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Jackson v. O'Shields, 101 F.3d 1083(5th
Cir.1996).
*1083 101 F.3d 1083
Fed. Carr. Cas. P 84,042
Sarah M. JACKSON and Leo
Smith, Plaintiffs,
v.
Timothy K. O'SHIELDS, J & T
Enterprises, Inc., John T. Hanna, and Larry Wallen,
Defendants.
CANAL INSURANCE COMPANY, A
Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Sarah M. JACKSON, Leo Smith,
Defendants-Appellants.
No. 96-60024.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
Dec. 19, 1996.
Motor carrier liability insurer
sought declaration of no coverage for underlying actions
brought by persons injured in accident with tractor
truck that had formerly been subject of lease-purchase
agreement between insured carrier and tractor owner. The
United States District Court for the Southern District
of Mississippi, Dan M. Russell, Jr., J., rendered
judgment for insurer, and underlying claimants appealed.
The Court of Appeals, Benavides, Circuit Judge, held
that: (1) termination of lease-purchase agreement was
not vitiated by continued presence of carrier's
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) placard and emblem
on tractor and carrier's failure to obtain cancellation
receipt from owner; (2) periodic posttermination joint
hauls did not vitiate termination; and (3) no oral lease
existed between carrier and owner when accident
occurred.
Affirmed.
1. FEDERAL COURTS k660.35
170B ----
170BVIII Courts of Appeals
170BVIII(E) Proceedings for Transfer
of Case
170Bk660 Certification and Leave to
Appeal
170Bk660.35 Hearing, determination,
and review.
[See headnote text below]
1. FEDERAL COURTS k668
170B ----
170BVIII Courts of Appeals
170BVIII(E) Proceedings for Transfer
of Case
170Bk665 Notice, Writ of Error or
Citation
170Bk668 Time for filing in general.
C.A.5 (Miss.) 1996.
Fact that district court did not
certify interlocutory order for appeal until after
notice of appeal was filed did not prevent Court of
Appeals from retaining jurisdiction over appeal.
Fed.Rules Civ.Proc.Rule 54(b), 28 U.S.C.A.
2. AUTOMOBILES k197(3)
48A ----
48AV Injuries from Operation, or Use
of Highway
48AV(A) Nature and Grounds of
Liability
48Ak183 Persons Liable
48Ak197 Persons Other Than Owners or
Operators in General
48Ak197(3) Hirer or borrower.
C.A.5 (Miss.) 1996.
Carrier-lessee's termination of
tractor truck lease-purchase agreement with owner-lessor
of tractor was not vitiated by continued presence of
carrier's Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) placard
and emblem on tractor and carrier's failure to obtain
cancellation receipt from owner, and thus these facts
did not make carrier vicariously liable under ICC
regulations for injuries resulting from posttermination
accident involving tractor, where termination complied
with agreement's terms and carrier took reasonable steps
to remove placard and obtain receipt. 49 U.S.C.(1994
Ed.) § 11107; 49 C.F.R. §§ 1057.11(c)(1), 1057.12(c)(1),
(e), 1058.2 (1995).
3. AUTOMOBILES k197(3)
48A ----
48AV Injuries from Operation, or Use
of Highway
48AV(A) Nature and Grounds of
Liability
48Ak183 Persons Liable
48Ak197 Persons Other Than Owners or
Operators in General
48Ak197(3) Hirer or borrower.
C.A.5 (Miss.) 1996.
Periodic joint hauls by carrier and
tractor truck owner after carrier gave written notice of
termination of parties' lease-purchase agreement
concerning the tractor did not vitiate termination, and
thus did not make carrier vicariously liable under
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) regulations for
injuries resulting from posttermination accident
involving tractor, where terms of the joint hauls were
substantially and materially different from terms of
agreement, in that agreement involved 90-10% revenue
split whereas split for joint hauls was 50-50%, and
agreement did not apply to tractor-only hauls whereas
joint hauls were all tractor-only hauls. 49 U.S.C.(1994
Ed.) § 11107; 49 C.F.R. §§ 1057.11(c)(1), 1057.12(c)(1),
(e), 1058.2 (1995).
4. AUTOMOBILES k197(3)
48A ----
48AV Injuries from Operation, or Use
of Highway
48AV(A) Nature and Grounds of
Liability
48Ak183 Persons Liable
48Ak197 Persons Other Than Owners or
Operators in General
48Ak197(3) Hirer or borrower.
C.A.5 (Miss.) 1996.
Oral lease between Interstate
Commerce Commission (ICC)-authorized carrier and vehicle
owner can give rise to statutory employment relationship
between carrier and driver making carrier vicariously
liable under ICC regulations for injuries caused by
driver, even though ICC regulations require leases
between ICC-authorized carriers and equipment owners to
be in writing. 49 U.S.C.(1994 Ed.) § 11107; 49 C.F.R. §§
1057.11(a), 1057.12(b), (c)(1) (1995).
5. AUTOMOBILES k197(3)
48A ----
48AV Injuries from Operation, or Use
of Highway
48AV(A) Nature and Grounds of
Liability
48Ak183 Persons Liable
48Ak197 Persons Other Than Owners or
Operators in General
48Ak197(3) Hirer or borrower.
C.A.5 (Miss.) 1996.
No oral lease existed between
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)-authorized carrier
and tractor truck owner when accident involving tractor
occurred during oyster haul, such as could make carrier
vicariously liable under ICC regulations for injuries
resulting from accident, where carrier, which formerly
had lease-purchase agreement with owner involving
tractor and had made periodic joint hauls with owner
after agreement's termination, was in no way connected
with the oyster haul, in that it was coordinated
exclusively by owner, trailer also belonged to owner,
haul did not benefit carrier in any way, carrier dealt
only in produce, and carrier had no knowledge of haul
until days later. 49 U.S.C.(1994 Ed.) § 11107; 49 C.F.R.
§§ 1057.11(a), 1057.12(b), (c)(1) (1995).
*1084 Brian Atkins Montague,
Montague, Pittman & Varnado, Hattiesburg, MS, for Canal
Insurance Company, plaintiff-appellee.
David A. Hilleren, Hilleren &
Hilleren, Mandeville, LA, for defendants-appellants.
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi.
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DUHÉ and
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:
The ultimate issue in this appeal is
whether Canal Insurance Company ("Canal") has indemnity
obligations under an MCS-90 Endorsement issued in
connection with the insurance policy of an interstate
carrier. To get to the bottom of Canal's indemnity
obligations, we must resolve whether a lease between a
tractor owner and carrier that is licensed by the
Interstate Commerce Commission ("ICC") can be
effectively terminated when the carrier's ICC placard
and emblem remain on the tractor and the carrier has not
obtained a receipt from the owner-lessor confirming the
termination of the lease. We conclude that the presence
of a carrier's ICC placard on leased equipment and the
carrier's failure to obtain a receipt upon return of the
leased equipment do not alone preclude a determination
that a lease has been terminated.
I.
On January 31, 1993, a 1976
Freightliner tractor-trailer rig hauling oysters
collided with an automobile driven by Sarah Jackson and
occupied by Leo Smith. Jackson and Smith allegedly
suffered personal injuries as a result of the accident.
The tractor-trailer rig was driven by Timothy O'Shields
and owned by Larry Wallen. At the time of the accident,
the tractor bore the painted ICC placard and the emblem
of J & T Enterprises, an ICC-authorized carrier. (FN1)
Canal was J & T Enterprises's insurance company. From
there, the matter grew more complicated, as the "round
robin of finger pointing by carriers, lessors, owners
and drivers, ... and insurers" began. Rediehs
Express, Inc. v. Maple, 491 N.E.2d 1006, 1012
(Ind.App.1986), cert. denied, 480 U.S. 932, 107
S.Ct. 1571, 94 L.Ed.2d 762 (1987).
Jackson and Smith brought suit for
personal injuries against O'Shields, Wallen, J & T
Enterprises, and John and Theresa Hanna (partners in J &
T Enterprises). Canal brought a separate action, seeking
a declaration that it had no defense or indemnity
obligations to any of the parties in the suit brought by
Jackson and Smith. The district court consolidated the
underlying tort suit and Canal's declaratory judgment
action and bifurcated the matters for trial purposes.
[1] Following a bench trial of
Canal's declaratory judgment action, the district court
held that there was no lease between J & T Enterprises
and Wallen (the owner of the *1085 tractor), oral
or otherwise, in effect for the trip involved in this
case. The district court found that the Hannas (acting
as partners of J & T Enterprises) had terminated the
written lease and made reasonable efforts both to remove
J & T Enterprises's ICC placard and insignia from the
tractor and to obtain a cancellation receipt from
Wallen. Consequently, the district court rendered a
declaratory judgment that Canal, as J & T Enterprises's
insurer, has no indemnity obligation to any of the
parties to the underlying lawsuit. This appeal followed.
(FN2)
II.
J & T Enterprises's insurance policy
with Canal contained an MSC-90 Endorsement ("Endorsement
for Motor Carrier Policies of Insurance for Public
Liability Under Sections 29 and 30 of the Motor Carrier
Act of 1980"). (FN3) Under the Endorsement, Canal
undertook to pay any final judgment rendered against J &
T Enterprises arising out of the "operation, maintenance
or use of motor vehicles subject to financial
responsibility requirements of Sections 29 and 30 of the
Motor Carrier Act of 1980." This provision covered J & T
Enterprises's liability arising out of equipment leased
by J & T Enterprises and operated under its ICC
authority. In this case, whether Canal has any indemnity
obligation under the MCS-90 Endorsement turns upon
whether there was a lease between J & T Enterprises and
Wallen for the 1976 Freightliner at the time of the
accident. If there was such a lease, J & T Enterprises
would be liable for injuries negligently inflicted by
the driver of the truck and, in turn, Canal would have
indemnity obligations.
There is no question that from
September 3, 1992 to October 30, 1992, J & T Enterprises
and Wallen were parties to a Lease Purchase Agreement
and a Contractor Operating Agreement with respect to the
1976 Freightliner involved in the accident. As its name
suggests, the Lease-Purchase Agreement focused on the
terms of J & T Enterprises's eventual purchase of the
1976 Freightliner and contained a warranty of title. The
Contractor Operating Agreement, by contrast, provided
the nitty-gritty terms of the leasing arrangement
between J & T Enterprises and Wallen. Soon after
entering into the agreements, however, the Hannas,
partners in J & T Enterprises, discovered that expensive
repairs and insurance costs made the arrangement
infeasible.
The district court found that John
Hanna promptly took formal steps to cancel the Lease
Purchase Agreement and the Contractor Operating
Agreement on behalf of J & T Enterprises. On October 30,
1992, Hanna personally delivered to Wallen a signed and
notarized termination notice. At that time, Wallen had
already retaken possession and control of the tractor.
Wallen refused to sign the cancellation receipt at the
bottom of the termination notice. Approximately a week
later, Hanna repeated his request that Wallen sign a
receipt. Again, Wallen refused to do so. John Hanna also
repeatedly asked Wallen to remove J & T Enterprises's
painted ICC placard and its emblem from the side of
Wallen's 1976 Freightliner. Although Wallen agreed on
several occasions to "take care of" removing the painted
J & T Enterprises placard from the tractor, he never did
so.
Smith and Jackson contend that the
lease relationship nevertheless continued in effect
through the date of the accident because J & T
Enterprises's emblem and ICC placard were not removed
from the door of Wallen's truck and because J & T
Enterprises did not obtain a receipt from Wallen showing
that the lease had been terminated. They also contend
that trips undertaken jointly by J & *1086 T
Enterprises and Wallen after J & T Enterprises gave
written notice of termination breathed new life into the
otherwise-terminated Contractor Operating Agreement.
Alternatively, they argue that joint hauls after the
termination of the written lease evidenced an oral lease
that was in effect when the accident happened.
III.
[2] Under the authority of 49 U.S.C.
§ 11107, the Interstate Commerce Commission regulates
leases of equipment used in interstate commerce. See
49 C.F.R. § 1057.1 et seq. One of the primary
purposes of the ICC's leasing regulations is to ensure
that carrier-lessees take control of and responsibility
for leased equipment during the term of a lease. (FN4)
In line with this purpose, we held in Simmons v. King
that if there is an existing lease between an
ICC-authorized carrier and an owner of leased equipment
and the equipment bears the carrier's ICC placard, then
the driver of the equipment will be deemed to be the
carrier's statutory employee. 478 F.2d 857, 867 (5th
Cir.1973). Consequently, the carrier will be held
vicariously liable for injuries resulting from the use
of the leased equipment. Id.; Price v. Westmoreland,
727 F.2d 494, 497 (5th Cir.1984) (applying Simmons
). Other jurisdictions have also employed a "statutory
employee" analysis to impose liability on
carrier-lessees. See, e.g., Planet Ins. Co. v.
Transport Indemnity Co., 823 F.2d 285, 288 (9th
Cir.1987); Rodriguez v. Ager, 705 F.2d 1229,
1233-36 (10th Cir.1983); Grinnell Mut. Reinsurance
Co. v. Empire Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 722 F.2d 1400,
1404 (8th Cir.1983), cert. denied, 466 U.S. 951,
104 S.Ct. 2155, 80 L.Ed.2d 540 (1984); Mellon Nat'l
Bank & Trust Co. v. Sophie Lines, Inc., 289 F.2d
473, 476-77 (3d Cir.1961); Cosmopolitan Mut. Ins. Co.
v. White, 336 F.Supp. 92, 96 (D.Del.1972).
This case is not squarely governed by
Simmons, however, because in Simmons there
was no doubt that there was a lease in effect between
the equipment owner and the ICC-authorized carrier when
the accident occurred. Here, the central issue is
whether there was a lease between J & T Enterprises and
Wallen for the tractor at the time the accident
occurred.
Jackson and Smith rely on decisions
from other circuits, in which courts have held that a
lease can be effectively terminated only if the
carrier-lessee (1) removes its identifying placard from
the leased equipment, and (2) obtains a cancellation
receipt from the equipment owner. (FN5) These courts
relied on a then-existing ICC regulation that placed the
burden on the carrier-lessee, upon the termination of a
lease, to remove its ICC placard and any identifying
emblem or insignia and required the carrier-lessee to
obtain a receipt from the owner-lessor. (FN6)
In 1986, the ICC regulations were
substantially modified, giving the leasing parties a
much broader range of discretion as to the *1087
terms of the lease. (FN7) Significantly, the regulations
no longer obligate the carrier to remove identifying
placards or other insignia from the leased equipment.
Instead, the parties must specify in the lease whether
the carrier-lessee or the owner-lessor has this
responsibility. (FN8) Likewise, the regulations now
allow the leasing parties to agree whether a receipt
will be required upon termination of the lease rather
than requiring that the carrier obtain a receipt. (FN9)
The history of the amendments
reflects that they were prompted by the Interstate
Carrier Conference's concern (expressed in a petition to
the Interstate Commerce Commission) that carriers could
face tort liability even if "equipment owners ...
wrongfully continue to display the carrier's
identification devices on equipment after a lease
contract has terminated." 3 I.C.C.2d at 92; see also
Williamson v. Steco Sales, Inc., 191 Wis.2d 608, 530
N.W.2d 412, 418-19 (App.1995) (discussing the amendment
of the ICC placard removal regulation), review
denied, 537 N.W.2d 571 (Wis.1995). In enacting the
amendments, the ICC made clear that ICC "leasing rules
do not and are not intended either to assign liability
based on the existence of placards or to interfere with
otherwise applicable State law." 3 I.C.C.2d at 93.
(FN10)
In the aftermath of the ICC
amendments, the continued vitality of decisions in other
circuits holding that a lease cannot be effectively
terminated until a carrier removes its placard and
obtains a receipt is at best questionable. Even if those
decisions could survive the amendments, we decline to
hold that the lease between Wallen and J & T Enterprises
continued in effect despite J & T Enterprises's
conscientious efforts to terminate the lease. Notably,
none of the pre-amendment cases cited by Jackson and
Smith involved a carrier who conscientiously attempted
to remove its placard and to obtain a receipt.
Rodriguez, 705 F.2d at 1230-31; Mellon, 289
F.2d at 477; Cosmopolitan Mut. Ins. Co., 336
F.Supp. at 97 ("The record does not indicate a single
effort on McCormick's part to comply with its ICC
obligations."). In fact, in both Rodriguez v. Ager
and Mellon National Bank & Trust Co. v. Sophie Lines,
Inc., the underlying leases between the carriers and
the equipment owners were apparently still in effect at
the time of the accidents. See Rodriguez, 705
F.2d at 1230 ("[T]he lease was on the verge of being
terminated, but at the time of the accident ... the
lease had not been cancelled...."); Mellon, 289
F.2d at 475 (noting that the "collision occurred October
4, 1955, within the period of the [30-day] lease").
When faced with a case in which a
carrier had assiduously attempted to cancel a lease in
accordance with the lease's provisions, a Florida court
held in Atlantic Truck Lines, Inc. v. Kersey,
that the presence of an ICC placard and lack of a
receipt are not alone dispositive of the existence of a
lease. 387 So.2d 411, 416 (Fla.App.1980), review
denied, 397 So.2d 778 (Fla.1981). As the Florida
court explained, cases like Rodriguez and
Mellon could produce unjust results if applied to a
diligent carrier:
*1088 [A] lease could be
terminated by a carrier because the owner breaches
the agreement by never appearing to pick up a
designated load, yet despite its best efforts to
locate the truck or its owner, the carrier would
still be liable as a matter of law if it failed to
obtain the placard and receipt. Such a result would
offend even the most cynical, and we do not think
that it was intended by Congress.
Id. (FN11) Although the facts
of the present case are not as stark as those presented
in the Kersey court's hypothetical, we believe
the basic point is sound and applicable in this case.
The district court's findings reflect
that the Hannas, partners in J & T Enterprises,
terminated the lease in compliance with its terms and
took reasonable steps to remove their ICC placard and to
obtain a receipt from Wallen. On October 30, 1992, John
Hanna presented Wallen with a written and notarized
termination notice. Wallen twice refused to sign the
termination notice to acknowledge receipt of the
equipment. We decline to hold that Wallen's unilateral
refusal to sign a receipt extended the term of the
Contractor Operating Agreement. Under the agreement's
termination clause, either party could terminate the
agreement by giving the other a written notice. (FN12)
An acknowledgment of the termination notice is not a
condition precedent to termination of the agreement. Nor
do the ICC regulations create a presumption that failure
to obtain a written receipt vitiates an unequivocal
written termination. To the contrary, as we have
previously discussed, the regulations now provide that
whether a receipt is required at all is a matter
of contract between the parties.
The presence of J & T Enterprises's
ICC placard does not vitiate the otherwise valid
termination notice. Under the agreement, Wallen, not the
Hannas, bore the responsibility of removing J & T
Enterprises's ICC placard and emblem upon the
termination of the lease. (FN13) The district court
found that, despite repeated requests by John Hanna,
Wallen refused to remove J & T Enterprises's placard
from the tractor. Wallen's failure to comply with his
obligation under the Contractor Operating Agreement will
not be held against J & T Enterprises.
We hold that the presence of J & T
Enterprises's ICC placard on the 1976 Freightliner and
the lack of a termination receipt did not alone keep the
otherwise-terminated agreement alive.
IV.
[3] Jackson and Smith next contend
that J & T Enterprises's and Wallen's periodic joint
ventures after the termination of the written lease
support imposing vicarious liability on J & T
Enterprises for the injuries suffered by Jackson and
Smith. During the months following the termination
notice, Wallen's 1976 Freightliner was used to pull J &
T Enterprises's trailers on various hauls. These joint
hauls, Jackson and Smith allege, somehow vitiated J & T
Enterprises's written notice terminating the Contractor
Operating Agreement. They argue alternatively that the
joint hauls created a new lease or leases between Wallen
and J & T Enterprises that were in effect when the
accident occurred.
The district court found that the
hauls after October 30, 1992 were not a continuation of
the Contractor Operating Agreement. We agree. As the
district court explained, the terms of the later hauls
were "substantially and materially different from the
long since cancelled contractor operating agreement."
For example, under the Contractor Operating Agreement,
the parties agreed to a 90-10% revenue split, compared
to an agreed 50-50% split for later loads. Further,
although the Contractor Operating Agreement by its terms
did not apply to tractor-only hauls (those involving a J
& T *1089 trailer rather than a Wallen trailer),
all the joint hauls after October 30, 1992 were
tractor-only hauls. On the whole, the facts as found by
the district court do not support Jackson's and Smith's
theory that the Contractor Operating Agreement continued
after the written termination notice.
[4] [5] Jackson and Smith are no
doubt correct that the fact that no written lease was in
effect at the time of the accident does not foreclose
the possibility that an oral lease existed between the
parties. See Zamalloa v. Hart, 31 F.3d 911, 917
(9th Cir.1994) (holding that a statutory employment
relationship between a driver and a carrier "can be
formed via an oral lease between the carrier and vehicle
owner even before the driver picks up the cargo");
Williamson, 530 N.W.2d at 416 ("Although ICC
regulations require the carrier to have a written lease,
the failure to have one does not absolve the carrier of
liability if an oral lease exists.") (citation omitted).
But the district court found that no oral lease between
J & T Enterprises and Wallen governed the fateful oyster
haul, and the record supports the district court's
conclusion. J & T Enterprises was in no way connected to
Wallen's haul of oysters on the night the accident
occurred. The haul was coordinated exclusively by
Wallen. Sam Styron, a broker who arranged the oyster
haul at Wallen's request, testified that Wallen told him
that he would be hauling the oysters on behalf of
Larry's Express. Unlike the previous hauls undertaken
jointly by J & T Enterprises and Wallen, which were
"tractor only," both the tractor and the trailer
involved in the accident belonged to Wallen. The oyster
haul did not benefit the Hannas or J & T Enterprises in
any way. The trailer carried oysters; the Hannas dealt
only in produce. The district court's findings reflect
that the Hannas had no knowledge of the haul until days
later. (FN14) Although the driver O'Shields had
previously driven trucks on various hauls for J & T
Enterprises and Wallen, the district court found that on
the occasion in question O'Shields was acting on behalf
of Wallen alone. Thus, we conclude that the district
court did not err in determining that no oral lease was
in effect for the haul in question.
Our holding in Price v.
Westmoreland does not compel a contrary conclusion.
In that case, we held that a carrier-lessee was
vicariously liable for injuries to a passenger in a
leased truck even though the driver of a truck leased by
the carrier did not have permission to carry passengers
and the carrier had no knowledge of the passenger's
presence. 727 F.2d at 495. There was no question in
Price, however, that a lease existed between the
truck owner and the ICC-authorized carrier. Id.
Under Price and Simmons, if the Wallen's
truck had been the subject of a lease by J & T
Enterprises at the time of the accident, J & T
Enterprises would be liable for Jackson's and Smith's
injuries regardless of whether the particular trip was
on J & T Enterprises's behalf. As the district court
found, however, there was no lease in place to connect J
& T Enterprises to the truck.
As Jackson and Smith point out, the
regulations require leases between an ICC-authorized
carrier and an equipment owner to be in writing and
require that the lease specify its duration. (FN15) 49
C.F.R. § 1057.11(a), § 1057.12(b). The leases governing
joint hauls undertaken by J & T Enterprises and Wallen
after the termination of the written Contractor
Operating Agreement did not comply with either of these
requirements. We recognize that failure to comply with
ICC regulations does not and should not insulate a
carrier-lessee from liability. But even if J & T
Enterprises had complied fully with ICC *1090.
regulations, this particular trip would not have been
within the scope of any lease between J & T Enterprises
and Wallen. The district court found that the hauls
after October 30, 1992 were "limited specific joint
ventures," which did not include the haul in question.
Under the district court's findings, which were
supported by the evidence, whatever the duration of the
lease or leases entered into after the termination of
the written agreement, they did not encompass the trip
in question. Although operating without a written
agreement may violate the ICC's regulations and justify
regulatory action against J & T Enterprises, it does not
provide a basis upon which to impose vicarious liability
on J & T Enterprises in this case. (FN16)
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the
judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
FN1. J & T Enterprises held an ICC
permit authorizing it to transport goods in interstate
commerce.
FN2. The district court certified the
declaratory judgment portion of the consolidated cases
for appeal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b).
Although the certification was given after the notice of
appeal had already been filed, we nonetheless retain
jurisdiction to review this case under the rationale
expressed in Metallurgical Indus., Inc. v. Fourtek,
Inc., 771 F.2d 915, 916 (5th Cir.1985) (citing
Alcorn County, Miss. v. U.S. Interstate Supplies,
731 F.2d 1160 (5th Cir.1984) (citing Jetco Elec.
Indus., Inc. v. Gardiner, 473 F.2d 1228 (5th
Cir.1973))). Additionally, we find, and indeed there is
no dispute, that the prerequisites for the certification
of the interlocutory order have been satisfied. See
FED.R.CIV.P. 54(b).
FN3. The exact form of this
endorsement is mandated by ICC regulation. See 49
C.F.R. § 387.15.
FN4. The ICC regulations mandate
that, under an ICC-regulated lease, the ICC
carrier-lessee assume "exclusive possession, control,
and use of the equipment for the duration of the lease"
and "assume complete responsibility for the operation of
the equipment for the duration of the lease." 49 C.F.R.
§ 1057.12(c)(1).
FN5. Under these "logo liability"
cases, the presence of a carrier's ICC placard on leased
equipment in effect creates an irrebuttable presumption
that a lease continues in effect. See Rodriguez,
705 F.2d at 1236 ("When [an ICC placard is] not removed
upon cancellation of a lease, it subjects the public to
the evils which Congress attempted to eliminate when the
independent contractor system was rejected.");
Cosmopolitan Mut. Ins. Co., 336 F.Supp. at 96
("Obtaining a receipt for the return of the vehicle and
removing the ICC placard are prerequisites to
termination of an ICC lease."); see also Mellon,
289 F.2d at 476 (explaining that the lessee "could have
effectually eliminated its responsibility for the
truck's use in only one way," by removing the ICC
placard and obtaining a receipt); Kreider Truck
Serv., Inc. v. Augustine, 76 Ill.2d 535, 31 Ill.Dec.
802, 394 N.E.2d 1179, 1182 (1979) (holding that a
carrier's "complete [r]esponsibility" for leased
equipment continues until the carrier removes its ICC
placard and obtains a receipt).
FN6. When the ICC regulations were
renumbered and republished in 1967, the receipt and
placard removal regulations were set out at 32 Fed.Reg.
20,056, 20057-58 (1967), in essentially the same form in
which they existed up until the 1986 amendments
discussed below. See Republication and
Redesignation of Regulations, 32 Fed.Reg. 20,003 (1967)
(redesignating the ICC leasing regulations, which were
previously codified at 49 C.F.R. part 307, as 49 C.F.R.
part 1057).
FN7. The amended regulations were in
effect when the accident happened and when J & T
Enterprises entered into the lease for the 1976
Freightliner. The amendments became effective on
November 21, 1986. See Lease and Interchange of
Vehicles (Identification Devices) (Ex Parte No. MC-43)
(Sub-No. 16), 3 I.C.C.2d 92 (October 10, 1986).
FN8. Section 1057.12(e) provides in
pertinent part:
... The lease shall clearly
specify which party is responsible for removing
identification devices from the equipment upon the
termination of the lease and when and how these
devices, other than those painted directly on the
equipment, will be returned to the carrier....
49 C.F.R. § 1057.12(e). The
regulations as amended still require the authorized
carrier to identify leased equipment by displaying its
name and MC number on the equipment. 49 C.F.R. §§
1057.11(c)(1), 1058.2. The control-and-responsibility
provisions were also left intact. 49 C.F.R. §
1057.12(c).
*1090_ FN9. The regulations
provide in relevant part that:
The lease shall clearly specify
the manner in which a receipt will be given to the
authorized carrier by the equipment owner when the
latter retakes possession of the equipment upon
termination of the lease agreement, if a receipt is
required at all by the lease....
49 C.F.R. § 1057.12(e).
FN10. In amending the receipt
requirement, the Commission noted that the former
rule placed "an unrealistic burden on most carriers
and offer[ed] no flexibility to the lease parties."
Id.
FN11. Even the Rodriguez and
Mellon courts would apparently provide an exception
to the logo liability rule if an accident occurred after
leased equipment was stolen. Mellon, 289 F.2d at
477, quoted in Rodriguez, 705 F.2d at 1233.
FN12. Under the agreement, a
termination notice is effective upon receipt unless the
notice itself states another termination date.
FN13. This provision complied with
the ICC regulations as amended. See 49 C.F.R. §
1057.12(e).
FN14. The district court explained
that although the record reflects "some documentary
evidence" that J & T Enterprises was the carrier for the
load, that evidence stemmed from the presence of the
placard and information mistakenly provided by the
driver O'Shields. O'Shields testified at the time of
trial that he was about the business of Larry Wallen on
the day in question, not J & T Enterprises.
FN15. Jackson and Smith also argue
that the regulations require that a lease between a
carrier and an owner be for a minimum of 30 days. The
regulations as amended, however, clearly allow leases of
less than 30 days. 49 C.F.R. § 1057.42; 49 Fed.Reg.
47,850 (Dec. 7, 1984); see Elimination of Thirty
Day Leasing Requirement (49 C.F.R. § 1057) (Ex Parte No.
MC-43 (Sub-No. 15)), 133 M.C. 392 (November 1984).
FN16. Since we have decided that the
district court did not err in its determination that
there was no lease between J & T Enterprises and Wallen
covering the trip in question, we need not reach Canal's
additional argument that no liability would attach
because the commodity being hauled on this particular
occasion (oysters) was exempt from ICC regulation.