Carman Tool & Abrasives, Inc. v. Evergreen Lines
Opinion of the Court
We consider whether under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA) a carrier must give the purchaser of goods listed in the bill of lading actual notice of COGSA’s package liability limitation.
Facts
This dispute arises out of a garden variety shipping transaction following the purchase of some heavy industrial equipment. The plaintiff, Carman Tool & Abrasives, Inc., purchased two milling machines, F.O. B. Taiwan, from the Dah Lih Machinery Co. Pursuant to established practice between the parties, Carman authorized Dah Lih to arrange for the shipment of the two machines to Los Angeles, using the services of defendant Evergreen Lines. Dah Lih booked the machinery for shipment on board Evergreen’s container ship, the M/V EVER GIANT, arranged for the delivery of the cargo to the EVER GIANT at the port of embarkation, provided all the relevant shipping information for the bill of lading, identified itself on the bill of lading as “shipper,” and was the party to whom the bill was issued. Dah Lih then delivered the bill of lading to its bank, which in turn negotiated it to Carman’s bank in exchange for a letter of credit authorizing payment to Dah Lih. This was the latest in a series of identical transactions involving Carman, Dah Lih and Evergreen.
When the milling machines arrived in Los Angeles, Evergreen hired defendant Metropolitan Stevedoring Co. to unload
As an affirmative defense, Evergreen and Metropolitan asserted that their liability, if any, is limited to $500 per package, pursuant to section 4(5) of COGSA, 46 U.S. C.App. § 1304(5) (1982 & Supp. Ill 1985), the terms of the contract of carriage as contained in the bill of lading and Evergreen’s tariff on file with the Federal Maritime Commission.
All parties moved for partial summary judgment as to whether defendants’ liability is limited to $500 per package.
Discussion
1. Section 4(5) of COGSA, 46 U.S. C.App. § 1304(5), limits a carrier’s liability for loss or damage to $500 per package.
Carman concedes that Evergreen’s bill of lading satisfies this condition.
We decline to expand the fair opportunity requirement as suggested by Carman. The requirement is not found in the language of COGSA;
International shipping transactions are relatively complex. The parties usually include the seller, one or more freight forwarders, a carrier, a consignee, as well as several banks and insurers. Moreover, a
Nothing in our cases points in the direction Carman would have us take. Tessler, Pan Am, Komatsu and Nemeth all dealt with the adequacy of the notice on the bill of lading.
2. Carman makes a narrower argument: It seems to contend that Evergreen’s bill of lading requires the carrier to give notice of the liability limitation to every party listed under its definition of “Merchant,” not merely to the shipper.
Conclusion
The district court’s partial summary judgment holding that defendants are enti-
. Plaintiff conceded that Metropolitan is entitled under the express terms of the bill of lading to the benefit of any limitation available to Evergreen.
. 46 U.S.C.App. § 1304(5) states in relevant part:
Neither the carrier nor the ship shall in any event be or become liable for any loss or damage to or in connection with the transportation of goods in an amount exceeding $500 per package ... unless the nature and value of such goods have been declared by the shipper before shipment and inserted in the bill of lading. This declaration, if embodied in the bill of lading, shall be prima facie evidence, but shall not be conclusive on the carrier.
. Although most circuits have held that carriers are under some obligation to inform shippers of COGSA’s liability limitations, the courts are divided as to what that obligation consists of. See Sturley, The Fair Opportunity Requirement Under COGSA Section 4(5): A Case Study in the Misinterpretation of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (Part I), 19 J. Mar. L. & Com. 1, 13-17 (1988) [hereinafter Sturley, Part /]; Comment, Containerization, the Per Package Limitation, and the Concept of “Fair Opportunity”, 11 Mar. Law. 123, 134-36 (1986). While we have required carriers to reproduce section 4(5)’s limitations "on the face of the bill of lading," Komatsu, 674 F.2d at 810 (quoting Pan Am, 559 F.2d at 1177), the Fifth Circuit has rejected our position and held that "the carrier’s published tariff offering the shipper a choice of freight rates, when combined with a clause paramount, gives the shipper constructive notice of the COG-SA loss limitation and its right to declare actual value.” Comment, 11 Mar. Law. at 135; see, e.g., Wuerttembergische v. M/V Stuttgart Express, 711 F.2d 621, 622 (5th Cir. 1983) (per curiam).
.Clause 7(2) of Evergreen's bill of lading specifically recites the language of the package limitation provision of COGSA, 46 U.S.C.App. § 1304(5):
... [Evergreen] shall in no event be or become liable for any loss or damage to or in connection with the Goods in an amount exceeding the limit of U.S. Dollars $500 per package ... unless the nature and value of such Goods have been declared by the Merchant before shipment and agreed to by [Ev*900 ergreen] and inserted in this Bill of Lading and the applicable ad valorem freight rate, as set out in [Evergreen’s] Tariff, is paid.
CR 132.
. As Professor Michael Sturley points out, COG-SA contains no language “that even arguably requires the carrier to notify the shipper of the right to declare a higher value [or] to offer the shipper a choice of rates....” Sturley, The Fair Opportunity Requirement under COGSA Section 4(5): A Case Study in the Misinterpretation of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (Part II), 19 J. Mar. L. & Com. 157, 158 (1988) [hereinafter Sturley, Part II], "The evidence against the fair opportunity requirement is so compelling,” he notes, "that it is difficult to see how so many courts could have adopted it.” Id. at 176.
. There is cause to doubt the assumption underlying the fair opportunity requirement, that commercially knowledgeable parties need additional protections that Congress did not see fit to write into the statute. Compare Pan Am, 559 F.2d at 1177 (rejecting argument that "an experienced shipper should be deemed to have knowledge of an opportunity to secure an alternative freight rate, and higher carrier liability, by reason of his knowledge of COGSA”) with Cincinnati Milacron, Ltd. v. M/V American Legend, 784 F.2d 1161, 1166 (4th Cir.) (Phillips, J„ dissenting) ("it does not seem unduly burdensome to impute to shippers knowledge of all of [COG-SA's] terms” as incorporated by reference in a short form bill of lading), rev'd en banc, 804 F.2d 837 (4th Cir. 1986) (adopting Judge Phillips’ dissent). Professor Sturley points out that in international shipping "a high level of sophistication is the norm. Furthermore, a professional freight forwarder generally arranges the details of the shipping contract, even in those rare cases where the shipper is not itself experienced.” Sturley, Part II at 179. More fundamentally, Professor Sturley suggests that ”[c]ourts simply should not question either the existence or the adequacy of the [liability] limitation. That is a legislative concern." Id. at 177.
.Professor Sturley points out that COGSA was adopted pursuant to a multinational agreement known as the Hague Rules. Sturley, Part I at 19. "International uniformity was the principal goal, and an American court should therefore strive to construe COGSA consistently with other nations’ interpretations of their domestic enactments of the Hague Rules.” Sturley, Part II at 160. Professor Sturley also comments:
The imposition of a fair opportunity requirement interferes with COGSA's primary purpose — achieving international uniformity —because other nations have not made the same mistake. It also interferes with COG-SA’s more specific goals. It is unclear, unpredictable, and difficult to apply in commerce. It fosters expensive litigation. And it further complicates bills of lading that already contain too many lines of fine print.
Id. at 165. Professor Sturley concludes:
The courts that imposed the [fair opportunity] requirement were wrong to do so, and future courts should avoid the error. Indeed the error is so clear and unequivocal, and the issue is so important, that the Supreme Court should grant certiorari to correct the problem.
Id. at 203.
. The carrier in Nemeth, for example, was held not to have met its burden of proving fair opportunity because the liability limitation clause in the bill of lading was microscopic and illegible. 694 F.2d at 611. Similarly, in Pan Am we held that the mere incorporation of COGSA's section 4(5), without express recitation in the bill of lading, would not satisfy the fair opportunity requirement. 559 F.2d at 1175-77.
. Carman makes much of the fact that a Car-man employee discussed rate schedules with one of Evergreen's agents nine months before the shipment of Dah Lih’s milling equipment, and that the Evergreen agent failed to mention that the shipper could opt for the ad valorem rate in order to avoid the $500 per package liability limitation. We find little merit in this contention. If carrier agents were required to recite every significant term of the bill of lading every time someone called with an inquiry regarding schedules or rates, they would never have time for anything else. We refuse to burden the flow of information between carrier and shippers with requirements for elaborate— and ultimately meaningless — recitations of terms and limitations. So long as the bill of lading has all the necessary information, the shipper, or any other interested party, has the means of learning everything it may wish to know about the terms of the transaction.
. In many cases, remote parties are already fully aware of the terms of the contract and the notice would be superfluous. Here, for example, Carman had used Evergreen in several pri- or transactions and had, in its files, bills of lading identical to the one at issue here. Had Carman wanted to know the precise terms of the bill of lading, it had a relatively convenient way of finding out. Indeed, there is every reason to believe that Carman made a knowing and deliberate choice in foregoing the additional cost that would have been incurred in raising the liability limit: it insured the shipment here with St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company. As best we can tell, St. Paul is now bringing this lawsuit in an attempt to shift to Evergreen and Metropolitan the burden of a loss it was paid to insure.
.Evergreen’s bill of lading states that Evergreen cannot be held liable in an amount greater than $500 per package “unless the nature and value of such goods have been declared by the Merchant before shipment....” CR 132. The bill of lading defines "Merchant” as the "shipper, Holder, consignee, the recover of the Goods, any person owning or entitled to the possession of the Goods or this Bill of Lading and anyone acting on behalf of any such persons.” Id.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CARMAN TOOL & ABRASIVES, INC. v. EVERGREEN LINES, a Corporation Metropolitan Stevedore Company M/V EVER GIANT, Her Engines, Machinery, Tackle, Furniture, Apparel, etc., In Rem
- Cited By
- 17 cases
- Status
- Published