Wait a second... You and two guards visually checked the trailer, and it was clear. But you don't say you checked the trailer again after being told the BOL had been annotated regarding the refused cases. You only mention checking the BOL.
I've never hauled anything small enough that 80 cases could go unnoticed. Do these cases exist only on the BOL, or are they physically present on your trailer?
Accidently left rejected pallets on trailer
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by LB1, Feb 7, 2020.
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I was thinking about this topic some last night. I was trying to remember more details of an incident I was involved in some time ago. Some people don't know this, but Hershey will contract out product lines to small candy makers to run when they have available line time. One such place is in New Jersey. I picked up a load there and took it to a warehouse near Dallas Texas. Once unloaded someone from inside brought out my bills. I looked at them and all the product was signed for. Upon a physical look inside my trailer, I noticed several cases of chocolate were in the trailer. I knew somebody inside screwed up by that point. I also went back to my bills and carefully looked. I saw no lined out rejections. Thankfully I was able to get back into the door. I got someone to look from the dock. About 10 minutes later I had a corrected bill, and I followed my company policy in reporting the rejected product. It's not so much I was being honest, as I wanted to make sure everybody was on the same page. I was still going to keep the chocolate regardless. My company could write off up to 5 cases without asking Hershey. So I drove over to a place I knew about, empty released and went to bed. Crap happens. None of us are perfect. Just learn to focus on the small details of this job.
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Nope I was told the product was in the trailer. I'm guess it was seen when the trailer was used to load something else at the shipper/dropyard or another driver saw something. Honestly I'm wondering if it was rejected on paper only. I could have sworn I saw the back wall of the trailer. And if I'm blind as a bat, how did 2 other people in different locations not see it too?? Hmmm... Something isn't adding up.
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The guard didn't say anything because it was REJECTED. It's not his or Wally's problem.
Stick to the "Dog ate my rejected lettuce" story.
With your keen attention to detail, you should be hauling plutonium or massive excavators in just a few weeks.Snailexpress Thanks this. -
Edit: For what it's worth, my primary gig is yard jockey. I'm used to paperwork not lining up with reality, spotting empty trailers, or catching theoretically empty trailers that actually have products on them. It's not at all uncommon for a notation like this to accompany a completely empty trailer, and vice versa.kemosabi49 Thanks this. -
^^^ Exactly. Did the receiver note it as Rejected on the bills and keep it anyway?
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Since I check and double check everything, I was mystified at myself for not seeing it. Maybe it was in the front or a dark corner."
"Maybe it was in that pesky dark corner.Socal Xpress Thanks this.
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