL 1451280
    , at *8, *11. 6 Second, the
    telephone company’s tariff to the Pennsylvania Public Utilities
    Commission (PUC). We based that decision on the nature of the
    question to be decided, which the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
    had held to be one peculiarly within the special expertise of the
    PUC. The same deference is unnecessary here.
    6
    As mentioned, the District Court initially held that a
    genuine issue of material fact remained as to whether a separate
    contract between Novolog and CSX, known in the litigation as
    the Refund Contract, constituted a contractual agreement
    regarding the railcars that could subject Novolog to liability for
    demurrage charges. That issue was subsequently resolved by
    CSX’s admission that it did not. With the last issue of material
    fact eliminated, the District Court then granted judgment as a
    11
    District Court dismissed CSX’s argument that Novolog was
    liable as the agent of an undisclosed consignee principal, since
    “this rule of law only applies where an agent actually is entering
    into a contract on behalf of the principal.” 
    Id. at *9.
    Third, the
    District Court held that CSX was not liable for demurrage under
    the statutory terms of ICCTA’s consignee-agent liability
    provision, 49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1) (providing for liability of
    consignee-agents who do not notify carrier of agency
    relationship), since that section “relates only to the payment of
    rates for shipment of freight not demurrage and . . . demurrage
    charges are distinct from transportation rates.” 
    Id. at *10.
    Finally, the District Court rejected CSX’s argument that
    Novolog’s knowledge of the industry practices, its acceptance of
    notices that railcars had been delivered, and its requests for
    railcars confirmed that it was the legal consignee or consignor of
    the shipments.
    We hold that recipients of freight who are named as
    consignees on bills of lading are subject to liability for demurrage
    charges arising after they accept delivery unless they act as
    agents of another and comply with the notification procedures
    established in ICCTA’s consignee-agent liability provision, 49
    U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1).
    We take as our starting point two well-established and oft-
    repeated principles. The first is that liability for freight charges,
    including demurrage charges, may be imposed against a
    consignor, consignee, or owner of the property, or on others by
    statute, contract, or prevailing custom. Illinois Cent. R.R. Co. v.
    South Tec Dev. Warehouse, 
    337 F.3d 813
    , 820 (7th Cir. 2003)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); Middle Atl.
    Conference v. United States, 
    353 F. Supp. 1109
    , 1118 (D.D.C.
    1972) (three-judge panel). The second is that the consignee
    matter of law for Novolog.
    12
    becomes a party to the transportation contract, and is therefore
    bound by it, upon accepting the freight; thus it is subject to
    liability for transportation charges even in the absence of a
    separate contractual agreement or relevant statutory provision.
    See Louisville & Nashville Ry. Co. v. Central Iron & Coal Co.,
    
    265 U.S. 59
    , 70 (1924) (“if a shipment is accepted, the consignee
    becomes liable, as a matter of law, for the full amount of the
    freight charges, whether they are demanded at the time of
    delivery, or not until later”); Erie R. Co. v. Waite, 
    114 N.Y.S. 1115
    (1909) (demurrage may be imposed upon consignees
    independently of statute or express contract); Gage v. Morse, 
    12 Allen 410
    , 90 Am. Dec. 155 (Mass. 1866) (“[i]f the consignee
    will take the goods, he adopts the contract”).7
    Historically the principle governing the liability of parties
    named as consignees in the bill of lading was a simple one of
    notice. In general “a consignee as such under a straight bill of
    lading [was] liable [because] treated as presumptive owner and
    compelled to pay.” In re Tidewater Coal Exch., 
    292 F. 225
    , 234
    (D.C.N.Y. 1923) (Hand, J.). However, if the consignee was
    “known [by the carrier] not to be the owner” but a mere “factor”
    or agent, the consignee was not liable for demurrage. 
    Id. The carrier
    might have notice of the relationship because the bill of
    lading included language such as “care of” or “account of,” or
    might simply know of the agency through long dealing even if
    7
    The status of owners is somewhat more complex and not
    relevant here since the parties agree that Novolog did not have
    a beneficial interest in the cargo. See, e.g., Wheaton Van Lines,
    Inc. v. Gahagan, 
    669 A.2d 745
    , 749 (Me. 1996) (“consignee”
    defined to include “an owner of shipped goods who is identified
    to the carrier as the intended recipient of the goods, who does in
    fact accept the goods not as an agent but for itself, and who in
    every way but designation on a bill of lading acts as a
    consignee.”)
    13
    the bill of lading failed to disclose it. 
    Id. at 233-34.
    In either
    case, the principal rather than the agent would be liable. 
    Id. These common
    law principles are reflected in ICCTA’s
    consignee-agent liability provision, titled “Liability for payment
    of rates,” which provides in relevant part:
    Liability for payment of rates for transportation for
    a shipment of property by a shipper or consignor to
    a consignee other than the shipper or consignor, is
    determined under this subsection when the
    transportation is provided by a rail carrier under
    this part. When the shipper or consignor instructs
    the rail carrier transporting the property to deliver
    it to a consignee that is an agent only, not having
    beneficial title to the property, the consignee is
    liable for rates billed at the time of delivery for
    which the consignee is otherwise liable, but not for
    additional rates that may be found to be due after
    delivery if the consignee gives written notice to the
    delivering carrier before delivery of the property–
    (A) of the agency and absence of beneficial
    title; and
    (B) of the name and address of the
    beneficial owner of the property if
    it is reconsigned or diverted to a
    place other than the place specified
    in the original bill of lading.
    49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1) (emphasis added).
    This section appears designed to address precisely the
    case before us, namely, the situation where a carrier assesses
    14
    charges after delivery against the named consignee and recipient
    of the freight, but the consignee/recipient contests its liability for
    the charges on the grounds that it is a mere middleman.
    Building on the common law, it adopts the principle that the
    named consignee becomes a party to the transportation contract
    upon receipt of the freight and is thereafter liable for all relevant
    charges, whether immediately due or arising after delivery,
    unless the consignee is an agent and the carrier has notice of
    this. It adds precision to the common law tradition, however, by
    clearly laying out what a named consignee/recipient must do to
    avoid liability on the grounds that it is an agent. The
    requirements are not burdensome: the consignee is obligated
    merely to notify the carrier, in writing, of the agency
    relationship.
    Novolog, however, disputes that this section is applicable
    to this case. It argues, first, that Section 10743 applies to “rates
    for transportation,” which do not include demurrage charges.
    Second, it contends that it is not a consignee merely by dint of
    being so designated, without its consent, on the bills of lading,
    and therefore the section cannot apply to it. We disagree.
    First, we need not stray far to discover what the provision
    means by “rates for transportation,” since the statute itself
    contains a definition section.            As used in ICCTA,
    “‘transportation’ includes”:
    (A) a locomotive, car, vehicle, vessel, warehouse,
    wharf, pier, dock, yard, property, facility,
    instrumentality, or equipment of any kind related
    to the movement of passengers or property, or
    both, by rail, regardless of ownership or an
    agreement concerning use; and
    (B) services related to that movement, including receipt,
    15
    delivery, elevation, transfer in transit, refrigeration, icing,
    ventilation, storage, handling, and interchange of
    passengers and property . . ..
    49 U.S.C.§ 10102(9) (emphasis added). There can be little
    question that railcars – as cars, vehicles, instrumentalities, or
    equipment related to the movement of property by rail – are
    encompassed by this definition.
    Although to our knowledge no court has spoken directly
    to the applicability of Section 10743(a)(1) to demurrage rates,
    both the former ICC and a three-judge panel of the District
    Court for the District of Columbia, faced with a substantially
    identical provision applicable to motor carriers, have also found
    it applicable to detention (i.e., demurrage) charges. In Payment
    for Detention Charges, Eastern Central States, 335 I.C.C. 537
    (I.C.C. 1969), the agency relied in part on Section 223 of the
    ICC Act, 49 U.S.C. § 323 (1964), to decide whether a trucking
    association’s tariff was unlawful. The ICC held without
    hesitation that the phrase “transportation charges in respect to
    the transportation of . . . property” in that provision “of course
    [] would encompass charges for demurrage or detention of
    vehicles. . . . While detention charges have a purpose different
    from that of freight charges, . . . demurrage charges are part of
    the total transportation charges.” Payment for Detention
    Charges, 335 I.C.C. at 539-40 (emphasis added).8 Upon review,
    a three-judge panel of the District Court for the District of
    Columbia agreed with the ICC, writing that the term
    8
    There is no substantive difference between the terms
    “transportation charges” and “rates for transportation” in the
    statute. See Historical and Revision Notes to 49 U.S.C. § 10744
    (1982) (“[t]he word ‘rates’ is substituted for ‘charges’ for
    consistency in view of the definition of ‘rate’ in section 10102
    of the revised title”).
    16
    “transportation charges” in Section 223 of the ICC Act “may
    include detention charges.” Middle Atl. Conference v. United
    States, 
    353 F. Supp. 1109
    , 1121 n.34 (D.D.C. 1972).9 We thus
    hold that demurrage rates are “rates for transportation” under
    Section 10743.
    Having determined that ICCTA’s consignee-agent
    notification provision applies to the assessment of demurrage
    9
    In 1981, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    interpreted a predecessor of our current Section 10743 as not
    applying to detention charges. In Blanchette v. Hub City
    Terminals, 
    683 F.2d 1008
    (7th Cir. 1981), it wrote that “[t]he
    purpose of [49 U.S.C. § 3.2 (1976)] was to relieve from liability
    agent-consignees who paid in full carriers’ initial bills, which
    the carrier later discovered were lower than the rate required by
    the tariff.” 
    Id. at 1011.
    Although this is clearly one of the
    purposes of the provision, it by no means excludes its
    applicability to other kinds of charges that can arise after
    delivery. Thus we decline to so limit its reach.
    We also note that our opinion in Baltimore & Ohio
    Chicago Terminal R.R. Co. v. United States, 
    583 F.2d 678
    , 690-
    91 (3d Cir. 1978), does not govern. There we held that the
    provisions of the then-current statute prohibiting rebates did not
    invalidate a proposed regulatory scheme by which the carrier
    was obligated to remit a certain portion of the billed demurrage
    charges to the actual owner of the rail car: these provisions (the
    then-current 49 U.S.C. § 15(15) and 41(1)) did not regulate
    demurrage charges, since the latter were “car service
    regulation[s]” as opposed to transportation rates and charges as
    those terms were used in the provisions at issue. Our decision
    was based on an analysis of the intent of the particular
    provisions at issue and does not affect our interpretation of a
    different provision here.
    17
    charges, we must decide whether it automatically applies to
    entities that are named as consignees on the bills of lading or
    whether more is required to turn such entities into “legal
    consignees” subject to it.
    Novolog argues that the shipper’s or carrier’s unilateral
    decision to designate Novolog as the consignee, without
    Novolog’s permission and where Novolog is not the ultimate
    consignee of the freight, cannot establish its status as a
    consignee for purposes of demurrage liability under the statute
    or otherwise. We disagree for three reasons. First, nothing in
    the statutory language suggests that it intends to restrict the term
    “consignee” to the ultimate consignee of the freight or use it to
    mean anything other than the person to whom the bill of lading
    authorized delivery and who accepts that delivery. Second, to
    hold that the documented designation of an entity as a consignee
    and that entity’s acceptance of the freight is insufficient to hold
    it presumptively liable for demurrage charges would frustrate
    the plain intent of the statute, which is to establish clear, easily
    enforceable rules for liability. And third, to the extent that
    Novolog’s suggests that it would be inequitable to treat the
    named consignee as presumptively liable, that argument is
    unpersuasive.10
    As always, the starting point for interpreting a statute is
    the language of the statute itself. Hallstrom v. Tillamook
    County, 
    493 U.S. 20
    , 25 (1989). Unlike with the phrase “rates
    for transportation,” ICCTA does not define the term
    “consignee” or its cognates. It is a fundamental canon of
    statutory construction, however, that “unless otherwise defined,
    10
    It goes without saying that Novolog’s lack of ownership of
    the freight is immaterial, since the provision is specifically
    directed at consignees “not having beneficial title to the
    property.” 49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1).
    18
    words will be interpreted as taking their ordinary, contemporary,
    common meaning.” Perrin v. United States, 
    444 U.S. 37
    , 42
    (1979). In common usage, the term means nothing more than
    the person to whom cargo is delivered following instructions.
    See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1971)
    (defining “consignee” as “one to whom something is consigned
    or shipped”); Black’s Law Dictionary (6th ed. 1990) (defining
    “consignee” as “[o]ne to whom a consignment is made[; p]erson
    named in bill of lading to whom or to whose order the bill
    promises delivery; [i]n a commercial use, . . . one to whom a
    consigment may be made, a person to whom goods are shipped
    for sale, or one to whom a carrier may lawfully make delivery in
    accordance with his contract of carriage, or one to whom goods
    are consigned, shipped, or otherwise transmitted”). There is
    simply no reason to read the word “consignee” in section 10743
    as having the more restricted meaning of ultimate consignee.11
    11
    Again, we agree with the Middle Atlantic Conference
    court’s analysis of a substantially identical provision in the part
    of the statute dealing with motor carriers. The court wrote that
    Section 223 of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C. § 323
    (1964),
    is addressed essentially at the problem of the
    warehouseman, carrier, etc., who, while acting as
    agent for an undisclosed principal, appears as
    consignee on the bill of lading. . . . [W]ith respect
    to “transportation charges” (which may include
    detention charges), the statute provides that a
    consignee might escape that obligation if certain
    conditions of notice are satisfied.
    Middle Atl. 
    Conference, 353 F. Supp. at 1121
    n.34 (emphasis
    added).
    19
    The statutory language also fails to support the
    contention that an entity can be considered a consignee for
    demurrage purposes only when it has consented to the
    designation in the bill of lading. Indeed, the statute envisages
    specifically the situation where “the shipper or consignor
    instructs the rail carrier transporting the property to deliver it to
    a consignee that is an agent only,” 49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1)
    (emphasis added), i.e., where the person designated by the
    shipper or consignor as the consignee is not in fact the person
    who would normally be responsible for the charges, but is only
    an agent (more properly designated, for instance, as a “care of”
    party).12
    Although we do not rely on them for primary guidance,
    we also note that both the Uniform Commercial Code and the
    Federal Bills of Lading Act define “consignee” in a manner
    consistent with our interpretation. See U.C.C. § 7-102(3)
    (“‘Consignee’ means a person named in a bill of lading to which
    or to whose order the bill promises delivery”); 49 U.S.C. §
    80101(1) (1994) ( “consignee” is “the person named in a bill of
    lading as the person to whom the goods are to be delivered”).
    12
    The alleged bills of lading in this case designate Novolog
    as the sole consignee, without any indication that it is an agent.
    If the bills of lading already contain a designation such as “care
    of,” however, the agency relationship is considered disclosed
    and the consignee-agent is not subject to liability for demurrage
    charges. See R. Franklin Unger, Trustee of the Ind. Hi-Rail
    Corp., debtor – Petition for Declaratory Order – Assessment
    and Collection of Demurrage of Switching Charges, STB
    Docket No. 42030, 2000 STB Lexis 333, n.13 (“demurrage and
    detention charges . . . do not apply to agents acting for the
    principal parties to the transportation [if] the agency relationship
    [is] disclosed”; if the “waybills contain . . . language that
    would clearly establish or refer to an agency relationship,” the
    20
    To hold, as Novolog asks us to do, that the designation in
    the relevant bills of lading should not be given effect without
    some further evidence of consent or involvement would also
    frustrate the plain intent of Section 10743, which is to facilitate
    the effective assessment of charges by establishing clear rules
    for liability.
    Railway demurrage charges have “from the start been
    inseparably coupled with the car supply question.” Harleigh H.
    Hartman, Law and Theory of Railway Demurrage Charges 9
    (1928). Their most important purpose is to encourage the
    prompt return of freight cars to service so as to guarantee the
    steady flow of rail freight. See Pennsylvania R.R. Co. v.
    Kittaning Iron & Steel Mfg. Co., 
    253 U.S. 319
    , 323 (1920)
    (purpose of demurrage charges is “to promote [railcar]
    efficiency by penalizing undue detention of cars.”) Congress’s
    concern with ensuring that railcars be available for
    transportation and not sidelined or improperly used as storage
    facilities is reflected in 49 U.S.C. § 10746, which provides that
    rail carriers “shall compute demurrage charges, and establish
    rules related to those charges, in a way that fulfills the national
    needs related to – (1) freight car use and distribution; and (2)
    maintenance of an adequate supply of freight cars to be
    available for transportation of property.” Compensation of the
    railroads for the use of their equipment is a secondary purpose
    of demurrage charges. Turner, Dennis & Lowry Lumber Co. v.
    Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry.Co., 
    271 U.S. 259
    , 262
    (1926); 4 Saul Sorkin, Goods in Transit § 25.02[1] & n.2
    (updated 2007) (collecting cases).
    For demurrage charges to fulfill their purpose of ensuring
    the smooth functioning of the rail freight system by creating
    disincentives against delays, railways must be able to assess
    agency relationship is considered disclosed.)
    21
    them effectively and without being mired in disputes. Section
    10743 is designed to ensure just that. The simple rule that the
    named consignee becomes liable for demurrage charges upon
    acceptance of the freight unless it timely notifies the carrier of
    an agency relationship allows railroads to rely on the bills of
    lading and avoid wasteful attempts to recover from the wrong
    parties. For their part, recipients of freight who should not be
    saddled with liability for transportation charges arising after
    delivery can escape it with little effort by simply providing
    written notice of their status to the carrier.
    Finally, although Novolog suggests that it would be
    inequitable to allow a carrier’s or shipper’s unilateral choice of
    designation to make it party to the transportation contract, no
    unfairness results from applying the statute’s plain language.
    Under the statutory scheme, the named consignee can avoid
    liability in two ways: first, by refusing the freight (which
    Novolog concedes it could have done); and second, by providing
    the carrier timely written notice of agency under Section
    10743(a)(1), if appropriate. The rail carrier, in contrast, has no
    option but to deliver the freight to the consignee named by the
    shipper, whether that be the ultimate consignee or owner or a
    middleman such as a transloader or warehouseman. As amici
    railroads argue, such middlemen generally have no incentive to
    enter into separate contracts with carriers that would make them
    responsible for demurrage charges; if they cannot easily be held
    accountable for their own delays, they may simply decide to use
    the rail cars as free storage. Holding such entities presumptively
    responsible for delays occurring while the railcars are under
    their control under the clear rule of Section 10743 ensures that
    the railroads will be able to assess demurrage, while also making
    it possible for all parties (carriers, middlemen such as Novolog,
    shippers, and ultimate consignees) to allocate the risk of liability
    by private contract, if they so choose.
    22
    For these reasons we decline to follow the Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit’s recent conclusion in a similar
    case that the entity listed as the consignee on the relevant bills
    of lading was not, without more, the legal consignee under
    Section 10743. See South 
    Tec, 337 F.3d at 821
    . See also
    Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. Carry Transit, No.3:04-CV-1095-
    B (N.D. Tex. Oct. 27, 2005) (following South Tec). In South
    Tec, a printing company (Donnelley) had an agreement with a
    carrier (the Illinois Central Railroad) to transport paper from
    Donnelley’s paper suppliers to the South Tec warehouse. There
    the paper was sorted and stored and the railcars released. When
    Donnelley needed the paper, it was loaded on other railcars or
    trucks and brought to the Donnelley facility. According to
    Donnelley’s agreement with Illinois Central, the bills of lading
    should state simply that the car was “to stop at South Tec
    Warehouse . . .. Freight Charges Cover Shipments to Ultimate
    Destination.” 
    Id. at 814-15.
    Although at least ninety percent of
    the bills of lading named Donnelley as the consignee, however,
    there was a wide variation among the bills of lading, and a small
    percentage named South Tec as the consignee. 
    Id. at 815,
    821.
    The District Court held that South Tec was liable for the
    demurrage charges because it had failed to comply with the
    notification requirements of 49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1). The
    Court of Appeals disagreed, noting that the District Court had
    apparently assumed that South Tec was indeed the consignee of
    the freight for purposes of the statute, and remanded for a
    determination of “who was the legal consignee (or consignees)
    of the paper shipments in question.” 
    Id. at 822.
    In remanding, the Court of Appeals did not strictly rule
    out the possibility that South Tec might in fact qualify as a
    consignee under the statutory provision, but it intimated that,
    without more, the facts then in the record made it unlikely. It
    held that “being listed by third parties as a consignee on some
    23
    bills of lading is not alone enough to [become] a legal consignee
    liable for demurrage charges, although it, coupled with other
    factors, might be enough to render South Tec a consignee.”
    South 
    Tec, 337 F.3d at 821
    . Although the court did not explain
    what additional factors might be considered, it suggested that
    one of the factors militating against finding South Tec to be a
    consignee under the statute was that the railroad had notice of
    South Tec’s agent status because of the large number of bills of
    lading designating it as a “care of” party. Id.13
    In our view the South Tec court’s approach frustrates the
    statute’s intent in two ways. First, in contrast to the statute’s
    clear rule, South Tec envisages a “designation-plus” analysis
    under which the entity named as the consignee on the bill of
    lading would be presumptively liable for demurrage only if
    “other factors” were present. Under such a regime, railroads
    would be forced to second-guess their bills of lading and
    perform indeterminate weighing tests before deciding who is to
    be charged. And second, South Tec suggests that consignees
    must satisfy the notification requirements of Section 10743 only
    when the carrier does not already have notice – through other
    bills of lading or otherwise – that the named consignee is acting
    as the agent of another. Practically, this would require
    consignees and railroads alike to ask with respect to each
    shipment whether, in the universe of shipments involving the
    same actors, a sufficient number of bills of lading have clarified
    the agency relationships so as to exempt the consignee from the
    statutory requirements. A far more effective system is to treat
    each bill of lading as a separate instance, so that in each case the
    entity named as consignee is presumptively responsible for
    demurrage.
    13
    It is unclear from the opinion whether the railroad sought
    to assess demurrage charges on all the shipments or only on
    those in which South Tec was named as the sole consignee.
    24
    In addition to relying on South Tec, Novolog seeks to
    support its position that it cannot be considered a consignee
    under the statute (or otherwise) by citing to decisions outside the
    narrow context of the interpretation of Section 10743(a)(1),
    which it claims represent “longstanding law barring imposition
    of demurrage liability upon an entity unilaterally designated as
    a consignee.” This characterization is incorrect. What the cases
    unanimously require for consignee liability is that the
    transloader or other transportation intermediary that does not
    have a beneficial interest in the freight at least be named as the
    consignee in the bill of lading. See Middle Atl. Conference, 
    353 F. Supp. 1109
    , 1119 n.31 (finding general agreement in the case
    law that where middlemen such as warehousemen or pier
    operators (1) acted as known agents or (2) were not named as
    consignors or consignees, they were not parties to the
    transportation contract and were not liable for demurrage
    charges); CSX Trans., Inc. v. City of Pensacola, 
    936 F. Supp. 880
    , 885 (N.D. Fla. 1995) (relying on the fact that the Port of
    Pensacola was not listed as a consignee on any of the bills of
    lading to find it was not liable for demurrage under the
    railroad’s tariff).
    On the question whether such a designation is sufficient
    to make the transloader a consignee potentially liable for
    charges, however, the existing precedent is considerably less
    clear.
    Our decision in Union Pacific R.R. Co. v. Ametek, Inc.,
    
    104 F.3d 558
    (3d Cir. 1997) (Ametek), for instance, has nothing
    to say about whether a transloader that is named as the
    consignee might be liable for demurrage charges. That case
    reached this Court on appeal from the District Court’s review of
    the ICC’s decision in Ametek, Inc. –Petition for Declaratory
    Order; Ametek, Inc. v. Panther Valley R.R. Corp., ICC Docket
    No. 40663, 1993 ICC Lexis 13 (Jan. 15, 1993) (ICC Ametek),
    25
    where the ICC had held unlawful the attempt by creditors of a
    certain rail freight carrier to collect demurrage charges from the
    owner and operator of a plastic processing facility. Ametek
    “receive[d] raw plastic materials for processing [and after]
    processing the materials . . . ship[ped] the processed product to
    the material suppliers’ customers.” ICC Ametek at *4. In the
    vast majority of the cases, Ametek was not named as the
    consignee or the consignor on the bills of lading. The ICC,
    however, also noted that, with respect to a few of the shipments,
    “Ametek was a party to the transportation contract by being
    named as the consignee . . ..” 
    Id. at *17
    (emphasis added).
    Where Ametek was listed as the consignee on the bill of lading,
    it was potentially liable for the charges. By the time the case
    reached us, however, the issue of whether it might be liable in
    the very small number of instances in which Ametek was named
    as a consignee was no longer being litigated; our review was
    focused on whether Ametek was liable – either through its
    receipt of the freight or by some separate contractual
    arrangement – where it was not named as the consignee in the
    bill of lading. See 
    id. at 560
    (Ametek “generally was not the
    consignor or consignee designated on the bills of lading”), 563
    (it was “undisputed that Ametek was not a party to the
    transportation contracts”). We did not even mention, much less
    take a position on, the ICC’s apparent assumption that Ametek
    was a party to the transportation contract in the few cases in
    which it was named as a consignee. Thus Ametek is of no help
    to Novolog – and indeed, the ICC’s position in that litigation
    supports our view.
    Middle Atlantic Conference is of no more comfort to
    Novolog. The court there held that a certain tariff unilaterally
    expanding the definition of “consignee” to include any person
    to whom the bill of lading instructed the carrier to deliver the
    shipment, but specifically explained that the tariff was invalid
    because it attempted to impose liability on a party who was not
    26
    a party to the transportation contract, “ i.e., a person not named
    in the bills of lading as consignor or consignee.” Middle Atl.
    
    Conference, 353 F. Supp. at 1112
    (emphasis added). Thus
    Middle Atlantic Conference does not stand for the proposition
    that a tariff may not make such entities as warehousemen liable
    for demurrage charges, but that it may not do so without support
    from the bill of lading and simply because of the “mere fact of
    handling the goods shipped.” 
    Id. at 1118.
    The “longstanding law” invoked by Novolog for the
    proposition that a transloader cannot be considered a consignee
    for demurrage purposes where it has not executed the bill of
    lading that names it as the consignee is, in fact, limited to three
    federal district court cases. See CSX Transp., Inc. v. Port Erie
    Plastics, Inc., No. 05-139 Erie, 
    2006 WL 2847414
    (W.D. Pa.
    Sep. 29, 2006) (following the District Court’s decision in this
    case); Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. Carry Transit, No.3:04-
    CV-1095-B (N.D. Tex. Oct. 27, 2005) (holding that where a
    transloader did not have any beneficial interest in the freight and
    did not authorize the shippers to list it as a consignee it could not
    be held liable for demurrage charges); and Southern Pacific
    Transp. Co. v. Matson Navigation Co., 
    383 F. Supp. 154
    , 157
    (D. Cal. 1974) (holding that a transloader who is “merely named
    in the railroad bill of lading” without being actively involved in
    the transportation contract and without any “culpability for the
    delay” cannot be liable for demurrage, but noting specifically
    that the transloader had been named as the “care of” party in the
    vast majority of the bills of lading under examination). We do
    not find these cases persuasive.14
    14
    Novolog also urges us to consider Evans Prods. Co. v.
    Interstate Commerce Comm’n, 
    729 F.2d 1107
    , 1113 (7th Cir.
    1984). Evans involved an attempt to assess demurrage charges
    against repair facilities; the court there concluded, among other
    things, that “[a]lthough they receive cars and ship the repaired
    27
    For these reasons we hold that an entity named on a bill
    of lading as the sole consignee, without any designations clearly
    indicating any other role, is presumptively liable for demurrage
    fees on the shipment to which that bill of lading refers, but may
    avoid liability, if it is an agent, by following the notification
    provisions of 49 U.S.C. § 10743(a)(1). On remand, the District
    Court should determine whether Novolog appeared as the
    consignee on the relevant bills of lading. Because it is
    undisputed that Novolog did not comply with the statutory
    notification provision, it will be unnecessary to determine
    whether it acted as an agent in the instances where it was named
    as the consignee.
    C. Liability for demurrage charges of a named
    shipper or consignor
    The final issue in this case is whether CSX may assess
    demurrage charges against Novolog as the consignor for the
    instances in which Novolog ordered empty railcars, which it
    then loaded with freight for CSX to transport to a domestic
    cars out again, repair facilities are not consignors or consignees
    of the cars because delivery of the cars as freight is not
    completed and the carrier’s lien is not extinguished when the
    repair facility receives the car. Repair facilities do not
    determine the further disposition of the cars, but rather act at the
    behest of the car owners/lessors.” 
    Id. at 1113.
    It is unclear
    under what travel documents the empty rail cars traveled on
    their way to the repair facilities; the court appears to have based
    its decision on the common-sense notion that a rail car is not
    going to a repair facility to stay there, but rather will be released
    to its owner or lessee after some time. We do not find the
    analogy between a transloader and a repair facility – which
    presumably does not engage in loading or unloading operations
    and cannot be the consignee of freight – particularly instructive.
    28
    destination. CSX seeks to assess demurrage under Item
    8070(G) of its tariff, which provides that “[u]nless otherwise
    advised, in WRITING, that another party is willing to accept
    responsibility for demurrage, consignor at origin or consignee at
    destination will be responsible for the payment of demurrage
    charges” (emphasis in original).        CSX’s tariff defines
    “consignor” as “[t]he party in whose name a car[s] is ordered;
    or the party who furnishes forwarding direction.”
    During the summary judgment proceedings, CSX
    introduced disputed evidence that Novolog appeared as the
    consignor on a number of bills of lading for such shipments. The
    District Court, however, made no findings of fact related to
    Novolog’s consignor status and did not discuss this issue
    separately in its opinion. Nor did the parties fully brief this
    issue on appeal.
    Although consignor liability is not regulated by 49 U.S.C.
    § 10743 or an analogous statutory provision, we see no reason
    why the principles applicable to consignee liability under the
    statute should not be made equally applicable to consignor
    liability. If the analogous rule governed, the entity named as
    consignor or shipper on the bill of lading would be liable unless
    it had ordered the empty railcars as an agent of another and had
    so notified the carrier in writing at the time of the request or
    unless, if another entity had designated it as consignor, it
    notified the carrier prior to shipment. Nonetheless, we find the
    record insufficient and the briefing too cursory to announce a
    rule. We will instead vacate the District Court’s grant of
    summary judgment with respect to the claims based on
    consignor liability and instruct it to reexamine this issue in light
    of our discussion of consignee liability. On remand, the District
    Court should determine whether Novolog appeared as the
    shipper/consignor on the relevant bills of lading. The District
    Court may also find it necessary to determine whether Novolog
    29
    was an agent in the instances in which it appeared as shipper or
    consignor in the bills of lading and, if so, whether it
    appropriately notified CSX of the relationship.
    IV. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we will vacate the District
    Court’s order granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of
    Novolog and we will remand this case to the District Court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-3431

Filed Date: 9/5/2007

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (18)

Pejepscot Industrial Park, Inc. v. Maine Central Railroad , 215 F.3d 195 ( 2000 )

union-pacific-railroad-co-missouri-pacific-railroad-co-norfolk-western , 104 F.3d 558 ( 1997 )

Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Authority and Sea-Land ... , 856 F.2d 546 ( 1988 )

baltimore-and-ohio-chicago-terminal-railroad-company-v-united-states-of , 583 F.2d 678 ( 1978 )

mci-telecommunications-corporation-v-teleconcepts-incorporated , 71 F.3d 1086 ( 1995 )

aw-v-the-jersey-city-public-schools-new-jersey-department-of-education , 486 F.3d 791 ( 2007 )

Turner, Dennis & Lowry Lumber Co. v. Chicago, Milwaukee & ... , 46 S. Ct. 530 ( 1926 )

Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Central Iron & Coal Co. , 44 S. Ct. 441 ( 1924 )

Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal Railroad Company v. ... , 154 F.3d 404 ( 1998 )

Missouri Pacific Railroad Company and Union Pacific ... , 897 F.2d 210 ( 1990 )

robert-w-blanchette-richard-c-bond-and-john-h-mcarthur-trustees-of-the , 683 F.2d 1008 ( 1981 )

evans-products-co-general-american-transportation-corp-and-interstate , 729 F.2d 1107 ( 1984 )

CSX Transp., Inc. v. CITY OF PENSACOLA, FLORIDA , 936 F. Supp. 880 ( 1995 )

Middle Atlantic Conference v. United States , 353 F. Supp. 1109 ( 1972 )

Pennsylvania Railroad v. Kittanning Iron & Steel ... , 40 S. Ct. 532 ( 1920 )

Perrin v. United States , 100 S. Ct. 311 ( 1979 )

Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Commercial Metals Co. , 102 S. Ct. 1815 ( 1982 )

Northwest Airlines, Inc. v. County of Kent , 114 S. Ct. 855 ( 1994 )

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