United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
No. 93-3509.
CARGILL INCORPORATED and Savannah Foods, Inc., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
GOLDEN CHARIOT MV, The, her engines, boilers, tackle, furniture, apparel, etc., in rem and
Golden Chariot Marinera, S.A., in personam, Defendants-Appellants.
Sept. 12, 1994.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
Before WISDOM, DAVIS and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.
W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
The M/V Golden Chariot and Golden Chariot Marinera, S.A. ("Marinera") appeal the district
court's denial of its motion to stay federal court proceedings pending arbitration. We affirm.
I.
This dispute arose over the contamination of a cargo of sugar aboard the M/V Golden
Chariot. Savannah Foods (Savannah) entered a contract to buy sugar from Cargill, Inc. Cargill
purchased the sugar from Argentinean and Paraguayan sources, and then chartered the M/V Golden
Chariot from its owner, Marinera, to transport the sugar from Buenos Aires, Argentina to Savannah,
Georgia. After loading was complete, Marinera delivered clean on board bills of lading to Cargill.
Six bills of lading were negotiated and transferred from Cargill to Savannah, five of which were for
the Argentinean sugar and one of which was for the Paraguayan sugar.
When the vessel arrived in Georgia, glass and bottles were discovered in the Paraguayan
sugar. Savannah attempted to reject the entire shipment of sugar, but Cargill claimed that Savannah
held title and thus bore the risk of loss.
Despite Cargill's contention that it did not bear the risk of loss, Cargill presented a claim to
the cargo underwriters; Cargill and Savannah argue that this was done on Savannah's behalf. They
also maintain that Cargill collected the payment for the loss and applied it against Cargill's invoice to
Savannah for the purchase price of the sugar.
Cargill then filed this suit against Marinera seeking compensation for the loss. The complaint
was later amended to add Savannah as a plaintiff and states that Savannah and/or Cargill were the
owners, successors, or predecessors in title to the cargo.
Marinera filed a motion to stay proceedings pending arbitration. Marinera relied on the
charter party between Cargill and Marinera, which contains an arbitration clause stating that "any and
all differences and disputes of whatsoever nature arising out of this charter shall be put to arbitration
in the City of New York." Cargill argued that the governing contracts were the bills of lading issued
by Marinera to Cargill and negotiated to Savannah. The bills of lading contain no arbitration clause.
The district court determined that the dispute was not subject to arbitration. The court based
its conclusion on its determination that Savannah owned the sugar at the time of the loss and was the
proper party to assert the claim, that the bill of lading was the contract of carriage, and that the bill
of lading for the Paraguayan sugar did not incorporate the charter party's arbitration term. Marinera
filed a timely appeal.
II.
Marinera argues that the court erred in concluding that Cargill was not required to arbitrate
this dispute and in denying its application for stay pending arbitration. First, it argues that Savannah
is not the proper party plaintiff because Savannah did not hold title to the cargo. Next, it argues that
the bill of lading is not the contract of carriage. Finally, it argues that even if the bill of lading is the
governing contract of carriage, the arbitration clause was incorporated into the bill of lading and
should control. We address these arguments below.
A.
Marinera first argues that Cargill, not Savannah, is the proper party plaintiff. Marinera
contends that this is critical because Cargill is a party to the charter party that includes an arbitration
clause. Savannah, of course, was not a party to the chart er agreement. Marinera argues that
Savannah was not the owner of the contaminated sugar because it rejected the damaged cargo and
title reverted to Cargill. The accuracy of this conclusion is supported, according to Marinera, by the
fact that Cargill filed the insurance claim and received payment for the damaged sugar from the
underwriters. For these reasons, Marinera contends that Cargill was the proper party plaintiff.
Savannah and Cargill point to their Master Bulk Raw Sugar Contract which provides that title
passed to Savannah when the vessel was assigned to transport the sugar. They argue that while there
are provisions allowing rescission when sugar is ineligible for entry due to quota restrictions, the
contract has no similar provision allowing Savannah to rescind if the sugar is damaged. To the
contrary, risk of loss under the contract passes to Savannah upon loading of the vessel. According
to Cargill and Savannah, Cargill filed the insurance claim on Savannah's behalf to take advantage of
Cargill's longstanding relationship with the underwriter.
The district court accepted Cargill and Savannah's contention that Savannah held title at the
time of loss, pursuant to the Bulk Raw Sugar Contract, and had not rescinded the contract. We
review the district court's findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard. Curry v. Fluor
Drilling Services, 715 F.2d 893, 895 (5th Cir.1983). The district court did not err in determining that
Savannah owned the sugar at the time of the loss. Mr. Espy, Savannah's officer, testified that he
initially sought to rescind the contract. However, Cargill's representative later persuaded Mr. Espy
that title had already passed to Savannah and Mr. Espy was satisfied when Cargill agreed to pursue
the cargo damage claim against underwriters. Even if Savannah was entitled to rescind the contract,
the district court was entitled to credit the testimony of the representatives of Cargill and Savannah
that they did not rescind the contract.
B.
Marinera next argues that the charter party, not the bill of lading, constitutes the governing
contract of carriage because this was a private carriage. Alamo Chemical Transportation Co. v. M/V
Overseas Valdes, 469 F.Supp. 203, 208-11 (E.D.La.1979) (where charter party provided that the
charterer employed the "entire ship" or "full capacity of the ship," it is a private carriage and the
charter party is the contract of carriage). According to Marinera, the bill of lading was simply a
receipt for goods, having nothing to do with title.
Cargill and Savannah maintain that when cargo is sold to a third party receiver of goods, who
was not a party to the charter agreement, and the bill of lading is delivered to that party, the bill of
lading becomes the contract of carriage. Associated Metals & Minerals Corp. v. M/V Venture, 554
F.Supp. 281, 283 (E.D.La.1983); Ministry of Commerce v. Marine Tankers Corp., 194 F.Supp. 161,
162-3 (S.D.N.Y.1960).
The district court determined that this was not a private carriage because under the charter
party Marinera could load other cargo: "If cargo covered by this charter is part cargo, Owner may
load other cargo ..." The district court further concluded that because Savannah held the bill of lading
and owned the sugar at the time of the loss, the bill of lading constituted the contract of carriage.
The district court correctly concluded that the bill of lading constituted the contract of
carriage. We agree with the court's statement of the law in Associated Metals:
Where a bill of lading, as here, has been transferred for value to a third party, not a party to
the charter party, it constitutes an undertaking independent of the charter party except as to
provisions of the charter party expressly incorporated into it.
Id. at 283 (citations omitted).
Cargill negotiated the bill of lading to Savannah, and Savannah was not a party to the charter
agreement. Therefore, the bill of lading constituted the contract of carriage.
C.
Finally, Marinera argues that even if the bill of lading constitutes the contract of carriage, the
bill of lading incorporated the terms of the charter party, and therefore, the arbitration clause must
be enforced.
A bill of lading can incorporate a charter party if the bill of lading specifically refers to the
charter party. M/V Venture, 554 F.Supp. at 283. However, where the date and name of the charter
party is left blank, there is no incorporation. Amoco Oil Co. v. M/T Mary Ellen, 529 F.Supp. 227,
229 (S.D.N.Y.1981). In Amoco Oil, as in the instant case, the bill of lading included a provision to
incorporate a charter party. The provision had blanks for the date and the parties to the charter party
sought to be incorporated. The blanks were not filled in. The shipowner argued that the bill of lading
was still incorporated because of the close relationship between Amoco Oil (the third party purchaser)
and Amoco Transport (the charterer). The shipowner argued that Amoco Oil must have known
about the arbitration clause in the charter party.
The court disagreed. It held that where the bill of lading does not clearly refer to the charter
party, Amoco Oil's awareness of the charter suggests "that its nonincorporation was intentional." The
court concluded that awareness of the charter party did not imply an agreement to accept the terms
of that extraneous agreement. Id. at 229.
The bill of lading for the Paraguayan sugar negotiated to Savannah states on the back: "All
terms and conditions, liberties and exceptions of the Charter Party, dated as overleaf, are herewith
incorporated." There is a space on the front of the bill of lading to indicate the date of the charter
party, but it is left blank. Nor does the bill of lading identify the parties to the charter party or its
place of signing.
Marinera argues that because the bills of lading for the Argentinean sugar did specifically refer
to the charter party, Savannah should have known that the bill of lading for the Paraguayan sugar also
incorporated the charter party. However, just as in Amoco Oil, the fact that the third party might be
aware of the arbitration clause in the charter party does not bind them to it. Savannah could just as
easily have thought that because the bill of lading for the Paraguayan sugar did not refer to the charter
party, while the bills of lading for the Argentinean sugar did, that the nonincorporation was
intentional.
The bill of lading did not specifically refer to the charter party. Therefore, the district court
correctly found that the bill of lading did not incorporate the charter party.
III.
We conclude that the district court was correct in determining that 1) Savannah held title to
the sugar at the time of the loss, 2) the bill of lading was the contract of carriage rather than the
charter party, and 3) the bill of lading did not incorporate the arbitration term in the charter party.
We therefore affirm the district court's order declining to stay proceedings pending arbitration.
AFFIRMED.