Our firm has been in business 38 years as a Motor Carrier Broker. We have arranged hundreds of thousands of shipments. We now deal in many other areas of freight management and logistics in addition to brokerage but, in the majority of our many types of relationships with shippers and carriers, we continue to broker a lot of freight.
The fundamentals of our relationship to the cargo loss and damage responsibility remain remarkably consistent since, in our view, they are grounded in strong statute and common law but most importantly, in practicality and common sense.
As a professional, third party arranger of freight, we have always known in our bones that no one should disturb the above facts and contractual-legal precedent. And it is especially not in the shipper-customer-owner of the goods in transits interest to disturb this favorable and realistic status quo. If we, as our shippers third party freight arranger-manager, began holding ourselves out as the party responsible for loss or damage to freight while in a carriers possession we would be undermining the owners recovery power.
Equally important, we would be lessening the carriers heavy sense of (a) responsibility to protect the goods in his care and (b) knowledge that the world demands he reimburse the shipper in full for any freight lost or damaged while in his possession.
Having said that, yes, we process or assist in processing the shippers claims against the carrier and in the carriers evaluation of the claims legitimacy. We have the shipper send the claim to us; often it arrives as entered against us. We then forward it to the carrier with a detailed transmittal letter and a copy to the shipper-claimant. We start a file and keep after the processing on a proactive basis until it is resolved.
Having been involved in the shipment from long before the carrier took possession to and through claims processing long after delivery, we are in a good position to assist both parties in evaluating and settling the claim. The object is to maximize the relative satisfaction and equity for each party in the settlement process.
Often it is simply the carriers fault. Both parties are in a position to abuse the claims process and sometimes do. Sincere, serious shippers and carriers expect business like treatment and get it. Our role in the process, as usual, is to work to be the best honest broker we can be.
The myriad of variations of transaction type demands we stay flexible. We sometimes throw some money in the settlement. We sometimes write the check to the shipper and deduct from the carrier. We sometimes agree with the carrier. For example, the shippers packaging may have caused the damage. In this case we would both explain the claim denial and suggest experts to evaluate the packaging design to avoid future problems.
We sometimes request our contingent cargo loss and damage insurance provider participate on our behalf to pay and subrogate against the carrier or to provide legal defense for the shipper, etc.
The reality is that good shippers and good carriers dont have many claims, relative to the total volume of freight moved. Most legitimate claims get handled with a minimum of both. We do the processing of most of them.
We have written contracts with every carrier detailing their historic CL&D liability will still apply to the shipper in our transactions. They readily sign.
We are convinced that for intermediaries to give in to the ill advised wish of the shipper that the intermediary be the party responsible for loss and damage undermines the shippers financial and legal interests. We are convinced that, structured our way, the shipper retains his full leverage against the carrier. Our participation then enhances the shippers position; we bring additional insurance and legal specialists; we do the additional negotiation and process the paperwork.
We are also convinced that to volunteer to take the CL&D burden off the shoulders of the only party in position to physically protect the freight in transit is irresponsible. Good deeds such as that will surely not go unpunished.
Ropes are best pulled on. We think the way the legal-contractual-practical CL&D regime has been designed, tested and continues to execute is excellent rope pulling. We would not look forward to pushing on the ropes that alternative suggestions are trying to design.
We dont recommend such changes to our shippers or our carriers. It aint broke; dont fix it. We dont even recommend them to our competitors.
Be careful what you wish for; you may get it. Responsibility to protect freight in a carriers possession is not something anyone but the carrier should have.