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Prepared By The Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA) OMB No. 2126-0025. Furnished by
Your Mover, as Required by Federal Law. Authority:
49 U.S.C. 13301, 13704, 13707, and 14104; 49 CFR 1.73.
WHAT IS INCLUDED IN THIS PAMPHLET?
In this pamphlet, you will find a discussion of
each of these topics:
- Why Was I Given This Pamphlet?
- What Are the Most Important Points I Should
Remember From This Pamphlet?
- What If I Have More Questions?
SUBPART A - GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
- Who must follow the regulations?
- What definitions are used in this pamphlet?
SUBPART B - BEFORE REQUESTING SERVICES FROM
ANY MOVER
- What is my mover's normal liability for loss or
damage when my mover accepts goods from me?
- What actions by me limit or reduce my mover's
normal liability?
- What are dangerous or hazardous materials that may
limit or reduce my mover's normal liability?
- May my mover have agents?
- What items must be in my mover's advertisements?
- How must my mover handle complaints and inquiries?
- Do I have the right to inspect my mover's tariffs
(schedules of charges) applicable to my move?
- Must my mover have an arbitration program?
- Must my mover inform me about my rights and
responsibilities under Federal law?
- What other information must my mover provide to
me?
- How must my mover collect charges?
- May my mover collect charges upon delivery?
- May my mover extend credit to me?
- May my mover accept charge or credit cards for my
payments?
SUBPART C - SERVICE OPTIONS PROVIDED
- What service options may my mover provide?
- If my mover sells liability insurance coverage,
what must my mover do?
SUBPART D - ESTIMATING CHARGES
- Must my mover estimate the transportation and
accessorial charges for my move?
- How must my mover estimate charges under the
regulations?
- What payment arrangements must my mover have in
place to secure delivery of my household goods
shipment?
SUBPART E - PICKUP OF MY SHIPMENT OF
HOUSEHOLD GOODS
- Must my mover write up an order for service?
- Must my mover write up an inventory of the
shipment?
- Must my mover write up a bill of lading?
- Should I reach an agreement with my mover about
pickup and delivery times?
- Must my mover determine the weight of my shipment?
- How must my mover determine the weight of my
shipment?
- What must my mover do if I want to know the actual
weight or charges for my shipment before delivery?
SUBPART F - TRANSPORTATION OF MY SHIPMENT
- Must my mover transport the shipment in a timely
manner?
- What must my mover do if it is able to deliver my
shipment more than 24 hours before I am able to accept
delivery?
- What must my mover do for me when I store
household goods in transit?
SUBPART G - DELIVERY OF MY SHIPMENT
- May my mover ask me to sign a delivery receipt
releasing it from liability?
- What is the maximum collect-on-delivery amount my
mover may demand I pay at the time of delivery?
- If my shipment is transported on more than one
vehicle, what charges may my mover collect at
delivery?
- If my shipment is partially or totally lost or
destroyed, what charges may my mover collect at
delivery?
- How must my mover calculate the charges applicable
to the shipment as delivered?
SUBPART H - COLLECTION OF CHARGES
- Does this subpart apply to most shipments?
- How must my mover present its freight or expense
bill to me?
- If I forced my mover to relinquish a
collect-on-delivery shipment before the payment of ALL
charges, how must my mover collect the balance?
- What actions may my mover take to collect from me
the charges in its freight bill?
- Do I have a right to file a claim to recover money
for property my mover lost or damaged?
SUBPART I - RESOLVING DISPUTES WITH MY
MOVER
- What may I do to resolve disputes with my mover?
WHY WAS I GIVEN THIS PAMPHLET?
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's
(FMCSA) regulations protect consumers on interstate
moves and define the rights and responsibilities of
consumers and household goods carriers.
The household goods carrier (mover) gave you this
booklet to provide information about your rights and
responsibilities as an individual shipper of household
goods. Your primary responsibility is to select a
reputable household goods carrier, ensure that you
understand the terms and conditions of the contract, and
understand and pursue the remedies that are available to
you in case problems arise. You should talk to your
mover if you have further questions. The mover will also
furnish you with additional written information
describing its procedure for handling your questions and
complaints. The additional written information will
include a telephone number you can call to obtain
additional information about your move.
WHAT ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT POINTS I SHOULD
REMEMBER FROM THIS PAMPHLET?
- Movers must give written estimates.
- Movers may give binding estimates.
- Non-binding estimates are not always accurate;
actual charges may exceed the estimate.
- If your mover provides you (or someone
representing you) with any partially complete document
for your signature, you should verify the document is
as complete as possible before signing it. Make sure
the document contains all relevant shipping
information, except the actual shipment weight and any
other information necessary to determine the final
charges for all services performed.
- You may request from your mover the availability
of guaranteed pickup and delivery dates.
- Be sure you understand the mover's responsibility
for loss or damage, and request an explanation of the
difference between valuation and actual insurance.
- You have the right to be present each time your
shipment is weighed.
- You may request a reweigh of your shipment.
- If you agree to move under a non-binding estimate,
you should confirm with your mover - in writing - the
method of payment at delivery as cash, certified
check, cashier's check, money order, or credit card.
- Movers must offer a dispute settlement program as
an alternative means of settling loss or damage
claims. ASK YOUR MOVER FOR DETAILS.
- You should ask the person you speak to whether he
or she works for the actual mover or a household goods
broker. A household goods broker only arranges for the
transportation. A household goods broker must not
represent itself as a mover. A household goods broker
does not own trucks of its own. The broker is required
to find an authorized mover to provide the
transportation. You should know that a household goods
broker generally has no authority to provide you an
estimate on behalf of a specific mover. If a household
goods broker provides you an estimate, it may not be
binding on the actual mover and you may have to pay
the actual charges the mover incurs. A household goods
broker is not responsible for loss or damage.
- You may request complaint information about movers
from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
under the Freedom of Information Act. You may be
assessed a fee to obtain this information. See 49 CFR
Part 7 for the schedule of fees.
- You should seek estimates from at least three
different movers. You should not disclose any
information to the different movers about their
competitors, as it may affect the accuracy of their
estimates.
WHAT IF I HAVE MORE QUESTIONS?
If this pamphlet does not answer all of your
questions about your move, do not hesitate to ask your
mover's representative who handled the arrangements for
your move, the driver who transports your shipment, or
the mover's main office for additional information.
SUBPART A - GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
The primary responsibility for your protection lies
with you in selecting a reputable household goods
carrier, ensuring you understand the terms and
conditions of your contract with your mover, and
understanding and pursuing the remedies that are
available to you in case problems arise.
Who must follow the regulations?
The regulations inform motor carriers engaged in
the interstate transportation of household goods
(movers) what standards they must follow when offering
services to you. You, an individual shipper, are not
directly subject to the regulations. However, your mover
may be required by the regulations to force you to pay
on time. The regulations only apply to your mover when
the mover transports your household goods by motor
vehicle in interstate commerce - that is, when you are
moving from one State to another. The regulations do not
apply when your interstate move takes place within a
single commercial zone. A commercial zone is roughly
equivalent to the local metropolitan area of a city or
town. For example, a move between Brooklyn, NY, and
Hackensack, NJ, would be considered to be within the New
York City commercial zone and would not be subject to
these regulations. Commercial zones are defined in 49
CFR part 372.
What definitions are used in this pamphlet?
ACCESSORIAL (ADDITIONAL) SERVICES
- These are services such as packing, appliance
servicing, unpacking, or piano stair carries that you
request to be performed (or that are necessary because
of landlord requirements or other special
circumstances). Charges for these services may be in
addition to the line haul charges.
ADVANCED CHARGES - These are
charges for services performed by someone other than the
mover. A professional, craftsman, or other third party
may perform these services at your request. The mover
pays for these services and adds the charges to your
bill of lading charges.
ADVERTISEMENT - This is any
communication to the public in connection with an offer
or sale of any interstate household goods transportation
service. This will include written or electronic
database listings of your mover's name, address, and
telephone number in an on-line database. This excludes
listings of your mover's name, address, and telephone
number in a telephone directory or similar publication.
However, Yellow Pages advertising is included within the
definition.
AGENT - A local moving company
authorized to act on behalf of a larger, national
company.
APPLIANCE SERVICE BY THIRD PARTY -
The preparation of major electrical appliances to make
them safe for shipment. Charges for these services may
be in addition to the line haul charges.
BILL OF LADING - The receipt for
your goods and the contract for their transportation.
CARRIER - The mover transporting
your household goods.
CASH ON DELIVERY (COD) - This
means payment is required at the time of delivery at the
destination residence (or warehouse).
CERTIFIED SCALE - Any scale
designed for weighing motor vehicles, including trailers
or semitrailers not attached to a tractor, and certified
by an authorized scale inspection and licensing
authority. A certified scale may also be a platform or
warehouse type scale that is properly inspected and
certified.
ESTIMATE, BINDING - This is an
agreement made in advance with your mover. It guarantees
the total cost of the move based upon the quantities and
services shown on the estimate.
ESTIMATE, NON-BINDING - This is
what your mover believes the cost will be, based upon
the estimated weight of the shipment and the accessorial
services requested. A non-binding estimate is not
binding on the mover. The final charges will be based
upon the actual weight of your shipment, the services
provided, and the tariff provisions in effect.
EXPEDITED SERVICE - This is an
agreement with the mover to perform transportation by a
set date in exchange for charges based upon a higher
minimum weight.
FLIGHT CHARGE - A charge for
carrying items up or down flights of stairs. Charges for
these services may be in addition to the line haul
charges.
GUARANTEED PICKUP AND DELIVERY SERVICE
- An additional level of service featuring
guaranteed dates of service. Your mover will provide
reimbursement to you for delays. This premium service is
often subject to minimum weight requirements.
HIGH VALUE ARTICLE - These are
items included in a shipment valued at more than $100
per pound ($220 per kilogram).
HOUSEHOLD GOODS, as used in
connection with transportation, means the personal
effects or property used, or to be used, in a dwelling,
when part of the equipment or supplies of the dwelling.
Transportation of the household goods must be arranged
and paid for by you or by another individual on your
behalf. This may include items moving from a factory or
store when you purchase them to use in your dwelling.
You must request that these items be transported, and
you (or another individual on your behalf) must pay the
transportation charges to the mover.
INVENTORY - The detailed
descriptive list of your household goods showing the
number and condition of each item.
LINE HAUL CHARGES - The charges
for the vehicle transportation portion of your move.
These charges, if separately stated, apply in addition
to the accessorial service charges.
LONG CARRY - A charge for carrying
articles excessive distances between the mover's vehicle
and your residence. Charges for these services may be in
addition to the line haul charges.
MAY - An option. You or your mover
may do something, but it is not a requirement.
MOVER - A motor carrier engaged in
the transportation of household goods and its household
goods agents.
MUST - A legal obligation. You or
your mover must do something.
ORDER FOR SERVICE - The document
authorizing the mover to transport your household goods.
ORDER (BILL OF LADING) NUMBER -
The number used to identify and track your shipment.
PEAK SEASON RATES - Higher line
haul charges applicable during the summer months.
PICKUP AND DELIVERY CHARGES -
Separate transportation charges applicable for
transporting your shipment between the
storage-in-transit warehouse and your residence.
REASONABLE DISPATCH - The
performance of transportation on the dates, or during
the period of time, agreed upon by you and your mover
and shown on the Order for Service/Bill of Lading. For
example, if your mover deliberately withholds any
shipment from delivery after you offer to pay the
binding estimate or 110 percent of a non-binding
estimate, your mover has not transported the goods with
reasonable dispatch. The term "reasonable dispatch"
excludes transportation provided under your mover's
tariff provisions requiring guaranteed service dates.
Your mover will have the defense of force majeure, i.e.,
that the contract cannot be performed owing to causes
that are outside the control of the parties and that
could not be avoided by exercise of due care.
SHOULD - A recommendation. We
recommend you or your mover do something, but it is not
a requirement.
SHUTTLE SERVICE - The use of a
smaller vehicle to provide service to residences not
accessible to the mover's normal line haul vehicles.
STORAGE-IN-TRANSIT (SIT) - The
temporary warehouse storage of your shipment pending
further transportation, with or without notification to
you. If you (or someone representing you) cannot accept
delivery on the agreed-upon date or within the
agreed-upon time period (for example, because your home
is not quite ready to occupy), your mover may place your
shipment into SIT without notifying you. In those
circumstances, you will be responsible for the added
charges for SIT service, as well as the warehouse
handling and final delivery charges.
However, your mover also may place
your shipment into SIT if your mover was able to make
delivery before the agreed-upon date (or before the
first day of the agreed-upon delivery period), but you
did not concur with early delivery. In those
circumstances, your mover must notify you immediately of
the SIT, and your mover is fully responsible for
redelivery charges, handling charges, and storage
charges.
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD - An
agency within the U.S. Department of Transportation that
regulates household goods carrier tariffs, among other
responsibilities. The Surface Transportation Board's
address is 1925 K Street NW., Washington, DC 20423-0001
Tele. 202-565-1674.
TARIFF - An issuance (in whole or
in part) containing rates, rules, regulations,
classifications, or other provisions. The Surface
Transportation Board requires that a tariff contain
three specific items. First, an accurate description of
the services the mover offers to the public. Second, the
specific applicable rates (or the basis for calculating
the specific applicable rates) and service terms for
services offered to the public. Third, the mover's
tariff must be arranged in a way that allows you to
determine the exact rate(s) and service terms applicable
to your shipment.
VALUATION - The degree of worth of
the shipment. The valuation charge compensates the mover
for assuming a greater degree of liability than is
provided for in its base transportation charges.
WAREHOUSE HANDLING - A charge may
be applicable each time SIT service is provided. Charges
for these services may be in addition to the line haul
charges. This charge compensates the mover for the
physical placement and removal of items within the
warehouse.
WE, US, and OUR - The Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA).
YOU and YOUR - You are an
individual shipper of household goods. You are a
consignor or consignee of a household goods shipment and
your mover identifies you as such in the bill of lading
contract. You own the goods being transported and pay
the transportation charges to the mover.
Where may other terms used in this pamphlet
be defined?
You may find other terms used in this pamphlet
defined in 49 U.S.C. 13102. The statute controls the
definitions in this pamphlet. If terms are used in this
pamphlet and the terms are defined neither here nor in
49 U.S.C. 13102, the terms will have the ordinary
practical meaning of such terms.
SUBPART B - BEFORE REQUESTING SERVICES FROM
ANY MOVER
What is my mover's normal liability for
loss or damage when my mover accepts goods from me?
In general, your mover is legally liable for loss
or damage that occurs during performance of any
transportation of household goods and of all related
services identified on your mover's lawful bill of
lading.
Your mover is liable for loss of, or damage to, any
household goods to the extent provided in the current
Surface Transportation Board's Released Rates Order. You
may obtain a copy of the current Released Rates Order by
contacting the Surface Transportation Board at the
address provided under the definition of the Surface
Transportation Board. The rate may be increased annually
by your mover based on the U.S. Department of Commerce's
Cost of Living Adjustment. Your mover may have
additional liability if your mover sells liability
insurance to you.
All moving companies are required to assume
liability for the value of the goods transported.
However, there are different levels of liability, and
you should be aware of the amount of protection provided
and the charges for each option.
Basically, most movers offer two different levels
of liability (options 1 and two below) under the terms
of their tariffs and the Surface Transportation Board's
Released Rates Orders. These orders govern the moving
industry.
OPTION 1: RELEASED VALUE
This is the most economical protection option
available. This no-additional-cost option provides
minimal protection. Under this option, the mover assumes
liability for no more than 60 cents per pound ($1.32
cents per kilogram), per article. Loss or damage claims
are settled based upon the pound (kilogram) weight of
the article multiplied by 60 cents per pound ($1.32
cents per kilogram). For example, if your mover lost or
destroyed a 10-pound (4.54-kilogram) stereo component
valued at $1,000, your mover would be liable for no more
than $6.00. Obviously, you should think carefully before
agreeing to such an arrangement. There is no extra
charge for this minimal protection, but you must sign a
specific statement on the bill of lading agreeing to it.
OPTION 2: FULL VALUE PROTECTION (FVP)
Under this option, the mover is liable for the
replacement value of lost or damaged goods (as long as
it doesn't exceed the total declared value of the
shipment). If you elect to purchase full value
protection, and your mover loses, damages or destroys
your articles, your mover must repair, replace with like
items, or settle in cash at the current market
replacement value, regardless of the age of the lost or
damaged item. The minimum declared value of a shipment
under this option is $5,000 or $4.00 times the actual
total weight (in pounds) of the shipment, whichever is
greater. For example, the minimum declared value for a
4,000-pound (1,814.4-kilogram) shipment would be
$16,000. Your mover may offer you FVP with a $250 or
$500 deductible, or with no deductible at all. The
amount of the deductible will affect the cost of your
FVP coverage. The $4.00 per pound minimum valuation rate
may be increased annually by your mover based on changes
in the household furnishings element of the Consumer
Price Index established by the U.S. Department of
Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Unless you specifically agree to other
arrangements, the mover must assume liability for the
entire shipment based upon this option. The approximate
cost for FVP is $8.50 for each $1,000 of declared value;
however, it may vary by mover. In the example above, the
valuation charge for a shipment valued at $16,000 would
be $136.00. As noted above, this fee may be adjusted
annually by your mover based on changes in the household
furnishings element of the Consumer Price Index.
Under both of these liability options, movers are
permitted to limit their liability for loss or damage to
articles of extraordinary value, unless you specifically
list these articles on the shipping documents. An
article of extraordinary value is any item whose value
exceeds $100 per pound ($220 per kilogram). Ask your
mover for a complete explanation of this limitation
before your move. It is your responsibility to study
this provision carefully and make the necessary
declaration.
These optional levels of liability are not
insurance agreements governed by State insurance laws,
but instead are authorized under Released Rates Orders
of the Surface Transportation Board of the U.S.
Department of Transportation.
In addition to these options, some movers may also
offer to sell, or procure for you, separate liability
insurance from a third-party insurance company when you
release your shipment for transportation at the minimum
released value of 60 cents per pound ($1.32 per
kilogram) per article (option 1). This is not valuation
coverage governed by Federal law, but optional insurance
regulated under State law. If you purchase this separate
coverage and your mover is responsible for loss or
damage, the mover is liable only for an amount not
exceeding 60 cents per pound ($1.32 per kilogram) per
article, and the balance of the loss is recoverable from
the insurance company up to the amount of insurance
purchased. The mover's representative can advise you of
the availability of such liability insurance, and the
cost.
If you purchase liability insurance from or through
your mover, the mover is required to issue a policy or
other written record of the purchase and to provide you
with a copy of the policy or other document at the time
of purchase. If the mover fails to comply with this
requirement, the mover becomes fully liable for any
claim for loss or damage attributed to its negligence.
What actions by me limit or reduce my
mover's normal liability?
Your actions may limit or reduce your mover's
normal liability under the following three
circumstances:
- You include perishable, dangerous, or hazardous
materials in your household goods without your mover's
knowledge.
- You choose liability option 1 but ship household
goods valued at more than 60 cents per pound ($1.32
per kilogram) per article.
- You fail to notify your mover in writing of
articles valued at more than $100 per pound ($220 per
kilogram). (If you do notify your mover, you will be
entitled to full recovery up to the declared value of
the article or articles, not to exceed the declared
value of the entire shipment.)
What are dangerous or hazardous materials
that may limit or reduce my mover's normal liability?
Federal law forbids you to ship hazardous materials
in your household goods boxes or luggage without
informing your mover. A violation can result in five
years' imprisonment and penalties of $250,000 or more
(49 U.S.C. 5124). You could also lose or damage your
household goods by fire, explosion, or contamination.
If you offer hazardous materials to your mover, you
are considered a hazardous materials shipper and must
comply with the hazardous materials requirements in 49
CFR parts 171, 172, and 173, including but not limited
to package labeling and marking, shipping papers, and
emergency response information. Your mover must comply
with 49 CFR parts 171, 172, 173, and 177 as a hazardous
materials carrier.
Hazardous materials include explosives, compressed
gases, flammable liquids and solids, oxidizers, poisons,
corrosives, and radioactive materials. Examples: Nail
polish remover, paints, paint thinners, lighter fluid,
gasoline, fireworks, oxygen bottles, propane cylinders,
automotive repair and maintenance chemicals, and
radio-pharmaceuticals.
There are special exceptions for small quantities
(up to 70 ounces total) of medicinal and toilet articles
carried in your household goods and certain smoking
materials carried on your person. For further
information, contact your mover.
May my mover have agents?
Yes, your mover may have agents. If your mover has
agents, your mover must have written agreements with its
prime agents. Your mover and its retained prime agent
must sign their agreements. Copies of your mover's prime
agent agreements must be in your mover's files for a
period of at least 24 months following the date of
termination of each agreement.
What items must be in my mover's
advertisements?
Your mover must publish and use only truthful,
straightforward, and honest advertisements. Your mover
must include certain information in all advertisements
for all services (including any accessorial services
incidental to or part of interstate transportation).
Your mover must require each of its agents to include
the same information in its advertisements. The
information must include the following two pieces of
information about your mover:
- Name or trade name of the mover under whose USDOT
number the advertised service will originate.
- USDOT number, assigned by FMCSA, authorizing your
mover to operate. Your mover must display the
information as: USDOT No. (assigned number).
You should compare the name or trade name of the
mover and its USDOT number to the name and USDOT number
on the sides of the truck(s) that arrive at your
residence. The names and numbers should be identical. If
the names and numbers are not identical, you should ask
your mover immediately why they are not. You should not
allow the mover to load your household goods on its
truck(s) until you obtain a satisfactory response from
the mover's local agent. The discrepancies may warn of
problems you will have later in your business dealings
with this mover.
How must my mover handle complaints and
inquiries?
All movers are expected to respond promptly to
complaints or inquiries from you, the customer. Should
you have a complaint or question about your move, you
should first attempt to obtain a satisfactory response
from the mover's local agent, the sales representative
who handled the arrangements for your move, or the
driver assigned to your shipment.
If for any reason you are unable to obtain a
satisfactory response from one of these persons, you
should then contact the mover's principal office. When
you make such a call, be sure to have available your
copies of all documents relating to your move.
Particularly important is the number assigned to your
shipment by your mover.
Interstate movers are also required to offer
neutral arbitration as a means of resolving consumer
loss or damage disputes involving loss of or damage to
household goods. Your mover is required to provide you
with information regarding its arbitration program. You
have the right to pursue court action under 49 U.S.C.
14706 to seek judicial redress directly rather than
participate in your mover's arbitration program.
All interstate moving companies are required to
maintain a complaint and inquiry procedure to assist
their customers. At the time you make the arrangements
for your move, you should ask the mover's representative
for a description of the mover's procedure, the
telephone number to be used to contact the mover, and
whether the mover will pay for such telephone calls.
Your mover's procedure must include the following four
things:
- A communications system allowing you to
communicate with your mover's principal place of
business by telephone.
- A telephone number.
- A clear and concise statement about who must pay
for complaint and inquiry telephone calls.
- A written or electronic record system for
recording all inquiries and complaints received from
you by any means of communication.
Your mover must give you a clear and concise
written description of its procedure. You may want to be
certain that the system is in place.
Do I have the right to inspect my mover's
tariffs (schedules of charges) applicable to my move?
Federal law requires your mover to advise you of
your right to inspect your mover's tariffs (its
schedules of rates or charges) governing your shipment.
Movers' tariffs are made a part of the contract of
carriage (bill of lading) between you and the mover. You
may inspect the tariff at the mover's facility, or, upon
request, the mover will furnish you a free copy of any
tariff provision containing the mover's rates, rules, or
charges governing your shipment.
Tariffs may include provisions limiting the mover's
liability. This would generally be described in a
section on declaring value on the bill of lading. A
second tariff provision may set the periods for filing
claims. This would generally be described in Section 6
on the reverse side of a bill of lading. A third tariff
provision may reserve your mover's right to assess
additional charges for additional services performed.
For non-binding estimates, another tariff provision may
base charges upon the exact weight of the goods
transported. Your mover's tariff may contain other
provisions that apply to your move. Ask your mover what
they might be, and request a copy.
Must my mover have an arbitration program?
Your mover must have an arbitration program for
your use in resolving disputes concerning loss or damage
to your household goods. You have the right not to
participate in the arbitration program. You may pursue
court action under 49 U.S.C. 14706 to seek judicial
remedies directly. Your mover must establish and
maintain an arbitration program with the following 11
minimum elements:
- The arbitration program offered to you must
prevent your mover from having any special advantage
because you live or work in a place distant from the
mover's principal or other place of business.
- Before your household goods are tendered for
transport, your mover must provide notice to you of
the availability of neutral arbitration, including the
following three things:
- A summary of the arbitration procedure.
- Any applicable costs.
- A disclosure of the legal effects of electing to
use arbitration.
- Upon your request, your mover must provide
information and forms it considers necessary for
initiating an action to resolve a dispute under
arbitration.
- Each person authorized to arbitrate must be
independent of the parties to the dispute and capable
of resolving such disputes fairly and expeditiously.
Your mover must ensure the arbitrator is authorized
and able to obtain from you or your mover any material
or relevant information to carry out a fair and
expeditious decision-making process.
- You must not be required to pay more than one-half
of the arbitration's cost. The arbitrator may
determine the percentage of payment of the costs for
each party in the arbitration decision, but must not
make you pay more than half.
- Your mover must not require you to agree to use
arbitration before a dispute arises.
- You will be bound by arbitration for claims of
$5,000 or less if you request arbitration.
- You will be bound by arbitration for claims of
more than $5,000 only if you request arbitration and
your mover agrees to it.
- If you and your mover both agree, the arbitrator
may provide for an oral presentation of a dispute by a
party or representative of a party.
- The arbitrator must render a decision within 60
days of receipt of written notification of the
dispute, and a decision by an arbitrator may include
any remedies appropriate under the circumstances.
- The 60-day period may be extended for a reasonable
period if you fail, or your mover fails, to provide
information in a timely manner.
Your mover must produce and distribute a concise,
easy-to-read, accurate summary of its arbitration
program.
Must my mover inform me about my rights and
responsibilities under Federal law?
Yes, your mover must inform you about your rights
and responsibilities under Federal law. Your mover must
produce and distribute this document. It should be in
the general order and contain the text of appendix A to
49 CFR Part 375.
What other information must my mover
provide me?
Before your mover executes an order for service for
a shipment of household goods, your mover must furnish
you with the following four documents:
- The contents of appendix A, "Your Rights and
Responsibilities When You Move" - this pamphlet.
- A concise, easy-to-read, accurate summary of your
mover's arbitration program.
- A notice of availability of the applicable
sections of your mover's tariff for the estimate of
charges, including an explanation that you may examine
the tariff sections or have copies sent to you upon
request.
- A concise, easy-to-read, accurate summary of your
mover's customer complaint and inquiry handling
procedures. Included in this summary must be the
following two items:
- The main telephone number you may use to
communicate with your mover.
- A clear and concise statement concerning who
must pay for telephone calls.
Your mover may, at its discretion, provide
additional information to you.
How must my mover collect charges?
Your mover must issue you an honest, truthful
freight or expense bill for each shipment transported.
Your mover's freight or expense bill must contain the
following 19 items:
- Name of the consignor.
- Name of the consignees.
- Date of the shipment.
- Origin point.
- Destination points.
- Number of packages.
- Description of the freight.
- Weight of the freight (if applicable to the rating
of the freight).
- The volume of the freight (if applicable to the
rating of the freight).
- The measurement of the freight (if applicable to
the rating of the freight).
- Exact rate(s) assessed.
- Disclosure of the actual rates, charges, and
allowances for the transportation service, when your
mover electronically presents or transmits freight or
expense bills to you. These rates must be in
accordance with the mover's applicable tariff.
- An indication of whether adjustments may apply to
the bill.
- Total charges due and acceptable methods of
payment.
- The nature and amount of any special service
charges.
- The points where special services were rendered.
- Route of movement and name of each mover
participating in the transportation.
- Transfer points where shipments moved.
- Address where you must pay or address of bill
issuer's principal place of business.
Your mover must present its freight or expense bill
to you within 15 days of the date of delivery of a
shipment at its destination. The computation of time
excludes Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays.
(Bills for charges exceeding 110 percent of a
non-binding estimate, and for additional services
requested or found necessary after the shipment is in
transit, will be presented no sooner than 30 days after
the date of delivery.)
If your mover lacks sufficient information to
compute its charges, your mover must present its freight
bill for payment within 15 days of the date when
sufficient information does become available.
May my mover collect charges upon delivery?
Yes. Your mover must specify the form of payment
acceptable at delivery when the mover prepares an
estimate and order for service. The mover and its agents
must honor the form of payment at delivery, except when
you mutually agree to a change in writing. The mover
must also specify the same form of payment when it
prepares your bill of lading, unless you agree to a
change. See also "May my mover accept charge or credit
cards for my payments?"
You must be prepared to pay 10 percent more than
the estimated amount, if your goods are moving under a
non-binding estimate. Every collect-on-delivery shipper
must have available 110 percent of the estimate at the
time of delivery.
May my mover extend credit to me?
Extending credit to you is not the same as
accepting your charge or credit card(s) as payment. Your
mover may extend credit to you in the amount of the
tariff charges. If your mover extends credit to you,
your mover becomes like a bank offering you a line of
credit, whose size and interest rate are determined by
your ability to pay its tariff charges within the credit
period. Your mover must ensure you will pay its tariff
charges within the credit period. Your mover may
relinquish possession of freight before you pay its
tariff charges, at its discretion.
The credit period must begin on the day following
presentation of your mover's freight bill to you. Under
Federal regulation, the standard credit period is 7
days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal
holidays. Your mover must also extend the credit period
to a total of 30 calendar days if the freight bill is
not paid within the 7-day period. A service charge equal
to one percent of the amount of the freight bill,
subject to a $20 minimum, will be assessed for this
extension and for each additional 30-day period the
charges go unpaid.
Your failure to pay within the credit period will
require your mover to determine whether you will comply
with the Federal household goods transportation credit
regulations in good faith in the future before extending
credit again.
May my mover accept charge or credit cards
for my payments?
Your mover may allow you to use a charge or credit
card for payment of the freight charges. Your mover may
accept charge or credit cards whenever you ship with it
under an agreement and tariff requiring payment by cash
or cash equivalents. Cash equivalents are a certified
check, money order, or cashier's check (a check that a
financial institution - bank, credit union, savings and
loan - draws upon itself and that is signed by an
officer of the financial institution).
If your mover allows you to pay for a freight or
expense bill by charge or credit card, your mover deems
such a payment to be equivalent to payment by cash,
certified check, or cashier's check. It must note in
writing on the order for service and the bill of lading
whether you may pay for the transportation and related
services using a charge or credit card. You should ask
your mover at the time the estimate is written whether
it will accept charge or credit cards at delivery.
The mover must specify what charge or credit cards
it will accept, such as American Express, Discover,
MasterCard, or Visa. If your mover agrees to accept
payment by charge or credit card, you must arrange with
your mover for the delivery only at a time when your
mover can obtain authorization for your credit card
transaction.
If you cause a charge or credit card issuer to
reverse a transaction, your mover may consider your
action tantamount to forcing your mover to provide an
involuntary extension of its credit.
SUBPART C - SERVICE OPTIONS PROVIDED
What service options may my mover provide?
Your mover may provide any service options it
chooses. It is customary for movers to offer several
price and service options.
The total cost of your move may increase if you
want additional or special services. Before you agree to
have your shipment moved under a bill of lading
providing special service, you should have a clear
understanding with your mover of what the additional
cost will be. You should always consider whether other
movers may provide the services you require without
requiring you to pay the additional charges.
One service option is a SPACE RESERVATION. If you
agree to have your shipment transported under a space
reservation agreement, you will pay for a minimum number
of cubic feet of space in the moving van regardless of
how much space in the van your shipment actually
occupies.
A second option is EXPEDITED SERVICE. This aids you
if you must have your shipments transported on or
between specific dates when the mover could not
ordinarily agree to do so in its normal operations.
A third customary service option is EXCLUSIVE USE
OF A VEHICLE. If for any reason you desire or require
that your shipment be moved by itself on the mover's
truck or trailer, most movers will provide such service.
Another service option is GUARANTEED SERVICE ON OR
BETWEEN AGREED DATES. You enter into an agreement with
the mover where the mover provides for your shipment to
be picked up, transported to destination, and delivered
on specific guaranteed dates. If the mover fails to
provide the service as agreed, you are entitled to be
compensated at a predetermined amount or a daily rate
(per diem) regardless of the expense you might actually
have incurred as a result of the mover's failure to
perform.
Before requesting or agreeing to any of these price
and service options, be sure to ask the mover's
representatives about the final costs you will pay.
TRANSPORT OF SHIPMENTS ON TWO OR MORE
VEHICLES
Although all movers try to move each shipment on
one truck, it becomes necessary, at times, to divide a
shipment among two or more trucks. This may occur if
your mover has underestimated the cubic feet (meters) of
space required for your shipment and it will not all fit
on the first truck. Your mover will pick up the
remainder, or "leave behind," on a second truck at a
later time, and this part of your shipment may arrive at
the destination later than the first truck. When this
occurs, your transportation charges will be determined
as if the entire shipment had moved on one truck.
If it is important for you to avoid this
inconvenience of a "leave behind," be sure your estimate
includes an accurate calculation of the cubic feet
(meters) required for your shipment. Ask your estimator
to use a "Table of Measurements" form in making this
calculation. Consider asking for a binding estimate. A
binding estimate is more likely to be conservative with
regard to cubic feet (meters) than a non-binding
estimate. If the mover offers space reservation service,
consider purchasing this service for the necessary
amount of space plus some margin for error. In any case,
you would be prudent to "prioritize" your goods in
advance of the move so the driver will load the more
essential items on the first truck if some are left
behind.
If my mover sells liability insurance
coverage, what must my mover do?
If your mover provides the service of selling
additional liability insurance, your mover must follow
certain regulations.
Your mover, its employees, or its agents, may sell,
offer to sell, or procure additional liability insurance
coverage for you for loss or damage to your shipment if
you release the shipment for transportation at a value
not exceeding 60 cents per pound ($1.32 per kilogram)
per article.
Your mover may offer, sell, or procure any type of
insurance policy covering loss or damage in excess of
its specified liability.
Your mover must issue you a policy or other
appropriate evidence of the insurance you purchased.
Your mover must provide a copy of the policy or other
appropriate evidence to you at the time your mover sells
or procures the insurance. Your mover must issue
policies written in plain English.
Your mover must clearly specify the nature and
extent of coverage under the policy. Your mover's
failure to issue you a policy, or other appropriate
evidence of insurance you purchased, will subject your
mover to full liability for any claims to recover loss
or damage attributed to it.
Your mover's tariff must provide for liability
insurance coverage. The tariff must also provide for the
base transportation charge, including its assumption of
full liability for the value of the shipment. This would
offer you a degree of protection in the event your mover
fails to issue you a policy or other appropriate
evidence of insurance at the time of purchase.
SUBPART D - ESTIMATING CHARGES
Must my mover estimate the transportation
and accessorial charges for my move?
We require your mover to prepare a written estimate
on every shipment transported for you. You are entitled
to a copy of the written estimate when your mover
prepares it. Your mover must provide you a written
estimate of all charges, including transportation,
accessorial, and advance charges. Your mover's "rate
quote" is not an estimate. You and your mover must sign
the estimate of charges. Your mover must provide you
with a dated copy of the estimate of charges at the time
you sign the estimate.
You should be aware that if you receive an estimate
from a household goods broker, the mover is not required
to accept the estimate. Be sure to obtain a written
estimate from the mover if a mover tells you orally that
it will accept the broker's estimate.
Your mover must specify the form of payment the
mover and its delivering agent will honor at delivery.
Payment forms may include but are not limited to cash,
certified check, money order, cashier's check, a
specific charge card such as American Express, a
specific credit card such as Visa, and your mover's own
credit.
If your mover provides you with an estimate based
on volume that will later be converted to a weight-based
rate, the mover must provide you an explanation in
writing of the formula used to calculate the conversion
to weight. Your mover must specify that the final
charges will be based on actual weight and services.
Before loading your household goods, and upon mutual
agreement between you and your mover, your mover may
amend an estimate of charges. Your mover may not amend
the estimate after loading the shipment.
A binding estimate is an agreement made in advance
with your mover. It guarantees the total cost of the
move based upon the quantities and services shown on
your mover's estimate.
A non-binding estimate is what your mover believes
the total cost will be for the move, based upon the
estimated weight of the shipment and the accessorial
services requested. A non-binding estimate is not
binding on your mover. Your mover will base the final
charges upon the actual weight of your shipment, the
services provided, and its tariff provisions in effect.
You must be prepared to pay 10 percent more than the
estimated amount at delivery.
How must my mover estimate charges under
the regulations?
BINDING ESTIMATES Your mover may
charge you for providing a binding estimate. The binding
estimate must clearly describe the shipment and all
services provided.
When you receive a binding estimate, you cannot be
required to pay any more than the estimated amount at
delivery. If you have requested the mover provide more
services than those included in the estimate, the mover
must not demand full payment for those added services at
time of delivery. Instead, the mover must bill for those
services later, as explained below. Such services might
include destination charges that often are not known at
origin (such as long carry charges, shuttle charges, or
extra stair carry charges).
A binding estimate must be in writing, and a copy
must be made available to you before you move.
If you agree to a binding estimate, you are
responsible for paying the charges due by cash,
certified check, money order, or cashier's check. The
charges are due your mover at the time of delivery
unless your mover agrees, before you move, to extend
credit or to accept payment by a specific charge card
such as American Express or a specific credit card such
as Visa. If you are unable to pay at the time the
shipment is delivered, the mover may place your shipment
in storage at your expense until you pay the charges.
Other requirements of binding estimates include the
following eight elements:
- Your mover must retain a copy of each binding
estimate as an attachment to the bill of lading.
- Your mover must clearly indicate upon each binding
estimate's face that the estimate is binding upon you
and your mover. Each binding estimate must also
clearly indicate on its face that the charges shown
are the charges to be assessed for only those services
specifically identified in the estimate.
- Your mover must clearly describe binding estimate
shipments and all services to be provided.
- If, before loading your shipment, your mover
believes you are tendering additional household goods
or are requiring additional services not identified in
the binding estimate, and you and your mover cannot
reach an agreement, your mover may refuse to service
the shipment. If your mover agrees to service the
shipment, your mover must do one of the following
three things:
- Reaffirm the binding estimate.
- Negotiate a revised written binding estimate
listing the additional household goods or services.
- Add an attachment to the contract, in writing,
stating you both will consider the original binding
estimate as a non-binding estimate. You should read
more below. This may seriously affect how much you
may pay for the entire move.
- Once your mover loads your shipment, your mover's
failure to execute a new binding estimate or to agree
with you to treat the original estimate as a
non-binding estimate signifies it has reaffirmed the
original binding estimate. Your mover may not collect
more than the amount of the original binding estimate,
except as provided in the next two paragraphs.
- Your mover may believe additional services are
necessary to properly service your shipment after your
household goods are in transit. Your mover must inform
you what the additional services are before performing
them. Your mover must allow you at least one hour to
determine whether you want the additional services
performed. Such additional services include carrying
your furniture up additional stairs or using an
elevator. If these services do not appear on your
mover's estimate, your mover must deliver your
shipment and bill you later for the additional
services.
If you agree to pay for the additional
services, your mover must execute a written attachment
to be made an integral part of the bill of lading and
have you sign the written attachment. This may be done
through fax transmissions. You will be billed for the
additional services 30 days following the date of
delivery.
- If you add additional services after your
household goods are in transit, you will be billed for
the additional services but only be expected to pay
the full amount of the binding estimate to receive
delivery. Your mover must bill you for the balance of
any remaining charges for these additional services no
sooner than 30 days after delivery. For example, if
your binding estimate shows total charges at delivery
should be $1,000 but your actual charges at
destination are $1,500, your mover must deliver the
shipment upon payment of $1,000. The mover must bill
you for the remaining $500 no sooner than 30 days
after the date of delivery.
- Failure of your mover to relinquish possession of
a shipment upon your offer to pay the binding estimate
amount constitutes your mover's failure to transport a
shipment with "reasonable dispatch" and subjects your
mover to cargo delay claims pursuant to 49 CFR Part
370.
NON-BINDING ESTIMATES
Your mover is not permitted to charge you for
giving a non-binding estimate.
A non-binding estimate is not a bid or contract.
Your mover provides it to you to give you a general idea
of the cost of the move, but it does not bind your mover
to the estimated cost. You should expect the final cost
to be more than the estimate. The actual cost will be in
accordance with your mover's tariffs. Federal law
requires your mover to collect the charges shown in its
tariffs, regardless of what your mover writes in its
non-binding estimates. That is why it is important to
ask for copies of the applicable portions of the mover's
tariffs before deciding on a mover. The charges
contained in movers' tariffs are essentially the same
for the same weight shipment moving the same distance.
If you obtain different non-binding estimates from
different movers, you must pay only the amount specified
in your mover's tariff. Therefore, a non-binding
estimate may have no effect on the amount that you will
ultimately have to pay.
You must be prepared to pay 10 percent more than
the estimated amount at the time of delivery. Every
collect-on-delivery shipper must have available 110
percent of the estimate at the time of delivery. If you
order additional services from your mover after your
goods are in transit, the mover will then bill you 30
days after delivery for any remaining charges.
Non-binding estimates must be in writing and
clearly describe the shipment and all services provided.
Any time a mover provides such an estimate, the amount
of the charges estimated must be on the order for
service and bill of lading related to your shipment.
When you are given a non-binding estimate, do not sign
or accept the order for service or bill of lading unless
the mover enters the amount estimated on each form it
prepares.
Other requirements of non-binding estimates include
the following ten elements:
- Your mover must provide reasonably accurate non
binding estimates based upon the estimated weight of
the shipment and services required.
- Your mover must explain to you that all charges on
shipments moved under non binding estimates will be
those appearing in your mover's tariffs applicable to
the transportation. If your mover provides a
non-binding estimate of approximate costs, your mover
is not bound by such an estimate.
- Your mover must furnish non binding estimates
without charge and in writing to you.
- Your mover must retain a copy of each non-binding
estimate as an attachment to the bill of lading.
- Your mover must clearly indicate on the face of a
non-binding estimate that the estimate is not binding
upon your mover and the charges shown are the
approximate charges to be assessed for the services
identified in the estimate.
- Your mover must clearly describe on the face of a
non binding estimate the entire shipment and all
services to be provided.
- If, before loading your shipment, your mover
believes you are tendering additional household goods
or requiring additional services not identified in the
non-binding estimate, and you and your mover cannot
reach an agreement, your mover may refuse to service
the shipment. If your mover agrees to service the
shipment, your mover must do one of the following two
things:
- Reaffirm the non-binding estimate.
- Negotiate a revised written non-binding estimate
listing the additional household goods or services.
- Once your mover loads your shipment, your mover's
failure to execute a new estimate signifies it has
reaffirmed the original non-binding estimate. Your
mover may not collect more than 110 percent of the
amount of this estimate at destination.
- Your mover may believe additional services are
necessary to properly service your shipment after your
household goods are in transit. Your mover must inform
you what the additional services are before performing
them. Your mover must allow you at least one hour to
determine whether you want the additional services
performed. Such additional services include carrying
your furniture up additional stairs or using an
elevator. If these services do not appear on your
mover's estimate, your mover must deliver your
shipment and bill you later for the additional
services.
If you agree to pay for the additional
services, your mover must execute a written attachment
to be made an integral part of the bill of lading and
have you sign the written attachment. This may be done
through fax transmissions. You will be billed for the
additional services after 30 days from delivery.
- If you add additional services after your
household goods are in transit, you will be billed for
the additional services. To receive delivery, however,
you are required to pay no more than 110 percent of
the non-binding estimate. At least 30 days after
delivery, your mover must bill you for any remaining
balance, including the additional services you
requested. For example, if your non-binding estimate
shows total charges at delivery should be $1,000 but
your actual charges at destination are $1,500, your
mover must deliver the shipment upon payment of
$1,100. The mover must bill you for the remaining $400
no sooner than 30 days after the date of delivery.
If your mover furnishes a non binding estimate,
your mover must enter the estimated charges upon the
order for service and upon the bill of lading.
Your mover must retain a record of all estimates of
charges for each move performed for at least one year
from the date your mover made the estimate.
What payment arrangements must my mover
have in place to secure delivery of my household goods
shipment?
If your total bill is 110 percent or less of the
non-binding estimate, the mover can require payment in
full upon delivery. If the bill exceeds 110 percent of
the non-binding estimate, your mover must relinquish
possession of the shipment at the time of delivery upon
payment of 110 percent of the estimated amount. Your
mover should have specified its acceptable form of
payment on the estimate, order for service, and bill of
lading. Your mover's failure to relinquish possession of
a shipment after you offer to pay 110 percent of the
estimated charges constitutes its failure to transport
the shipment with "reasonable dispatch" and subjects
your mover to your cargo delay claims under 49 CFR Part
370.
Your mover must bill for the payment of the balance
of any remaining charges after 30 days from delivery.
SUBPART E - PICKUP OF MY SHIPMENT OF
HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Must my mover write up an order for
service?
We require your mover to prepare an order for
service on every shipment transported for you. You are
entitled to a copy of the order for service when your
mover prepares it.
The order for service is not a contract. Should you
cancel or delay your move or if you decide not to use
the mover, you should promptly cancel the order.
If you or your mover change any agreed-upon dates
for pickup or delivery of your shipment, or agree to any
change in the non-binding estimate, your mover may
prepare a written change to the order for service. The
written change must be attached to the order for
service.
The order for service must contain the following 15
elements:
- Your mover's name and address and the USDOT number
assigned to your mover.
- Your name, address and, if available, telephone
number(s).
- The name, address, and telephone number of the
delivering mover's office or agent at or nearest to
the destination of your shipment.
- A telephone number where you may contact your
mover or its designated agent.
- One of the following three dates and times:
- The agreed-upon pickup date and agreed delivery
date of your move.
- The agreed-upon period(s) of the entire move.
- If your mover is transporting the shipment on a
guaranteed service basis, the guaranteed dates or
periods of time for pickup, transportation, and
delivery. Your mover must enter any penalty or per
diem requirements upon the agreement under this
item.
- The names and addresses of any other motor
carriers, when known, that will participate in
interline transportation of the shipment.
- The form of payment your mover will honor at
delivery. The payment information must be the same as
was entered on the estimate.
- The terms and conditions for payment of the total
charges, including notice of any minimum charges.
- The maximum amount your mover will demand at the
time of delivery to obtain possession of the shipment,
when transported on a collect-on-delivery basis.
- If not provided in the bill of lading, the Surface
Transportation Board's required released rates
valuation statement, and the charges, if any, for
optional valuation coverage. The STB's required
released rates may be increased annually by your mover
based on the U.S. Department of Commerce's Cost of
Living Adjustment.
- A complete description of any special or
accessorial services ordered and minimum weight or
volume charges applicable to the shipment.
- Any identification or registration number your
mover assigns to the shipment.
- For non binding estimated charges, your mover's
reasonably accurate estimate of the amount of the
charges, the method of payment of total charges, and
the maximum amount (110 percent of the non-binding
estimate) your mover will demand at the time of
delivery for you to obtain possession of the shipment.
- For binding estimated charges, the amount of
charges your mover will demand based upon the binding
estimate and the terms of payment under the estimate.
- An indication of whether you request notification
of the charges before delivery. You must provide your
mover with the telephone number(s) or address(es)
where your mover will transmit such communications.
You and your mover must sign the order for service.
Your mover must provide a dated copy of the order for
service to you at the time your mover signs the order.
Your mover must provide you the opportunity to rescind
the order for service without any penalty for a
three-day period after you sign the order for service,
if you scheduled the shipment to be loaded more than
three days after you sign the order.
Your mover should provide you with documents that
are as complete as possible, and with all charges
clearly identified. However, as a practical matter, your
mover usually cannot give you a complete bill of lading
before transporting your goods. This is both because the
shipment cannot be weighed until it is in transit and
because other charges for service, such as unpacking,
storage-in-transit, and various destination charges,
cannot be determined until the shipment reaches its
destination.
Therefore, your mover can require you to sign a
partially complete bill of lading if it contains all
relevant information except the actual shipment weight
and any other information necessary to determine the
final charges for all services provided. Signing the
bill of lading allows you to choose the valuation
option, request special services, and/or acknowledge the
terms and conditions of released valuation.
Your mover also may provide you, strictly for
informational purposes, with blank or incomplete
documents pertaining to the move.
Before loading your shipment, and upon mutual
agreement of both you and your mover, your mover may
amend an order for service. Your mover must retain
records of an order for service it transported for at
least one year from the date your mover wrote the order.
Your mover must inform you, before or at the time
of loading, if the mover reasonably expects a special or
accessorial service is necessary to transport a shipment
safely. Your mover must refuse to accept the shipment
when your mover reasonably expects a special or
accessorial service is necessary to transport a shipment
safely, but you refuse to purchase the special or
accessorial service. Your mover must make a written note
if you refuse any special or accessorial services that
your mover reasonably expects to be necessary.
Must my mover write up an inventory of the
shipment?
Yes. Your mover must prepare an inventory of your
shipment before or at the time of loading. If your
mover's driver fails to prepare an inventory, you should
write a detailed inventory of your shipment listing any
damage or unusual wear to any items. The purpose is to
make a record of the existence and condition of each
item.
After completing the inventory, you should sign
each page and ask the mover's driver to sign each page.
Before you sign it, it is important you make sure that
the inventory lists every item in the shipment and that
the entries regarding the condition of each item are
correct. You have the right to note any disagreement. If
an item is missing or damaged when your mover delivers
the shipment, your subsequent ability to dispute the
items lost or damaged may depend upon your notations.
You should retain a copy of the inventory. Your
mover may keep the original if the driver prepared it.
If your mover's driver completed an inventory, the mover
must attach the complete inventory to the bill of lading
as an integral part of the bill of lading.
Must my mover write up a bill of lading?
The bill of lading is the contract between you and
the mover. The mover is required by law to prepare a
bill of lading for every shipment it transports. The
information on a bill of lading is required to be the
same information shown on the order for service. The
driver who loads your shipment must give you a copy of
the bill of lading before or at the time of loading your
furniture and other household goods.
IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO READ THE BILL OF
LADING BEFORE YOU ACCEPT IT. It is your responsibility
to understand the bill of lading before you sign it. If
you do not agree with something on the bill of lading,
do not sign it until you are satisfied it is correct.
The bill of lading requires the mover to provide
the service you have requested. You must pay the charges
set forth in the bill of lading.
THE BILL OF LADING IS AN IMPORTANT DOCUMENT. DO NOT
LOSE OR MISPLACE YOUR COPY. Have it available until your
shipment is delivered, all chargves are paid, and all
claims, if any, are settled.
A bill of lading must include the following 14
elements:
- Your mover's name and address, or the name and
address of the motor carrier issuing the bill of
lading.
- The names and addresses of any other motor
carriers, when known, who will participate in the
transportation of the shipment.
- The name, address, and telephone number of the
office of the motor carrier you must contact in
relation to the transportation of the shipment.
- The form of payment your mover will honor at
delivery. The payment information must be the same
that was entered on the estimate and order for
service.
- When your mover transports your shipment under a
collect-on-delivery basis, your name, address, and
telephone number where the mover will notify you about
the charges.
- For non-guaranteed service, the agreed-upon date
or period of time for pickup of the shipment and the
agreed-upon date or period of time for the delivery of
the shipment. The agreed-upon dates or periods for
pickup and delivery entered upon the bill of lading
must conform to the agreed-upon dates or periods of
time for pickup and delivery entered upon the order
for service or a proper amendment to the order for
service.
- For guaranteed service, the dates for pickup and
delivery and any penalty or per diem entitlements due
you under the agreement.
- The actual date of pickup.
- The identification number(s) of the vehicle(s) in
which your mover loads your shipment.
- The terms and conditions for payment of the total
charges including notice of any minimum charges.
- The maximum amount your mover will demand from you
at the time of delivery for you to obtain possession
of your shipment, when your mover transports under a
collect-on-delivery basis.
- If not provided in the order for service, the
Surface Transportation Board's required released rates
valuation statement, and the charges, if any, for
optional valuation coverage. The Board's required
released rates may be increased annually by your mover
based on the U.S. Department of Commerce's Cost of
Living Adjustment.
- Evidence of any insurance coverage sold to or
procured for you from an independent insurer,
including the amount of the premium for such
insurance.
- Each attachment to the bill of lading. Each
attachment is an integral part of the bill of lading
contract. If not provided to you elsewhere by the
mover, the following three items must be added as
attachments:
- The binding or non-binding estimate.
- The order for service.
- The inventory.
A copy of the bill of lading must accompany your
shipment at all times while in the possession of your
mover or its agent(s). When your mover loads the
shipment on a vehicle for transportation, the bill of
lading must be in the possession of the driver
responsible for the shipment. Your mover must retain
bills of lading for shipments it transported for at
least one year from the date your mover created the bill
of lading.
Should I reach an agreement with my mover
about pickup and delivery times?
You and your mover should reach an agreement for
pickup and delivery times. It is your responsibility to
determine on what date, or between what dates, you need
to have the shipment picked up and on what date, or
between what dates, you require delivery. It is your
mover's responsibility to tell you if it can provide
service on or between those dates, or, if not, on what
other dates it can provide the service.
In the process of reaching an agreement with your
mover, you may find it necessary to alter your moving
and travel plans if no mover can provide service on the
specific dates you desire.
Do not agree to have your shipment picked up or
delivered "as soon as possible." The dates or periods
you and your mover agree upon should be definite.
Once an agreement is reached, your mover must enter
those dates upon the order for service and the bill of
lading.
Once your goods are loaded, your mover is
contractually bound to provide the service described in
the bill of lading. Your mover's only defense for not
providing the service on the dates called for is the
defense of force majeure. This is a legal term. It means
that when circumstances change, were not foreseen, and
are beyond the control of your mover, preventing your
mover from performing the service agreed to in the bill
of lading, your mover is not responsible for damages
resulting from its nonperformance.
This may occur when you do not inform your mover of
the exact delivery requirements. For example, because of
restrictions trucks must follow at your new location,
the mover may not be able to take its truck down the
street of your residence and may need to shuttle the
shipment using another type of vehicle.
Must my mover determine the weight of my
shipment?
Generally, yes. If your mover transports your
household goods on a non-binding estimate under the
mover's tariffs based upon weight, your mover must
determine the weight of the shipment. If your mover
provided a binding estimate and has loaded your shipment
without claiming you have added additional items or
services, the weight of the shipment will not affect the
charges you will pay. If your mover is transporting your
shipment based upon the volume of the shipment - that
is, a set number of cubic feet (or yards or meters) -
the weight of the shipment likewise will not affect the
charges you will pay.
Your mover must determine the weight of your
shipment before requesting you to pay for any charges
dependent upon your shipment's weight.
Most movers have a minimum weight or volume charge
for transporting a shipment. Generally, the minimum is
the charge for transporting a shipment of at least 3,000
pounds (1,362 kilograms).
If your shipment appears to weigh less than the
mover's minimum weight, your mover must advise you on
the order for service of the minimum cost before
transporting your shipment. Should your mover fail to
advise you of the minimum charges and your shipment is
less than the minimum weight, your mover must base your
final charges upon the actual weight, not upon the
minimum weight.
How must my mover determine the weight of
my shipment?
Your mover must weigh your shipment upon a
certified scale.
The weight of your shipment must be obtained by
using one of two methods.
ORIGIN WEIGHING - Your mover may weigh your
shipment in the city or area where it loads your
shipment. If it elects this option, the driver must
weigh the truck before coming to your residence. This is
called the TARE WEIGHT. At the time of this first
weighing, the truck may already be partially loaded with
another shipment(s). This will not affect the weight of
your shipment. The truck should also contain the pads,
dollies, hand trucks, ramps, and other equipment
normally used in the transportation of household goods
shipments.
After loading, the driver will weigh the truck
again to obtain the loaded weight, called the GROSS
WEIGHT. The net weight of your shipment is then obtained
by subtracting the tare weight before loading from the
gross weight.
GROSS WEIGHT - TARE WEIGHT BEFORE LOADING = NET
WEIGHT.
DESTINATION WEIGHING (Also called BACK WEIGHING) -
The mover is also permitted to determine the weight of
your shipment at the destination after it delivers your
load. Weighing your shipment at destination instead of
at origin will not affect the accuracy of the shipment
weight. THE MOST IMPORTANT DIFFERENCE IS THAT YOUR MOVER
WILL NOT DETERMINE THE EXACT CHARGES ON YOUR SHIPMENT
BEFORE IT IS UNLOADED.
Destination weighing is done in reverse of origin
weighing. After arriving in the city or area where you
are moving, the driver will weigh the truck. Your
shipment will still be on the truck. Your mover will
determine the GROSS WEIGHT before coming to your new
residence to unload. After unloading your shipment, the
driver will again weigh the truck to obtain the TARE
WEIGHT. The net weight of your shipment will then be
obtained by subtracting the tare weight after delivery
from the gross weight.
GROSS WEIGHT - TARE WEIGHT AFTER DELIVERY= NET
WEIGHT.
At the time of both weighings, your mover's truck
must have installed or loaded all pads, dollies, hand
trucks, ramps, and other equipment required in the
transportation of your shipment. The driver and other
persons must be off the vehicle at the time of both
weighings. The fuel tanks on the vehicle must be full at
the time of each weighing. In lieu of this requirement,
your mover must not add fuel between the two weighings
when the tare weighing is the first weighing performed.
Your mover may detach the trailer of a tractor
trailer vehicle combination from the tractor and have
the trailer weighed separately at each weighing provided
the length of the scale platform is adequate to
accommodate and support the entire trailer.
Your mover may use an alternative method to weigh
your shipment if it weighs 3,000 pounds (1,362
kilograms) or less. The only alternative method allowed
is weighing the shipment upon a platform or warehouse
certified scale before loading your shipment for
transportation or after unloading.
Your mover must use the net weight of shipments
transported in large containers, such as ocean or
railroad containers. Your mover will calculate the
difference between the tare weight of the container
(including all pads, blocking and bracing used in the
transportation of your shipment) and the gross weight of
the container with your shipment loaded in the
container.
You have the right, and your mover must inform you
of your right, to observe all weighings of your
shipment. Your mover must tell you where and when each
weighing will occur. Your mover must give you a
reasonable opportunity to be present to observe the
weighings.
You may waive your right to observe any weighing or
reweighing. This does not affect any of your other
rights under Federal law.
Your mover may request you waive your right to have
a shipment weighed upon a certified scale. Your mover
may want to weigh the shipment upon a trailer's
on-board, noncertified scale. You should demand your
right to have a certified scale used. The use of a
noncertified scale may cause you to pay a higher final
bill for your move, if the noncertified scale does not
accurately weigh your shipment. Remember that certified
scales are inspected and approved for accuracy by a
government inspection or licensing agency. Noncertified
scales are not inspected and approved for accuracy by a
government inspection or licensing agency.
Your mover must obtain a separate weight ticket for
each weighing. The weigh master must sign each weight
ticket. Each weight ticket must contain the following
six items:
- The complete name and location of the scale.
- The date of each weighing.
- Identification of the weight entries as being the
tare, gross, or net weights.
- The company or mover identification of the
vehicle.
- Your last name as it appears on the Bill of
Lading.
- Your mover's shipment registration or Bill of
Lading number.
Your mover must retain the original weight ticket
or tickets relating to the determination of the weight
of your shipment as part of its file on your shipment.
When both weighings are performed on the same
scale, one weight ticket may be used to record both
weighings.
Your mover must present all freight bills with true
copies of all weight tickets. If your mover does not
present its freight bill with all weight tickets, your
mover is in violation of Federal law.
Before the driver actually begins unloading your
shipment weighed at origin and after your mover informs
you of the billing weight and total charges, you have
the right to demand a reweigh of your shipment. If you
believe the weight is not accurate, you have the right
to request your mover reweigh your shipment before
unloading.
You have the right, and your mover must inform you
of your right, to observe all reweighings of your
shipment. Your mover must tell you where and when each
reweighing will occur. Your mover must give you a
reasonable opportunity to be present to observe the
reweighings.
You may waive your right to observe any reweighing;
however, you must waive that right in writing. You may
send the written waiver via fax or e-mail, as well as by
overnight courier or certified mail, return receipt
requested.
This does not affect any of your other rights under
Federal law.
Your mover is prohibited from charging you for the
reweighing. If the weight of your shipment at the time
of the reweigh is different from the weight determined
at origin, your mover must recompute the charges based
upon the reweigh weight.
Before requesting a reweigh, you may find it to
your advantage to estimate the weight of your shipment
using the following three-step method:
- Count the number of items in your shipment.
Usually there will be either 30 or 40 items listed on
each page of the inventory. For example, if there are
30 items per page and your inventory consists of four
complete pages and a fifth page with 15 items listed,
the total number of items will be 135. If an
automobile is listed on the inventory, do not include
this item in the count of the total items.
- Subtract the weight of any automobile included in
your shipment from the total weight of the shipment.
If the automobile was not weighed separately, its
weight can be found on its title or license receipt.
- Divide the number of items in your shipment into
the weight. If the average weight resulting from this
exercise ranges between 35 and 45 pounds (16 and 20
kilograms) per article, it is unlikely a reweigh will
prove beneficial to you. In fact, it could result in
your paying higher charges.
Experience has shown that the average shipment of
household goods will weigh about 40 pounds (18
kilograms) per item. If a shipment contains a large
number of heavy items, such as cartons of books, boxes
of tools or heavier than average furniture, the average
weight per item may be 45 pounds or more (20 kilograms
or more).
What must my mover do if I want to know the
actual weight or charges for my shipment before
delivery?
If you request notification of the actual weight or
volume and charges upon your shipment, your mover must
comply with your request if it is moving your goods on a
collect-on-delivery basis. This requirement is
conditioned upon your supplying your mover with an
address or telephone number where you will receive the
communication. Your mover must make its notification by
telephone; fax transmissions; e-mail; overnight courier;
certified mail, return receipt requested; or in person.
You must receive the mover's notification at least
one full 24-hour day before its scheduled delivery,
excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays.
Your mover may disregard this 24-hour notification
requirement on shipments subject to one of the following
three things:
- Back weigh (when your mover weighs your shipment
at its destination).
- Pickup and delivery encompassing two consecutive
weekdays, if you agree.
- Maximum payment amounts at time of delivery of 110
percent of the estimated charges, if you agree.
SUBPART F - TRANSPORTATION OF MY SHIPMENT
Must my mover transport the shipment in a
timely manner?
Yes, your mover must transport your household goods
in a timely manner. This is also known as "reasonable
dispatch service." Your mover must provide reasonable
dispatch service to you, except for transportation on
the basis of guaranteed delivery dates.
When your mover is unable to perform either the
pickup or delivery of your shipment on the dates or
during the periods of time specified in the order for
service, your mover must notify you of the delay, at the
mover's expense. As soon as the delay becomes apparent
to your mover, it must give you notification it will be
unable to provide the service specified in the terms of
the order for service. Your mover may notify you of the
delay in any of the following ways: by telephone; fax
transmissions; e-mail; overnight courier; certified
mail, return receipt requested; or in person.
When your mover notifies you of a delay, it also
must advise you of the dates or periods of time it may
be able to pick up and/or deliver the shipment. Your
mover must consider your needs in its advisement.
Your mover must prepare a written record of the
date, time, and manner of its notification. Your mover
must prepare a written record of its amended date or
period for delivery. Your mover must retain these
records as a part of its file on your shipment. The
retention period is one year from the date of
notification. Your mover must furnish a copy of the
notification to you either by first class mail or in
person, if you request a copy of the notice.
Your mover must tender your shipment for delivery
on the agreed=upon delivery date or within the period
specified on the bill of lading. Upon your request or
concurrence, your mover may deliver your shipment on
another day.
The establishment of a delayed pickup or delivery
date does not relieve your mover from liability for
damages resulting from your mover's failure to provide
service as agreed. However, when your mover notifies you
of alternate delivery dates, it is your responsibility
to be available to accept delivery on the dates
specified. If you are not available and are not willing
to accept delivery, your mover has the right to place
your shipment in storage at your expense or hold the
shipment on its truck and assess additional charges.
If after the pickup of your shipment, you request
your mover to change the delivery date, most movers will
agree to do so provided your request will not result in
unreasonable delay to its equipment or interfere with
another customer's move. However, your mover is under no
obligation to consent to amended delivery dates. Your
mover has the right to place your shipment in storage at
your expense if you are unwilling or unable to accept
delivery on the date agreed to in the bill of lading.
If your mover fails to pick up and deliver your
shipment on the date entered on the bill of lading and
you have expenses you otherwise would not have had, you
may be able to recover those expenses from your mover.
This is what is called an inconvenience or delay claim.
Should your mover refuse to honor such a claim and you
continue to believe you are entitled to be paid damages,
you may take your mover to court under 49 U.S.C. 14706.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)
has no authority to order your mover to pay such claims.
While we hope your mover delivers your shipment in
a timely manner, you should consider the possibility
your shipment may be delayed, and find out what payment
you can expect if a mover delays service through its own
fault, before you agree with the mover to transport your
shipment.
What must my mover do if it is able to
deliver my shipment more than 24 hours before I am able
to accept delivery?
At your mover's discretion, it may place your
shipment in storage. This will be under its own account
and at its own expense in a warehouse located in
proximity to the destination of your shipment. Your
mover may do this if you fail to request or concur with
an early delivery date, and your mover is able to
deliver your shipment more than 24 hours before your
specified date or the first day of your specified
period.
If your mover exercises this option, your mover
must immediately notify you of the name and address of
the warehouse where your mover places your shipment.
Your mover must make and keep a record of its
notification as a part of its shipment records. Your
mover has full responsibility for the shipment under the
terms and conditions of the bill of lading. Your mover
is responsible for the charges for redelivery, handling,
and storage until it makes final delivery. Your mover
may limit its responsibility to the agreed-upon delivery
date or the first day of the period of delivery as
specified in the bill of lading.
What must my mover do for me when I store
household goods in transit?
If you request your mover to hold your household
goods in storage in transit and the storage period is
about to expire, your mover must notify you, in writing,
about the four following items:
- The date when storage-in-transit will convert to
permanent storage.
- The existence of a nine-month period after the
date of conversion to permanent storage, during which
you may file claims against your mover for loss or
damage occurring to your goods while in transit or
during the storage-in-transit period.
- Your mover's liability will end.
- Your property will be subject to the rules,
regulations, and charges of the warehouseman.
Your mover must make this notification at least 10
days before the expiration date of one of the following
two periods of time:
- The specified period of time when your mover is to
hold your goods in storage.
- The maximum period of time provided in its tariff
for storage in transit.
Your mover must notify you by facsimile
transmission; overnight courier; e-mail; or certified
mail, return receipt requested.
If your mover holds your household goods in
storage-in-transit for less than 10 days, your mover
must notify you, one day before the storage-in-transit
period expires, of the same information specified above.
Your mover must maintain a record of all
notifications to you as part of the records of your
shipment. Under the applicable tariff provisions
regarding storage-in-transit, your mover's failure or
refusal to notify you will automatically extend your
mover's liability until the end of the day following the
date when your mover actually gives you notice.
SUBPART G - DELIVERY OF MY SHIPMENT
May my mover ask me to sign a delivery
receipt purporting to release it from liability?
At the time of delivery, your mover will expect you
to sign a receipt for your shipment. Normally, you will
sign each page of your mover's copy of the inventory.
Your mover's delivery receipt or shipping document
must not contain any language purporting to release or
discharge it or its agents from liability.
Your mover may include a statement about your
receipt of your property in apparent good condition,
except as noted on the shipping documents.
DO NOT SIGN the delivery receipt if it contains any
language purporting to release or discharge your mover
or its agents from liability. Strike out such language
before signing, or refuse delivery if the driver or
mover refuses to provide a proper delivery receipt.
What is the maximum collect-on-delivery
amount my mover may demand I pay at the time of
delivery?
On a binding estimate, the maximum amount is the
exact estimate of the charges. Your mover must specify
on the estimate, order for service, and bill of lading
the form of payment acceptable to it (for example, a
certified check).
On a non-binding estimate, the maximum amount is
110 percent of the approximate costs. Your mover must
specify on the estimate, order for service, and bill of
lading the form of payment acceptable to it (for
example, cash).
If my shipment is transported on more than
one vehicle, what charges may my mover collect at
delivery?
Although all movers try to move each shipment on
one truck, it becomes necessary at times to divide a
shipment among two or more trucks. This frequently
occurs when an automobile is included in the shipment
and it is transported on a vehicle specially designed to
transport automobiles. When this occurs, your
transportation charges are the same as if the entire
shipment moved on one truck.
If your shipment is divided for transportation on
two or more trucks, the mover may require payment for
each portion as it is delivered.
Your mover may delay the collection of all the
charges until the entire shipment is delivered, at its
discretion, not yours. When you order your move, you
should ask the mover about its policies in this regard.
If my shipment is partially lost or
destroyed, what charges may my mover collect at
delivery?
Movers customarily make every effort to avoid
losing, damaging, or destroying any of your items while
your shipment is in their possession for transportation.
However, despite the precautions taken, articles are
sometimes lost or destroyed during the move.
In addition to any money you may recover from your
mover to compensate for lost or destroyed articles, you
may also recover the transportation charges represented
by the portion of the shipment lost or destroyed. Your
mover may only apply this paragraph to the
transportation of household goods. Your mover may
disregard this paragraph if loss or destruction was due
to an act or omission by you. Your mover must require
you to pay any specific valuation charge due.
For example, if you pack a hazardous material
(i.e., gasoline, aerosol cans, motor oil, etc.) and your
shipment is partially lost or destroyed by fire in
storage or in the mover's trailer, your mover may
require you to pay for the full cost of transportation.
Your mover may first collect its freight charges
for the entire shipment, if your mover chooses. At the
time your mover disposes of claims for loss, damage, or
injury to the articles in your shipment, it must refund
the portion of its freight charges corresponding to the
portion of the lost or destroyed shipment (including any
charges for accessorial or terminal services).
Your mover is forbidden from collecting, or
requiring you to pay, any freight charges (including any
charges for accessorial or terminal services) when your
household goods shipment is totally lost or destroyed in
transit, unless the loss or destruction was due to an
act or omission by you.
How must my mover calculate the charges
applicable to the shipment as delivered?
Your mover must multiply the percentage
corresponding to the delivered shipment times the total
charges applicable to the shipment tendered by you to
obtain the total charges it must collect from you.
If your mover's computed charges exceed the charges
otherwise applicable to the shipment as delivered, the
lesser of those charges must apply. This will apply only
to the transportation of your household goods.
Your mover must require you to pay any specific
valuation charge due.
Your mover may not refund the freight charges if
the loss or destruction was due to an act or omission by
you. For example, you fail to disclose to your mover
that your shipment contains perishable live plants. Your
mover may disregard its loss or destruction of your
plants, because you failed to inform your mover you were
transporting live plants.
Your mover must determine, at its own expense, the
proportion of the shipment, based on actual or
constructive weight, not lost or destroyed in transit.
Your rights are in addition to, and not in lieu of,
any other rights you may have with respect to your
shipment of household goods your mover lost or
destroyed, or partially lost or destroyed, in transit.
This applies whether or not you have exercised your
rights provided above.
SUBPART H - COLLECTION OF CHARGES
Does this subpart apply to most shipments?
It applies to all shipments of household goods that
involve a balance due freight or expense bill or are
shipped on credit.
How must my mover present its freight or
expense bill to me?
At the time of payment of transportation charges,
your mover must give you a freight bill identifying the
service provided and the charge for each service. It is
customary for most movers to use a copy of the bill of
lading as a freight bill; however, some movers use an
entirely separate document for this purpose.
Except in those instances where a shipment is
moving on a binding estimate, the freight bill must
specifically identify each service performed, the rate
or charge per service performed, and the total charges
for each service. If this information is not on the
freight bill, DO NOT accept or pay the freight bill.
Movers' tariffs customarily specify that freight
charges must be paid in cash, by certified check, or by
cashier's check. When this requirement exists, the mover
will not accept personal checks. At the time you order
your move, you should ask your mover about the form of
payment your mover requires.
Some movers permit payment of freight charges by
use of a charge or credit card. However, do not assume
your nationally recognized charge, credit, or debit card
will be acceptable for payment. Ask your mover at the
time you request an estimate. Your mover must specify
the form of payment it will accept at delivery.
If you do not pay the transportation charges at the
time of delivery, your mover has the right, under the
bill of lading, to refuse to deliver your goods. The
mover may place them in storage, at your expense, until
the charges are paid. However, the mover must deliver
your goods upon payment of 100 percent of a binding
estimate.
If, before payment of the transportation charges,
you discover an error in the charges, you should attempt
to correct the error with the driver, the mover's local
agent, or by contacting the mover's main office. If an
error is discovered after payment, you should write the
mover (the address will be on the freight bill)
explaining the error, and request a refund.
Movers customarily check all shipment files and
freight bills after a move has been completed to make
sure the charges were accurate. If an overcharge is
found, you should be notified and a refund made. If an
undercharge occurred, you may be billed for the
additional charges due.
On "to be prepaid" shipments, your mover must
present its freight bill for all transportation charges
within 15 days of the date your mover received the
shipment. This period excludes Saturdays, Sundays, and
Federal holidays.
On "collect" shipments, your mover must present its
freight bill for transportation charges on the date of
delivery, or, at its discretion, within 15 days,
calculated from the date the shipment was delivered at
your destination. This period excludes Saturdays,
Sundays, and Federal holidays. (Bills for charges
exceeding 110 percent of a non-binding estimate, and for
additional services requested or found necessary after
the shipment is in transit, will be presented no sooner
than 30 days after the date of delivery.)
Your mover's freight bills and accompanying written
notices must state the following five items:
- Penalties for late payment.
- Credit time limits.
- Service or finance charges.
- Collection expense charges.
- Discount terms.
If your mover extends credit to you, freight bills
or a separate written notice accompanying a freight bill
or a group of freight bills presented at one time must
state, "You may be subject to tariff penalties for
failure to timely pay freight charges," or a similar
statement. Your mover must state on its freight bills or
other notices when it expects payment, and any
applicable service charges, collection expense charges,
and discount terms.
When your mover lacks sufficient information to
compute its tariff charges at the time of billing, your
mover must present its freight bill for payment within
15 days following the day when sufficient information
becomes available. This period excludes Saturdays,
Sundays, and Federal holidays.
Your mover must not extend additional credit to you
if you fail to furnish sufficient information to your
mover. Your mover must have sufficient information to
render a freight bill within a reasonable time after
shipment.
When your mover presents freight bills by mail, it
must deem the time of mailing to be the time of
presentation of the bills. The term "freight bills," as
used in this paragraph, includes both paper documents
and billing by use of electronic media such as computer
tapes, disks, or the Internet (e-mail).
When you mail acceptable checks or drafts in
payment of freight charges, your mover must deem the act
of mailing the payment within the credit period to be
the proper collection of the tariff charges within the
credit period for the purposes of Federal law. In case
of a dispute as to the date of mailing, your mover must
accept the postmark as the date of mailing.
If I forced my mover to relinquish a
collect-on-delivery shipment before the payment of ALL
charges, how must my mover collect the balance?
On "collect-on-delivery" shipments, your mover must
present its freight bill for all transportation charges
within 15 days, calculated from the date the shipment
was delivered at your destination. This period excludes
Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays. (Bills for
charges exceeding 110 percent of a non-binding estimate,
and for additional services requested or found necessary
after the shipment is in transit, will be presented no
sooner than 30 days after the date of delivery.)
What actions may my mover take to collect
from me the charges upon its freight bill?
Your mover must present a freight bill within 15
days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal
holidays) of the date of delivery of a shipment at your
destination. (Bills for charges exceeding 110 percent of
a non-binding estimate, and for additional services
requested or found necessary after the shipment is in
transit, will be presented no sooner than 30 days after
the date of delivery.)
The credit period must be 7 days (excluding
Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays).
Your mover must provide in its tariffs the
following three things:
- A provision automatically extending the credit
period to a total of 30 calendar days for you if you
have not paid its freight bill within the 7-day
period.
- A provision indicating you will be assessed a
service charge by your mover equal to one percent of
the amount of the freight bill, subject to a $20
minimum charge, for the extension of the credit
period. The mover will assess the service charge for
each 30-day extension that the charges go unpaid.
- A provision that your mover must deny credit to
you if you fail to pay a duly presented freight bill
within the 30-day period. Your mover may grant credit
to you, at its discretion, when you satisfy your
mover's condition that you will pay all future freight
bills duly presented. Your mover must ensure all your
payments of freight bills are strictly in accordance
with Federal rules and regulations for the settlement
of its rates and charges.
Do I have a right to file a claim to
recover money for property my mover lost or damaged?
Should your move result in the loss of or damage to
any of your property, you have the right to file a claim
with your mover to recover money for such loss or
damage.
You should file a claim as soon as possible. If you
fail to file a claim within 9 months, your mover may not
be required to accept your claim. If you institute a
court action and win, you may be entitled to attorney's
fees, but only in either of two circumstances. You may
be entitled to attorney's fees if you submitted your
claim to the carrier within 120 days after delivery, and
a decision was not rendered through arbitration within
the time required by law. You also may be entitled to
attorney's fees if you submitted your claim to the
carrier within 120 days after delivery, the court
enforced an arbitration decision in your favor, and the
time for the carrier to comply with the decision has
passed.
While the Federal Government maintains regulations
governing the processing of loss and damage claims (49
CFR Part 370), it cannot resolve those claims. If you
cannot settle a claim with the mover, you may file a
civil action to recover your claim in court under 49
U.S.C. 14706. You may obtain the name and address of the
mover's agent for service of legal process in your state
by contacting the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration. You may also obtain the name of a
process agent via the Internet by going to http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov
and then clicking on Licensing and Insurance
(L&I) section.
In addition, your mover must participate in an
arbitration program. As described earlier in this
pamphlet, an arbitration program gives you the
opportunity to settle certain types of unresolved loss
or damage claims through a neutral arbitrator. You may
find submitting your claim to arbitration under such a
program to be a less expensive and more convenient way
to seek recovery of your claim. Your mover is required
to provide you with information about its arbitration
program before you move. If your mover fails to do so,
ask the mover for details of its program.
SUBPART I - RESOLVING DISPUTES WITH MY
MOVER
What may I do to resolve disputes with my
mover?
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
does not help you settle your dispute with your mover.
Generally, you must resolve your own loss and
damage disputes with your mover. You enter a contractual
arrangement with your mover. You are bound by each of
the following three things:
- The terms and conditions you negotiated before
your move.
- The terms and conditions you accepted when you
signed the bill of lading.
- The terms and conditions you accepted when you
signed for delivery of your goods.
You have the right to take your mover to court. We
require your mover to offer you arbitration to settle
your disputes with it.
If your mover holds your goods "hostage" - refuses
delivery unless you pay an amount you believe the mover
is not entitled to charge - the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration does not have the resources to
seek a court injunction on your behalf.
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