The Circuit Court of Appeals in reversing the dismissal of the libel directed a decree providing for the assessment of the damages caused by the failure of respondent to deliver certain merchandise. 27 F.(2d) 129. The sole question before me is the applicable measure of damages.
Libelant contends that it should be based on the value of the goods at the contemplated destination: respondent that under clause 9 of the bill of lading, the damages should be limited to 300 yen per package, or that, in any event, under clause 18 of the bill of lading they should be limited to the invoice value of the goods plus freight and insurance.
Libelant denies the validity of these valuation clauses because, as it contends, no choice of rates was provided. Union Pacific Ry. v. Burke, 255 U. S. 317, 41 S. Ct. 283, 65 L. Ed. 656. Respondent answers that a rate was provided under a proper construction of the printed tariff. Judge Knox, in passing on exceptions to the answer before the trial, sustained the validity of the limitation clauses (D. C.) 42 F.(2d) 717. I find it unnecessary to determine the question, although as to clause 9 I am inclined to agree with him on the ground that alternative rates were offered in the tariff. Clause 18, however, is in my judgment invalid under The Merauke Case, 31 F.(2d) 974 (C. C. A. 2d).
In The Sarnia, 278 F. 459 (C. C. A. 2d), the eourt held that the carrier loses the benefit of a valid valuation clause in case of deviation. The basis of the decision was that the shipowner had committed a breach of the contract of affreightment that goes to the essence of the contract. The basis of my dissent was that the valuation clause was fairly intended to control the adjustment of the rights of the parties even in case of a radical departure from the contract. But my view did not prevail. While in Sarnia the breach of contract was in the deviation, the rule there enunciated is, of course, not limited to such breach.
In the instant ease, the court, in reversing, held that “the exception in the bill of lading exempting the carrier from liability for losses arising from acts of God is clearly unavailable as a defense, because of the estoppel which precludes the respondent from denying that the goods were on board the Alaska Maru on August 30. Assuming, as we must, that they were on the vessel at that date, the earthquake and robbers could not have affected them.” 27 F.(2d) 129, 133.
It did not pass directly on the validity or effect of the valuation clause. But under the reasoning in The Sarnia, supra (see, too, Higgins v. Anglo-Algerian S. S. Co., Ltd., [C. C. A.] 248 F. 386), respondent having-knowingly and falsely represented that the-goods were being carried on the Alaska Maru cannot claim the benefit of the valuation, clause. True it is that respondent’s liability is based upon estoppel to. deny that the goods-had actually been shipped. True, too, that if the valuation clause be valid, the liability would be limited, if the goods had in fact been shipped.
But while respondent, because of its-misrepresentation in the bill of lading, is estopped from asserting a defense based upon the actual fact that the goods were never shipped, libelant is not thereby through any doctrine of mutuality estopped from basing *719its claim to damages upon the failure to make the shipment, with the resulting failure to make proper delivery. The very misrepresentation, in addition to creating the estoppel to deny destruction on land by the act of God, prevents respondent from availing itself of the valuation clause as also of any other exceptions inserted for its benefit.
The damages, therefore, will be fixed as per stipulation at $8,250, with interest from October 25, 1923, and costs.