CharlesD
Expert Expediter
Here's a real situation, with names left out to protect the innocent...or guilty...depending on what side you want to take.
A contractor is dispatched on a load and arrives at the shipper, but can't get loaded right away due to some problems at the shipper's facility. The dispatcher communicates this information to the customer and tells the driver to stay put until further notice. An hour later the driver calls dispatch and says that the load is a dry run but dispatch tells the driver to stay put because the customer has not yet verified if the load is a dry run or not. Another hour passes and the customer calls and tells dispatch that the load is a go because some arrangement has been made to load the van. Dispatch calls the driver, but the driver has left the premises and gone home, and is now refusing to go back to the shipper. The dispatcher calls a partner carrier that has a van in the area and brokers the load to them in order to meet the obligation to the customer, but due to weather, the partner's unit takes a while to make it to the shipper and now the load picks up nearly 3 hours late, but he busts his butt and makes the protect time on the load, thus saving the first company's rear.
The next day the original driver calls dispatch and asks if he is going to get anything for the dry run and dispatch tells him that the load was brokered to another carrier, so it wasn't a dry run and there is therefore no dry run pay. The owner of this company has a soft heart and decides to give the driver another chance and books him on another load a couple days later. The driver gets to the shipper and the freight turns out to be too big for the van, but the customer says to hold the van there until they confirm whether or not the shipper might want to ship part of the freight on the van. Once again, the driver is told by dispatch to wait there until a definite decision is made regarding the status of the load. A couple hours later the customer calls dispatch and says that, per the shipper, the driver is no longer on the premises. Dispatch calls the driver and he says that since the load is a dry run, he is heading home. The problem is that the customer had not yet confirmed that the load was a dry run. Eventually this was confirmed, but the customer doesn't want to pay anything on the dry run because the driver left before it was confirmed.
Once again, the driver wants dry run pay and is once again told that since he left the premises early there is no dry run pay. The driver still insists that this money is owed him for both loads and voices that opinion rather strongly to dispatch, by which point the driver is no longer under contract to the carrier. The driver still insists that dry run pay is owed him for both loads, says some other unsavory things about the company, and states that he can prove this money is owed him.
Who is in the right here? Does the carrier owe anything to this driver?
A contractor is dispatched on a load and arrives at the shipper, but can't get loaded right away due to some problems at the shipper's facility. The dispatcher communicates this information to the customer and tells the driver to stay put until further notice. An hour later the driver calls dispatch and says that the load is a dry run but dispatch tells the driver to stay put because the customer has not yet verified if the load is a dry run or not. Another hour passes and the customer calls and tells dispatch that the load is a go because some arrangement has been made to load the van. Dispatch calls the driver, but the driver has left the premises and gone home, and is now refusing to go back to the shipper. The dispatcher calls a partner carrier that has a van in the area and brokers the load to them in order to meet the obligation to the customer, but due to weather, the partner's unit takes a while to make it to the shipper and now the load picks up nearly 3 hours late, but he busts his butt and makes the protect time on the load, thus saving the first company's rear.
The next day the original driver calls dispatch and asks if he is going to get anything for the dry run and dispatch tells him that the load was brokered to another carrier, so it wasn't a dry run and there is therefore no dry run pay. The owner of this company has a soft heart and decides to give the driver another chance and books him on another load a couple days later. The driver gets to the shipper and the freight turns out to be too big for the van, but the customer says to hold the van there until they confirm whether or not the shipper might want to ship part of the freight on the van. Once again, the driver is told by dispatch to wait there until a definite decision is made regarding the status of the load. A couple hours later the customer calls dispatch and says that, per the shipper, the driver is no longer on the premises. Dispatch calls the driver and he says that since the load is a dry run, he is heading home. The problem is that the customer had not yet confirmed that the load was a dry run. Eventually this was confirmed, but the customer doesn't want to pay anything on the dry run because the driver left before it was confirmed.
Once again, the driver wants dry run pay and is once again told that since he left the premises early there is no dry run pay. The driver still insists that this money is owed him for both loads and voices that opinion rather strongly to dispatch, by which point the driver is no longer under contract to the carrier. The driver still insists that dry run pay is owed him for both loads, says some other unsavory things about the company, and states that he can prove this money is owed him.
Who is in the right here? Does the carrier owe anything to this driver?