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Index
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Table of Cases
Table of Statutes
Table of Statutory Instruments
Table of Conventions and Rules
Table of European Legislation
Chapter 1 A short history of the bill of lading
(A) The origins of the bill of lading
Proof of entitlement
The contract of carriage
An indicium of title
Conclusions
(B) The eighteenth century and Lickbarrow v Mason
(C) The bill of lading in the nineteenth century and Barber v Meyerstein
The Hague Rules and the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924
Chapter 2 Definition and classification of bills of lading
(A) Introduction
(B) Bill of lading contrasted with other instruments
Receipts
Waybills
Delivery orders/warrants
Charterparties/booking notes
(C) Forms of bills of lading
Negotiable and non-negotiable bills
Bearer bills
Order bills
Straight consigned bills
Shipped bills
Received for shipment bills – introduction
Is a received for shipment bill of lading really a bill of lading?
Received for shipment bills of lading – other issues
Freight prepaid bills
Through bills and combined transport bills
Short/long form bills
Clean/claused bills
Originals and copy bills
Spent and stale bills
(D) Other definitions of bills of lading
The Factors Act 1889
COGSA 1971 and the Hague Rules
COGSA 1992
The Hamburg Rules
UCP 600
(E) Electronic bills
What are electronic bills of lading
Are electronic “bills” bills of lading?
Other problems
The BOLERO Scheme
The essDOCS Scheme
The future
Chapter 3 The issue of bills of lading
(A) Introduction
(B) The obligation to issue a bill of lading
The requirement to issue a bill of lading
(C) The obligation to issue in a particular form
Where the vessel is not chartered
Where the vessel is chartered
Particulars inserted in a bill of lading
Sets of bills
(D) Place and time/date of issue
Place of issue
Time of issue
(E) Failure to issue at all bills of lading or bills in an appropriate form
Failure or refusal to issue bill of lading
The relevance of charterparty terms
(F) Authority to sign/bind
(G) Authority and false or inaccurate bills
(H) Rights and obligations of the master/carrier on signing bills of lading
Contractual duty to take care
Article III rule 3 of the Hague Rules
(I) Status of parties concerned with bill of lading
Status of the shipper
Status of carrier
Status of the consignee
Status of notify party
(J) Split/subsequent/switch bills
Change of consignee
Splitting/cancelling/“switch” bills
(K) Indemnities consequent on issue
Chapter 4 Representations in the bill of lading
(A) Introduction
(B) The carrier’s obligation to record quality and quantity
The common law
The Hague and Hague-Visby Rules
(C) The legal status of representations made in the bill
At common law
(D) Representations in the bill of lading as between the shipper and carrier
Common law
Hague-Visby Rules
(E) Representations in the bill of lading in the hands of a transferee
The common law – estoppel
The common law – negligent misstatement and deceit
The Hague-Visby Rules
(F) Representations in the bill of lading as between the transferor and transferee
(G) Representations made without authority
Common law
Bills of Lading Act 1855, section 3
COGSA, section 4
Requirements of the section
Effect of the section
(H) Warranty of authority
(I) Conclusive evidence clauses
Chapter 5 Delivery
(A) Introduction
(B) The right to delivery of the goods onboard from the carrier
A contractual right to delivery
No right to delivery by reason of mere possession of the bill of lading
Conclusion
(C) The carrier’s right to deliver
Delivery without production of a bill
Delivery without production of a non-negotiable bill
Carrier protected by delivery to the holder of a negotiable bill
Delivery to the consignee named in a non-negotiable bill
The carrier’s failure to require the surrender of the bill of lading
Letters of indemnity against liability for delivery without the production of the bill of lading
Chapter 6 The bill of lading and property and title to the goods
(A) Introduction
(B) The bill of lading as a document of title at common law
Straight bills of lading
Received for shipment bills of lading
Mate’s receipts and delivery orders
Delivery warrants and orders
(C) Proprietary effects between sellers and buyers
The shipper’s/seller’s retention of the bill of lading
The nature of the interest reserved
Transfer of the bill of lading
(D) The transfer of the bill of lading other than to the buyer
Transfers of the bill of lading to banks or agents
(E) The bill of lading and good faith purchasers
Transfers under the Factors Act 1889
Dispositions by buyers and sellers
Chapter 7 The bill of lading as a contract
(A) Introduction
Contract contained or evidenced
(B) Formation of “the bill of lading contract”
Antecedent contract
One contract or more
No (apparent) antecedent contract
Bill of lading of no contractual force
Rectification
Contract concluded after issue of the bill
(C) Terms of the bill of lading contract
Which terms are contractually effective?
Inconsistency between terms of bill and other terms
Contractual content of bill in the hands of the indorsee
Principles of construction of the bill of lading contract
Terms and representations distinguished
Implied terms in a bill of lading contract
Classification of terms
Statutory control of bill of lading contracts
(D) Identity of parties to the bill of lading contract
Who is the contracting carrier?
Identity of the other contracting party
Estoppel
(E) Incorporation of terms into the bill of lading contract
General words of incorporation
Specific words of incorporation
Summary of principles
Identifying the charter whose terms are to be incorporated
(F) Other contractual issues
Termination
Duties post termination
Chapter 8 The transfer of contractual rights
(A) The position prior to COGSA 1992
The position at common law
The Bills of Lading Act 1855
Growing problems with the 1855 Act
(B) The doctrine in Brandt v Liverpool
(C) COGSA 1992
The holder of a bill of lading – the concept of possession
Obtaining possession
Restrictions on “holder”
In good faith
Contract of carriage
Estoppel
Set-off
Goods
Sea waybills
Ship’s delivery orders
Application of section 3
(D) The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
Chapter 9 Claims other than in contract
(A) Introduction
(B) Suit in negligence
General principles
Physical loss and damage
Economic loss
Title to sue in negligence
Negligence and damage occurring at different times
The relevance of contracts
International regimes
Substantive differences between claims in negligence and Hague Rules regime
The relevance of bailment
(C) Suit in bailment
The essence of bailment
Possession
Attornment
Duties and responsibilities of the bailee
Duty of the bailor
Title to sue
Sub-bailment
Bailment on terms
(D) Suit in wrongful interference with goods/conversion
Title to sue for wrongful interference with goods
Species of wrongful interference with goods
Quantum of damages in claims for wrongful interference
The effect of contractual terms on claims for wrongful interference
(E) The relevance of contractual terms to non-contractual claims
The basic principle
(1) Agency
(2) Contractual protection to “non-parties” – Himalaya clauses
Implied contract
Bailment on terms
Statutory force of law
Chapter 10 Contractual rights and obligations: The Hague Rules
(A) Introduction
(B) The rules – history and basic principles
History
(C) General principles of construction
Language
International convention
Use of travaux préparatoires
Interpretation of foreign versions of the Rules
(D) Application/incorporation of the rules
COGSA 1971: Introduction
Article X
Sub-rule X(a)
Sub-rule X(b)
Sub-rule X(c)
Section 1 of COGSA 1971
Foreign law applicable
The Hague Rules
(E) Individual Hague-Visby Rules
The basic scheme of the Hague-Visby Rules
Article I
Article II
Article III
Article III rule 1
Article III rule 2
Care of cargo at common law
The position under the Rules
Article III rule 3
Article III rule 4
Article III rule 5
Article III rule 6
Article III rule 6bis
Article III rule 7
Article III rule 8
Article IV
Article IV rule 1
Article IV rule 2
Article IV rule 3
Article IV rule 4
Article IV rule 5
Article IV rule 6
Article Vbis
Article VI
Article VII
Article VIII
Article IX
Article X
(F) The Hamburg Rules
Introduction
Application
Specific rules
(G) The Rotterdam Rules
Chapter 11 Combined transport and through bills of lading
(A) Introduction
Scope of this chapter
Main issues
Terminology
(B) Basic contractual issues
What is the ambit of the contract?
One contract of carriage (to which C is party)
Contracting as agent
Contract for carriage
The role of “freight forwarders” and “agents”
Principal, agent or both?
(C) Is it a bill of lading?
General considerations
Specific contexts
(D) Carrier’s liability
Which regime
Aspects of the Hague and Hague-Visby Rules
Chapter 12 Freight
(A) Introduction
(B) Right to freight – Conditions of earn/return
The common law position in the absence of specific contractual provision
Specific contractual provisions
(C) Who is liable for freight
The original contracting party
The subsequent holder or indorsee
Freight “as per charterparty”
Freight prepaid bills
(D) Who is entitled to freight
(E) Lien for freight
Lien on cargo
“Lien” on freight or sub-freights
(F) Defences to claims for freight
Rule against set-off
Illegality
Chapter 13 Primary remedies
(A) Damages
Non-delivery of cargo and delivery of damaged cargo
Late delivery
Failure by carrier to ship cargo
Late loading
Other “consequential” losses
Failure by cargo interests to load or take delivery of cargo
Representations in bills of lading
Damages for conversion or wrongful interference with goods
Interest
(B) Injunctions and related orders
Injunctions
Orders under the Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977, CPR Part 25 and the Arbitration Act 1996
(C) Other equitable remedies
Specific performance
Rectification
Miscellaneous remedies
(D) Declarations
Chapter 14 Conflicts and procedural matters
(A) Introduction
(B) Applicable law
Contract
(C) Choice of forum clauses
Validity
Scope of jurisdiction or arbitration clauses
(D) In rem actions
(E) In personam actions – The European regime
(F) In personam actions – The English regime
Presence in the jurisdiction
Service within the jurisdiction
Service out of the jurisdiction
(G) Ancillary remedies and other procedural matters
Stays of actions
Anti-suit injunctions
Negative declarations
Limitation claims
Miscellaneous other applications
Appendix 1: Hague Rules 1924
Appendix 2: Bills of Lading Act 1855 (Repealed)
Appendix 3: Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971
Appendix 4: Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 (C. 50)
Appendix 5: Schedule of Contracting States
Index
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