[ PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 97-8278
________________________
D. C. Docket No. 4:94-CV-55
ITEL CONTAINER CORPORATION,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
M/V “TITAN SCAN”, her engines, boilers, etc.;
MODUL CARRIERS A. G. & CO. “TITAN SCAN”
SCHIFFAHRTS K. G.; MAMMOET SHIPPING, B. V.,
Defendants-Cross-claimants-
Appellees,
SKY SHIPPING LTD. f.k.a.
CANDYLINE LTD.,
Defendant-Cross-claimant-Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Georgia
_________________________
(May 1, 1998)
Before COX, DUBINA and BLACK, Circuit Judges.
COX, Circuit Judge:
Sky Shipping Ltd., formerly known as Candyline Ltd. (“Candyline”) appeals
following the district court’s judgment finding the liability limits of the English
Hague-Visby Rules applicable to Candyline’s contract of carriage with Itel Container
Corporation (“Itel”) and the liability limits of the United States Carriage of Goods by
Seas Act (U.S. COGSA) applicable to Candyline’s contract of carriage with Mammoet
Shipping B.V. (“Mammoet”). We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
Itel is a container leasing company. In 1990, Itel purchased 198 refrigerated
containers in Japan for use in international commerce. Subsequently, Itel negotiated
with a representative from Candyline for the shipment of the containers from Japan
to Savannah, GA. Candyline operates as a non-vessel operating common carrier – an
entity that contracts with a shipper as carrier, but then enters into a separate agreement
with a vessel owner or charterer for actual carriage of the shipper’s cargo. After
negotiating the contract, Itel received a signed copy of a Conline Booking Note
evidencing the terms and conditions of the shipment. Along with the boilerplate
terms, the Booking Note contained an addendum with additional typewritten terms,
including Clause 10, which states “English law to apply.” Candyline’s agent in Japan
then prepared and delivered to Itel’s Japanese agent a Liner Bill of Lading. The Bill
2
of Lading incorporated by reference the Booking Note, stating “Terms and Conditions
as per Conline Booking Note Dated 30th August, 1990.” (R.2-46-5, 6 at ¶ 24). The
Bill of Lading contained a General Paramount Clause providing for the application of
the Hague Rules in some situations and for the incorporation of Hague-Visby Rules
in others, where applicable.1 Clause 3 of the Bill of Lading was a forum selection
clause providing for any disputes arising under the Bill of Lading to be decided in the
country where the carrier has its principal place of business, under that country’s laws.
Candyline’s principal place of business was in England.
As a non-vessel operating common carrier, Candyline contracted with
Mammoet for the actual carriage of the containers. Mammoet managed the M/V
TITAN SCAN, which was owned by Modul Carriers A.G. & Co. (“Modul”).
Candyline and Mammoet executed a Conline Booking Note and Bill of Lading
containing terms identical to those found in the Itel/Candyline agreement with the sole
exception of the cost of the freight. The Bill of Lading was issued in Japan, and like
1
The Hague Rules arose from the International Convention of 1924 and were ratified
in the United States in 1937. The United States Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (U.S. COGSA)
represents the domestic enabling of the Hague Rules. The “Protocol to Amend the Hague Rules
of 1924,” or the Visby Amendments, were drafted in 1968 and were not adopted by the United
States. These Amendments raised the per package limitation on liability. See Assoc. Metals &
Minerals Corp. v. M/V Arktis Sky, 1991 A.M.C. 1499 (S.D.N.Y. 1991). During the relevant time
period, England had adopted the Visby Amendments, or Hague-Visby Rules, and Japan had not.
(R.4-85-17).
3
the Itel/Candyline Bill of Lading, provided for “Terms and Conditions as per Conline
Booking Note Dated 30th August 1990.”
The containers were transported from Japan to Panama without incident. In
Panama, the ship made an unscheduled stop and the containers were restowed. During
the trip from Panama to Savannah, the containers came loose during heavy weather.
Twenty were lost overboard and six others severely damaged.
Itel sued the M/V TITAN SCAN, in rem, and Candyline, Modul, Mammoet,
and Autoridad Portuaria Nacional, in personam, seeking to recover damages for the
lost and physically damaged containers.2 Candyline then filed a cross-claim for
indemnity against Mammoet. The district court held that Itel was entitled to recover
damages from Candyline and that Candyline’s liability was determined by the Hague-
Visby Rules, a statutory regime adopted in England that provides higher liability
limits than Unites States law provides. The district court also held that Candyline was
entitled to indemnity from Mammoet, but that Mammoet’s liability was limited by the
U.S. COGSA. Because the U.S. COGSA contains a lower cap on liability than the
Hague-Visby Rules, Candyline was not indemnified the full amount Candyline paid
Itel.
2
Autoridad is a stevedoring company that was never served with process and was
therefore dismissed from the lawsuit pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(m). Itel’s claims against
Modul, Mammoet, and the TITAN SCAN are not at issue in this appeal.
4
II. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
The parties do not dispute that Candyline breached its contract with Itel and
therefore stands liable to Itel, or that Mammoet must indemnify Candyline as limited
by the relevant statutory scheme. Rather, Candyline contends that the district court
erred in concluding that Candyline’s liability to Itel was subject to the liability limits
of the Hague-Visby Rules as enacted in England, whereas Mammoet’s indemnity to
Candyline was restricted by the liability limits contained in the U.S. COGSA.
Candyline argues that there is no legal basis for distinguishing between the
Itel/Candyline and Candyline/Mammoet agreements and that they were intentionally
created as “back to back” contracts to be governed in all aspects by the same statutory
regime. Candyline also asserts that the district court erred in finding the liability
limits contained in the Hague-Visby Rules applicable to the Itel/Candyline contract.
Candyline maintains that while the district court correctly found that the parties
intended that English law be used to determine the controlling liability scheme for the
Itel/Candyline contract, the district court incorrectly concluded that English law calls
for the application of the liability limits of the Hague-Visby Rules. Instead, Candyline
asserts that under English law, the liability limits of the Japanese COGSA, which did
not adopt the Hague-Visby Rules, would apply.
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Itel maintains that Candyline’s liability under the Itel/Candyline agreement
should be governed by the English Hague-Visby Rules, arguing that Clause 10 of the
Booking Note (“English law to apply”) and Clause 3 of the Bill of Lading (forum
selection clause) mandate the application of English law. Itel also contends that its
contract with Candyline falls within the purview of Article X(c) of the Hague-Visby
Rules, calling for the application of those rules when the contract contained in or
evidenced by the bill of lading so provides.3
Because Mammoet was not a party to the Itel/Candyline agreement, it does not
address the district court’s conclusion that the liability limits of the Hague-Visby
Rules apply to that agreement. Instead, Mammoet urges this court to affirm the
district court’s determination that the Itel/Candyline and Candyline/Mammoet
contracts must be construed separately and that the liability limits contained in the
U.S. COGSA applies to the Candyline/Mammoet contract. Mammoet notes that
3
Article X of the British Carriage of Goods by Sea Act of 1971 states:
The provisions of these Rules [Hague-Visby] shall apply to every bill of lading
relating to the carriage of goods between ports in two different States if:
(a) the bill of lading is issued in a contracting State, or
(b) the carriage is from a port in a contracting State, or
(c) the contract contained in or evidenced by the bill of lading
provides that these Rules or legislation of any State giving effect to
them are to govern the contract.
6
Candyline failed to include in the agreement with Mammoet any language suggesting
the existence of a “pass through” liability scheme or “back to back” agreement.
Further, Mammoet maintains that the Candyline/Mammoet agreement does not
evidence a clear intent to abrogate the liability limits of the U.S. COGSA in favor of
a higher liability limit.
III. DISCUSSION
U.S. COGSA applies compulsorily “to all contracts for carriage of goods by
sea to or from ports of the United States in foreign trade.” 46 U.S.C. § 1312. U.S.
COGSA provides that neither the carrier nor the ship are liable “for any loss or
damage to or in connection with the transportation of goods in an amount exceeding
$500 per package . . . unless the nature and value of such goods have been declared
by the shipper before shipment and inserted in the bill of lading.” 46 U.S.C. §
1304(5). U.S. COGSA permits the parties to agree by contract to a higher liability
limit. However, the parties’ intent to apply the higher limit must be clear; if the
question of whether the parties agreed to a higher liability limit is “irretrievably
ambiguous,” then U.S. COGSA applies by default. See Valmet Materials Handling
Equip., Inc. v. Nedloyd Linjen B.V. Rotterdam, 1993 A.M.C. 1243, 1246 (M.D. Fla.
1993).
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The district court concluded that, with respect to the Itel/Candyline contract, the
Hague-Visby statutory scheme as enacted in England provided the appropriate cap on
Candyline’s liability to Itel. In making this determination, the district court
considered that (1) the Bill of Lading was issued in Japan; (2) Candyline, the “carrier”
for purposes of the transaction, had its principal place of business in England; (3)
previous courts had construed the same General Paramount Clause as evidencing an
intent to agree to a higher liability limit; and (4) Clause 10 (“English law to apply”)
incorporated a foreign legal regime with a higher liability limit than that under U.S.
COGSA.
With respect to the Candyline/Mammoet contract, the district court rejected
Candyline’s argument that the two contracts stood “back to back,” thereby creating
a “pass through” liability scheme. The court then concluded that unlike the
Candyline/Itel agreement, the Candyline/Mammoet agreement did not evidence an
intent to abrogate the package limitations contained in the U.S. COGSA in favor of
a foreign regime with higher liability limits. The court noted that the “carrier” for
purposes of the Candyline/Mammoet agreement was Mammoet, whose principal place
of business is Amsterdam. Thus, while the presence of Clause 3 (forum selection
clause) in the Itel/Candyline Bill of Lading suggested the application of British law,
it did not with respect to the Candyline/Mammoet agreement. The court also noted
8
that the language of Clause 10 of the Booking Note (“English law to apply”) is
ambiguous and is not, in itself, dispositive of the parties’ intent to displace the liability
limits of the U.S. COGSA. Accordingly, because Clause 10 called for the application
of English law, Clause 2 (General Paramount Clause) pointed in the direction of
Japanese COGSA, and Clause 3 (forum selection clause) called for the application of
Dutch law, the court held that Candyline failed to meet its burden of proving
Mammoet’s unqualified assent to a limit above the $ 500 ceiling. Thus, Mammoet’s
reimbursement to Candyline for the damages Candyline paid Itel was restricted by the
liability limits of the U.S. COGSA.
The district court’s findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly
erroneous. See Reich v. Dep’t of Conservation & Natural Resources, 28 F.3d 1076,
1082 (11th Cir. 1994). We review the district court’s application of law to the facts
of the case de novo. See id. at 1083 (citing Massaro v. Mainlands Section 1 & 2 Civic
Ass’n, Inc., 3 F.3d 1472, 1475 (11th Cir. 1993).
A. Are the Itel/Candyline and Candyline/Mammoet Agreements Separate
Transactions?
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that the Itel/Candyline and
Candyline/Mammoet contracts must be evaluated as two separate transactions. The
evidence is undisputed that Itel and Mammoet had no communication during the
9
negotiation of the respective contracts of carriage. Further, while Candyline insists
that its intent in structuring the contracts identically was to create a “pass through”
system of liability, Candyline failed to include language to that effect in the
Candyline/Mammoet agreement. Looking at the language of the contract, we find no
evidence to support Candyline’s assertion that the two contracts must be evaluated as
a single transaction.
Our analysis does not end, however, with the determination that the contracts
must be evaluated separately. The real question we must answer is whether the
district court correctly concluded that the differences in the Itel/Candyline contract
and the Candyline/Mammoet contract justify the application of different liability
limitations.
B. Do the Liability Limits of the English Hague-Visby Rules Apply to the
Itel/Candyline Agreement?
We first consider whether the district court correctly concluded that Hague-
Visby Rules, as enacted in England, govern the amount of Candyline’s liability to Itel
pursuant to the Itel/Candyline contract. Relevant to our determination is Clause 2 of
that contract, the General Paramount Clause, which provides:
The Hague Rules contained in the International Convention for the
Unification of certain rules relating to Bills of Lading . . . as enacted in
the country of shipment shall apply to this contract. When no such
enactment is in force in the country of shipment, the corresponding
10
legislation of the country of destination shall apply, but in respect of
shipments to which no such enactments are compulsorily applicable the
terms of the said Convention shall apply.
Trades where Hague-Visby Rules apply.
In trades where . . . the Hague-Visby Rules [] apply compulsorily, the
provisions of the respective legislation shall be considered incorporated
in this Bill of Lading. The Carrier takes all reservations possible under
such applicable legislation, relating to the period before loading and after
discharging and while the goods are in charge of another Carrier, and to
deck cargo and live animals.
Also relevant to our determination is Clause 3 of the Bill of Lading, which provides:
Any dispute arising under the Bill of Lading shall be decided in the
country where the carrier has his principal place of business, and the
laws of such country shall apply except as provided elsewhere herein.
The district court noted that in the past, General Paramount Clauses identical to this
one have been interpreted as an agreement between the parties to have a liability limit
higher than that provided under U.S. COGSA. See Associated Metals & Minerals
Corp. v. M/V Arktis Sky, 1991 A.M.C. 1499 (S.D.N.Y. 1991); Pyropower v. ALPS
MARU, 1993 A.M.C. 1562 (E.D. Pa. 1993). However, while it is true that in those
cases, the General Paramount Clause was interpreted to allow for a higher limit of
liability, those cases stand for the proposition that where the Hague-Visby Rules were
enacted in the country of shipment, the second paragraph of the General Paramount
Clause is implicated and the Hague-Visby Rules are therefore incorporated into the
Bill of Lading. In this case, the country of shipment was Japan, which had not enacted
11
the Hague-Visby Rules at the time of the contract. Thus, the second paragraph of the
General Paramount Clause is not implicated. According to the first paragraph of the
General Paramount Clause, the Hague Rules as enacted by Japan would be
incorporated into the Bill of Lading.
While the General Paramount Clause suggests the application of Japanese
COGSA, we nonetheless agree with the district court’s conclusion that the liability
limits of the Hague-Visby Rules, as enacted in England, apply to the Itel/Candyline
agreement. First, Clause 3 in the Bill of Lading (forum selection clause) states that
any dispute arising under the Bill of Lading shall be decided in the country of the
carrier’s place of business. The “carrier” for purposes of the Itel/Candyline agreement
is Candyline, whose principal place of business is London. Thus, Clause 3 points
toward the application of English law. Second, Clause 10 (“English law to apply”),
which is contained in the typewritten addendum to the Booking Note, calls for the
application of English law.
Until recently, forum selection clauses such as these were unenforceable as a
violation of U.S. COGSA. Recently, however, the Supreme Court overruled the line
of cases invalidating forum selection clauses in COGSA cases, holding that U.S.
COGSA does not nullify foreign arbitration clauses contained in maritime bills of
lading. See Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky Reefer, 515 U.S. 528, 535-
12
36 (1995). In Sky Reefer, the Court upheld a foreign arbitration clause against a
challenge that the clause violated section 3(8)4 of U.S. COGSA by making recovery
under U.S. COGSA more difficult. See id. at 531-32. At least one court has upheld
a foreign forum selection clause based on the Court’s analysis in Sky Reefer, noting
that such clauses are enforceable unless the substantive law the foreign forum would
apply is less that what COGSA guarantees. See G.A. Pasztory v. Croatia Line, 918
F. Supp. 961, 965 (E.D. Va. 1996). Here, the foreign forum selection clauses call for
the application of English law which, under the Hague-Visby Rules, contains a higher
liability limit than that under U.S. COGSA. Thus, under a Sky Reefer-type analysis,
the forum selection clause should be enforced.
Furthermore, under generally accepted principles of contract construction,
specific clauses take precedence over general ones, and clauses that have been added
by the parties preempt form provisions. See, e.g., Insurance Co. of N. Am. v. S/S
SEALAND DEVELOPER, 1990 A.M.C. 2967, 2970 & n.4 (S.D.N.Y. 1989). Clause
4
Section 3(8) of U.S. COGSA provides:
Any clause, covenant, or agreement in a contract of carriage
relieving the carrier or the ship from liability for loss or damage to
or in connection with the goods, arising from negligence, fault, or
failure in the duties or obligations provided in this section, or
lessening such liability otherwise than as provided in this chapter,
shall be null and void and of no effect.
46 U.S.C. App. § 1303(8).
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10 of the addendum to the Booking Note is a specific clause that was added by the
parties and therefore should preempt the boilerplate clause paramount. Additionally,
while Clause 3 of the Bill of Lading was not added by the parties, it is more specific
than the General Paramount Clause, and it, too, calls for the application of English
law.
As to Candyline’s argument that under English law, the liability scheme
contained in the Japanese COGSA, rather than that of the English Hague-Visby Rules,
would apply, we agree with the district court that the language of Clause 10 (“English
law to apply”) together with that of Clause 3 (forum selection clause) satisfies Article
X(c) of the Hague-Visby Rules, which provides that the Hague-Visby Rules apply if
“the contract contained in or evidenced by the bill of lading provides that these Rules
or legislation of any State giving effect to them are to govern the contract.”
C. Do the Liability Limits of the U.S. COGSA Apply to the
Candyline/Mammoet Agreement?
We turn now to the question of whether the Candyline/Mammoet agreement
evidences a clear intent to abrogate the liability limits of the U.S. COGSA in favor of
higher liability limits contained in a foreign statutory regime. As the district court
noted, the Candyline/Mammoet contract and the Itel/Candyline contract are nearly
identical. However, the district court concluded that unlike the Itel/Candyline
14
agreement, the Candyline/Mammoet agreement did not evidence an intent to
overcome the congressional mandate that the liability limits of the U.S. COGSA apply
in the absence of a clear agreement to apply a higher liability limit. We disagree.
While the Candyline/Mammoet situation is marginally different from the
Itel/Candyline situation, we do not think the differences between the two situations
constitute adequate grounds upon which to distinguish the statutory schemes
applicable to the liability limits of the respective contracts. The factors that counseled
in favor of our applying the higher liability limits of the English Hague-Visby Rules
to the Itel/Candyline contract are present in the Candyline/Mammoet contract, as well.
As with the Itel/Candyline contract, the Bill of Lading was issued in Japan, and
the country of shipment was Japan; both of these facts suggest, as they did in the
Itel/Candyline contract, the application of the Japanese COGSA liability scheme,
which does not include the Hague-Visby Rules. However, the Candyline/Mammoet
agreement, like the Itel/Candyline agreement, also contains Clause 10, the typewritten
term added by the parties stating “English law to apply.” Therefore, the only ground
for distinguishing between the Itel/Candyline situation and the Candyline/Mammoet
situation is Clause 3 (forum selection clause), which provides for the application of
the law of the carrier’s principal place of business. The “carrier” for purposes of the
Candyline/Mammoet agreement was Mammoet, whose principal place of business is
15
Amsterdam rather than London. Thus, Clause 3 calls for the application of Dutch law.
Clause 3, however, is an inadequate ground upon which to distinguish the
Itel/Candyline contract from the Candyline/Mammoet contract, for two reasons. First,
Clause 3 specifies that “[a]ny dispute . . . shall be decided in the country where the
carrier has his principal place of business, and the laws of such country shall apply
except as provided elsewhere herein.” (emphasis added). Clause 10, a typewritten
phrase added by the parties, specifically provided for the application of English law.
Second, even if Clause 10 were eliminated, the Netherlands, like England, has adopted
the Hague-Visby Rules. Thus, even if the liability limits of the contract were
governed by Dutch law, the higher liability limits contained in the Hague-Visby Rules
would nevertheless apply. See 6 Benedict on Admiralty 1-30 (Frank L. Wiswall ed.,
1998). We therefore conclude that Clause 3 is not an appropriate ground upon which
to distinguish the Itel/Candyline agreement from the Candyline/Mammoet agreement.
If anything, Clause 3 evidences an intent to abrogate the liability limits of the U.S.
COGSA in favor of a foreign statutory scheme with higher liability limits.
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s determination that the amount
of liability under the Itel/Candyline contract is governed by the English Hague-Visby
Rules and reverse the district court’s conclusion that amount of indemnity under the
16
Candyline/Mammoet agreement is subject to the U.S. COGSA. We remand for the
district court to determine the amount of indemnification to which Candyline is
entitled pursuant to the English Hague-Visby Rules.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part and REMANDED.
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