I came across a story from a shipper; want to see what would be the correct sequence of actions.
The shipper booked a truck from a supposedly decent and large brokerage. The truck arrived and it was what was anticipated; so far so good. The truck crashed (thankfully no one was hurt) but the entire load was deemed totaled. The towing company decided to charge 60k for clean-up and recovery. It turned out that the trucking company had no insurance. Brokerage instantly said that it was not their issue and backed out of the whole agreement. The towing company started going after the shipper for the clean-up & recovery charges.
The shipper wants to sue the brokerage which in turn says to talk to the trucking company; which I would assume has dissolved. Is the shipper on the hook here? Is the brokerage for lack of due-dillegence? Or is the trucker?
The shipper booked a truck from a supposedly decent and large brokerage. The truck arrived and it was what was anticipated; so far so good. The truck crashed (thankfully no one was hurt) but the entire load was deemed totaled. The towing company decided to charge 60k for clean-up and recovery. It turned out that the trucking company had no insurance. Brokerage instantly said that it was not their issue and backed out of the whole agreement. The towing company started going after the shipper for the clean-up & recovery charges.
The shipper wants to sue the brokerage which in turn says to talk to the trucking company; which I would assume has dissolved. Is the shipper on the hook here? Is the brokerage for lack of due-dillegence? Or is the trucker?