Wrenches,

We have been in business for about 8 years, and up until now, the shipping gods 
have smiled upon me, but apparently my luck has run out, as I've had 2 costly 
shipping nightmares within a month,  and I'm just wondering what other Wrenches 
have done to protect themselves from the liability involved in trusting 
expensive shipments to the freight carriers.  Here's my situation:

I recently had a pallet of modules shipped, and it arrived with multiple broken 
modules, due apparently to careless handling,and having had something heavy set 
on top of the pallet.  I have my freight shipments sent to a neighboring 
business which is kind enough to receive them for me, since they have many full 
time staff who are always available during business hours to fork shipments off 
a truck.  In this case the forklift driver did not notice the damage (it was 
not immediately evident), and the delivery was signed for.  However, upon 
picking up the pallet an hour later, I  realized that the shipment was damaged, 
called the freight company immediately to notify them of the damage, and 
subsequently filed a detailed written claim. 

I just got notice that my claim was denied by the carrier, evidently without 
considering any of the photos or the written explanation I submitted with the 
claim. They simply cited that the shipment had been signed for without noting 
damage.  
It is clear to me that the carrier was responsible for the damage, yet 
apparently because the damage was hidden and the BOL was signed, they can leave 
me holding the bag for a significant amount of money. 

This particular incident could have been worse, but it is the first time I've 
had it happen and it certainly makes me worried about future deliveries. It 
suddenly seems like an unacceptable liability to have others sign for my 
deliveries without a thorough inspection. 

I asked my distributor whether the shipments have any insurance on them, and 
the person I spoke with didn't know the answer. So my $50 Ebay shipment is 
insured, but my $50,000 worth of equipment isn't? My insurance agent says that 
I can make a claim on my commercial insurance, but advised against it in this 
case, since the loss was only around $1K, and is guaranteed to raise my future 
premiums.

I know that things get damaged or lost all the time in shipment, and I'm 
wondering how other businesses handle it.  Businesses that do larger volume 
must have damaged freight all the time.  Is it just impossible to get freight 
companies to take responsibility for damage that is not immediately evident, 
since they are acting as judge on their own behalf?  Do you just refuse to sign 
the bill of lading until you've examined all the contents of the packages (this 
is a logistical nightmare in most cases)?  Do you just chalk it up to the cost 
of doing business and/or make claims to your commercial insurance? 

Would appreciate your thoughts / experiences with this issue.  
Thanks. - Luke

Luke Christy
  
NABCEP Certified PV Installation Professionalâ„¢: Certification #031409-25 
NABCEP Certified Solar Heating Installerâ„¢: Certification #ST032611-03       
CoSEIA Certified PV Installer 

Solar Gain Services, LLC
PO Box 531
Monte Vista, CO. 81144
sgsrenewab...@gmail.com
719.588.3044
www.sgsrenewables.com

   







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