Brown & Root, Inc. v. M/v Peisander, Etc.

648 F.2d 415, 1982 A.M.C. 929, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12135
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 19, 1981
Docket77-3277
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 648 F.2d 415 (Brown & Root, Inc. v. M/v Peisander, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown & Root, Inc. v. M/v Peisander, Etc., 648 F.2d 415, 1982 A.M.C. 929, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12135 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

The question in this case is whether the $500 package limitation provided in the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA) limits the recovery of a shipper against a stevedore when the bill of lading incorporating COGSA expressly states that “in no case” will recovery exceed $500, but the applicable tariff, obliquely referred to in the bill of lading (B/L) establishes a means to obtain increased liability by payment of a specified additional transportation charge.

What’s It All About?

This case was tried in the District Court on a stipulated set of facts. As the stipulations reveal, 1 Brown & Root (Shipper) deliv *417 ered a crate of machinery on December 24, 1974, to the dock in Houston. Young & Co. of Houston (Stevedore) was the contracting Stevedore. The crate was to be loaded aboard M/Y Peisander, owned by China Mutual Steam Navigation Co., Ltd. and operated by Barber Blue Sea Line (Carrier). Unfortunately, the forklift truck operated by Stevedore dropped the crate while transporting it toward shipside. The damage amounted to $56,048.75.

All the parties agree that the Stevedore was at fault. Yet the parties disagree 2 on the extent of the Stevedore’s liability in dollars and cents — the difference exceeds $55,000.

Whatever the ultimate legal conclusion about the application and significance of the tariff, the parties stipulated also that the cargo interest did not declare any value and, for whatever it’s worth, Shipper “had shipped frequently in the past . .. and shipped frequently after this occurrence with Barber Blue Sea Line ...” but had not “on any of these occasions declared any value.”

Scaling The Himalaya

The principal controversy below was whether the Stevedore could claim the benefit of the $500 COGSA limitation. This in turn depends on the validity and application of that clause which, following the tradition of the admiralty that speaks in terms of the “Jason clause” 3 and the “Inchmaree clause” 4 , is attributed universally, but nevertheless quite erroneously, to the Himalaya. 5 Ironically, the Carrier here ex *418 pressly repeated this popular misnomer in the stipulated B/L clause 3, “Identity of Carrier and Himalaya Clause,” which provided that “all defenses under the B/L shall inure to the benefit of the Carrier’s agents [and] any independent contractor, including Stevedores, performing any of the Carrier’s obligations under the contract of carriage 6 .... ” As we shall see later, it takes many Sherpas to carry away the Himalaya.

Although the matter is not completely free of doubt, because Shipper’s final brief to the trial court on the merits concluded that judgment “... should be entered for [Shipper] against all three defendants [vessel interests and Stevedore] jointly and severely, in the amount of $56,048.75,” the parties were focusing primarily on the liability of Stevedore, not the Carrier, for unlimited damage. So intent were the parties that the formal stipulation, providing, first, that the Stevedore is liable for $56,-048.75 “unless its liability is limited to $500,” went on to provide that if it maintained its Himalaya defense, judgment should be entered for Shipper against all defendants in the sum of $500, but if that defense is rejected, judgment should be entered for Shipper against Stevedore for the full amount but in favor of Shipper against the Carrier in the amount of $500. 7

Indeed, as we read the stipulation, it was the purpose of the parties in the event Stevedore lost on Himalaya to impose the full burden on Stevedore since even the limited liability of the Carrier for $500 was conditioned on the financial inability of Stevedore to pay the full sum.

*419 Thus, in the trial court, except for the concluding demand for full recovery against Carrier and Stevedore, the attack was entirely on the right of Stevedore to a Himalaya $500 limitation.

What’s Before Us?

When the case came before us on appeal, things became quite different. Without the least deferential nod toward the specific stipulated limitation as to the Carrier (see note 7, supra), Shipper’s brief contended specifically that the trial court “erred in allowing defendants [Carrier and Stevedore] to limit their liability to $500 per package, as defendants failed to meet their burden of establishing the validity of the package limitation ...” and by prayer requested that the “judgment should be reversed and [Shipper] should be awarded recovery in full ... against all defendants, both jointly and severely.” This theme was sounded fervently on oral argument.

Both on argument and by formal brief, Carrier and Stevedore pointed out this marked change in theory between that asserted at the trial and in this Court. As they say it, Shipper went on the theory that Carrier was entitled to limit its liability but not Stevedore. No contention was made below by Shipper that the COGSA limitation was unavailable to Carrier because of any deficiency in the B/L clause.

This change of heart came about because of the intervening decision of the Ninth Circuit in Pan American World Airways, Inc. v. California Stevedore and Ballast Company, 559 F.2d 1173, 1978 A.M.C. 1839 (9th Cir. 1977), which held under a substantially identical Barber Blue Sea Line B/L that the “in no case” language in clause 18 8 made the limitation void, thus putting on the carrier the burden of establishing that the shipper had the choice of rates to attain increased valuation.

In view of the very precise stipulation (see note 7, supra), Shipper can complain of no error with respect to the judgment against Carrier. This Court has no right or power to modify the judgment as against the Carrier based, as it was, on this precise stipulation. An affirmance of that part of the judgment is therefore in order.

But what of the claim by Shipper against Stevedore? Here things are quite different. The stipulation on judgment see (If 12, note 7, supra) plainly states that if Stevedore succeeds in its Himalaya defense, judgment is to be entered against Stevedore and Carrier for $500; but if this defense fails for Stevedore, it is liable for the full damage sum of $56,048.75. More important, the stipulation (see 116, note 1, supra), after prescribing that as between Shipper and Carrier the bill of lading and the tariff governed, expressly provided that the “parties disagree as to whether relations between the cargo interest ... and [Stevedore] . .. were governed by said tariff and bill of lading.” Building on this, as it properly may, Shipper contends that, at most, all the Himalaya clause does is extend

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Bluebook (online)
648 F.2d 415, 1982 A.M.C. 929, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-root-inc-v-mv-peisander-etc-ca5-1981.