TradeArbed Inc v. Medi Trader MV

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2010
Docket08-31075
StatusUnpublished

This text of TradeArbed Inc v. Medi Trader MV (TradeArbed Inc v. Medi Trader MV) 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
TradeArbed Inc v. Medi Trader MV, (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

Case: 08-31075 Document: 00511012649 Page: 1 Date Filed: 01/26/2010

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED January 26, 2010

No. 08-31075 Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk

TRADEARBED INC; ARCELOR TRADING USA INC, doing business as Freemak Industries; FREEMAK INDUSTRIES INC,

Plaintiff-Appellees v.

WESTERN BULK CARRIERS K/S,

Defendant-Appellant

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana USDC No. 2:03-CV-00529

Before BARKSDALE, SOUTHWICK, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.* PER CURIAM:** At issue in this maritime-shipping dispute is whether the district court erred in determining liability and damages for cold-rolled steel coils and steel pipes shipped on the MEDI TRADER from Eastern Europe to Houston and New Orleans. Western Bulk challenges: the district court’s finding the coils were undamaged when loaded onto the MEDI TRADER, but damaged when unloaded;

* Judge Haynes concurs in the judgment only. ** Pursuant to 5TH CIR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR . R. 47.5.4. Case: 08-31075 Document: 00511012649 Page: 2 Date Filed: 01/26/2010

No. 08-31075

its damages assessment; and its finding Western Bulk was the sole Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA) carrier—and therefore the sole party liable for damages—with respect to TradeArbed, Inc. (the coils’ owner), and Freemak Industries, Inc. (the pipes’ owner). AFFIRMED. I. Western Bulk was the last in a chain of time charterers of the MEDI TRADER, tracing back to her owner, Seafarers Shipping, Inc. Seafarers was a party to this action, but, post-trial, was dismissed without prejudice, as discussed infra. A. The cargo at issue for TradeArbed and Freemak is described in turn. The primary disputes concern TradeArbed. 1. In December 2002, TradeArbed entered into a charter party with Western Bulk to ship hot-rolled and cold-rolled steel coils on the MEDI TRADER, from Bourgas, Bulgaria, to New Orleans. TradeArbed later became Arcelor Trading (they are referred to as TradeArbed). (Although it does not affect this analysis, there were two charter parties signed on 5 December 2002. Western Bulk negotiated one with TradeArbed; the other, with Arcelor Trading. The latter exists to reflect the above-noted merger. The charter parties refer only to “Hot Rolled Coils”, but the parties understood this term covered cold-rolled coils as well.) TradeArbed’s coils were loaded onto the MEDI TRADER in January 2003. The moisture-sensitive cold-rolled coils were shipped in the usual protective wrappings; the non-moisture-sensitive hot-rolled coils were not wrapped. TradeArbed’s damages at issue concern only the cold-rolled coils.

2 Case: 08-31075 Document: 00511012649 Page: 3 Date Filed: 01/26/2010

Three bills of lading (numbers six–eight) covered the cold-rolled coils, and each noted tears, dents, and minor rust on some of the wrappings. Otherwise, the bills were clean. TradeArbed’s coils were stowed in holds one, three, and five. After loading in Bourgas, hold one contained cold-rolled coils covered by bill six, along with TradeArbed’s bill-nine cold-rolled coils and another shipper’s galvanized-rolled coils (also moisture-sensitive, the galvanized-rolled coils were wrapped similar to cold-rolled coils); hold three contained cold-rolled coils covered by bill seven, along with some of TradeArbed’s hot-rolled coils and another shipper’s galvanized-rolled coils; and hold five contained cold-rolled coils covered by bills seven and eight, along with more of TradeArbed’s hot-rolled coils. Holds two and four were filled with other shippers’ cargo. Cargo was added to holds one and three at a subsequent port, before ocean transit to the United States. Evidence was presented at trial regarding the existence of condensation in the holds, which can cause rust on moisture-sensitive cold-rolled coils. The moisture was claimed to have entered the holds from either or both of two principal sources. First, it could have entered with non-moisture-sensitive cargo, like the hot- rolled coils, which, prior to loading, were stored in the open air and were covered with snow during loading. During loading, the MEDI TRADER’s chief mate objected to stowing wet hot-rolled coils in the same hold with moisture-sensitive cold-rolled coils. Second, moisture could have entered when, at a subsequent port, cargo was loaded into the holds during rainfall. This was also over the chief mate’s protests. After discharging some of her cargo in Houston, including Freemak’s pipes, the MEDI TRADER proceeded to New Orleans, where her remaining

3 Case: 08-31075 Document: 00511012649 Page: 4 Date Filed: 01/26/2010

cargo, including the cold-rolled coils, was unloaded; those coils were still in wrappers. In both Houston and New Orleans, a number of surveyors inspected the cargo and the holds. Surveyors agreed hold three contained “tide marks”—evidence of standing water in the hold. In the three holds containing the coils at issue, surveyors also found “drip-down condensation” resulting from water condensing at the top of the hold and dripping onto the cargo. Surveyors generally agreed this was fresh- water, as opposed to salt-water, condensation, and attributed it to the moisture introduced during loading. It was also noted that some coils were dripping water during unloading in New Orleans. TradeArbed’s cold-rolled coils were loaded from the MEDI TRADER onto barges for shipment to their final destinations up the Mississippi River. They were not unwrapped until they reached those destinations. The original buyer of the bills-seven and -eight coils rejected them as unfit, citing heavy rust. Another round of surveys generally attributed the rust to moisture encountered in ocean transit. TradeArbed sold those coils to the original buyer at a depreciated value. Surveys approved of the new sale price as “fair, reasonable, [and] represent[ative of] conditions viewed”. The bill-six coils were rejected based on damage caused by rust and oil emulsification within the coils. More so than with the bills-seven and -eight coils, evidence conflicted on whether the bill-six coils were damaged in ocean transit. The original buyer of those coils rejected them, but TradeArbed reached agreement with a different buyer to purchase them at a depreciated value. Surveys described the new bill-six sale price as “representat[ative of] conditions viewed, . . . fair, reasonable, and . . . recommended as the best disposition in the matter . . . .”

4 Case: 08-31075 Document: 00511012649 Page: 5 Date Filed: 01/26/2010

2. For the same voyage on the MEDI TRADER, Freemak also chartered, from Western Bulk, space to ship its steel pipes. They were loaded in December 2002 in Odessa, Ukraine. Upon unloading them in Houston, it was discovered they had been crushed by rebar. As it did at trial, Western Bulk concedes the pipes were damaged during the ocean transit. B. TradeArbed and Freemak filed an action for damages against: the MEDI TRADER, in rem; her owner (Seafarers); her manager (Victoria Ship Management, Inc.); and her charterer (Western Bulk). The district court consolidated the action with one filed earlier by Cargill Ferrous International, another shipper with cargo on the MEDI TRADER during the voyage at issue. Seafarers and Victoria filed a cross claim and a third-party complaint against Western Bulk, seeking indemnification for damage to the cargo. The district court bifurcated the trial, separating “the cargo quantum claims from the issues of liability between [Western Bulk] and Seafarers”. Cargill Ferrous Int’l v. M/V MEDI TRADER, 513 F. Supp. 2d 609, 612 (E.D. La. 2007). The second part of the bifurcated trial has yet to occur.

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TradeArbed Inc v. Medi Trader MV, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tradearbed-inc-v-medi-trader-mv-ca5-2010.