Madow Co. v. S.S. Liberty Exporter

569 F.2d 1183
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1978
DocketNo. 357, Docket 77-7388
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 569 F.2d 1183 (Madow Co. v. S.S. Liberty Exporter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madow Co. v. S.S. Liberty Exporter, 569 F.2d 1183 (2d Cir. 1978).

Opinion

GURFEIN, Circuit Judge:

The Madow Company (“Madow”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Carter, J.), dismissing its claim against the Ta Peng Steamship Co., Ltd. (“Ta Peng”) after trial. This suit in admiralty was brought by the plaintiff cargo owner against the last vessel to carry the damaged cargo, the SS “OCEANIC LONDON,” and against her owner, Ta Peng. The cargo was a shipment of horseshoes and other tack from Pusan, Korea, consigned to Madow at Boston. The shipment arrived at the Port of Boston in badly damaged condition. The District Court held that since Madow had failed to prove that Ta Peng received the cargo in good condition, Ta Peng was not liable for the damage. Accepting the findings of fact, we reverse the judgment because it incorrectly applied the governing maritime law.

[1184]*1184On December 28, 1972, at Pusan, Korea, the SS “LIBERTY EXPORTER” took on board two shipments consisting of 446 and 497 cartons of horseshoes and other tack consigned to Madow at the Port of Boston. On behalf of the ship’s master, two standard bills of lading covering the shipments were issued by the “L” Lines as a common carrier. The “LIBERTY EXPORTER” proceeded to the port of Hong Kong where her mortgage was foreclosed for default. The mortgagee sold the ship to the Waitby Shipping Company (“Waitby”). As a condition of the sale, Waitby accepted the obligation to arrange the delivery of the goods making up the cargo to their respective destinations.

Waitby then negotiated with appellee Ta Peng a “space charter” for the carriage aboard the SS “OCEANIC LONDON” of all the cargo from the “LIBERTY EXPORTER”. Under the terms of the charter, Ta Peng provided 300,000 cubic feet1 aboard the SS “OCEANIC LONDON” for $175,000. This amount equaled the sum of the freight prepaid on the cargo of the SS “LIBERTY EXPORTER” plus the amounts due on a collect basis under the original bills of lading covering the various consignments included in her cargo. Waitby appointed an agent, Hansen & Tidemann, Inc., of New York, to arrange for discharge and delivery of the cargo. The agent was instructed to collect the freight charges due on delivery and to credit them directly to Ta Peng.

It was established that Ta Peng’s usual practice when cargo is transshipped from another vessel to one of its ships is to determine the quantity and condition of the cargo being transshipped. After receiving the cargo aboard its ship without survey, in this instance, Ta Peng issued a “Memo Bill of Lading” dated February 19,1973. It did not prepare new bills of lading for presentation to the consignees, but agreed to deliver the cargo against surrender of the original bills of lading. Contrary to its usual practice, it made no effort to determine the condition of the cargo at Hong Kong.

The “Memo Bill of Lading” described the “ship” as “M.V. LIBERTY EXPORTER/M.V. OCEANIC LONDON.” It described the “Port of Loading” as Hong Kong and the “Port of Discharge from Ship” — “To Various Port [sic] in U.S.A. as per list attached on Space Charter Terms.” It described the “Shipper” as “Waitby Shipping Corporation c/o Dodwell & Co., Ltd. as Agents.” The cargo was “consigned to”— “Hansen and Tidemann, Inc., New York, For Distribution to the Various Consignees as per List Submitted by Dodwell & Co., Ltd., as Agents, Hong Kong.” “Total: Said to contain Twenty-Four Thousand Two Hundred and Thirty-Three Packages Only.”

The “Memo Bill of Lading” contained the following clause:

“Received cargoes from ‘OCEAN REX’ ex ‘LIBERTY EXPORTER’ on transshipment and space charter basis, said to contain as list attached. The carrier will absorb loading and discharging expenses but not responsible for the contents and conditions of the cargoes. Claims, if any, shall be for a/c of the owner ‘LIBERTY EXPORTER’ and shall be negotiated with the owner who issued the original bills of lading.”

At the time of the transshipment and issuance of this “Memo Bill of Lading” to Waitby, neither the shippers nor the consignees were aware that the cargo was being transshipped from the “LIBERTY EXPORTER” onto another vessel.

The SS “OCEANIC LONDON” arrived in Boston on April 16, 1973. The shipments consigned to Madow were discharged from the “OCEANIC LONDON” on or about April 20,1973. The trucker sent to pick up the goods at the pier shortly after the vessel’s arrival refused to take delivery of the cargo, since the cargo appeared to be wet and in an otherwise damaged condition. Before the trucker took delivery at the pier, a survey was conducted by John Jaffray, an independent surveyor, who concluded that [1185]*1185the shipment was damaged. His tests indicated, among other things, that the carton had been wetted with salt water.

After the survey mentioned, Madow took possession of the cargo under the original bills of lading issued at Pusan.

Ta Peng maintains that a claim for damage lies only against the issuer of the original bill of lading. It defends against liability upon the ground that it had named Wait-by as the shipper and had inserted an exculpatory clause in the new “Memo Bill of Lading”. It contends that it owes no duty to the consignees of the original bills of lading, including the plaintiff.

A shipper of goods by common carrier makes out a prima facie case for recovery for damaged cargo under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (“COGSA”)2 by showing delivery of the shipment to the carrier in good condition and damage at outturn. “Once a prima facie case has been established, the burden of proof is on the defendants to establish that the damage was not due to their negligence, or that it was occasioned by one of the ‘excepted causes’ in Section 1304(2) of COGSA.” See Demsey & Associates, Inc. v. SS “Sea Star”, 461 F.2d 1009, 1014, 1015 (2d Cir. 1972).

The carrier, upon receipt at Pusan of the cargo consigned to Madow, issued negotiable clean bills of lading. Under COGSA § 3(4), 46 U.S.C. § 1303(4), these clean bills of lading are prima facie evidence that the carrier received the shipments in good condition. Demsey & Associates, Inc. v. SS “Sea Star”, supra. Since no evidence to the contrary was introduced, the District Court properly found that the shipments were in good condition when loaded aboard the SS “LIBERTY EXPORTER” at Pusan.

It is the normal rule that when an initial voyage was begun with a “clean” bill of lading and there are successive carriers, the liability falls upon the last carrier, unless it can prove that it was not negligent, or that it comes within one of the COGSA “excepted causes.” § 1304(2). The rule goes back to the common law and is supported by a balancing of the availability to the respective parties of the means for minimizing the risk. Since the carrier that picks up the cargo from another vessel generally has the power to command inspection upon loading, a power which the faraway shipper or consignee does not possess, the risk quite ex-pectably falls on the last carrier. This may be put either in terms of a presumption that the original cleanliness of the cargo continues, Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. C. C. Whitnack Produce Co., 258 U.S. 369, 372, 42 S.Ct. 328, 66 L.Ed. 665 (1922),

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Bluebook (online)
569 F.2d 1183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madow-co-v-ss-liberty-exporter-ca2-1978.