CIF Contracts COPY Flashcards
Dupont v. British South Africa Co (1901)
Another construction case.
Performance of the buyer’s obligations to pay depended on the quantity of goods that arrived at the port of destination.
Contract required half of the contract price to be paid upon shipment of the goods, and the other half at the port of destination.
Held; notwithstanding that the payment clause, in effect, divided the risk between the buyer and the seller – this COULD still be a CIF contract.
Toepfer Lenersan-Poortman NV [1980]
Where the contract does not expressly specify a time for tender of documents, the courts may imply a term to this effect in such a case - such an implied term might derive from the other terms of the contract.
Here, contract did not specify time for tender of documents but did specify a time for payment by the buyer - “payment againt documents”.
Held; time for tender was the time at which payment was to be made.
Krohn & Co. v. Mitsui & Co. Europe GmbH [1978]
Another construction case.
Where the contract is a contract for the sale of goods such as Kerosine, which can evaporate during shipment, and the parties have agreed that the price will be determined on actual quantity that has arrived excluding the evaporated quantity, held that this could still be a CIF contract.
If this is a CIF contract, and the goods are to be weighed at the port of destination, then if the seller diverts the vessel from the port of destination to a different port, the seller will be in breach of contract.
James v. The Commonwealth (1939)
AUSTRALIA
Australian court expressed the view that, if the seller ships a definite quantity of goods in the performance of the contract, that would constitute prima facie appropriation.
Suzuki & Co. v. Burgett and Newsam (1922)
Contract provided for shipment within a time limit, but it did not say that time was in the essence of the contract.
Held; that nevertheless, the seller was bound to ship the goods within the time stated - not necessary for the contract to have stated that time was of the essence.
Whatever the period is, the duty of the seller is to ship the goods within the time specified in the contract.
James Finlay & Co Ltd v Kwik Hoo Tong [1929]
Kwei Tek Chao v. British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954]
Courts assumed that where the bill of lading is non-genuine, the buyer is entitled to reject it, even though the seller is not guilty of fraud (because he was not aware of any false statement)
If this is the law, it is different from the position where the documents are presented through a bank (United City Merchants Ltd v Royal Bank of Canada)
But uncertain - scope for argument - complicated by Lord Diplock’s remarks in
Gill & Duffus SA v. Berger & Co. Inc. [1984]
The Julia [1949]
Another construction case - leading case.
Seller had given a delivery order to his own agent in Antwerp, who was to come to collect the goods from the carrier - buyer was to pay the contract price to seller’s agent, and then take goods from him.
Contract expressed to be “C.I.F. Antwerp”.
H of L Held; NOT a CIF contract, because the buyer did not have the right to take delivery of the goods from the carrier.
Instead, it was a contract for the delivery of goods “on shore” – goods had to be landed before they could be delivered to the buyer.
+ here, buyer bound to pay when he received goods, not against documents.
+ buyer did not receive the delivery order to collect the goods.
DOCS TENDERED HERE GAVE BUYER NO RIGHTS DIRECTLY AGAINST THE CARRIER - goods could only be transferred by physical delivery, and not through the delivery order (which was acting as a bill of lading).
LORD PORTER
“the whole circumstances have to be looked at.”
NB: also authority that ship’s delivery orders can be tendered instead of bills of lading in a bulk sale, as long as the contract provides.
Practical Considerations (remedies)
Important when advising client in a PQ:
When buyer deciding whether or not to reject the goods - buyer can still accept the defective goods and claim damages - if he rejects the goods, having already paid for the documents, he has no leverage against a seller in a distant country! (Difficulties in enforcing judgment, etc.)
Therefore, buyer might consider accepting the goods and finding a way to get value from them (e.g. selling them cheaply rather than using in your factory, then claiming against the seller for the balance - part of mitigating losses).
Tradax Export SA v. André & Cie [1976]
Here, authorities did not announce a definite ban on the export of the goods in question - said that they might impose one.
Is seller under a duty to ship the goods earlier on in the shipment period?
Held; NO - must announce definition prohibtion, not possibility of one.
Seller will not be in breach; rather the prohbition will FRUSTRATE THE CONTRACT.
Distinguishable from Ross T Smyth.
Sharpe & Co. Ltd v. Nosawa [1917]
In a case where the contract does not specify a particular time for he tender of documents, the seller is bound to tender the documents as soon as possible after the goods have been shipped.
Provisional Delivery
Can be effected in 3 ways…
STAGE 1 - seller’s delivery obligations:
ACTUAL SHIPMENT OF THE GOODS - can be done in 3 ways:
(1) CIF seller can put the goods on to a vessel himself.
(2) CIF seller can purchase goods afloat - i.e. buy goods that are already on another ship, provided they conform with the contract of sale, and use them to perform the contract.
(3) CIF seller can allocate his own goods that are already afloat to perfrom the contract of sale, provided they conform with the contact.
Myth & Co. Ltd v Bailey Son & Co. Ltd (1940)
Lord Wright:
The CIF contract “is more widely and more frequently in use than any other contract used for purposes of sea-borne commerce. An enormous number of transactions, in value amounting to untold sums, are carried out every year under CIF contracts.”
Appropriation
+ Notice of Appropriation
The selection of the goods to be used to perform the contract.
Normally done by the seller, as buyer is not present - will need to be communicated to the buyer, normally by sending a notice of appropriation (AKA ‘Declaration of Shipment) - if contract requires one, becomes part of a CIF seller’s duties - failure = breach; but if it doesn’t require one, then seller not bound to deliver one.
Purpose of Notice of Appropriation:
(1) Allows buyer to make onward contracts to sell the goods, even before receiving bill of lading, as NoA gives buyer confidence that goods have been shipped and has more detailed information about them, specifically the date of shipment.
(2) Enables buyer to make any necessary arrangements for storage at port of destination, for the same reasons as above.
C Groom v Barber [1915]
Seller must present VALID and EFFECTIVE insurance POLICY (contianing all the terms) - so not cover note or certificate
IF INSURANCE POLICY NOT VALID AND EFFECTIVE, BUYER CAN REJECT IT.
Mere fact buyer can’t claim under it doesn’t make it invalid - e.g. coz buyer not insured against particular risk that has occured.
Key question: has seller made contract of insurance on terms usual in the trade?
If yes, it is valid, even if buyer can’t make claim because not covered for the risk.
Here, goods lost when ship sunk by German warship - policy of insurance did not cover war risk - but this was usual in the trade that it was matter for buyer to insure against war risk himself if he wished
Held; insurance policy was both valid and effective because the policy was on terms that were usual in the trade.
Symbolic Delivery
STAGE 2: seller’s delivery obligations
DELIVERY OF DOCUMENTS - 3 main docs a seller must tender:
(1) BILL OF LADING
- serves as a receipt of the goods received by the carrier; as a document of title; and evidences the terms of the contract of carriage - see separate entry.
(2) INSURANCE POLICY
- the insurance is a contract with an insurer to cover the GOODS during the sea voyage against risks which is customary in the teade to cover.
- policy contains the detailed T&Cs (certificate is rarely sufficient unless it entitled holder to demand formal policy so can claim against insurer)
- Made by seller (as CIF) but must be transferrable to buyer, so that if buyer cannot claim against carrier for breach of contract, can claim against the insurer.
(3) SELLER’S COMMERCIAL INVOICE
- states the kind and quantity of goods shipped, the price of the goods as agreed and any other charges or cost, and then provides the total amount due from buyer.
(4) ADDITIONAL DOCUMENTS
- parties may stiuplate that other docs must also be tendered - e.g. certificate of quality.
- becomes part of seller’s duties
In a CIF contract, once the seller has tendered these three documents, and the documents are effective, that is the end of the seller’s duties.
Delivery Order
Sometimes, a seller will ship a large quantity of goods in a vessel but the goods will be destined to different buyers – i.e. in a single bulk consignment.
Carrier will give the seller a bill of lading for the entire bulk.
When vessel arrives at the port of destination, the seller will give a buyer who has paid a “Delivery Order”.
This is an order to the carrier requiring the carrier to deliver a particular quantity of the bulk goods to the person named in the order.
United City Merchants Ltd v Royal Bank of Canada [1983]
CIF contract through bank’s letter of credit.
Bill of Lading issued by the carrier contained a false date of shipment.
This date written down was still within the contract period – thus, on its face, the bill of lading looked like a valid bill of lading.
But, before bank could make payment to seller, discovered that bill was false - the actual date of shipment was outside contractual period - so not a genuine bill of lading - but seller not aware of false statement (as this was done by carrier), at the time they gave bill of lading to bank.
H of L held; [LORD DIPLOCK]
the bill of lading was non-genuine, and although the falsity of the bill of lading had been discovered, nevertheless the bank was bound to pay the seller – because the seller was not committing any fraud.
(Position is different where sale is directly between buyer and seller, no letter of credit)
Kwei Tek Chao v. British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954]
Restitution
Shipment required in October - actually shipped on 3rd November; but bill of lading falsely stated 31st October, so appeared on its face to conform.
So buyer accepted bill and paid for it.
When discovered falsity, brought action in restitution for the price.
Rejected - held;
Although there had been a failure of consideration, it wasn’t a COMPLETE failure, only PARTIAL - because a bill of lading with an incorrect date is still capable of giving title to the goods, so buyer still getting something of value.
Distinguishable from The Raffaella.
Need a COMPLETE FAILURE OF CONSIDERATION - e.g. like forgery, or non-shipment of the goods.
James Finlay & Co Ltd v Kwik Hoo Tong [1929]
Kwei Tek Chao v. British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954]
(Remedies)
Courts recognised the right of the buyer to recover damages for breach of contract where the buyer has paid for a bill of lading that is not genuine - so if action in restitution doesn’t succeed, buyer has another option.
Legal basis: if the document had stated the truth, then the buyer would have had the right to reject it.
By giving the false date of shipment, the buyer lost the opportunity to reject the bill of lading.
Damages awarded constitute the difference between the contract price of the goods and the value of the goods when the buyers discovered the breach of the seller’s obligation.
Kwei Tek Chao v. British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954]
Authority that BUYER HAS TWO SEPARATE, SUCCESSIVE RIGHTS OF REJECTION.
Arise in succession; not at the same time.
(1) Reject the documents
(2) Reject the goods themselves.
Question when exercising first right - do documents conform with the contract? Not whether goods conform. If documents don’t conform, buyer can reject them - but can’t reject conforming documents on the ground the goods are non-conforming: they are SEPARATE RIGHTS.
If buyer rejects goods, they revest in the seller (bill of lading must be returned).
Here, contract required shipment by 31 October; actually shipped 3 November.
Bill of lading stated 31 October
Held; a CIF buyer has two rights of rejection (the right to reject documents, and a separate right to reject the goods).
DEVLIN J:
“…the right to reject the documents arises when the documents are tendered, and the right to reject the goods arises when they are landed and when after examination not found to confirm with the contract”.
If the documents are compliant and buyer rejects the documents (i.e. a wrongful rejection), buyer will be in breach of contract – will be regarded as a repudiatory breach of contract – (of a condition) - means seller can claim damages AND terminate contract.
Kleinjan & Holst NV Rotterdam v. Bremer [1972]
On notice of appropriation..
Authority: if contract requires seller to issue a notice of appropriation, SELLER HAS A DUTY OF STRICT COMPLIANCE.
Seller must comply with ALL requirements in relation to the notice of appropriation.
This covers both
(i) the TIME at which the notice must be sent; and
(ii) the CONTENTS of the notice.
Held; if the seller fails to comply strictly with the notice of appropriation, the buyer then has a right to reject that notice, and therefore to reject the goods.
(But buyer can waibe the breach)
Clements Horst Co. v. Biddell Bros [1911]
Buyer does not have the right to examine the goods before payment – must pay for the goods in exchange for the documents beforehand - not entitled to insist on inspecting the goods first - if he does so, will be in repudiatory breach of contract.
Court said that if the buyer was to have this right, it would be commercially unsound, because
(1) Seller would be bound to make arrangements for inspection facilities at port of destination (held; this is not commercially viable as seller will normally be thousands of miles away); or
(2) Seller would have to give buyer bill of lading so buyer can collect goods and inspect the, BEFORE paying for them - this would defeat very purpose of CIF - bill of lading most useful document for seller - it is seller’s security for payment - if seller releases it to buyer before payment, he would lose his security.
Stein, Forbes & Co. v. County Tailoring Co. (1916)
Contract required “payment against documents on arrival of the ship”.
Held; the duty of the buyer was still to pay on presentation of documents - must use clear language if intending to depart from the general rule applying to CIF contracts (that is, departing from s.28 SOGA)
Held; here, Buyer’s payment obligation arose upon presentation of the documents, but the actual time of payment is postponed until arrival of the vessel.
Similar:
Soon Hua Seng Co Ltd v Glencore Crain Co
C Groom Ltd v. Barber [1915]
Goods lost in transit
Where bill of lading is valid and effective, buyer must accept it and pay against it EVEN IF THE GOODS HAVE BEEN LOST IN TRANSIT.
Buyer’s remedy is normally a claim against the carrier or insurer – seller must still be paid against the documents!
CIF seller is bound to deliver the documents, and not the goods.
Case where ship was attacked by German forces - when seller tendered documents, buyer was aware goods had been lost and refused to accept the documents.
Held; buyer bound to accept and pay for the documents because they were conforming - buyer’s claim would be against insurer - the fact that insurance policy did not cover war risk was not seller’s problem, because he had taken out insurance policy that was usual in the trade - buyer could have taken out additional insurance if he wanted.
(Cite for this proposition alongside Re Weis & Co)
Functions of the BILL OF LADING
(1) IT SERVES AS A RECEIPT FOR THE GOODS RECEIVED BY THE CARRIER
- states the type, quantity and apparent condition of the goods - carrier is then bound to deliver the goods at the port of destination in the same condition.
- enables buyer to know if something is wrong when the goods arrive.
- statements within are binding on the carrier - carrier cannot deny what is says
(2) AS A DOCUMENT OF TITLE
- it gives A RIGHT TO POSSESSION of the goods they represent.
- whoever is the lawful holder of the bill is the only person entitled at that time to possession of the goods.
- essential for seller to transfer it to buyer to enable buyer to collect the goods at the port of destination.
(3) EVIDENCES THER TERMS OF THE CONTRACT OF CARRIAGE
- enables buyer to quickly look at the bill and determine whether the terms of the contract of carriage that has been made by the seller, are in accordance with the terms of the contract for the sale of goods.
- if not, buyer entitled to treat seller as being in breach of contract.
Arnold Karlberg & Co. v. Blythe, Green Jourdain & Co. [1916]
COURT OF APPEAL
Sale of goods or documents?
C of A rejected veiw of High Court.
Said that CIF contract IS A CONTRACT FOR THE SALE OF GOODS, TO BE PERFORMED BY THE DELIVERY OF DOCUMENTS.
(LJ BANKES)
This is the dominant view today.
Reasoning:
- A CIF seller is bound by the normal obligations of any other seller of goods.
- Bound to ship goods that comply with the requirements of the contract, in relation to the quantity, quality, fitness for purpose, compliance with description, of the goods.
- Like any other seller of goods, the CIF seller must be capable of giving title to the goods that he is selling.
SO STILL ABOUT THE GOODS.
Manbre Saccharine Co v Corn Products Co [1919]
Seller has a duty to tender the documents (valid and effective) at the time specified by the contract.
Bound to do so even if goods have already been destoyed or damages.
No excuse for seller to refuse to tender the documents on the basis that the goods have been damaged or lost.
Re Anglo-Russian Merchant Traders and John Batt & Co. (London) Ltd [1917]
Where contract specifies a shipment period, the seller has a right to ship the goods ANY TIME within that shipment period - seller is not bound to ship the goods at a particular time within the shipment period - can do at the beginning, middle or end of that period, it is entirely up to him.
Held here, if seller decides to ship late on in the shipment period, and something happens to prevent shipment (e.g. an unforeseen supervening event), it is NOT a breach of contract – the buyer cannot argue that the seller should’ve shipped the goods earlier in the shipment period.
Hoare v. Dresser (1859)
Held; where contract requires seller to ship goods in a named vessel, and the seller ships goods of the contract description in that vessel, that could amount to appropriation, even in the absence of a notice of appropriation.
Slightly different to Produce Brokers v Olympia Oil and Cake Co. - but seems to contradict what it generally says.
So English law is confused on whether any conduct can amount to appropriation.
Arnold Karlberg & Co. v. Blythe, Green Jourdain & Co. [1915]
HIGH COURT
Sale of goods or documents?
Said that a CIF contract is not a contract for the sale of goods but rather for the sale of documents.
Because: what the buyer actually gets from the seller are the documents, under which the buyer gets a right of action to bring claims against the relevant third parties.
Therefore, it is not a contract for the sale of goods, but a contract for the sale of documents which confer rights of action.
Soon Hua Seng Co. Ltd v. Glencore Grain Co. Ltd [1996]
Held; duty of seller to tender documents is not cancelled out by a provision in the contract that the exact amount to be paid will be calculated at the port of destination.
Seller must still tender the documents and the buyer’s obligation to pay still arises at that point (I.E. AGAINST DOCUMENTDS) but is postponed until arrival of the vessel at the port of destination.
Echoes Stein, Forbes & Co. v. County Tailoring Co.