Remember our Chans advice/163 about the English High Court’s Judgment holding the Hague Visby Rules instead of the Hague Rules to apply to the cargo damage claim case in excess of US$3.6 million? The English Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 24/2/2016 upholding the High Court’s conclusion but with different reasons. [Case No: A3/2014/1285, 2016 EWCA Civ 101, 2016 WL 00692394]
Introduction
Article IV Rule 5 of the (old) Hague Rules (1924) contains a provision entitling a shipowner to limit its liability to £100 gold per package or unit. Article IV Rule 5(a) of the (new) Hague-Visby Rules (1968) contains a provision entitling a shipowner to limit its liability by special drawing rights as defined by the International Monetary Fund. Article IV Rule 5(g) however provides that the parties to a bill of lading contract may agree other maximum limits provided that no maximum amount so fixed is less than the limit provided for in Article IV Rule 5(a). The main question in the appeal was whether in a case which was otherwise governed by the new (1968) rules, a common form of Paramount Clause incorporated the (old) Hague Rules which in fact gave rise to a higher limit than that provided for in the (new) Hague-Visby Rules and whether, in that event, the old (and higher) limit was available to the cargo-owner if the cargo was lost or damaged.
The Paramount Clause, set out on the reverse side of the bills of lading in the case in question, provided as follows:—
2. Paramount Clause The Hague Rules contained in the International Convention for the Unification of certain rules relating to Bills of Lading, dated Brussels the 25th August 1924 as enacted in the country of shipment shall apply to this contract. When no such enactment is in force in the country of shipment, the corresponding legislation of the country of destination shall apply, but in respect of shipments to which no such enactments are compulsorily applicable, the terms of the said Convention shall apply.
Although the bills of lading were not issued on the standard Congenbill form, this wording is (with one immaterial change) identical to the wording of the clause paramount which that widely used bill of lading form contains.
The Facts
Machinery and equipment, intended for use in the construction of a liquid natural gas facility in Yemen, were loaded on the vessel “SUPERIOR PESCADORES” at the port of Antwerp in Belgium in early January 2008. The shipowners issued six bills of lading in the Conline form acknowledging shipment of the cargo in apparent good order and condition for carriage from Antwerp to Balhaf in Yemen. The vessel sailed from Antwerp on 12/1/2008. On about 17/1/2008, while the vessel was crossing the Bay of Biscay, the cargo in hold no.1 shifted, causing significant damage to part of the cargo. The claimants’ total losses resulting from this incident were said to be in excess of US $3.6 million.
On 12/10/2012 the Britannia Steamship Insurance Association Ltd gave a letter of undertaking to the cargo-owners to pay such sum as might be agreed or adjudged in respect of the claim and further agreed on the shipowners’ behalf that the claim would be subject to English law and jurisdiction. That law includes the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971 which renders the Hague-Visby Rules (referred to formally as the Brussels Protocol (1968)) applicable as a matter of statute law when the carriage is from a port in a contracting state. Belgium is such a state.
Proceedings had been started in January 2012. The Particulars of Claim served in April 2012 relied on the clause paramount as a contractual incorporation of the Hague (not Hague-Visby) Rules and pleaded that to the extent that the Hague Rules provide for higher limits than the Hague-Visby Rules , the claimants were entitled to those higher sums. In the case of some of the bills of lading the Hague Rules limit was always higher than the Hague-Visby limit, and the claimants had claimed this higher limit. In the case of bill of lading no. 4, however, application of the Hague Rules yielded a higher limitation figure for four of the six packages, while for the remaining two packages the Hague-Visby limit was higher. In the case of each package the claimants had claimed whichever limitation figure was the higher.
The shipowners’ Defence served on 18/5/2012 admitted liability to pay the amount of the Hague-Visby package limit, equivalent to just over US $400,000, and contended that “it is not open to the Claimants to pick and choose between the Hague-Visby package limit and the Hague package limit, depending on which gives them more”. The undisputed Hague-Visby amount (plus interest) had since been paid.
The claimants would be entitled to recover additional damages up to a further sum of about US$ 200,000 if they were entitled to rely on the Hague Rules limit.
The Issues
The first issue was whether, on the true construction of the Paramount Clause, it operated as an agreement between the cargo owner and the shipowner, that the (old) Hague Rules applied or that the Hague-Visby Rules applied. If it was an agreement that the Hague-Visby Rules applied, then there was no agreement between the parties that a different regime in the form of the (old) Hague Rules was to apply. But if it was an agreement that the (old) Hague Rules applied, a second issue arose namely whether the Paramount Clause constituted an agreement to fix maximum amounts other than those contained in Article IV Rule 5(a) of the Hague-Visby Rules for the purposes of Article IV Rule 5(g) of those rules. There was then a third issue namely whether the date of conversion into relevant currency of the limit of £100 gold per package or unit was the date when the cargo was delivered in its damaged condition or the date of the judgment.
The Rules
Article IV Rule 5 of the (old) Hague Rules provided:—
Neither the carrier nor the ship shall in any event be or become liable for any loss or damage to or in connection with goods in an amount exceeding £100 per package or unit or the equivalent of that sum in other currency, 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 binding or conclusive on the carrier. By agreement between the carrier, master or agent of the carrier and the shipper another maximum amount than that mentioned in this paragraph may be fixed, provided that such maximum shall not be less than the figure above named.
Article IX provided that the limit of £100 per package or unit is to be taken to be “gold value”.
The relevant provisions of the Hague-Visby Rules are:—
Article III – Responsibilities and Liabilities … Rule 8 Any clause, covenant or agreement in a contract of carriage relieving the carrier or the ship from liability for loss or damage to, or in connection with, goods … or lessening such liability otherwise than as provided in these Rules, shall be null and void and of no effect. … Article IV – Rights and Immunities … Rule 5 (a) Unless the nature and value of such goods have been declared by the shipper before shipment and inserted in the bill of lading, 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 goods in an amount exceeding 666.67 units of account per package or unit or 2 units of account per kilogramme of gross weight of the goods lost or damaged, whichever is the higher. (b) The total amount recoverable shall be calculated by reference to the value of such goods at the place and time at which the goods are discharged from the ship in accordance with the contract or should have been so discharged. … … (d) The unit of account mentioned in this Article is the special drawing right as defined by the International Monetary Fund. The amounts mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph shall be converted into national currency on the basis of the value of that currency on a date to be determined by the law of the Court seized of the case. (e) Neither the carrier nor the ship shall be entitled to the benefit of the limitation of liability provided for in this paragraph if it is proved that the damage resulted from an act or omission of the carrier done with intent to cause damage, or recklessly and with knowledge that damage would probably result. … (g) By agreement between the carrier, master or agent of the carrier and the shipper other maximum amounts than those mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph may be fixed, provided that no maximum amount so fixed shall be less than the appropriate maximum mentioned in that sub-paragraph. Article V – Surrender of Rights and Immunities, and increase of Responsibilities and Liabilities A carrier shall be at liberty to surrender in whole or in part all or any part of his rights and immunities or to increase any of his responsibilities and liabilities under these Rules, provided such surrender or increase shall be embodied in the bill of lading issued to the shipper. …
Paragraphs (a) and (d) of Article IV Rule 5 in their current form set out above were inserted into the Schedule to the 1971 Act by section 2 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1981. The same section provided that the date for conversion of the special drawing rights into national currency under English law was the date of judgment. These provisions are now contained in Schedule 13 to the Merchant Shipping Act 1995.
The package limitation regime contained in Article IV Rule 5 of the Hague-Visby Rules differs from the equivalent Hague Rules regime in several respects. The High Court identified five. First, the previous limit of £100 in gold is replaced by a limit calculated by IMF special drawing rights, the value of which is based upon a basket of currencies. Second, paragraph (a) spells out that it is the higher of two figures, calculated by reference to the number of packages or the weight of the goods respectively, which constitutes the relevant limit. Third, paragraph (b) is new, providing for the method by which damages are to be calculated. Fourth, paragraph (c), dealing with containerisation, is new. Fifth, paragraph (e) provides for the circumstances in which the carrier may lose the benefit of limitation. The Hague Rules contained no equivalent provision, although resort would sometimes be had to the common law principles of deviation. Paragraph (g), however, permitting agreement on a higher maximum amount, existed in materially the same terms in the Hague Rules.
The High Court’s Judgment
The High Court decided (1) the Paramount Clause on its true construction incorporated the (old) Hague Rules not the Hague-Visby Rules but (2) it did not operate as an agreement for a higher limit pursuant to Article IV rule 5(g) of the Hague-Visby Rules. The cargo-owners were therefore confined to recover damages limited by reference to Article IV rule 5(a) of the Hague-Visby Rules. That limit was calculated at the date of judgment as required by the Merchant Shipping Acts, so the third issue did not arise. If it had, he would have held that the limit was to be calculated as at the date of delivery of the cargo.
Hague or Hague-Visby?
The High Court would like to have held that the Paramount Clause incorporated the Hague-Visby rather than the Hague Rules but felt constrained by authority to hold that on its true construction (even in 2015 in respect of a contract made in 2008) the 1924 Hague Rules rather than the 1968 Hague-Visby Rules should apply. It would therefore be necessary to look at those authorities. The United Kingdom adopted the Hague-Visby Rules as early as 1971 in the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act of that date; it did not come into force until a certain number of other countries had signed up but that happened as long ago as 23/6/1977.
The actual terms of the Paramount Clause are, of course, important. It identifies the Hague Rules contained in the International Convention of 25th August 1924 but provides that it is those Rules
as enacted in the country of shipment
which are to apply to the contract. The country of shipment was Belgium which adhered to the Hague-Visby Rules on 6/12/1978.
In the United Kingdom, the (old) Hague Rules had been enacted by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924. The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971 (“the 1971 Act”) repealed that Act, see section 6(3) of the 1971 Act and provided by section 1:—
1 Application of Hague Rules as amended (1) In this Act, “the Rules” means the International Convention for the unification of certain rules of law relating to bills of lading signed at Brussels on 25th August 1924, as amended by the Protocol signed at Brussels on 23rd February 1968 [and by the Protocol signed at Brussels on 21st December 1979]. (2) The provisions of the Rules, as set out in the Schedule to this Act, shall have the force of law. …
The schedule to the Act, referred to in section 1(2) is entitled
THE HAGUE RULES AS AMENDED BY THE BRUSSELS PROTOCOL 1968.
The schedule then enacts that Brussels Protocol which is the formal designation of the 1968 Hague-Visby Rules. On any ordinary and sensible view of English law, therefore, the Hague Rules “as enacted” in England are the Hague Rules as enacted by the schedule to the 1971 Act, a schedule which in its title refers to the Hague Rules “as amended”. The position in Belgium must be taken to be the same.
It was, therefore, necessary to consider the authorities by which the High Court felt constrained to come to a contrary conclusion.
The first such authority is Nea Agrex S.A. v Baltic Shipping Co. Ltd (The Agios Lazaros) [1976] QB 933; [1976] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 47 a case decided after the 1971 Act had been passed but before it had come into force in respect of a contract made in 1972. It was a charterparty case and neither set of Rules was compulsorily applicable but the charter itself provided “Paramount Clause deemed to be incorporated in this Charter Party”. This decision was helpful as showing what this court thought shipping men meant by the phrase “clause paramount” in 1972 but was, perhaps of little assistance in determining what the phrase “the Hague Rules … as enacted in the country of shipment” meant to shipping men in 2008.
The High Court referred to The Marinor [1996] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 301 in which the paramount clause incorporated the provisions of the Canadian Carriage of Goods by Water Act “as amended”. Colman J had no difficulty in holding that those words did incorporate the (new) Hague-Visby Rules. In the case in question, of course, it was not the Hague Rules “as amended” but “as enacted”. The Marinor was not therefore directly relevant save to show that there was a form of words which would lead to the definitive conclusion that the new Rules were intended to apply.
In Lauritzen Reefers v Ocean Reef Transport Ltd S.A. (The Bukhta Russkaya) [1997] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 744 a “general paramount clause” was to apply in a 1995 charterparty. The claim was made by a charterer who had settled with bill of lading holders and wanted to claim an indemnity from the shipowner. The Hague-Visby Rules permitted a claim for an indemnity to be brought if it was brought within 3 months of the settlement (Art III Rule 6bis) but the original Hague Rules required any claim to be brought within one year of delivery. It was therefore critical to determine which Rules applied. For the charterers, Mr Michael Coburn of counsel relied on a passage from the 4th edition of Wilford Coghlin & Kimball on Time Charters page 561 which, after referring to the Agios Lazaros stated:—
However, if a paramount clause is incorporated into a Baltime charterparty governed by English law it is likely, following the coming into force in 1977 of the Carriage of Goods By Sea Act 1971 , the Hague-Visby Rules would be regarded as incorporated.
Thomas J did not deal with this argument of Mr Coburn because he held, on the evidence before him, that the words “general paramount clause” in a time charterparty referred to a particular clause or more accurately any of a number of clauses that had the following essential terms (page 746):—
(1) if the Hague Rules are enacted in the country of shipment, then they apply as enacted; (2) if the Hague Rules are not enacted in the country of shipment, the corresponding legislation of the country of destination applies or, if there is no such legislation, the terms of the Convention containing the Hague Rules apply; (3) if the Hague-Visby Rules are compulsorily applicable to the trade in question, then the legislation enacting those rules applies.
In the light of this conclusion Thomas J held that, since the Hague-Visby Rules were specifically referred to in the “general paramount clause” as being applicable (by contract) if compulsorily applicable (presumably by the proper law) which they were not in the case before him, it was the old Hague Rules which applied to the case. That was perhaps not a surprising decision in a case where the incorporating clause itself expressly referred to both the Hague Rules and the Hague-Visby Rules and made clear that the Hague-Visby Rules were only to apply in certain defined circumstances.
On the facts, of the case in question, however, it was necessary to consider the argument which Mr Coburn made in that case and whether Mr Wilford’s book on Time Charters was correct in the view it expressed. The Court of Appeal though the late Mr Wilford was indeed correct to say that since 1977 a typical clause paramount, which did not differentiate in terms between the two sets of rules, would be taken by shipping men to incorporate the Hague-Visby rules in a Baltime charter governed by English law and, by extension, to other charters and to bills of lading subject to such a clause (such as the Conline bills in the case in question).
The Court of Appeal were shown the updated form of the Conline bill which (in clause 3(a)) incorporates the Hague Rules “as amended” by the Protocol signed at Brussels on 23/2/1968 (“the Hague Visby Rules”). The cargo-owners argued that since it was possible to incorporate the Hague-Visby Rules by express words and it had been done in a later form than that used for the instant cargo carrying voyage, the court could safely assume that there was no intention to incorporate the Hague-Visby rules in the present case. Such an argument was not to the Court of Appeal’s mind decisive. The court had to construe a contract made by shipping men in 2008; the fact that they could have used a clause which made the position clear did not absolve the court from deciding what the clause meant when the position was not clear. The Court of Appeal saw little argument against Mr Wilford’s view as expressed in his book.
There remained, however, the authority on which the High Court chiefly relied to hold that in these bills of lading it was the 1924 rather than the 1968 rules which were incorporated. That was Parsons Corporation v C.V. Scheepvaartonderneming Happy Ranger (The Happy Ranger) [2001] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 530 (Tomlinson J) and [2002] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 356 (CA). The main point of contention was whether the Hague-Visby Rules applied if the contract was contained not “in a bill of lading or any similar document of title” but in what might be called an ordinary contract for goods to be carried (from Italy to Saudi Arabia) which merely provided that the carrier’s regular form of bill of lading was to form part of the contract. It was held that there was in fact a bill of lading and the Hague-Visby Rules were “compulsorily applicable”. The relevant general paramount clause was:—
General Paramount Clause The Hague Rules contained in the International Convention for the Unification of certain rules relating to Bills of Lading, dated Brussels 25th August 1924, as enacted in the country of shipment shall apply to this contract. When no such enactment is in force in the country of shipment, Articles I to VIII of the Hague Rules shall apply. In such case the liability of the Carrier shall be limited to £100 – sterling per package. Trades where Hague-Visby apply In trades where the International Brussels Convention 1924 as amended by the protocol signed at Brussels on 23rd February 1968 – the Hague-Visby Rules – apply compulsorily, the provisions of the respective legislation shall be considered incorporated in this Bill of lading ….
At first instance the cargo-owners contended that the version of the Hague Rules enacted in Italy was the Hague-Visby Rules so that it was those rules which were applicable pursuant to the first sentence of the clause; the shipowners argued that the Hague-Visby Rules were not “the Hague Rules … as enacted” in Italy
not only because of the various important differences between the two codes but also because … the wording of clause 3 itself draws a clear distinction between enactment of the Hague Rules and enactment of [the] Hague-Visby Rules.
Tomlinson J accepted this submission saying at para 31:—
I also reject the argument that the Hague-Visby Rules are to be regarded as the Hague Rules “as enacted” in Italy so as to be incorporated by reason of the first limb of cl. 3 of the specimen bill of lading. Quite apart from the important difference between the two codes, in the first two sub-clauses of cl. 3 a clear distinction is drawn between the Hague and the Hague-Visby Rules and their enactment. Italy has repealed its enactment of the Hague Rules and has enacted the Hague-Visby Rules. That is not the situation to which the first sub-clause of cl. 3 refers.
The Court of Appeal did not regard this paragraph of the judgment as saying that the words “as enacted in the country of shipment” could not refer to the Hague-Visby Rules if, for example, the particular paramount clause made no specific reference to the Hague-Visby Rules in some other part of the same clause but those Rules had in fact been enacted in the country of shipment. The Court of Appeal considered that any case, in which a bill of lading was issued in 2008 incorporating the Hague Rules as enacted in the country of shipment and in which the country of shipment had enacted the Hague-Visby Rules , should be regarded as a case which was subject to the Hague-Visby Rules rather than the (old) Hague Rules.
The claimant sought to rely on an Additional Clause B at the foot of the bill of lading headed Scandinavian Trades providing for the Hague-Visby Rules to be incorporated
in trades where one of the Scandinavian Maritime Codes apply compulsorily.
The claimant submitted that this showed the parties to the bill of lading could refer to the Hague-Visby Rules when they wished to do so. The Court of Appeal could not accept that this Scandinavian tail could wag the general ocean-going dog. Nor did the High Court judge who said that if he had had to decide the point
I would have been cautious about construing a reasonably prominent and widely used clause paramount by reference to another clause buried in the small print of the bill which stated that it was “to be added” in a trade with Scandinavian and therefore, at least arguably, did not even form part of the contract in a case having nothing to do with Scandinavia.
The Court of Appeal would applaud the High Court judge’s instincts in this respect.
Agreement “fixing” other maximum amounts within Art IV rule 5(g)
The Court of Appeal’s conclusion that clause 2 of the bills of lading incorporated the (new) Hague-Visby Rules rather than the (old) Hague Rules made it unnecessary to consider whether clause 2 constituted an agreement fixing other amounts within Article IV rule 5(g).
Date for Conversion under the Hague Rules
Nor was it necessary to express any concluded view about the date of converting £100 gold per unit into the national currency.
Conclusion
As it was, the Court of Appeal would dismiss the appeal and uphold the High Court’s conclusion that the Hague-Visby limit applied, even if the Court of Appeal’s reasons for doing so were not the same as those in the High Court’s judgment below.
Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions or you would like to have a copy of the Judgment.
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The Shanghai Maritime Court issued a Judgment on 24/12/2009 to deal with the question whether a shipping company could charge the container demurrage based on the tariff published on its website.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 21/7/2014 discharging a Mareva injunction in relation to a cargo misdelivery claim of about US$12 million. [HCA 2368/2012]
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal’s Judgment dated 11/4/2008 explained some legal principles relating to whether indemnity claims are allowed by in rem legal actions against vessels. [CACV 257/2007]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 22/11/2013 concerning an unless order in relation to a freight forwarder’s claims for outstanding freight charges of HK$4,427,336. [HCA 1755/2011]
Without even knowing, we have published including this one 200 issues of the Chans Advice. As this is a monthly bulletin, 100 issues took more than 8 years and 200 issues took 17 years to run.
We recently have received a lot of uncollected cargo claim cases from our forwarder clients, which have kept our 6 claim handlers very busy. We would like to take this opportunity to talk about this troublesome problem of uncollected cargoes. Actually, the forwarders have been facing this real headache in at least these two decades.
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 12/2/2018 to deal with the cargo owners’ seeking leave to appeal against the High Court’s Judgment reported in our Chans advice/209 last month. [CAMP 38/2017] [2018 HKCA77]
In the issue of our Chans advice last month, we talked about the major provisions of the Montreal Convention (which is for the international carriage of goods by air). In this issue, we would like to discuss the major terms of an equally important international convention for the international carriage of goods by sea, viz. the Hague Visby Rules.
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Judgment on 22/5/2017 holding that the District Court has jurisdiction to determine bill of lading and bailment cases. [HCAJ 150/2014]
The English Commercial Court issued a Judgment on 7/11/2012 holding a carrier liable for US$458,655.69 owing to its issuing 13 clean Bills of Lading for a consignment of steel pipes which had some pre-shipment damage. [2012 EWHC 3124 (Comm)]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 23/12/2013 dealing with an application for security for costs in relation to a ship sinking case. [HCAJ 213/2009]
Remember Chans advice/142 and Chans advice/145 that the High Court of Hong Kong held the forwarder liable for cargo misdelivery without production of original bills of lading? The Court of Appeal of Hong Kong issued a Judgment on 31/1/2013 dismissing the forwarder’s applications for an extension of time to appeal. [HCMP 2366/2012 & HCMP 2367/2012]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 18/11/2016 dismissing a shipping company’s application for summary judgment against its former deputy general manager (Mr Ma) for restitution of the sum of HK$387,655,303.70 on the ground of money had and received and/or unjust enrichment. [HCA 619/2016]
The Hong Kong District Court issued a Judgment on 8/4/2014 holding that the one year’s suit time limit under the Hague Visby Rules does not apply to the carrier’s claims against the shipper. [DCCJ 4438/2013]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a summary Judgment on 28/9/2012 holding a forwarder liable for US$626,389 plus costs and interest for misdelivery of cargoes without production of the original bills of lading. [HCCL 20/2011 & HCCL 21/2011]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Judgment on 21/7/2014, in which some legal principles relating to the in rem jurisdiction of the Court to arrest vessels were explained. [HCAJ 241/2009]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Decision on 31/8/2018 concerning a feeder company’s claim against a shipping company’s lawyer for wasted costs. [HCA1919/2016] [2018HKCFI1879]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 30 September 2021 holding a shipowner’s Defences as an abuse of process in a case of unpaid crew wages. [HCAJ 76/2020] [2021 HKCFI 2961] [HCAJ 91/2020]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a decision on 11/9/2013 concerning a shipowner’s application to extend the validity of a writ of summons against a Taiwan hull and machinery insurer. [HCAJ 95/2012]
In the transport industry, the contracts of carriage (e.g. Bills of Lading, Air Waybills) usually contain an exclusive jurisdiction clause for settling disputes. However, it is not uncommon that the shippers and consignees sue the transport operators in a court other than the one specified in the exclusive jurisdiction clause. In Hong Kong, the transport operators may rely on the Foreign Judgments (Restriction on Recognition and Enforcement) Ordinance to tackle this kind of situation.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a decision on 31 May 2022 ordering a South Korean shipowner to provide a Hong Kong shipowner with security for costs in the amount of HK$600,000 in relation to a ship collision case that happened in Hong Kong during the super typhoon Hato in August 2017. [HCAJ 80-85/2019] [2022 HKCFI 1631]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 22/8/2016 dealing with a case that a forwarder wanted to strike out a cargo misdelivery claim on the ground that the claim disclosed no reasonable cause of action. [HCCL 5/2015]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Judgment on 1/11/2012 ordering the USA/Canada owners of a cargo (a yacht) to put up HK$250,000 as further security for costs in their legal action against the ship owners. [HCAJ 177/2009]
In our Chans advice/244, we reported the Hong Kong High Court case [HCA937/2016] [2021 HKCFI 2310] that the forwarder was held liable to pay nominal damages of HKD1,000 to the shipper in the cargo misdelivery claim of USD1,299,189.87. On 20 October 2021, the Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on Costs holding the shipper liable to pay the costs of the forwarder. [2021 HKCFI 3021]
The limit of liability for international carriage of cargoes by air under the Montreal Convention has been revised from 19 SDR/Kg to 22 SDR/Kg of the gross weight of the cargoes effective from 28 December 2019. We have received many enquiries from freight forwarders about changing their house Air Waybills’ terms to cope with the new limit of liability. We would like to take this opportunity to discuss some essential terms in house Air Waybills.
The amendment to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) 1974 Chapter VI, Regulation 2 in respect of the verified gross mass of a container carrying cargo (laden container) is for entry into force globally on 1 July 2016.
Following the Hong Kong Court of Appeal’s Judgment dated 11/3/2015 discharging the Mareva Injunctions and the receivership orders (mentioned in our monthly newsletter of Chans advice/171 two months ago), the Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 12/5/2015 to determine the question of who should pay the remuneration to the receivers. [HCMP 1449/2014]
The Ningbo Maritime Court issued a Judgment on 25/5/2016, and dismissed a cargo insurer’s (PICC Ningbo) recovery claim of USD25,238.40 against Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd (“MOSK”) in relation to the vessel MOL Comfort sinking into the Indian Ocean on 17/6/2013.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 13 August 2021 holding a forwarder liable to pay nominal damages of HKD1,000 to a shipper in a cargo misdelivery claim case of USD1,299,189.87. [HCA 937/2016] [2021 HKCFI 2310]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Decision on 23 May 2018 allowing a shipowner to be represented by 2 different firms of solicitors (one appointed by its hull underwriters and the other appointed by its P&I Club). [HCAJ84/2017] [2018HKCFI1136]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision As To Costs on 5 December 2024 ordering a shipowner (which lost in an anti-suit injunction court case) to pay the winning party’s (a cargo owner) costs on an indemnity basis. HCCT 66/2024 [2024 HKCFI 3511]
The English High Court issued a Judgment on 31/7/2015 dismissing a cargo owner’s conversion claim US $565,891.58 against a shipowner in an uncollected cargo case. [(2015) EWHC 2288 (Comm), (2015) 2 C.L.C. 415]
The Hong Kong District Court issued a Decision on 8 May 2020 upholding a summary judgment ordering one forwarder to pay outstanding airfreight charges of HK$440,000 to another forwarder. [DCCJ1202/2018] [2020HKDC307]
The PRC Supreme Court on 26/11/2015 issued a Judgment holding a shipping company’s container demurrage claim against a shipper time barred. [2015民提字第119號]
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued a Judgment [CACV144/2017] [2018HKCA299] on 29/6/2018 upholding the High Court’s Judgment dated 2/6/2017 (which was reported in our Chans advice/201).
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 11/12/2013 holding that a Hong Kong plaintiff needed to put up a security for costs in a court case concerning a yacht sinking incident. [HCCL 5/2013]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a ruling on 2/12/2016 dealing with a shipowner’s interrogatory application in relation to an uncollected cargo case. [HCAJ 118/2015]
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal on 1 December 2021 allowed a charterer’s appeal against a High Court’s Decision dated 13 April 2021 (which disallowed the charterer’s charter hire claims of US$234,955 against the shipowner because the High Court was not satisfied the claims were well founded). [CACV 294/2021] [2021 HKCA 1865]
More and more junior staff of the banks insist all the Bills of Lading to be signed and issued with the above remark “As agent for the Carrier”. This is of course right if the concerned Carrier does not have its own office in the place of issuing the Bill of Lading and therefore instruct its agent there to issue the Carrier’s Bill of Lading.
Against the post-Covid tide, we ran an off-line real seminar on Uncollected and Undelivered Cargo on 28 May 2024. Attendance could not be compared with any webinars but the number of enthusiastic questions in the Q&A session reflected the demand for transport liability issue solutions. For the sake of recapitulations and sharing the Q&A among the Chan Advice readership, we like to report the Q&A in two issues. We welcome any other questions you may have on the following.
In this issue, we would like to continue with the case (CSAV v Hin-Pro) mentioned in our monthly newsletter of Chans advice/169 two months ago. The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued its Judgment on 11/3/2015 discharging the Mareva Injunctions and the receivership orders granted by DHCJ Saunders against Hin-Pro and Soar. [CACV 243/2014]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 2 October 2024 dismissing a shipping company’s application to strike out a forwarder’s third party indemnity claim in a cargo (frozen beef) damage case. [HCAJ 9/2023, HCAJ 22/2023, 2024 HKCFI 2708]
The English Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 13/12/2017 dealing with a cargo damage claim of EUR2,654,238 and a charter hire claim of USD1,012,740 in connection with a NYPE charterparty. [2017 EWCA Civ 2107] [2017 WL 06343564] [Case No. A3/2016/4770]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 9/4/2018 dealing with a cargo total loss case in which a NVOC in Malta was wrongly sued (because it had the same name as that of the correct NVOC in BVI). [HCAJ 65/2016], [2018 HKCFI 699]
As reported in our Chans advice/170 dated 27/2/2015, the English High Court on 14/10/2014 held CSAV’s bill of lading’s English jurisdiction clause as an exclusive jurisdiction clause. On 23/4/2015, the English Court of Appeal issued its Judgment reaching the same conclusion. [Neutral Citation No: 2015 EWCA Civ 401, Case No: A3/2014/3584]
This continues the Q&A in our off-line real seminar on Uncollected and Undelivered Cargo on 28 May 2024. Participants were keen to know more about seaway bills, how war plays in insurance? How modes of transport differ mis-delivery claims handling? What is insurers’ attitude towards transloading claims? And finally, why mis-delivery and uncollected cargo claims deserve special attention. SMIC deals with similar questions daily. Each case varies in its cause, and therefore healing recipe differs. But if you are conversant with fundamentals. They could be simple.
The Court of Appeal of Hong Kong issued a judgment on 28 March 2019 dealing with a matter concerning the sale pendente lite of an oil tanker Brightoil Glory. [CAMP49/2019][2019HKCA395]
The 12th annual SMIC seminar on uncollected cargoes pulled some 300 participants to attend with much curiosity for 3 hours in the YMCA Assembly Hall. The accumulated questionmarks and enigmas about the subject matter lurking in the trade were unleashed among the audiences.
To continue our recent series of loss prevention articles, we would like to discuss in this issue the major provisions of the PRC Maritime Code as far as the international carriage of goods by sea is concerned.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 25 February 2019 dealing with Changhong Group’s delayed application for leave to appeal in relation to the collision case reported in our Chans advice/218 and Chans advice/215. [HCAJ3/2018, 2019HKCFI542]
On 12/4/2017, the Hong Kong High Court dismissed an application made by a cargo owner for stay of proceedings commenced by two forwarders in relation to an uncollected cargo case. [HCA 1927/2016]
The English High Court issued a Judgment on 2/4/2014 holding the Hague Visby Rules instead of the Hague Rules (as incorporated by a Paramount Clause) to apply to a shipment ex Belgium. [Case No: 2012 Folio 102, 2014 EWHC 971 Comm, 2014 WL 1219313]
We have received some enquiries from our forwarder clients about the FCR e.g. what is FCR? How many types of FCR are there? What are the uses of FCR? We would like to discuss these in this issue.
Our Chans advice/191 reported a Hong Kong High Court’s case concerning a shipping company’s restitution claim against its former deputy general manager (Mr Ma) for HK$387,655,303.70. The latest development of this case is: the Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 1/2/2018 and a Decision on 9/2/2018 holding that Mr Ma was in contempt of Court as a result of his breach of a Mareva Injunction Order and that he be committed to prison for 4 months. [HCMP1115/2017] [2018 HKCFI176] [2018 HKCFI328]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Judgment on 4/5/2012 explaining some legal principles as to when shipowners should fear the arrest of their ships. [HCAJ 141/2010]
We reported in our Chans advice/252 that the Hong Kong High Court held Hyundai Hong Kong’s ex-Deputy General Manager (Mr Ma) liable to compensate HK$387,655,303.70 to Hyundai Hong Kong in the case of his theft of his employer’s money. On 23 December 2022, the Hong Kong High Court issued a decision ordering a sum of HK$500,000 (which was deposited by Mr Ma as bail money) to be released to Hyundai Hong Kong in partial satisfaction of Mr Ma’s judgment debt. [HCA 619/2016] [2022 HKCFI 3798]
What is the difference between a straight bill of lading and an order bill of lading? This can be illustrated in the Wuhan Maritime Court’s Judgment dated 17 September 2019 concerning a cargo misdelivery claim of US$89,838.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a judgment on 12/4/2016 to dismiss a cargo owner’s action in respect of breaking a barge owner’s tonnage limitation. [HCAJ 178/2014]
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 9/7/2015 in relation to the High Court Judgment dated 21/7/2014 (reported in our Chans advice/167 dated 28/11/2014). [HCMP 2315/2014]
The Hong Kong High Court on 13/8/2013 held a shipper liable to a shipping company for paying demurrage of US$1,645,286.74 plus interest and costs. [HCAJ 166/2011]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 13 May 2021 to deal with an interpleader action concerning the stakeholding of US$700,000 in relation to a dispute over some management fees between two transport operators. [HCMP510/2020] [2021 HKCFI 1373]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 5/8/2015 holding that a shipment of formula milk powder without the legally required export licence should not be forfeited. [HCMA171/2015]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 4 March 2020 dismissing a shipowner’s application for a stay of proceedings in favour of arbitration in a case of cargo misdelivery without presentation of original bill of lading. [HCAJ 5/2019] [2020 HKCFI 375]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 2/6/2017 dealing with the liability apportionment among 3 vessels in 2 almost simultaneous collisions that happened near Hong Kong on 14/5/2011. [HCAJ158/2012 and HCAJ49/2013 and HCAJ48/2011]
In Chans advice/215, we reported the High Court of Hong Kong refused Changhong Group’s application to stay the Hong Kong action. The Court of Appeal also subsequently dismissed Changhong Group’s appeal. On 13 July 2020, the Court of Final Appeal finally dismissed Changhong Group’s application for leave to appeal. [FAMV No. 34 of 2020] [2020 HKCFA 24]
Following the issue of Chans advice last month, we would like to report the latest decision issued by the court over this theft case. On 17 January 2023, the Hong Kong High Court dismissed Mr Ma’s application to withdraw HK$1.5 million out of his frozen assets for paying the legal costs for his appeal against conviction in theft. [HCA 619/2016] [2023 HKCFI 197]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 21 July 2023 in relation to a case that an aircraft (worth at least USD 80 million) and its cargoes were destroyed by a fire caused by the goods of chlorine dioxide disinfection tablets. [HCA 837/2022] [2023 HKCFI 1896]
The Hong Kong District Court issued a Decision on 30 April 2021 dealing with a personal injury case in relation to a container terminal. [DCPI 110/2020] [2021 HKDC 463]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 29 January 2019 dismissing Changhong Group’s application for stay of the legal proceedings against it brought by the consignee and the insurer of the cargo on board the Sanchi. [HCAJ6/2018, 2019HKCFI263]
There are three ways of fulfilling the deposit requirement of the Ministry of Transport (“MOT”) in the People’s Republic of China (“PRC”) for your NVOCC license.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 22 Feb 2021 holding that the wreck removal claims of a ship sunk were not subject to the Convention on Limitation of Liability for Maritime Claims 1976. [HCAJ 98/2019] [2021 HKCFI 396]
The High Court of Hong Kong issued a Decision on 21/9/2017 dealing with the principles in respect of the real risk of dissipation of assets in a case of Mareva Injunction involving a shipowner and a charterer. [HCMP 1010/2017]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 3/2/2017 holding Natural Dairy liable to pay HK$4,360,948.38 to Schenker being the outstanding freight charges. In the Judgment, the Judge also explained the principles regarding the meaning of notice of the forwarder’s standard trading conditions. [HCA 1755/2011].
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 20 February 2019 dismissing Changhong Group’s appeal against the High Court’s Decision of 15 November 2018 (reported in Chans advice/215) because Changhong Group had not obtained leave to appeal from the Hong Kong High Court. [CACV576/2018] [2019HKCA246]
Remember our Chans advice/112 that the Hong Kong High Court held the Rotterdam terminal liable to pay the cargo value of €950,071.20 for the misdelivery of one container of Sony Play Stations? On 2/4/2013, Judge To of the Hong Kong High Court issued another Judgment holding that the forwarder was entitled to limit its liability to US$24,392 in accordance with its B/L terms. [HCAJ 106/2008]
We mentioned in our Chans advice/225 that the limit of liability under the Montreal Convention for carriage of cargoes was increased from 19 SDR/kg to 22 SDR/kg of the gross weight of the cargoes effective on 28 December 2019. We have recently received some forwarders’ request asking us to talk about the major terms in the Montreal Convention. We in this issue would like to introduce the Montreal Convention’s major provisions as follows:
In our last issue of Chans advice/253, the Hong Kong District Court’s judgment dated 26 April 2022 mentioned a case authority of China Ocean v Mitrans Shipping. We would like to discuss this judgment dated 11 July 1995 of the Hong Kong Court of Appeal in our Chans advice this month. [1995 No. 71 Civil]
The Hong Kong Court of Appeal issued a Judgment on 4 October 2019 upholding the High Court’s Decision dated 9 April 2018 (reported in our Chans advice/208). [CACV593/2018][2019HKCA1101]
More than 10 years ago, we broke new grounds unheard of before among insurance brokers by introducing genuine claim support (by truly employing a team of professional transport claim handlers) independent of that from the insurers. Since then, the knowledge advantage of the insurer over that of the transport operator insured has been evened. Those who buy transport liability insurance are truly better protected with professionals standing at their side who really know the freight industry and are conversant in transport insurance and claims handling.
On 5/8/2011, the District Court of Hong Kong dismissed a shipping company’s container claims against a forwarder for want of prosecution and abuse of process. [DCCJ 765/2005]
Are Standard Trading Conditions (“STC”) equivalent to the House Bill of Lading (“HB/L”) terms or the House Air Waybill (“HAWB”) terms? We have been frequently asked this question by our forwarder clients.
We have received a lot of cargo claims from our forwarder clients in the recent months. In this issue, we would like to discuss in general how the forwarders should handle the cargo claims.
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Judgment on 25/8/2017 to determine whether the Hong Kong Court or the Yangon Court was the natural and appropriate forum in an in rem legal proceedings in relation to a cargo damage claim of USD143,852.02. [HCAJ 101/2015]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a judgment on 21/4/2016 and disallowed a cargo owner’s application for summary judgment against a forwarder in connection with a cargo (a diamond) missing claim of US$900,000. [HCCL 10/2015]
The Hong Kong High Court issued a Decision on 9/5/2017 allowing a time extension for some cargo interests to claim against the Tonnage Limitation Fund constituted by the owner of one of the two vessels involved in a collision that happened on 7/11/2013. [HCAJ 189/2013]
In our Chans advice/169 last month, we mentioned the English Court’s Judgment dated 14/10/2014 holding CSAV’s bill of lading’s English jurisdiction clause to be an exclusive jurisdiction clause. In this issue, let’s look at that English High Court Judgment [2013 Folio No 1248, 2014 EWHC 3632 Comm, 2014 WL 5113447] issued by Justice Cooke in detail.
According to the Hague-Visby Rules, the carrier shall be discharged of all liability in respect of the cargoes unless suit is brought within one year of their delivery or the date when they should have been delivered. The English High Court issued a Judgment on 22nd July 2025 explaining the meaning of “suit”. [2025 EWHC 1878 (Comm)]
Remember Chans advice/142 dated 31/10/2012 that the High Court of Hong Kong held the forwarder liable for cargo misdelivery without production of original bills of lading? The High Court of Hong Kong issued another Judgment on 4/12/2012 dealing with the interest and costs. [HCCL 20/2011 & HCCL 21/2011]