Limits & Defences
Cases
Sandeman Coprimar SA v Transitos y Transportes Integrales S.L. & Ors
[2003] EWCA Civ 113
[2003] EWCA Civ 113, [2003] 2 WLR 1496, [2003] QB 1270
Philips MR
Liability at common law
The Judge held that the seals had no intrinsic value at all. Insofar as Seagram were entitled to damages, this was in respect of consequential loss. English principles of remoteness applied. To be recoverable, loss had to be of a type that was reasonably foreseeable. Carriage charges thrown away fell into this category. Each of the three defendants was liable in respect of these. They amounted to 42,550 pesetas, the equivalent of less than £200.
So far as the liability to the Spanish authorities under the guarantee was concerned, the Judge found that TTI were aware of the nature of the seals and the consequences that would attend their loss, so that TTI were liable to Seagram for this. The same was not true of either Spain-TIR or BCT. On the evidence neither of those companies could reasonably have appreciated either the nature of the goods that were in the cartons nor the financial consequences to Seagram of their loss.
Article 23
Article 23 of the CMR lays down the measure of compensation recoverable where a carrier is liable under the Convention for the loss of the goods carried. The starting point under Article 23.1 is that the carrier is liable for the value of the goods at the place and time at which they were accepted for carriage. In addition, under Article 23.4, ‘Customs duties and other charges incurred in respect of the carriage of the goods shall be refunded’. The Judge held that the sums payable under the guarantee constituted such charges provided, but only provided, that they satisfied the English law test of remoteness. In the case of TTI they did so. It followed from this finding that TTI had a contractual liability under Article 23 that mirrored the common law liability found by the Judge. So far as Spain-TIR and BCT were concerned, if Article 23.4 were to apply to them, it would impose no liability in respect of sums payable under the guarantee for, in their case, these were too remote.
We have used the conditional tense in this last sentence, because the Judge expressed the view that whether or not Article 23 applied was a matter for the election by Spain-TIR and BCT, and it was open to them to exercise that election even after his judgment. This finding was based upon the permissive terms of Article 28.2, which the Judge held applied to each of these defendants. It was up to them whether to invoke the provisions of Article 23. If they did so, they would become subject to all the provisions of that Article.
The issues raised on the appeal
The following issues arise on this appeal:
i) Was the Judge correct to hold that the guarantee payment was too remote to be recovered from Spain-TIR or BCT at common law? Seagram contend that he was not. Spain-TIR and BCT support his finding.
ii) If the guarantee payment was not too remote, did it constitute part of the value of the seals? Seagram contends that it did not. Spain-TIR and BCT contend that it did.
iii) Was the Judge correct to hold that the guarantee payment fell within the definition of ‘other charges’ under Article 23.4? Spain-TIR and BCT contend that he was not. Seagram support his finding.
iv) Was the Judge correct to hold that ‘other charges’ under Article 23.4 could only be recovered if not too remote under English law? Seagram contend that he was not. Spain-TIR and BCT support his finding.
v) Was the Judge correct to hold that Spain-TIR were liable to Seagram as bailees of the seals? Spain-TIR contend that he was not. Seagram support his finding.
vi) Was the Judge correct to hold that BCT were liable to Seagram as bailees of the seals? BCT contend that he was not. Seagram support his finding.
vii) Was the Judge correct to indicate that Spain-TIR and BCT could elect whether to rely on Article 23, but that if they did so would be bound by all its provisions? Seagram contend that Spain-TIR and BCT have no right to elect, but are bound by all the provisions of Article 23. Spain-TIR and BCT contend that they enjoy a right to elect to rely on those provisions of Article 23 which limit their liability.
Was the Judge correct to hold that the guarantee payment was too remote to be recovered from Spain-TIR and BCT at common law?
The Judge cited Overseas Tankship (UK) Limited v Morts Docks and Engineering Co Ltd (‘The Wagon Mound’) [1961] AC 388 as laying down the following test of remoteness in the law of negligence:
“A negligent tortfeasor is not responsible for all the direct consequences of his negligence, but only for such damage as ought reasonably to have been foreseen. There are two relevant qualifications to that general principle. Firstly, the test of reasonable foreseeability in tort is generally more stringent, and less favourable to the wrongdoer, than the similar test in contract. Secondly, so long as the general nature of the damage in question was reasonably foreseeable, it is immaterial that the precise extent of the damage, or the precise manner in which it was caused, may not themselves have been foreseeable.”
So far as the law of conversion is concerned, the Judge adopted the following passage from the decision of the Court of Appeal in Kuwait Airways Corporation v Iraq Airways Co (Nos 4 and 5) [2002] UKHL 19; [2002] 2AC 883 at paragraph 538:
“It appears to us that as the law now stands, in conversion cases a court has to ask whether at the time of the conversion the type of loss that occurred (as opposed to the precise manner in which it occurred) was reasonably foreseeable.”
On behalf of Seagram, Mr Nolan did not challenge these tests. He submitted, however, that the Judge had misapplied them. He put his case in a number of ways. First he relied upon the fact that BCT had no idea what was in the cartons. This was of the nature of their business. All kinds of goods came into their possession, often imprecisely described. In these circumstances BCT could not be heard to say that any type of loss was unforeseeable.
There can be problems in applying a test of foreseeability to carriers who handle consolidated containers of many different varieties of goods. Some would argue that one of the objects of the CMR Convention was to make such an exercise superfluous. There is, however, no such problem on the facts of this case. No carrier without specific knowledge of the nature of ‘precintas’ and of the guarantee that has to be given to the Spanish authorities in exchange for their release, could envisage that the loss of a number of cartons could give rise to the type of liability experienced by Seagram in this case. Mr Nolan submitted that the loss in this case was of the same type as the loss that occurs when dutiable spirits are stolen and duty has to be paid on them. We shall be dealing with this suggested analogy in a different context later in this judgment. Suffice it to say that we do not accept it. The liability in this case was not analogous to duty payable on the goods carried.
Mr Nolan submitted that when a number of items are lost, the owner will foreseeably suffer a financial loss in respect of each item. In this case a payment had to be made under the guarantee in respect of each seal. It followed, argued Mr Nolan, that the loss was of a type foreseeable as the consequence of the loss of goods carried. This contention is unsound. The fact that one kind of damage occurs item by item does not render another kind of damage that also occurs item by item similar in type.
Finally, Mr Nolan argued that because the guarantee payment fell within the express definition of ‘other charges’ in Article 23.4, the payment in question was of a type expressly contemplated by the CMR conditions. BCT contracted on CMR conditions and, therefore, could not be heard to suggest that this type of loss was not readily foreseeable. We have yet to deal with the issue of whether the guarantee payment did fall within the definition of ‘other charges’. If the Judge was right that it did, this was only by giving the meaning of that phrase so wide a compass that it embraced liabilities of types that were not reasonably foreseeable. We reject the suggestion that so wide a meaning of ‘charges’ could embrace a single ‘type’ of damage when applying the common law test of remoteness.
We are in no doubt that the liability to make the guarantee payment was too remote to be recoverable from Spain-TIR or BCT as damages in negligence or conversion.
If the guarantee payment was not too remote, did it constitute part of the value of the seals?
The argument that the guarantee payment formed part of the value of the seals was advanced by Spain-TIR and BCT by way of alternative to their primary case that the payment was too remote to be recoverable at all. If this alternative case had succeeded, they would have sought to invoke the limit of liability provided by Article 23.3 of the CMR. Having regard to the answer that we have given to the previous question, this issue does not arise. We will, however, deal with it shortly, for the answer further supports our conclusion that the guarantee payment was too remote to be recovered. The guarantee was exacted to guard against the possibility that the seals might be misused so as to deprive the Spanish authorities of excise duty payable on liquor sold in Spain. The evidence was that, if it could be demonstrated that the seals had been destroyed, the guarantee would not be called. Thus it was not inevitable that loss of the seals would result in payment under the guarantee. For instance, if the seals had been destroyed by fire, no payment would have been exacted. This demonstrates that the liability under the guarantee formed no part of the value of the seals. It arose as a consequence of their loss by reason (i) of the undertaking given under the guarantee and (ii) of the circumstances in which the loss occurred.
Was the Judge correct to hold that the guarantee payment fell within the definition of ‘other charges’ under Article 23.4?
In making his finding the Judge held that he was bound to follow the decision of the House of Lords in Buchanan & Co. v Babco Ltd. [1978] AC 141. Mr Coburn, on behalf of Spain-TIR challenged that conclusion, arguing that the Judge felt himself unduly constrained by that decision.
Buchanan v Babco concerned the theft of a consignment of whisky that was being carried under CMR terms, from the plaintiffs’ bonded warehouse in Glasgow to Teheran. Its value, in bond, was £7,000. Had it been exported from the United Kingdom no excise duty would have been payable. It was, however, stolen from a lorry park in London, while in the course of transit. In these circumstances the plaintiffs became liable under section 85 of the Customs and Excise Act 1952 to pay excise duty on the whisky in the sum of some £30,000. The plaintiffs contended that the value of the whisky included the £30,000 duty, so that it could be recovered under Article 23.2 of the CMR. This contention was rejected by both the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords, a result which underpins our conclusion in paragraph 32 above, were underpinning needed.
For present purposes, the crucial issue was that raised by the plaintiffs as an alternative argument. Was the liability to duty recoverable as falling within ‘the carriage charges, Customs duties and other charges incurred in respect of the carriage of the goods’ under Article 23.4? In the absence of authority, we would have answered this question in the negative. It seems to us that one object of the CMR is to make a clear apportionment of risk arising in the course of international carriage by road, so as to facilitate insurance and avoid double insurance. A natural reading of Article 23 would seem to us to impose liability on the carrier for the value of the goods when the carriage begins, subject to the Article 23.3 limit, together with charges incidental to the carriage of the goods, including Customs duties. Such charges, typically, are foreseeable and form an increment to the value of the goods. Article 23.6 refers to entitlement to higher compensation under Articles 24 and 26. Article 26 would seem designed to enable a consignor to impose liability on the carrier for a value exceeding the Article 23.3 limit and for possible consequential loss – a liability compensated for by a surcharge and which, by virtue of being declared, can be insured against by the carrier.
The minority in the House of Lords resolved the issue as we would have done. The majority, however, did not. They upheld the judgment of the Court of Appeal, though not that court’s reasoning, in concluding that the liability to excise duty constituted ‘other charges’ under Article 23.4. Their reasoning can be derived from the following passages.
Lord Wilberforce at p.154:
“I find that the judgment of Master Jacob carries conviction. The duty, he says, became chargeable having regard to the way in which the goods were carried by the defendants. “In respect of” is wide enough to include the way in which the goods were carried, miscarried or lost. I think this is right – and I do not consider that it is answered by saying that the charge would not have arisen if the thieves had exported the goods or if the whisky had flowed away. No doubt this is true but the fact that an exemption might have arisen does not prevent the charge which did arise from being “in respect of the carriage”. The carriers’ duty was to carry the whisky to the port of embarkation – their failure to do so might, or might not, bring a charge into existence. But if it did, I think it right to say that the charge was in respect of the carriage.”
Lord Dilhorne at p.158:
“If “in respect of” is given the broad interpretation of “in consequence of”, content can be given to the words in question. They will clearly cover a far wider ambit than carriage charges. While it would not be right to seek to import common law doctrines into the Convention, it cannot be right, in my opinion, to construe “in respect of” as meaning “for” with the result that the article would read “carriage charges….and other charges for carriage”. They must be given a wider meaning than that and in my opinion the right meaning to give them is that in the context in which they appear they mean “in consequence of” or “arising out of”.”
Lord Salmon at pp.160 and 161:
“Were the charges for excise duty which the respondents have been obliged to pay incurred “in respect of the carriage of the goods”? No doubt these words are flexible and somewhat imprecise, but, especially as they appear in an international convention relating to commercial affairs, they should not be construed pedantically or rigidly but sensibly and broadly. So construed, I agree with the view expressed by Master Jacob in his judgment that they are wide enough to include “in consequence of the way in which the goods were carried by the appellants”. They were certainly carried in such a way as caused the respondents to be charged with £30,000 in respect of excise duty.
….
My Lords, in my view, the language of article 23 is capable of bearing and does bear the meaning attached to it by Master Jacob. This meaning accords with both reason and justice. An excise duty of £30,000 has become chargeable against the respondent exporters solely because of the result of the appellant carriers’ servant for which the carriers are vicariously liable. Reason and justice seem to demand that the burden of paying the £30,000 should rest on the shoulders of the carriers rather than on those of the innocent exporters.”
Each of the majority proceeded on the basis that Article 23 was the only route by which liability for excise tax could be recovered. None made any reference to Article 26. Their speeches extend the meaning of the words ‘in respect of the carriage’ to embrace ‘in consequence of the miscarriage’
The decision in Buchanan v Babco is critically discussed in the third edition of Professor Clarke’s book on International Carriage of Goods by Road: CMR at paragraph 98 and in the 3rd Edition of Hill & Messent on CMR: Contracts of the International Carriage of Goods by Road at paragraphs 9.25 to 9.34. Each suggests that the approach of the majority of the House of Lords must be subject to some restriction. We shall refer to some of the observations of the authors of these works when we come to address the next issue. Nor is the decision one which lies happily with the approach to the ambit of Article 23 of the courts of most of the other signatories to the Convention, France being an exception. For our part we do not consider that the decision should be applied any more widely by the courts of this country than respect for the doctrine of precedent requires.
The Judge held that:
“I find it impossible to make any rational distinction between the statutory liability for duty which was the subject matter of that case and the liability under the guarantee in the present case.”
We do not agree. In Buchanan v Babco the excise duty payable was a charge on the goods carried. It was, as a matter of English law, an automatic consequence of the loss of the goods within the jurisdiction. It could be said to be similar in kind to the Customs duty payable upon importation of the goods into another country. The liability under the guarantee in this case is not a duty payable in respect of the goods carried. It is a liability arising under a guarantee that arose as a result of the inability of Seagram to account for the seals. Not only is the liability a more remote consequence of the loss of the seals than is excise duty payable on whisky that is stolen, as to which see the next issue, but it does not in our view fall within the meaning of a ‘charge incurred in respect of the carriage of the goods’. For this reason we hold that payment under the guarantee is not recoverable under Article 23.4
Was the Judge correct to hold that ‘other charges’ under Article 23.4 could only be recovered if not too remote under English law?
The Judge adopted and applied the following passage from Professor Clarke’s work at p.371:
“The trouble with the broad view is that it makes it difficult for the carrier to estimate exposure to liability. Whereas there is a monetary limit on the amount of liability for loss, damage or delay to the goods, there is no limit in the CMR on the amount of compensation that can be awarded for “other charges”. Inevitably, some kind of rule is required to identify those charges which are “in consequence of” the carriage and those which are not. In the CMR the question was not anticipated and has not been answered. An answer must be found in national law, and found, it appears, in rules of causation and remoteness. In terms of causation, charges will be recoverable under English law if they were incurred as part of a reasonable response to the threat posed by the carrier’s breach of the contract of carriage. In terms of remoteness, charges will be recoverable if they are losses of a type which the carrier should reasonably have contemplated would be incurred in the event of his breach of the contract of carriage.”
Hill & Messent at paragraph 9.31 make a similar suggestion that the ‘width of expression’ used by the House of Lords should only be applied to expenses that were within the actual or constructive knowledge of the carrier ‘so they could be held liable without offending the normal rules of remoteness’.
Because we have distinguished Buchanan v Babco it is not necessary for us to rule whether these expressions of view are correct and we shall not do so. We sympathise with the perceived need to restrict the scope of Buchanan v Babco. At the same time we think it unfortunate if that decision imports the application of English principles of remoteness. This does not seem appropriate, for the scheme of the CMR contemplates an identical liability imposed on a succession of carriers. On the facts of the present case, the Judge found that TTI were liable in respect of the guarantee payment, but that Spain-TIR and BCT were not. Had they all been linked to a single CMR contract this would have led to problems when Article 38 fell to be applied.
Was the Judge correct to hold that Spain-TIR were liable to Seagram as bailees of the seals?
This issue arises on a cross-appeal by Spain-TIR. Only the liability for the carriage charges now turns on the issue, and that is a liability which seems likely ultimately to fall on BCT. The issue is, however, an important one because, together with the seventh issue, it calls for consideration of the legal nature of a sub-bailment on terms. This takes us into deep waters.
The starting point is to review the circumstances in which Spain-TIR became involved with the carriage of the seals. This requires some elaboration of the facts that we set out at the beginning of this judgment.
The head contract of carriage was between Seagram and TTI and it was, by operation of law, subject to the CMR. Spain-TIR agreed with TTI to carry the seals from Madrid to Paisley. This contract also was subject to the CMR by operation of law. TTI gave Spain-TIR written instructions which identified the sender as Seagram and the consignee as Chivas. Spain-TIR issued a CMR consignment note which named the sender as Spain-TIR and the consignee as BCT. Spain-TIR sub-contracted to BJ Waters the carriage from their depot to BCT’s premises in Bradford. This contract, also, was subject to the CMR by operation of law. Interserve, as Spain-TIR’s agents agreed with BCT that BCT would carry the seals to their destination at Paisley. This agreement was on CMR terms, both because the contract between Interserve and BCT so provided and because BCT received the seals with and on the terms of the consignment note prepared by Spain-TIR.
The Judge recorded the concession by Mr Nolan on behalf of Seagram that Spain-TIR were entitled to invoke Article 28 of the CMR and avail themselves of those provisions of the CMR which fixed or limited the compensation due. The Judge held that, in the light of this concession, it was not necessary for him to decide whether Spain-TIR would have been entitled to rely upon those provisions under the doctrine of ‘bailment on terms’. Findings made by the Judge in relation to BCT bear, however, on that question.
The Judge found that TTI must be regarded as having, at least by implication, authorised Spain-TIR to sub-contract to BCT performance of the last leg of the journey. Mr Nolan conceded that BCT also were entitled to invoke Article 28 of the CMR. The Judge went on to hold:
“I would not have been prepared to hold that Seagram had expressly forbidden any sub-bailment of the seals. In those circumstances, given the likelihood of consolidation and deconsolidation and the very widespread practice of sub-contracting all or part of contracts for the international carriage of goods by road, I would have been prepared, if the matter had not been resolved by concession, to hold that Seagram had impliedly consented to a sub-bailment of the seals. It would, I think, almost inexorably have followed that its consent would have extended to a sub-bailment on the terms of the CMR, given the international nature of the carriage.”
It necessarily follows from this that the Judge would have been prepared to hold that Seagram had impliedly consented to a sub-bailment by TTI to Spain-TIR on terms of the CMR.
In our judgment the Judge was justified for the reasons that he gave in concluding that both Spain-TIR and BCT had taken possession of the goods as bailees on terms of the CMR.It remains to consider the implications of this.
Mr Coburn submitted that it was not open to Seagram to sue Spain-TIR for breach of bailment for two reasons. He submitted that, under principles of common law Spain-TIR were not liable for breach of bailment because they were not in possession of the seals at the time of their loss. He further submitted that because both the contract between Seagram and TTI and the contract between TTI and Spain-TIR were governed by the CMR, the CMR applied generally to regulate the rights and liabilities of these three parties. In these circumstances Article 36 applied and Spain-TIR could not be sued by Seagram because they were not the first carrier, the last carrier or the carrier performing that portion of the carriage during which the event causing the loss occurred.
Turning to the position in common law, Mr Coburn submitted that where a contractual bailee of goods sub-bails them to A, who in turn sub-sub-bails them to B, who loses them, the bailee will be liable to the owner for breach of a non-delegable duty of care, but A will have no liability, being neither in possession of the goods at the time of their loss nor party to the contract under which they were bailed.
The basis upon which the Judge found Spain-TIR liable as bailees was that, having voluntarily accepted possession of the goods for onward carriage to Paisley, and entrusted to BCT part of the responsibilities that they had assumed they were liable for the loss of the goods caused by the default of BCT.
We have difficulty with the Judge’s analysis, having regard to his finding that Seagram authorised Spain-TIR to sub-contract to BCT. The basis of this finding was that Seagram consented to a chain of sub-contracts that was a typical feature of CMR carriage. Why in these circumstances should a greater liability be imposed upon Spain-TIR than that incidental to being a link in the chain of successive carriers under a single CMR contract? Why should Spain-TIR not be entitled to rely on Article 36?
This question requires consideration of the manner in which a sub-bailment on terms operates. The doctrine was first clearly stated by Lord Denning MR in Morris v Martin [1966] 1 QB 717. That case involved the sub-bailment to the defendants, with the consent of the owner, the plaintiff, of a fur stole that had been delivered to the bailee for cleaning. The fur stole was converted by a servant of the sub-bailee. The contract between the bailee and the sub-bailee contained exempting conditions. The Court of Appeal held that the defendants, as sub-bailees for reward, owed the plaintiff the same duty to take reasonable care of the fur that was owed by the bailee. They were liable for the default of their servant. The exempting conditions did not, on their true construction, exempt from liability for the loss. In these circumstances it was unnecessary to decide whether they applied as between the plaintiff and the defendants. Lord Denning expressed the view that in such circumstances the owner was bound by the conditions as if he had expressly or impliedly consented to the bailee making a sub-bailment containing those conditions, but not otherwise.
This doctrine was approved and applied by Steyn J. in Singer Co. (UK) Ltd v Tees and Hartlepool Port Authority [1988] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 164. It also received approval by members of the Court of Appeal in The Kapetan Marcos NL (No 2) [1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 321 and The Captain Gregos (No 2) [1990] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 395.
In Johnson Matthey & Co. Ltd v Constantine Terminals [1976] 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 215, Donaldson J. adopted a different approach to the entitlement of a sub-bailee to rely, as against the bailor, upon the terms upon which the bailee had sub-bailed the goods to him. The sub-bailees in that case sought to rely upon their standard conditions to provide a defence in respect of their loss of a consignment of silver belonging to the plaintiffs. Donaldson J. first observed that it was probably possible to hold, following the approach of Lord Denning in Morris v Martin, that there had been a bailment on terms with the consent of the plaintiffs. He went on to hold, however, that such consent was unnecessary. He explained the basis of this at p.222:
“But the plaintiffs cannot prove the bailment upon which, in my judgment, they must rely, without referring to terms upon which the silver was received by Constantine Terminals from International Express. These terms establish (a) that Constantine Terminals were bailees for reward, but also (b) that the implied duties of such a bailee were qualified by exceptions. And, despite Mr Wadsworth’s vigorous argument to the contrary, I really do not see how the plaintiffs can rely upon one part of the contract while ignoring the other. Consent seems to me to be relevant only between the bailor and head bailee. If the sub-bailment is on terms to which the bailor consented, he has no cause of action against the head bailee. If it was not, the sub-bailee is still protected, but if the bailor is damnified by the terms of the sub-bailment he has a cause of action against the head bailee.”
Morris v Martin and Johnson Matthey v Constantine Terminals received detailed analysis in the decision of the Privy Council, delivered by Lord Goff The Pioneer Container [1994] 2 AC 324. In that case the plaintiffs engaged carriers to ship goods by sea under bills of lading which gave the carriers authority to sub-contract ‘on any terms’. The carriers sub-contracted to the defendant ship owners on terms which included a Taiwanese exclusive jurisdiction clause. The issue was whether this clause was binding as between the plaintiffs and the defendants.
Lord Goff first considered the relationship between the plaintiffs and the sub-bailee. On this he found authoritative guidance in the decision of the Privy Council in Gilchrist Watt and Sanderson Pty. Ltd. v York Products Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 1262. There the defendants were stevedores who had lost two cases of clocks that they had received as sub-bailees of the shipowners, who owed a duty to deliver them to the plaintiffs under the bills of lading. The Privy Council held that the defendants were liable to the plaintiffs, in that, as Lord Pearson observed at p.1267, they:
“took upon themselves an obligation to the plaintiffs to exercise due care for the safety of the goods, although there was no contractual relation or attornment between the defendants and the plaintiffs.”
Following this decision, Lord Goff held that there was a ‘collateral bailment’ between the plaintiffs and the defendant shipowners. He then turned to consider the terms of this bailment. He approved the doctrine formulated by Lord Denning in Morris v Martin, adding at p.339 this comment on the relevance of ‘consent’:
“It must be assumed that, on the facts of the case, no direct contractual relationship has been created between the owner and the sub-bailee, the only contract created by the sub-bailment being that between the bailee and the sub-bailee. Even so, if the effect of the sub-bailment is that the sub-bailee voluntarily receives into his custody the goods of the owner and so assumes towards the owner the responsibility of a bailee, then to the extent that the terms of the sub-bailment are consented to by the owner, it can properly be said that the owner has authorised the bailee so to regulate the duties of the sub-bailee in respect of the goods entrusted to him, not only towards the bailee but also towards the owner.”
Lord Goff went on to state that this doctrine did not turn on estoppel, nor on contract:
“Such a conclusion, finding its origin in the law of bailment rather than the law of contract, does not depend for its efficacy either on the doctrine of privity of contract, or on the doctrine of consideration. That this may be so appears from the decision of the House of Lords in Elder, Dempster & Co Ltd v Paterson, Zochonis & Co Ltd [1924] A.C. 522. In that case, shippers of cargo on a chartered ship brought an action against the shipowners for damage caused to the cargo by bad stowage, for which the shipowners were responsible. It is crucial to observe that the cargo was shipped under charterers’ bills of lading, so that the contract of carriage contained in or evidenced by the bills of lading was between the shippers and the charterers. The shipowners nevertheless sought to rely, as against the shippers, upon an exception in the bill of lading which protected the charterers from liability for damage due to bad stowage. It was held that the shipowners were entitled to do so, the preferred reason upon which the House so held (see Midland Silicones Ltd v Scruttons Ltd [1962] AC 446, 470 per Viscount Simonds, following the opinion of Fullagar J. in Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring and Lighterage Co. Ltd [1956] 1 Lloyds’s Rep. 346, 364; 95 C.L.R. 43, 789) being found in the speech of Lord Summer [1924] A.C. 522, 564:
‘in the circumstances of this case the obligations to be inferred from the reception of the cargo for carriage to the United Kingdom amount to a bailment upon terms, which include the exceptions and limitations of liability stipulated in the known and contemplated form of bill of lading.’
Of course, there was in that case a bailment by the shippers direct to the shipowners, so that it was not necessary to have recourse to the concept of sub-bailment. Even so notwithstanding the absence of any contract between the shippers and the shipowners, the shipowners’ obligations as bailees were effectively subject to the terms upon which the shipowners implicitly received the goods into their possession. Their Lordships do not imagine that a different conclusion would have been reached in the Elder, Dempster case if the shippers had delivered the goods, not directly to the ship, but into the possession of agents of the charterers who had, in their turn, loaded the goods on board; because in such circumstances, by parity of reasoning, the shippers may be held to have impliedly consented that the sub-bailment to the shipowners should be on terms which included the exemption from liability for bad storage.”
Lord Goff then turned to the decision in Johnson Matthey v Constantine Terminals. He held that the analysis of Donaldson J. was unsound, being contrary to Morris v Martin and the Gilchrist Watt case. The exposition of the law that followed merits citation in full:
“In addition, the conclusion of Donaldson J. that consent is relevant only between the owner and the bailee is inconsistent with the reasoning of Lord Denning M.R. in Morris v C.W. Martin & Sons Ltd. when he expressed the opinion, at p.729, that the bailor is bound by the terms of the sub-bailment to which he has consented but not otherwise. Their Lordships have already expressed their agreement with the approach of Lord Denning on this point. Indeed, as they see it, once it is recognised that the sub-bailee, by voluntarily taking the owner’s goods into his custody, ipso facto becomes the bailee of those goods vis-à-vis the owner, it must follow that the owner’s rights against the sub-bailee will only be subject to terms of the sub-bailment if he has consented to them, i.e., if he has authorised the bailee to entrust the goods to the sub-bailee on those terms. Such consent may, as Lord Denning pointed out, be express or implied; and in this context the sub-bailee may also be able to invoke, where appropriate, the principle of ostensible authority.
In truth, at the root of this question lies a doctrinal dispute of a fundamental nature, which is epitomised in the question: is it a prerequisite of a bailment that the bailor should have consented to the bailee’s possession of the goods? An affirmative answer to this question (which is the answer given by Bell, Modern Law of Personal Property in England and Ireland, at pp.88-89) leads to the conclusion that, if the owner seeks to hold a sub-bailee responsible to him as bailee, he has to accept all the terms of the sub-bailment, warts and all; for either he will have consented to the sub-bailment on those terms or, if not, he will (by holding the sub-bailee liable to him as bailee) be held to have ratified all the terms of the sub-bailment. A negative answer to the question is however supported by other writers, notably by Palmer, Bailment, at pp.31 et seq., where Professor Palmer cites a number of examples of bailment without the consent of the owner, and by Professor Tay in her article ‘The Essence of Bailment: Contract, Agreement or Possession?’ (1966) 5 Sydney Law Review 239. On this approach, a person who voluntarily takes another person’s goods into his custody holds them as bailee of that person (the owner); and he can only invoke, for example, terms of a sub-bailment under which he received the goods from an intermediate bailee as qualifying or otherwise affecting his responsibility to the owner if the owner consented to them. It is the latter approach which, as their Lordships have explained, has been adopted by English law and, with English law, the law of Hong Kong.
Their Lordships wish to add that this conclusion, which flows from the decisions in Morris v C.W. Martin & Sons Ltd [1966] 1 Q.B. 716 and the Gilchrist Watt case [1970] 1 WLR 1262, produces a result which in their opinion is both principled and just. They incline to the opinion that a sub-bailee can only be said for these purposes to have voluntarily taken into his possession the goods of another if he has sufficient notice that a person other than the bailee is interested in the goods so that it can properly be said that (in addition to his duties to the bailee) he has, by taking the goods into his custody, assumed towards that other person the responsibility for the goods which is characteristic of a bailee. This they believe to be the underlying principle. Moreover, their Lordships do not consider this principle to impose obligations on the sub-bailee which are onerous or unfair, once it is recognised that he can invoke against the owner terms of the sub-bailment which the owner has actually (expressly or impliedly) or even ostensibly authorised. In the last resort the sub-bailee may, if necessary and appropriate, be able to invoke against the bailee the principle of warranty of authority.”
Thus far the cases that we have considered have been those in which the sub-bailee has sought to rely upon conditions which reduced his liability or, in the Pioneer Container, were beneficial to him. What if some of the terms agreed between the bailee and the sub-bailee increase the liability of the sub-bailee beyond that arising under the common law? Can the bailor enforce such conditions against the sub-bailee? Professor Palmer addresses this question at p.1329 of the second edition of his work on Bailment:
“Occasionally, the terms of the sub-bailment will cast upon the sub-bailee a greater responsibility for the safety of the goods than would exist at common law. These terms are clearly enforceable by the intermediate party since he will enjoy a contractual relationship with the sub-bailee. Even if the sub-bailment is gratuitous the sub-bailee will apparently be bound by his promise to the intermediary, because a gratuitous bailee seems capable of enlarging his duty at common law.
The more immediate question is whether such additional duties are directly enforceable by the owner against the sub-bailee. In certain circumstances such enforcement should be possible. If the terms of a sub-bailment can be invoked to reduce the common law duties that are owed by the sub-bailee to the owner, they should be relevant to establish a responsibility that is greater. The criterion would be whether such additional duties were an integral part of the owner-sub-bailee relationship, and essential to its efficacy, or were merely incidental. The sub-bailee should therefore be liable to the owner for the non-performance of any duty which represents one of the central terms or understandings upon which he was allowed to assume possession.”
This is one possible solution to the problem, but not the only one.
We draw attention to the observations of Lord Goff in the passage cited above that, were it correct that consent of the bailor was a prerequisite of a bailment, any resulting bailment would be subject to ‘all the terms of the sub-bailment, warts and all’. It seems to us that it must follow from this, and indeed that it should logically be the case, that where a bailor consents to and thereby authorises a sub-bailment on terms, all the terms agreed between the bailee and the sub-bailee, insofar as these are applicable to the relationship of the bailor and the sub-bailee, apply as between the bailor and the sub-bailee.
It seems to us that this result also follows from the application of the principles of the law of contract. Lord Goff’s authoritative analysis in the Pioneer Container traces the origin of ‘bailment on terms’ to principles of the law of bailment that do not turn on contract, but this does not exclude the possibility that the law of contract may have a role to play in this area. The principles of the law of bailment have always overlapped with those of the law of contract, for bailment and contract often go hand in hand. Where a bailee has the consent, and thus the authority, of the bailor to enter into a sub-bailment on particular terms and does so, and where those terms purport to govern the relationship not merely between the sub-bailee and the bailee, but between the sub-bailee and the bailor, it seems to us that all the elements of a collateral contract binding the sub-bailee and the bailor will be present, for there will be privity, via the agency of the bailee, and no difficulty in identifying consideration, at least if the terms are capable of resulting in benefit to each of the parties. It is easier to identify a contract in such circumstances than in the circumstances which led the Privy Council to identify one in The Eurymedon [1975] AC 154.
These considerations are very relevant in the present case. The Judge has found that Seagram implicitly authorised the conclusion of a chain of contracts on CMR terms. The CMR conditions, which applied as between Seagram and TTI required that, if there was such a contractual chain, all links in it should be welded to a single contract by transfer of the goods and the consignment note. TTI produced no consignment note but, as each link in the chain was formed, there was agreement between the immediate parties that the contract should be on CMR terms. It seems to us that in these circumstances the sub-bailment of each party in the chain was on terms of all the CMR conditions, whether by application of the doctrine of bailment on terms or under principles of the law of contract.
Thus we consider that the Judge was correct to rule that Spain-TIR and BCT could not rely upon those of the CMR conditions which limited or fixed their liability without being bound by other relevant CMR conditions. On our analysis, however, no right to elect was open to them. The CMR conditions were applicable as a consequence of the seals being bailed to them on the terms of those conditions.
On this basis, we find that Mr Coburn was correct to submit that Article 36 applied. It was not open to Seagram to sue Spain-TIR in that Spain-TIR was not the first carrier, the last carrier or the carrier performing that portion of the carriage during which the loss occurred. They came into possession of the goods in circumstances where they were authorised to sub-bail them on CMR terms. Seagram cannot, in these circumstances, contend that Spain-TIR remains susceptible to suit in relation to loss of the seals after they had been transferred to a successive carrier.
Was the Judge correct to hold that BCT were liable to Seagram as bailees of the seals?
BCT did not challenge the finding that they were liable for the carriage costs of the cartons containing the seals. By their Respondents’ Notice they contended, however, that, if liability for the guarantee payment was imposed by virtue of Article 23.4, they were not liable for this because they were not bailees of the seals themselves. This argument was based upon the proposition that a person who comes into possession of goods will not be constituted bailee of them if, unknown to him, they have properties which give them an unforeseeably elevated value – see the discussion in Palmer at p.436 and following. As we have held that BCT is under no liability in respect of the guarantee payment, either under the terms of the CMR or at common law, this issue does not arise. We would add that the terms of Article 23 do not seem to us to give any scope for the application of the doctrine in question.
Was the Judge correct to indicate that Spain-TIR and BCT could elect whether to rely on Article 23, but that if they did so they would be bound by all its provisions?
We have already answered this question in paragraph 65 above. The Judge approached the question on the premise that Spain-TIR and BCT fell into the category of persons for whom Article 28.2 makes provision. On our analysis, any liability falling on Spain-TIR or BCT was not ‘extra-contractual’ within the meaning of that term in Article 28.2, but arose because they were subject, whether by contract or the law of bailment, to those provisions of the CMR which both impose and restrict liability.
For the reasons that we have given, Seagram’s appeal will be dismissed and Spain-TIR’s cross-appeal will be allowed.
Order:
1. Appeal Dismissed
2. Cross-appeal allowed
3. Judge’s order to be set aside as per counsel’s draft order
4. claimants to pay second defendants 90 per cent of their costs of appeal
5. Claimants pay 3rd Defendants their costs of appeal and cross-appeal
6. All costs to be subject to detailed assessment if not agreed.
(Order does not form part of the approved judgment)