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MAN Ferrostaal, Inc. v. M/V Akili, 11-0486-cv(L) (2012)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Number: 11-0486-cv(L) Visitors: 28
Filed: Dec. 06, 2012
Latest Update: Mar. 26, 2017
Summary: 11-0486-cv(L) MAN Ferrostaal, Inc. v. M/V Akili, 1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 August Term, 2011 4 (Argued: January 9, 2012 Decided: December 6, 2012) 5 Docket No. 11-0486-cv(L), 11-0567-cv(XAP) 6 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 MAN FERROSTAAL, INC., 8 Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant, 9 10 v. 11 12 M/V AKILI, her engines, boilers, tackle, etc., 13 Defendant-Cross-Claimant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee 14 15 AKELA NAVIGATION CO., LTD.,
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      11-0486-cv(L)
      MAN Ferrostaal, Inc. v. M/V Akili,


 1                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

 2                             FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

 3                                 August Term, 2011

 4      (Argued: January 9, 2012                Decided: December 6, 2012)

 5                  Docket No. 11-0486-cv(L), 11-0567-cv(XAP)

 6   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 7   MAN FERROSTAAL, INC.,
 8             Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
 9
10                     v.
11
12   M/V AKILI, her engines, boilers, tackle, etc.,
13             Defendant-Cross-Claimant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee
14
15   AKELA NAVIGATION CO., LTD., ALMI MARINE MANAGEMENT SA,
16             Defendants-Third-Party Plaintiffs-Cross-
17             Claimants-Appellees,
18
19   SM CHINA CO., LTD.,
20             Defendant-Third-Party Defendant-Cross-Defendant.
21
22   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
23
24   B e f o r e:     WINTER, KATZMANN, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.

25        Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court

26   for the Southern District of New York (Denise Cote, Judge), after

27   a bench trial, holding the M/V Akili liable in rem for damage to

28   cargo shipped aboard the vessel.          Appellants argue that the

29   district court erred in holding that the vessel was liable in

30   rem, and in holding that the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act applied

                                           1
 1   to the vessel as a “carrier” under that act.       Man Ferrostaal

 2   cross-appeals the judgment for failing to hold Almi Marine

 3   Management and Akela Navigation Co. liable in personam for the

 4   damage under a bailment theory.    We affirm.

 5                                 VINCENT M. DEORCHIS,
 6                                 Deorchis & Partners, LLP, New York,
 7                                 NY, for Defendant-Cross-Claimant-
 8                                 Appellant-Cross-Appellee.
 9
10                                 STEVEN P. CALKINS, Kingsley
11                                 Kingsley & Calkins, Hicksville, NY,
12                                 for Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-
13                                 Appellant.
14
15
16   WINTER, Circuit Judge:

17        The M/V Akili, its owner, Akela Navigation Co., and manager,

18   Almi Marine Management, appeal from Judge Cote’s decision, after

19   a bench trial, holding the M/V Akili liable in rem for damage to

20   cargo shipped aboard the vessel.       Appellants claim that the

21   district court erred in holding the vessel liable in rem.          Man

22   Ferrostaal (“Ferrostaal”) cross-appeals from the holding that

23   Almi Marine Management (“Almi”) and Akela Navigation Co.

24   (“Akela”) are not liable in personam under a bailment theory.            We

25   write at length to clarify both the issues and our analysis,

26   which differs somewhat from that of the district court.      However,

27   we affirm.

28



                                        2
 1                               BACKGROUND

 2        Ferrostaal’s business is accepting orders of steel from

 3   customers in the United States, procuring steel from

 4   international suppliers, and then arranging for the steel’s

 5   transportation to the customer.   The cargo at issue here was

 6   9,960 “thin-walled” steel pipes, manufactured in China and sold

 7   to Ferrostaal pursuant to a purchase order dated March 23, 2006

 8   (“Purchase Order”).   Ferrostaal in turn sold the pipe to McJunkin

 9   Appalachian Oilfield of West Virginia and arranged for it to be

10   shipped to New Orleans.

11        A series of charters and sub-charters of the Akili were

12   executed before the cargo was loaded aboard.   On June 19, 2006,

13   Akela time-chartered the Akili to Seyang Shipping, Ltd., which in

14   turn was permitted to sublet the vessel for all or any part of

15   the time covered by the charter (the “Time Charter Party”).     The

16   Time Charter Party specified that all bills of lading issued

17   under the charter would incorporate “the General Clause Paramount

18   or U.S. or Canadian Clause Paramount whichever applicable as

19   attached.”1   Thereafter, Seyang sub-chartered the vessel to S.M.



          1
           The USA Clause Paramount is a clause designating the
     Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, or COGSA, as the controlling law
     with respect to the rights and liabilities of parties to a bill
     of lading.


                                       3
 1   China for the voyage from Shanghai to Houston and then to New

 2   Orleans.   Prior to chartering the Akili from Seyang, S.M. China

 3   had executed a part-cargo charter (the “Voyage Charter Party”)

 4   with Ferrostaal for the carriage of the thin-walled pipes from

 5   Shanghai to New Orleans.   The Voyage Charter Party did not

 6   identify the vessel on which the cargo was to be shipped, stating

 7   instead that the ship was “TBN” -- “to be named” in landlubbers’

 8   lingo -- by S.M. China.

 9        The Voyage Charter Party placed responsibility for loss

10   “caused by improper or negligent stowage, or discharge, or care

11   of the goods” on the “Owners” of the vessel.   It further

12   specified that “[s]towage is to be under the Master’s supervision

13   and responsibility as Owners’ agent.”   The “Owner” was defined as

14   S.M. China.   It also contained a “free-in-and-out” provision that

15   stated that the handling of cargo was to be “free of risk . . .

16   to the vessel.”

17        The Voyage Charter Party also contained a “Clause Paramount”

18   that stated in part,   “[n]otwithstanding any other provisions in

19   this contract, any claims for loss or damage to cargo shall be

20   governed by the Hague-Visby rules as if comprehensively

21   applicable by law.”    The Hague-Visby rules are an international

22   convention that are in all pertinent respects literally identical

23   to rules established by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 46


                                       4
 1   U.S.C. § 30701 (“COGSA” or “the Act”).   This is no coincidence

 2   because the convention requires signatory nations to pass

 3   legislation embodying these rules.

 4        A bill of lading was issued by China Ports International

 5   Shipping Agency Ltd., as the agent of S.M. China, to Zhongqing,

 6   the shipper, and then was transferred to Ferrostaal through

 7   banking channels pursuant to the “cash against documents” term of

 8   the Purchase Order.    The bill of lading contained a Clause

 9   Paramount that incorporated the Hague rules.2

10        The pipe was carried from China to New Orleans aboard the

11   Akili.   Upon arrival in New Orleans, it was discovered that the

12   steel pipes had been placed at the bottom of a cargo hold and


          2
           The Clauses Paramount in the Bill of Lading reads as
     follows:

                This Bill of Lading shall be subject to the
                Hague Rules contained in International
                Convention for the Unification of Certain
                Rules of Law Relating to Bills of Lading,
                dated at Brussels the 25th August, 1924, or
                the corresponding legislation of the flag
                state of the ship. If the stipulations of
                the bill of lading are wholly or partly
                contrary thereto, this bill of lading shall
                be read as if such stipulation or part
                thereof, as the case may be, were deleted.

     Because the contract of affreightment is the Voyage Charter Party
     for reasons stated infra, the differences between the Voyage
     Charter Party Clause Paramount and the Bill of Lading Clause
     Paramount do not affect the disposition of this case.


                                      5
1   damaged when heavier pipes were placed on top.   The pipes were

2   repaired by Houston Tubulars, Inc., which was paid $286,078.32 by

3   Ferrostaal.

4        On July 9, 2007, Ferrostaal filed the present action in rem

5   against the Akili and in personam against Akela, Almi, and S.M.

6   China.   Akela and Almi filed a cross-claim against S.M. China.3

7   After a bench trial, Judge Cote held the Akili liable in rem4 and


         3
          Akela and Almi filed a motion to dismiss for lack of
    personal jurisdiction on January 23, 2009, which was stayed
    pending trial on the issues of in rem and in personam liability.

         4
          On February 9, 2009, Ferrostaal made an emergency motion to
    sever the in rem action and transfer it to the Eastern District
    of Louisiana because the Akili was expected to call at a
    Louisiana port. The motion was granted. Then, the Owners’
    insurance company wrote a Letter of Undertaking seeking to avoid
    the arrest. Pursuant to a Stipulation and Consent Order entered
    by the parties, the in rem action was transferred back to the
    Southern District of New York, where it was assigned a new case
    number. Although the in rem and in personam claims were tried
    together, disposed of by a single opinion and order, and resolved
    by a combined judgment bearing both case numbers, the two cases
    were never formally consolidated.
         Because the Akili filed its notice of appeal only under the
    docket number of the in personam action, Ferrostaal argues that
    we lack jurisdiction to consider appellant’s arguments insofar as
    they pertain to the in rem action. We are unpersuaded. The
    Akili timely filed notice in the district court of its intent to
    appeal the “judgment, order or decree” entered by the district
    court as it pertains to the in rem action. 28 U.S.C. § 2107(a).
    Ferrostaal received notice of the Akili’s intent to appeal, and
    it claims no prejudice as a result of the Akili’s failure to file
    the notice in both actions or to caption it with both district
    court case numbers. Accordingly, the Akili’s oversight is not
    fatal to its appeal. See Marrero Pichardo v. Ashcroft, 
374 F.3d 46
, 54-55 (2d Cir. 2004); Conway v. Village of Mount Kisco, N.Y.,
    
750 F.2d 205
, 211-12 (2d Cir. 1984).

                                     6
 1   dismissed the claims for in personam liability against Akela and

 2   Almi.     This appeal and cross-appeal followed.

 3                                 DISCUSSION

 4           We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear

 5   error and its conclusions of law de novo.       Mobil Shipping &

 6   Transp. Co. v. Wonsild Liquid Carriers Ltd., 
190 F.3d 64
, 67 (2d

 7   Cir. 1999).    Mixed questions of law and fact are reviewed de

 8   novo.    White v. White Rose Food, 
237 F.3d 174
, 178 (2d Cir.

 9   2001).

10   a)   The Appeal

11           Boiled down, the parties dispute whether:    (i)   an in rem

12   proceeding rendering the Akili liable for damage to, or loss of,

13   cargo is unavailable in this matter because a vessel is not a

14   “carrier” within the meaning of COGSA and (ii) the free-in-and-

15   out provision in the Voyage Charter Party purportedly absolving

16   the Akili of in rem liability is enforceable.       We hold that the

17   first issue is essentially irrelevant because a vessel’s in rem

18   liability for damage to cargo exists under maritime common law,

19   not COGSA, for a violation of a carrier’s contractual or

20   statutory -- COGSA’s -- obligations.       We resolve the second issue

21   against enforcement of the free-in-and-out provision so far as it

22   might be construed to prevent in rem liability of the vessel.          In

23   doing so, we do not decide whether COGSA applied as a matter of



                                        7
 1   law to this voyage because, even if it did not, the Voyage

 2   Charter Party’s Clause Paramount contractually incorporates the

 3   Hague-Visby rules prohibiting a carrier from contracting for a

 4   waiver of its obligations regarding damage to cargo.     See 46

 5   U.S.C. § 30701 Note § 3(8).

 6        1.     The Vessel as a COGSA “Carrier”

 7        COGSA sets out the obligations of “carriers” involved in the

 8   shipment of goods into the United States from international

 9   ports.    It requires ocean carriers to “Properly and carefully

10   load, handle, stow, carry, keep, care for, and discharge the

11   goods carried,” id. § 30701 Note § 3(2), and forbids carriers

12   from contracting out of these obligations.     Id. § 30701 Note §

13   3(8); see also Sogem-Afrimet. Inc. v. M/V Ikan Selayang, 
951 F. 14
   Supp. 429, 442-43 (S.D.N.Y. 1996), aff’d, 
122 F.3d 1057
 (2d Cir.

15   1997) (“COGSA does not permit the carrier to divest itself of the

16   duty to insure the proper stowage of the cargo.”).     COGSA defines

17   a “carrier” to mean “the owner, manager, charterer, agent, or

18   master of a vessel,” 46 U.S.C. § 30701, including “the owner or

19   the charterer who enters into a contract of carriage with a

20   shipper.”    Id. at Note § 1(a).

21        Appellant argues that because a “vessel” is not a carrier

22   under COGSA, the Akili cannot be liable in rem for damage to, or

23   loss of, cargo.    We disagree.    COGSA assumes the existence of the



                                         8
 1   in rem proceeding rather than creates it.   Section 3, the crux of

 2   the Act, sets out duties applicable only to carriers but is

 3   entitled “Responsibilities and Liabilities of Carrier and Ship.”

 4   (emphasis added).   The very title of Section 3 thus assumes that

 5   maritime law supplies in rem liability coextensive with carrier

 6   liability.5

 7        Well before enactment of COGSA and its predecessor, the

 8   Harter Act, maritime law held ships liable in rem for cargo

 9   damage due to improper stowage.   The Water Witch, 
66 U.S. 494
,

10   500 (1862) (“The ship having received the cargo and carried it

11   . . . is estopped to deny her liability to deliver in like good

12   order as received . . . .”); Demsey & Assoc., Inc. v. S.S. Sea

13   Star, 
461 F.2d 1009
, 1014 (2d Cir. 1972) (“Every claim for cargo

14   damage creates a maritime lien against the ship which may be

15   enforced by a libel in rem.”), abrogated on other grounds by

16   Seguros Illimani S.A. v. M/V Popi P, 
929 F.2d 89
 (2d Cir. 1991);

17   Pioneer Import Corp. v. Lafcomo, 
49 F. Supp. 559
, 561-62 (S.D.N.Y.

18   1943), aff’d, 
138 F.2d 907
 (2d Cir. 1943) (“A lien arises against

19   the ship for damage to cargo caused by improper stowage.”); see

20   also Gilmore & Black, The Law of Admiralty § 3-45 at 165 (1957).


          5
           The only portion of Section 3 that applies directly to
     ships is Paragraph 8, which prevents parties from contracting
     around the ship’s coextensive liability. § 30701 Note § 3(8),
     discussed infra.


                                       9
1        In rem liability is derived from a pre-COGSA maritime law

2   doctrine to the effect that, once cargo is aboard a vessel, the

3   vessel is deemed to have impliedly ratified the underlying

4   contract of affreightment and is answerable for nonperformance.6


         6
          The district court used a combination of maritime law and
    COGSA to find the Akili liable in rem. See Man Ferrostaal v. M/V
    Akili, 
763 F. Supp. 2d 599
, 612 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (“The Akili, by
    setting sail with the cargo, is deemed to have ratified the bill
    of lading, and therefore is liable in rem as a [COGSA] carrier.”
    (emphasis added)). We do not adopt this reasoning.

         The “implied ratification” doctrine gives rise directly to
    in rem liability. It does not render a vessel a carrier under
    COGSA. See, e.g., Demsey, 461 F.2d at 1015. The ratification
    doctrine is directly traceable to pre-COGSA maritime law
    precedent. For example, the seminal implied ratification case,
    The Esrom, 
272 F. 266
, 270 (2d Cir. 1921), cites The Schooner
    Freeman v. Buckingham, 
59 U.S. 182
 (1855), a case that preceded
    COGSA and its predecessor, the Harter Act. In Freeman, the
    Supreme Court stated:
              [W]hen the general owner [of a vessel]
              intrusts the special owner with the entire
              control and employment of the ship, it is a
              just and reasonable implication of law that
              the general owner assents to the creation of
              liens binding upon his interest in the
              vessel, as security for the performance of
              contracts of affreightument made in the
              course of the lawful employment of the
              vessel. The general owner must be taken to
              know that the purpose for which the vessel is
              hired, when not employed to carry cargo
              belonging to the hirer, is to carry cargo of
              third persons; and that bills of lading, or
              charter-parties, must, in the invariable
              regular course of business be made, for the
              performance of which the law confers a lien
              on the vessel.

    Id. at 190.


                                   10
 1   Demsey, 461 F.2d at 1014-15; see also Kraus Bros. Lumber Co. v.

 2   Dimon S.S. Corp., 
290 U.S. 117
, 121 (1933).   The Akili, by

 3   setting sail with the cargo on board, impliedly ratified the

 4   contract of affreightment between S.M. China and Ferrostaal.   See

 5   Freeman, 59 U.S. at 190 (noting that where a shipowner allows a

 6   special owner to carry cargo of third persons, the law confers a

 7   lien for the performance of bills of lading or charter parties).7

 8        As between S.M. China and Ferrostaal, the contract of

 9   affreightment was the Voyage Charter Party rather than the bill

10   of lading.8   A carrier may not alter its contractual obligations


          7
           Akili argues that Insurance Company of North America v. S/S
     American Argosy, 
732 F.2d 299
 (2d Cir. 1984), demands a different
     conclusion. It does not. American Argosy governs bills of
     lading issued by non-vessel operating common carriers (“NVOCCs”),
     which “do not . . . own or charter the ships that actually carry
     the cargo.” Id. At 301. We recognized that the ratification
     doctrine applies where a bill of lading has been issued “by a
     charterer of the vessel,” and decline to extend the doctrine to
     situations involving NVOCCs. Id. at 303-04. Unlike an NVOCC,
     S.M. China operated the ship for the purpose of carrying cargo
     pursuant to a charter agreement, as authorized by the ship’s
     owner, and the ratification doctrine therefore applies. See
     Freeman, 59 U.S. at 190.

          8
           The fact that a vessel is operated under charter does not
     absolve it of in rem liability. Demsey, 461 F.2d at 1014;
     Pioneer Import, 138 F.2d at 908 (“[T]he maritime lien against the
     ship . . . obtains whether or not [the ship] was under
     charter.”). Even if a charterer enters into a contract of
     affreightment unauthorized by the vessel owner, the vessel is
     liable in rem for non-performance even if the vessel owner is
     absolved of in personam liability. See Demsey, 461 F.2d at 1015;
     see The Water Witch, 66 U.S. at 500 (holding ship liable for
     improper stowage by charterer despite master’s refusal to sign
     the bill of lading because “the ship having received the cargo
     and carried it to the consignees . . . is estopped to deny her
     liability to deliver in like good order as received.”).

                                     11
 1   to a shipper under a Voyage Charter Party by issuing a bill of

 2   lading with different terms, Asoma Corp. v. SK Shipping Co., 467

 
3 F.3d 817
, 823-24 (2d Cir. 2006), albeit when the bill of lading

 4   is negotiated to a good faith third party, which did not occur

 5   here, the bill governs the third party’s rights.   Id. at 824.

 6        To sum up, even if a vessel is not a “carrier” within the

 7   meaning of COGSA, maritime law renders vessels liable in rem for

 8   a carrier’s violations of its obligations.   Therefore, while

 9   COGSA, if applicable, may affect or alter a carrier’s obligations

10   and thereby determine the outcome of an in rem proceeding against

11   a carrier’s vessel, the in rem remedy is a creature of maritime

12   law, not COGSA.

13        2.   Enforceability of a Waiver of the Vessel’s In Rem

14             Liability

15        The applicability of COGSA in this appeal arises in a second

16   and different context.   Appellants argue that the free-in-and-out

17   provision of the Voyage Charter Party relieves the vessel of

18   liability for improper stowage.    The free-in–and-out provision

19   reads:

20               The cargo to be loaded, stowed, lashed,
21               secured, and dunnaged free of risk and
22               expenses to the vessel in accordance with
23               local regulations for steel cargoes, under
24               deck only.
25
26        Appellee disagrees with this interpretation of the

27   provision, but we need not resolve that issue in light of our

                                       12
 1   disposition.   As discussed above, COGSA and its predecessor, the

 2   Harter Act, were meant to modify, not displace, in rem liability

 3   under maritime law.   A principal modification was to prohibit

 4   carriers from contracting out of their obligations under maritime

 5   law and out of their vessel’s exposure to in rem liability.        §

 6   30701 Note § 3(8).

 7        As the classic admiralty treatise states, “The general law

 8   of maritime carriage made the public carrier of goods by sea

 9   absolutely responsible for their safe arrival,” with a few

10   exceptions.    Gilmore & Black, supra § 3-22 at 139.   “When the

11   bill of lading came into general use as a receipt for goods and

12   document of title, [however], shipowners [and other carriers] . .

13   . began to set out on the face of the bill various ‘exceptions’

14   [to liability].”   Id. § 3-22 at 140.   “Bills came to include

15   stipulations that the carrier was not to be liable even for the

16   results of his own negligence or that of the ship’s people. . .

17   Instead of being absolutely liable, irrespective of negligence,

18   [the carrier] enjoyed an exemption from liability, regardless of

19   negligence, as wide as his bargaining position enabled him to

20   contract for.”   Id. § 3-23 at 142.   The dissatisfaction of

21   American cargo interests with these exemptions from liability

22   prompted Congress to enact the Harter Act of 1893, the

23   predecessor to COGSA.   Id. § 3-24 at 142-43.



                                      13
 1        COGSA, therefore, prevents international ocean carriers from

 2   contracting out of certain specified obligations, including the

 3   responsibility to stow cargo properly.   See Nichimen Co. v. M.V.

 4   Farland, 
462 F.2d 319
, 327 (2d Cir. 1972); see also § 30701 Note

 5   § 3 (setting forth carrier duties); id. Note § 3(8) (preventing

 6   carriers and ships from contracting out of the duties set forth

 7   therein).   These obligations are deemed as a matter of law to be

 8   incorporated by reference into every bill of lading where COGSA

 9   applies.    See § 30701 Note (“Every bill of lading . . . in

10   foreign trade, shall have effect subject to the provisions of

11   this chapter.”); Gilmore & Black, supra § 3-25 at 145.

12        The relevant COGSA provision reads:

13               Any clause . . . in a contract of carriage
14               relieving the carrier or the ship from
15               liability for loss or damage to or in
16               connection with the goods, arising from . . .
17               obligations provided in this section . . .
18               shall be null and void and of no effect.
19
20   § 30701 Note § 3(8).

21        The Hague-Visby Convention sets out an identical rule –- in

22   haec verba –- and the parties here have incorporated the

23   Convention and its rules into the Clauses Paramount of the Voyage

24   Charter Party and the bill of lading.    If COGSA applies as a

25   matter of law, the free-in-and-out provision is unenforceable

26   insofar as it is a waiver of in rem liability.    If the cargo

27   damage rules of Hague-Visby apply as a matter of contract, the

28   same result is reached.

                                      14
 1        The applicability of either approach, however, is not self-

 2   evident.   Both COGSA and Hague-Visby contain the following

 3   provision:

 4                “[C]ontract of carriage” applies only to
 5                contracts of carriage covered by a bill of
 6                lading or any similar document of title, in
 7                so far as such document relates to the
 8                carriage of goods by sea, including any bill
 9                of lading or any similar document as
10                aforesaid issued under or pursuant to a
11                charter party from the moment at which such
12                bill of lading or similar document of title
13                regulates the relations between a carrier and
14                a holder of the same.
15
16   § 30701 Note § 1(b); Hague-Visby Rules, Art. I.    For convenience

17   sake, we will refer to this provision as “the Applicability

18   Provision” or “Provision”.

19        With regard to the applicability of COGSA as a matter of

20   law, the Applicability Provision has led to a division among

21   American courts.    Although the provision does not specifically

22   mention a distinction between public and private carriage, most

23   American courts, including the district court in this case, treat

24   the Applicability Provision as calling for a determination of

25   whether the vessel was engaged in public -- roughly speaking,

26   multiple cargos and shippers -- or private -- again, roughly

27   speaking, a single cargo and shipper -- carriage.    Akili, 
763 F. 28
   Supp. 2d at 609-10; see, e.g., Jefferson Chem. Co. v. M/T Grena,

29   
413 F.2d 864
, 867 (5th Cir. 1969); Pac. Vegetable Oil Corp. v.



                                       15
 1   M/S Norse Commander, 
264 F. Supp. 625
, 627 (S.D. Tex. 1966); J.

 2   Gerber & Co. v. SS Sabine Howaldt, 
310 F. Supp. 343
, 350

 3   (S.D.N.Y. 1969), reversed on other grounds, 
437 F.2d 580
 (2d Cir.

 4   1971).    As we explained in Nichimen, the public-private carriage

 5   distinction is a relic of case law applying COGSA’s predecessor,

 6   the Harter Act.    462 F.2d at 327-28.   COGSA’s language includes

 7   no mention of the public-private distinction but states only that

 8   the Act applies “from the moment at which such bill of lading or

 9   similar document of title regulates the relations between a

10   carrier and a holder of the same.”     46 U.S.C. § 30701 Note §

11   1(b).

12           We have sometimes labored to treat charter parties and bills

13   of lading as proxies for private and public carriage,

14   respectively.    See, e.g., Madow Co. v. S.S. Liberty Exporter, 569

15 F.2d 1183
, 1186-87 (2d Cir. 1978) (arguing that the charter

16   arrangements deemed to be outside the reach of COGSA generally

17   involve engagement of the entire vessel by the charterer for the

18   purpose of shipping his own cargo).      In Nichimen, however, we

19   noted that there is no necessary correlation between public

20   carriage and carriage pursuant to a bill of lading, or private

21   carriage and voyage charter parties.     462 F.2d at 328.   Indeed,

22   in Nichimen, we declined to treat the applicability of COGSA as

23   turning on whether the vessel was engaged in public or private



                                       16
 1   carriage, id. at 326-28, finding instead that COGSA applied of

 2   its own force because the parties privately agreed that a

 3   subsequently-issued bill of lading would govern relations between

 4   them.    Id. at 328-29; see Blommer Chocolate Co. v. Nosira Sharon

 5   Ltd., 
776 F. Supp. 760
, 767-68 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) (discussing

 6   Nichimen).

 7           Application of the public-private carriage analysis probably

 8   favors appellees, as the district court held, because the voyage

 9   here involved multiple cargos and multiple shippers.     However,

10   the Fifth Circuit has recently refused to treat carriers that

11   transport multiple shippers’ cargo as per se subject to COGSA.

12   See Tradearbed Inc. v. Western Bulk Carriers K/S, 374 Fed. App’x.

13   464, 473-74 (5th Cir. 2010).    Instead, it treats the

14   applicability of COGSA as turning on which document -- charter

15   party or bill of lading -- governs relations between the

16   litigants.    See Id. at 374; see also Thyssen, Inc. v. Nobility

17   MV, 
421 F.3d 295
, 297, 307 (5th Cir. 2005).

18           Based on the “governing-instrument” standard, appellants

19   argue that COGSA does not apply because the bill of lading here

20   was only a receipt and the Voyage Charter Party –- with the free-

21   in-and-out provision –- is the governing document.    It is

22   established that a bill of lading issued under a charter party is

23   only a receipt when it remains in the hands of the shipper-



                                       17
 1   charterer.   See Nichimen, 462 F.2d at 328; see Asoma, 467 F.3d at

 2   824.   In such a case, the charter party continues to govern

 3   relations between the parties.    See Asoma, 467 F. 3d at 823-24;

 4   The Fri, 
154 F. 333
, 336-37 (2d Cir. 1907).    Otherwise, as we

 5   have noted, a carrier could alter the terms of the charter party

 6   by issuing inconsistent bills of lading.   Asoma, 467 F.3d at 824

 7   (citing Hellenic Lines, Ltd. v. Embassy of Pakistan, 
467 F.2d 8
   1150, 1154 (2d Cir. 1972)).    Therefore, the bill of lading

 9   becomes the governing instrument only after it is negotiated to a

10   subsequent holder who is not bound by the charter party.   Id.;

11   see Ministry of Commerce v. Marine Tankers Corp., 
194 F. Supp. 12
   161, 162-63 (S.D.N.Y. 1960).   The governing instrument test,

13   therefore, would favor appellants’ theory of this case.

14          The adoption of either the “public/private carriage” or the

15   “governing instrument” interpretation of the Applicability

16   Provision might well, therefore, affect the outcome in this

17   matter.   However, we need not resolve the various issues raised

18   because the Voyage Charter Party’s Clause Paramount incorporates

19   the Hague-Visby Rules.   Even if COGSA does not apply, therefore,

20   the Voyage Charter Party provides rules regarding the

21   impermissibility of a waiver of in rem liability –- Hague-Visby

22   –- identical to those of COGSA.

23



                                       18
 1        The Clause Paramount of the Voyage Charter Party reads:

 2             Notwithstanding any other provisions in this
 3             contract, any claims for loss or damage to
 4             cargo shall be governed by the Hague-Visby
 5             rules as if compulsorily applicable by law,
 6             and any other clauses herein repugnant to the
 7             Hague-Visby rules shall be null and void and
 8             of no force or effect as respects cargo
 9             claims. Any clauses in this contract
10             allocating responsibility or risk with
11             respect to loading, stowing, stevedoring,
12             lashing, securing, dunnaging, discharging and
13             delivery shall be deemed to apply only as
14             price terms and shall not be interpreted to
15             alter in any way the responsibilities of the
16             owner and the ship as carriers as defined in
17             the Hague rules as respects claims for cargo
18             loss and damage.
19
20        In maritime law, a Clause Paramount “identifies the law that

21   will govern the rights and liabilities of all parties to the bill

22   of lading,” Sompo Japan Ins. Co. Of America v. Union Pac. R.R.

23   Co., 
456 F.3d 54
, 56 (2d Cir. 2006) abrogated on other grounds by

24   Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. v. Regal-Beloit Corp., 
130 S. Ct. 2433

25   (2010), and, therefore, supersedes the free-in-and-out provision.

26   See Asoma Corp. v. M/V Seadaniel, 
971 F. Supp. 140
, 143 (S.D.N.Y.

27   1997) (finding in a similar case, with similar contractual

28   provisions, that the Clause Paramount governed).   Indeed, the

29   Clause Paramount itself states that its provisions govern

30   “[n]otwithstanding any other provisions in this contract.”

31        The Clause Paramount, therefore, incorporates Hague-Visby’s

32   prohibitions on waivers of in rem liability into the Voyage



                                    19
 1   Charter Party.    See Koppers Conn. Coke Co. v. McWilliams Blue

 2   Line Inc., 
89 F.2d 865
, 866 (2d Cir. 1937) (noting that the

 3   Harter Act [COGSA’s predecessor] could apply where the parties to

 4   a charter incorporated it, even in instances where it did not

 5   apply of its own force); see also Nichimen, 462 F.2d at 328

 6   (finding that parties may render COGSA applicable through

 7   contractual arrangements where it does not apply of its own

 8   force); see also Thyssen, 421 F.3d at 307(noting that parties may

 9   incorporate COGSA into a private carriage agreement using a

10   Clause Paramount).   To the extent that the free-in-and-out

11   provision might relieve the Akili of liability for improper

12   stowage it is, therefore, of no effect because it is prohibited

13   by Hague-Visby.

14        A final matter.    We noted above a concern that the

15   applicability of Hague-Visby’s rules invalidating a waiver of a

16   carrier’s obligations was not self-evident.   That was perhaps a

17   tad of an overstatement, but it might be argued that the Voyage

18   Charter Party’s contractual incorporation of Hague-Visby includes

19   the Applicability Provision, thereby requiring us to interpret

20   that provision and address the complexities explored above in the

21   interpretation of the identical provision in COGSA.   However, the

22   language of the Clause Paramount in the Voyage Charter Party

23   states that “any claims for loss or damage to cargo shall be



                                      20
 1   governed by the Hague-Visby rules as if cumpulsorily applicable

 2   by law.” (emphasis added).     This clearly applies the substantive

 3   rules in question without regard to the proper interpretation of

 4   the Applicability Provision.

 5         We also note that courts have read charter parties

 6   incorporating COGSA to incorporate the substantive rules of COGSA

 7   governing cargo damage claims whether or not the Applicability

 8   Provision would normally render COGSA inapplicable.    See e.g.,

 9   Itochu Int’l, Inc. v. M/V Western Avenir, 
1997 WL 537698
, *5

10   (E.D. La. 1997); Horn v. CIA de Navegacion Fruco, 
404 F.2d 422
,

11   429 n.6 (5th Cir. 1968); Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Calmar

12   Steamship Corp., 
404 F. Supp. 442
, 445 (W.D. Wash. 1975); cf.

13   Koppers, 89 F.2d at 866.   This seems to us a common sense

14   interpretation.   If COGSA or Hague-Visby apply by force of law,

15   contractual incorporation into a charter party or bill of lading

16   is unnecessary.   Incorporation of the substantive rules governing

17   cargo damage without regard to the Applicability Provision makes

18   sense largely as a protection against judicial rulings that the

19   statute and convention are not applicable as a matter of law.

20   b.   The Cross Appeal

21         Ferrostaal argues in its cross-appeal that the district

22   court erred in holding there was no in personam liability for

23   Akela and Almi.   We disagree.



                                       21
 1        One can recover for damage to cargo under COGSA or under a

 2   bailment theory.   See Rationis Enters. Inc. of Pan. v. Hyundai

 3   Mipo Dockyard, Co., Ltd., 
426 F.3d 580
, 587 n.3 (2d Cir. 2005).

 4   Ferrostaal does not contend it is entitled to recover under the

 5   former theory.   To prevail under the latter theory, there must

 6   have been a bailment relationship between the claimant and the

 7   ship owner or manager.   A “bailment does not arise unless

 8   delivery to the bailee is complete and he has exclusive

 9   possession of the bailed property.”   Thyssen Steel Co. v. M/V

10   Kavo Yerakas, 
50 F.3d 1349
, 1355 (5th Cir. 1995).   When a

11   charterer has taken responsibility for stowage of cargo aboard a

12   ship, the ship owner does not have exclusive possession and

13   cannot be held liable as a bailee.    Id. at 1354-55.   Therefore,

14   “no inference of negligence against the bailee arises if his

15   possession of the damaged bailed property was not exclusive of

16   that of the bailor.”   United States v. Mowbray’s Floating Equip.

17   Exchange, Inc., 
601 F.2d 645
, 647 (2d Cir. 1979) (citing Pan-Am.

18   Petrol. Transp. Co. v. Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co., 
281 F. 97
,

19   107 (2d Cir. 1922)).

20        Neither Akela nor Almi authorized S.M. China to issue bills

21   of lading on their behalf.   Ferrostaal could not have believed

22   such authorization to exist when the bill of lading named only

23   S.M. China as carrier and did not purport to be a document signed



                                     22
 1   “for the master.”   See Demsey, 461 F.2d at 1015 (finding that

 2   ship owner could not be made personally liable when charterer had

 3   no actual or apparent authority to so bind it); Yeramex Intern.

 4   v. S.S. Tendo, 
595 F.2d 943
, 948 (4th Cir. 1979) (same).9

 5        The carriers remained responsible for delivery of the goods

 6   and maintained exclusive control and custody over the cargos

 7   through agents they hired directly.    Akela and Almi, on the

 8   contrary, did not issue receipts for the subject cargo, enter

 9   into contracts of carriage with Zhongquing or Ferrostaal, hire

10   the stevedores, or have any agreement to load or to stow the

11   cargo.   See OT Trading, L.P. v. M/V Saga Morus, 
641 F.3d 105
,

12   109-10 (5th Cir. 2011) (even though the charter’s agent had

13   authority to sign bills of lading on behalf of the ship owner, it

14   signed on behalf of the sub-charterer carrier, and that therefore

15   the owner and the charterer were both in possession of the cargo,

16   and thus did not have exclusive control over the cargo).    Akela

17   and Almi are, therefore, not liable.


          9
           Both David Crystal, Inc. v. Cunard Steamship Co., Ltd., 
339 F.2d 295
 (2d Cir. 1964), and Leather’s Best, Inc. v. S.S.
     Mormaclynx, 
451 F.2d 800
 (2d Cir. 1971) are relied upon by
     Ferrostaal for the proposition that a bailment exists even when
     the cargo has been turned over by a carrier to stevedores,
     despite non-exclusivity. However, these cases both address the
     special question of the liability of a carrier to a shipper post-
     discharge but pre-delivery where the bill of lading is silent as
     to the exact time at which the carrier’s obligations cease. They
     are, therefore, inapposite.


                                     23
1                         CONCLUSION

2   We affirm for the reasons stated.




                              24

Source:  CourtListener

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