Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ELLERMAN & BUCKNALL STEAMSHIP CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHA MISRIMAL BHERAJEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/03/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Mercantile Law-Deceit-Shipowner had knowledge materials
ordered to be supplied in new drums-giving ’clean bill of
lading’though packing in old drum-taking indemnity bond-
whether liable for deceit for loss caused to buyer-"Letters
of Credit", "bill of lading", "clean bill of lading",
considered.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent entered into two contracts with the B Company
(sellers) of New York to purchase certain chemicals and in
pursuance of the contracts placed three indents for the
material in December 1950 and January 1951. The indents
specified that the materials were to be packed in new fibre
drums.
The respondent thereafter opened and confirmed irrevocable
letters of credit to be negotiated by his bankers’ agents in
New York. These agents were authorised to make payment to
the sellers against "clean on board" bills of lading.
When the sellers shipped the, goods by one of the
appellant’s vessels, the Mate’s receipt given to the sellers
on the arrival of the goods at the wharf described them as
being packed in refused drums. The sellers then approached
the appellant with a request to grant them a clean bill of
lading as against the reference in the Mate’s receipt to
refused drums. Upon the sellers furnishing the appellant
with an indemnity bond against any claims etc., the
appellant issued them a clean bill of lading which described
the drums simply as drums.
The sellers then negotiated the bills of lading against the
letters of credit and obtained payment of the contract
price. When the shipment arrived in India it was discovered
that the drums contained only coal dust and not the
chemicals ordered.
The respondent took appropriate proceedings against the
sellers in the American Courts and recovered part of his
loss. He then instituted the present suit against the bank
and the appellant. The Trial Court dismissed the claim
against the appellant but decreed the suit in part against
the bank. However, the High Court, on appeal, held that the
appellant, with the knowledge that the bills of lading would
be negotiated, gave at the request of the seller, clean
bills of lading though only unclean bills of lading should
have been given. It therefore held the shipowners
responsible for the loss caused to the respondents and
allowed a separate appeal filed by the bank.
On appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of the
appellants that while respondent had based his cause of
action on a breach of contract, the High Court had given
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relief founded on deceit. that under common law or contract
the appellant had no duty or obligation to make a statement
in the bills of lading that the drums were old ones; and
that the bills of lading were clean ones, for the oldness or
newness of drums had no real impact on the contents thereof,
as both were equally suitable containers for the materials
to be supplied.
93
HELD:(i) There was no merit in the contention that the High
Court gave relief founded on deceit whereas the respondents
cause of action was based on a breach of contract. It was
clear from the pleadings that a claim on the basis of
misrepresentation was made in the plaint, denied by the
appellant in the written statement and argued in the Courts
below. [96 G-H]
(ii)The High Court was right in holding that the appellant
was liable in damages for the loss incurred by the
respondent.
It was one of the terms of the contract between the seller
and the buyer that the goods should be placed in new fibre
drums. The standard of good order and condition of the
packages was agreed upon by the parties to the contract.
The shipowners knew that condition as disclosed by the
Mate’s receipt. If the drums had been mentioned as old in
the bill of lading, that bill would not have been a clean
bill. Though the apparent condition of the drums was old,
the shipowners made an assertion that they were not old
drums, i.e., they gave a clean bill. This representation
was obviously intended, in collusion with the sellers, to
enable them to operate upon the credit with the Bank. This
collusion was also apparent from the indemnity bond they
took from the sellers to guard themselves against the
consequences of the said representation. All the elements
of deceit were therefore present. [102 D-F]
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 274 of 1964.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated November 3, 1960
of the Madras High Court in C.C.C. Appeal No. 61 of 1957.
A. K. Sen, V. Bhagat and D. N. Gupta, for the appellant.
S. T. Desai, Kesawlal and R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. The appellant, Ellerman Bucknall Steamship
Company Ltd., hereinafter called the shipowners, are a
limited liability company incorporated under the law in the
United Kingdom carrying on business as common carriers by
sea. They own a ship named "CITY OF LUCKNOW". Messrs.
Best & Co., Ltd., having their office at Madras, are the
local agents of the shipowners.
Sha Misrimal Bherajee, the respondent herein, hereinafter
called the buyer, entered into two contracts with the
British Mercantile Company Limited, New York, herein-after
called the seller, for the purchase of Fresh Monsanto
Polystyrene Injection Moulding Power (not reground) in
granueles manufactured by Monsanto Chemical of New York. In
respect of the first contract, the purchaser placed two
indents dated December 26, 1950, and December 27, 1950, for
the said stuff of value of Rs. 13,500/- and Rs. 6,750/-
respectively. The buyer entered into a second contract with
the seller for the purchase of 24 drums of the same material
of the value of Rs. 16,000/- under an indent dated January
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23, 1951. In respect of the first contract and indents the
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buyer opened and confirmed an irrevocable Letter of Credit
No. 4748 dated December 28, 1950, for U.S. $4535 plus war
risk with the Eastern Bank Limited. In regard to the second
contract he opened another irrevocable Letter of Credit No.
5012 dated January 31, 1951 for U.S. $3,330. As the said
Bank had no branch of its own at New York, it arranged with
the Marine Midland Trust Company of New York for payment of
the bills that might be presented by the seller in New York.
Pursuant to the said contracts, the seller delivered to the
shipowners certain consignments in reused fibre drums. The
bills of lading issued by the shipowners described the drums
simply as drums. After taking a letter of indemnity to
cover against any loss, the shipowners issued clean bills of
lading. The seller negotiated the bills of lading with the
Marine Midland Trust Company, New York and obtained payment
of U.S. $6,998.75 under the letters of credit. Thereafter,
the bills of lading were forwarded to the Eastern Bank
Limited, Madras, and the buyer paid to the said Bank a sum
of Rs. 33,012-5-9 against the said letters of credit. When
the shipment arrived it was discovered that the goods sought
to be delivered did not answer the description given in the
documents. Indeed’, the drums contained only coal dust and
factory shavings. The buyer took appropriate proceedings
against the seller in the American, courts and realized a
sum of Rs. 13,604-9-0. Thereafter, he instituted the
present suit in the City Civil Court, Madras, for the re-
covery of a sum of Rs. 23,760-15-6 against the Bank as well
as the shipowners. To that suit the Bank was made the 1st
defendant and the shipowners, the 2nd defendant. Broadly
stated, the basis of the claim against the Bank was that,
though under the letters of credit the Bank had the
authority to pay only against clean bills of lading, it paid
against unclean bills of lading. The cause of action
against the shipowners was that they made a
misrepresentation that the bills of lading were clean
whereas in fact they were not so, with the result, acting on
that misrepresentation, the agent of the Bank paid against
the said bills of lading which it would not have done had it
known the real facts.
The learned City Civil Judge held that the bills of lading
were clean ones but in respect of one of the letters of
credit the Bank should not have accepted the shipping
documents which related only to a part of the goods
contracted for. On that finding the learned Judge held that
the Bank was liable to refund the amount paid only under one
of the letters of credit. As against the shipowners he came
to the conclusion that even if the bills were not clean, the
Bank would nevertheless have paid the amount, as the terms
of the letters of credit were comprehensive enough to
authorize such payments. In the result, he dismissed the
suit against the shipowners but decreed it in part against
the Bank. The Bank and the shipowners preferred appeals to
the High Court against the said decree insofar as it went
against each of them.
95
The appeals were heard by a Division Bench of the Madras
High Court. The learned Judges of the High Court came to
the conclusion that the shipowners with the knowledge that
the bills of lading would be negotiated gave, at the request
of the seller, clean bills of lading while as a matter of
fact only unclean bills of lading should have been given.
They further held that the purchaser was damnified, as on
the basis of the misrepresentation found in the bills of
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lading the Bank paid the amount against the shipping
documents which it would not have done if it had known that
the bills of lading were unclean. In the result, they gave
a decree for the entire suit claim against the shipowners.
They allowed C.C.C.A. No. 61 of 1957 against the shipowners
but dismissed it against the Bank. C.C.C.A. No. 54 of 1957,
the appeal filed by the Bank, was allowed. The shipowners
have preferred the present appeal against the decree given
by the High Court against them.
The argument of Mr. A. K. Sen, learned counsel for the
appellant, may broadly be placed under the following three
heads: (1) While the respondent based his cause of action on
a breach of contract, the High Court gave the relief founded
on deceit; (2) under common law or contract the appellant
had no duty or obligation to make a statement in the bills
of lading that the drums were old ones and, therefore, the
non-mention of that fact could not have misled the Bank into
paying against the shipping documents under the letters of
credit; and (3) the bills of lading were clean ones, for the
oldness or newness of drums had no real impact on the
contents thereof, for both, were equally suitable containers
of the articles to be supplied.
Mr. S. T. Desai. learned counsel for the respondent, while
made a faint attempt to sustain the decree of the High Court
on the basis of breach of contract, seriously sought to
support it on the doctrine of deceit. He argued that there
was a fraudulent misrepresentation by the appellant in
collusion with the seller to the effect that the bills of
lading were clean while in fact they were not and that,
acting on that misrepresentation, the Bank, through its
agent at New York, paid the amount to the seller under the
letters of credit against the shipping documents, which it
would not have done if such a misrepresentation had not been
made. He countered the contentions of the learned counsel
for the appellant that the High Court gave a decree on a
cause of action different from that on which the plaint was
based.
The first contention turns upon the pleadings as well as on
the conduct of the parties during the trial and the appeal.
A perusal of the plaint discloses that the 2nd defendant was
sought to be made liable both in contract and in tort.
Paragraph 9 of the plaint reads thus:
"if the first defendants state that they acted
on the terms of the bills of lading and are
therefore protected, the plaintiffs
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also charge that in any event the second
defendants are liable, for issuing the bills
of lading without disclosing the true state of
facts and for inserting statements in the
bills of lading which are now admitted to be
untrue. The plaintiffs also charge that the
defendants are precluded from denying the
correctness of the statement in the bills of
lading as regards the apparent good order and
condition as mentioned in the bills, of
lading. The plaintiffs charge that the second
defendants and the shippers acted collusively
with a view to enable if possible the shippers
to obtain moneys against goods which were not
the goods agreed to be sold and which were not
consigned according to the contract. The very
fact that the second defendants have obtained
an indemnity for issuing the bills of lading
without disclosing the real state of facts
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would show their consciousness that they were
not right in issuing the bills of lading in
the terms they did and whatever their rights
as against the shippers may be on the
indemnity, the plaintiffs are not concerned
with the same, but the second defendants are
liable to the plaintiffs to make good the loss
resulting by reason of a representation acted
on by which the plaintiffs have been
damnified".
This passage in the plaint contains all the necessary
allegations to sustain a claim in tort. It is clear,
therefore, that the claim of the buyer against the
shipowners was also based upon the misrepre. sentation made
by the latter in the bills of lading. In the written-
statement the appellant denied the allegations in para 9 of
the plaint and stated that there was no secret arrangement
between them and the seller in regard to the goods or the
containers. The shipowners also denied that they inserted
any untrue statement in the bills of lading acting in
collusion with the seller to enable the latter to obtain
money against the bills of lading. Issue 6 framed by the
learned City Civil Judge reads:
"Did the second defendant act bona fide
throughout in issuing the bills of lading and
in taking an indemnity from the shippers?".
The judgment of the learned City Civil Judge discloses that
the question of misrepresentation by collusion was argued
and the learned Judge held that the Bank was not misled, as
under the letters of credit it had to pay the amount against
the bills of lading, whether clean or unclean. Before the
High Court also the question of misrepresentation by the
shipowners was expressly raised and was accepted by it. We
cannot, therefore, agree with the contention of the learned
counsel for the appellant that the High Court had made out a
new case which was not raised in the plaint: indeed, the
claim on the basis of misrepresentation was made in the
plaint, denied by the appellant in the written-statement and
argued in both the courts below. There are, therefore, no
merits in the first contention.
97
On the question of the appellant’s liability to the buyer in
contract, we are satisfied that there is no basis for it.
Indeed, learned counsel for the respondent did not seriously
press the point, though he did not give it up altogether.
A bill of lading serves three purposes, viz., (i) it is
receipt for the goods shipped containing the terms on which
they have been received; (ii) it is evidence of the contract
for carriage of goods-, and (iii) it is a document of title
for the goods specified therein. The contract of the
shipowners in the bill of lading is that they will de.liver
the goods at their destination "in the like good order and
condition" in which they were when shipped. In terms of the
contract the shipowners delivered the goods to the buyer in
the drums. The consignee incurred damages not because of
any defect in the drums but because the seller sent goods
different from those he had agreed to sell to him.
Therefore, the shipowners were not liable for any damages to
the purchaser on the basis of breach of any of the terms of
the contract. No further elaboration on this point is
called for, as finally this point was not seriously pressed
by the learned counsel for the respondent.
Now we shall consider the main point raised in the appeal,
namely, the liability of the appellant in tort. Before we
advert to the question of law it would be convenient to
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notice the relevant facts.
Exhibit A-1 dated December 26, 1950, the indent placed by
the buyer with the seller in respect of Fresh Monsanto
Polystyrene Injection Moulding Powder of value of Rs.
13,500/-. The packing was to be in new fibre drums each
containing 250 lbs. nett. Exhibit A-2 is another indent
dated December 27, 1950, placed by the buyer with the
seller. The quantity required thereunder was of the value
of Rs. 6,750/- and the packing was to be in new fibre drums
each containing 250 lbs. nett. Exhibit A-5 is the third
indent dated January 23, 1951, for the same goods worth Rs.
16,500/- with similar terms. The buyer opened two letters
of credit, Exs. B-1 and B-2, with the Eastern Bank Limited,
Madras, for U.S. $ 7,625. Exhibits B-28 and B-29 are the
letters written by the Eastern Bank Limited, Madras, to the
Marine Midland Trust Company, New York, to open letters of
credit for payment of the bills that might be presented by
the seller.
Exhibit B-1 reads:
"We hereby authorise and request you and/or
your Agents and/or Representatives at New York
to open a confirmed and irrevocable bank
credit in favour of Messrs. British
Mercantile Company Limited etc., and to make
payment or payments thereunder on our
behalf............ against documents purport-
ing to be invoices, shipping specifications,
Bills of Lading and Policies and/or
Certificates of Insurance covering Marine and
War Risks............ We agree that this
credit is subject to U.S.A. regulations and
practice."
98
Exhibit B-2 is also a similar letter of credit. Clause 3 of
Ex. 28 reads:
" Clean on Board" Bills of Lading in complete
sets of at least two signed copies to be made
out to the order of the Eastern Bank Limited.
or to order blank endorsed and marked by the
shipping company ’Freight paid’."
Exhibit B-29 also contains similar recitals. It will be
seen that though the words "clean on board" bills of lading
are not found in Ex. B-1 and B-2, but in the directions
given to the Marine Midland Trust Company, New York, the
said words are clearly found. The following relevant
recitals are found in a sample of the bills of lading:
"Received in apparent good order and condition
from British Mercantile Company, Limited, City
of Lucknow, to be transported by the good
Vessel City of Lucknow to sail from the Port
of New York for the East
Indies...........................
Total 21 packages, said to weigh 9,920 lbs.
said to be marked and numbered as below
(weight, gauge, measurement, contents,
conditions, quality and value unknown,
statements of same herein being made solely on
shipper’s declaration and this bill of lading
not to be deemed any evidence thereof) to be
delivered as provided hereunder (liability as
carrier to end without notice) in like good
order and condition at Madras or so near
thereto as the vessel may safely get unto
order of the Mercantile Bank of India,
Limited, or to his or their Assigns.
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..............................."
The bill of lading gives the number of packages as 21 drums
and under the column "description of goods" it states
"Polystyrene, Powder". The Mate’s receipt given to the
seller on the arrival of the goods at the wharf for being
carried by S.S. City of Lucknow describes them is being
packed in refused drums. The seller gave an indemnity bond
to the shipowners and the material part of it reads:
"We shall be obliged by your granting us
Clean Bills of Lading for the under mentioned
goods, Mate’s receipt being claused Reused
Drums-
and in consideration of your so doing we
undertake to pay on demand all freight and/or
General and particular Average and/or charges
there may be thereon, to indemnify you and
each of you against all claims and/or demands
which may be made against you or any of you in
respect of the undermentioned goods and to
hold you harmless from any and all
consequences that may arise by your granting
such clean B/L and acting thereon including
losses, damages, costs or any other expenses
which you or any of you may sustain or incur
by reason of the premises or in any way
relating thereto."
99
After obtaining the said indemnity bond, the shipowners
issued the bill of lading wherein instead of "reused drums"
only "drums" was mentioned. It will be seen from the said
documents that according to the indents the seller had to
pack the goods in new fibre drums. that the Bank opened
letters of credit for payment against bills of lading, that
the Marine Midland Trust Company of New York, the agent of
the Eastern Bank Limited, Madras, opened letters of credit
whereunder payments could be made only against clean bills
of lading, that in the Mate’s receipt given to the seller on
the arrival of the goods at the wharf for being carried by
S.S. City of Lucknow the drums were described as reused
drums and that thereafter, after giving indemnity against
any loss to the shipowners, in the bill of lading the drums
were not described as reused drums but only as drums. The
learned City Civil Judge on the said documents gave the
following findings:
.lm0
Thus, if the Bills of Lading were unclean certainly the
banks would not have paid the money to the shippers. In
fact it was for the very purpose of enabling the shippers to
obtain monies from the banks that they wanted clean Bills of
Lading and were prepared to give letters of indemnity to the
shipping company. With such description in the Bills of
Lading it is extremely doubtful whether even the under-
writers would have insured the goods as required under the
letters of credit. If the shippers had not produced either
clean Bills of Lading or Certificates of Insurance as
required under the letters of credit then certainly the
shippers could not have realised the money from the bank.
Thus the second defendants have certainly helped the
shippers in this matter by suppressing the real condition of
the goods from the Bills of Lading."
The High Court, agreeing with that finding, held "the
shipowner with the knowledge that the bills of lading would
be negotiated, gave at the request of the seller clean bills
of lading, while as a matter of fact only unclean bills of
lading should have been given". The question is whether on
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the said facts and the findings given by the courts below
the purchaser could maintain an action for deceit against
the shipowners.
"Deceit is a false statement of a fact made by a person
knowingly or recklessly with the intent that it shall be
acted upon by another who does act upon it and thereby
suffers damage"; see "A Text-book of the Law of Tort" by
Winfield; 5th Edn., at 6. 379. In order to make the
shipowners liable for deceit, the first ingredient to be
satisfied is that they knowingly issued a clean bill of
lading, when it should not have been given, with intent that
on that basis payment would be made to the holder of the
bill under the letters of credit. In order to come to a
correct conclusion whether the ingredients of the definition
of "deceit" have been satisfied in the present case, it is
necessary to know the exact scope of the following three
terms: "letters of credit", "bill of lading", and "clean
bill
100
of lading". The said three expressions are evolved in the
law merchant to facilitate international trade. The origin
and importance of letters of credit in the international
commerce has been stated by Denning, L. J., in Pa via & Co.,
A.P.A. v., Thurmann Neilsen(1) as follows:
"The sale of goods across the world is now
usually arranged by means of confirmed
credits. The buyer requests his banker to
open a credit in favour of the seller and in
pursuance of that request the banker, or his
foreign agent, issues a confirmed credit in
favour of the seller. This credit is a
promise by the banker to pay money to the
seller in return for the shipping documents.
Then the seller, when he presents the docu-
ments, gets paid the contract price. The
conditions of the credit must be strictly
fulfilled, otherwise the seller would not be
entitled to draw on it."
But when issuing banker has no branch in the relevant
country where the beneficiary operates, the services of an
intermediary banker may be requisitioned. The intermediary
banker may be asked to advise the beneficiary of the credit
or may be asked to add his confirmatory undertaking to it.
In the latter event the beneficiary has the promise of both
the bankers.
As letters of credit are issued or opened on conditions on
which the request is made, the banker can only negotiate the
shipping documents if the conditions are strictly complied
with. If, for instance, the mandate of the buyer is that
the banker shall pay on a clean bill of lading, the banker
can only honour a clean bill and not an unclean one. When a
purchaser specifically directs the banker to pay against a
clean bill of lading, the condition for payment is an
obvious one. But, when a credit calls for bills of lading
without any qualification, in normal circumstances it means
clean bills of lading: see British Imex Industries Ltd. v.
Midland Bank Ltd.(2).
A clean bill of lading is defined in Halsbury’s Laws of Eng-
land, 3rd Edn., Vol. 2, at p. 218, as "one which does not
contain any reservation as to the apparent good order and
condition of the goods or the packing". Carver in his book
"British Shipping Laws", Vol. 2, Part 1, in para. 82,
explains the expression "good order and condition" thus:
"The general statement in the bill of lading
that the goods have been shipped "in good
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order and condition" amounts (if it is
unqualified) to an admission by the shipowner
that, so far as he and his agents had the
opportunity of judging, the goods were so
shipped. If there is no clause or notation in
the bill of lading modifying or qualifying the
statement that the goods were "shipped in good
order and condition" the bill is known as a
clean bill of lading."
Decisions have held that the "condition" refers to external
and apparent condition, and quality, to some thing which is
usually not
(1) [1952] 2 Q.B. 84, at 88.
(2) L.R. [1958] 1 Q.B. 542, a 551.
101
apparent at all events to an unskilled person: see Compania
Naviera Vasconzada v. Churchill & Sim(1). The words like
"quality and measure unknown" found in Compania Naviera
Vasconzada v. Churchil & Sim(1) "weght, contents and value
unknown" in The Peter der Grosse(1); "weight, quality,
condition and measure unknown" in The Tromp(3) were held to
be not qualifying words. In The Restitution Steamship Co.,
Ltd., v. Sir John Pirie and Co.(1) it was held "if you
insert in the margin of a bill of lading weights,
quantities, or anything that is not contained in the bill of
lading itself, that is not a clean bill of lading". If such
words found a place in the body of a bill of lading, they
would not have the effect of making the bill an unclean one,
we do not see how their mention in the margin would make a
difference. But we need not express our final opinion
thereon, as in the present case the words are found in the
body of the bill itself.
But it is said that the omission of the adjective "new"
qualifying the word "drums" or indeed the addition of the
adjective "old" to qualifying the same would not necessarily
make the bill any the less a clean bill, if old drums were
suitable vehicles for conveying the articles supplied
therein. The newness or the oldness of the container, the
argument proceeded, was not decisive of its suitability, for
in the main it depended upon its condition and contents.
This argument as a proposition of law appears to be sound.
In The Tromp(3) potatoes, to the knowledge of the
defendants’ master who signed the bill of lading, were
shipped in wet bags and in a damaged condition. The court
held that as in the bill of lading the potatoes were
described as shipped in good order and condition, which rep-
resented the external condition of the bags, the defendants
were estopped from denying that the bags were dry when
shipped. But it would be noticed that the packing in that
case was defective and that was the main cause for the
rotting of the potatoes and, therefore, the bill of lading
was not a clean one. In Silver v. Ocean Steamship Co.,
Ltd.(1), damage was caused to frozen eggs as the can wherein
they were packed were gashed, perforated or punctured and
the eggs were insufficiently packed. So the court held that
having given a clean bill of lading the shipowner was
estopped from proving that the cans were not in apparent
good order and condition. In Brown Jenkinson & Co., Ltd. v.
Percy Dalton (London) Ltd.(1) orange juice was shipped in
barrels. Some of the barrels were old and frail and some
were leaking. Yet the shipowners gave a clean bill of
lading. They were estopped from denying that the barrels
were in apparent good order and condition.
These decisions establish that good order and condition of
packages depends upon the suitability of the packages for
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the
(1)L.R. [1906] 1 K.B. 237. (2) L.R.[1876]lp.414.
(3)L.R. [1921] p. 337. (4) L.R. [1889] 5 T.L.R. 641.
(5)L.R.[1930]1 K.B.416. (6) L.R. [1957] 2 Q.B. 621.
102
particular goods or articles packed therein and other
relevant circumstances of each case.
What is the real scope and legal effect of the statement in
the bill of lading that the goods were shipped in good order
and condition? We have already noticed that a bill of
lading with such a statement, which does not contain any
further reservation or qualification, is known as a clean
bill of lading. The said words are affirmation of a fact.
It is an admission creating an estoppel as between the
shipowners and an endorsee, who on the faith of that
admission has become endorsee for value of the bill of
lading. The shipowners are estopped from denying that the
goods and the packages were not in good order and condition.
The estoppel applies only where the bad condition is
discernible on a reasonable examination of the containers,
having regard to their contents. Any qualification of the
said affirmation must only refer to the external and
apparent condition of the containers: see The Skarp(1),
Silver v. Ocean Steamship Co., Ltd.(") Companies Naviera
Nazconzada v. Churchill & Sim(1), and The Tromp(4). It is
not necessary to consider the said decisions in detail as
the principle is well settled.
Now let us look at the relevant facts of the present case.
It was one of the terms of the contract between the seller
and the buyer that the goods should be packed in new fibre
drums. The standard of good order and condition of the
packages was agreed upon by the parties to the contract.
The shipowners knew that condition as the Mate’s receipt
disclosed the same. If the drums had been mentioned as old
in the bill of lading, the said bill would not have been a
clean bill. Though the apparent condition of the drums was
old, the shipowners made an assertion that they were not old
drums, i.e., they gave a clean bill. This representation
was obviously intended, in collusion with the seller, to
enable him to operate upon the credit with the Bank. This
collusion is also apparent from the indemnity bond they took
from the seller to guard themselves against the consequences
of the said representation. All the elements of deceit are
present.
The decision in Brown Jenkinson & Co., Ltd. v. Percy Dalton
(London) Ltd.(1) is apposite. There, the defendants had a
quantity of orange juice which they wish to ship to Hamburg.
The plaintiffs, as agents of the owners of the vessel on
which the orange juice was to be shipped, informed the
defendants that the barrels containing the orange juice were
old and frail and that some of them were leaking and that a
claused bill of lading should be granted. The defendants
required a clean bill of lading, and the shipowners, at the
defendants’ request and on a promise that the defendants
would give to them an indemnity, signed bills of lading
(1)L.R.[1935]134. (2) L.R. [1930]
1 K.B. 416.
(3) L.R. [1906] 1 K.B. 237. (4) L.R. [1921]
P. 337.
(5) L.R. [1957] 2 Q.B. 621.
103
stating that the barrels were "shipped in apparent good
order and condition". The defendants, pursuant to their
promise, entered into an indemnity whereby they undertook
unconditionally to indemnify the master and the owners of
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the vessel against all losses which might arise from the
issue of clean bills of lading in respect of the goods. The
barrels when delivered at Hamburg, were leaking and the
shipowners had to make good the loss. The plaintiffs sued
the defendants under the indemnity, the benefit of which had
been assigned to them. The defendants refused to pay,
alleging that the contract of indemnity was illegal, because
it had as its object the making by the shipowners of a
fraudulent misrepresentation. The court held that the
shipowners by making in the bill of lading a representation
of fact that they knew to be false with intent that it
should be acted upon were committing the tort of deceit, and
that the defendants’ promise to indemnify the shipowners
against loss resulting from the making of that
representation was accordingly unenforceable. The only
difference on facts between that case and the present one is
that in that case the barrels were not only old and frail
but also some of them were leaking. But there, as here, the
shipowners made a representation of fact which they knew to
be false with intent that it should be acted upon. If so,
it follows that the High Court was right in holding that the
appellant was liable in damages for the loss incurred by the
respondent.
Learned counsel for the appellant sought to raise three fur-
ther points, namely, (i) the shipowners were not bound by
the representation made by the ship’s mate; (ii) the bill of
lading was governed by the American law and not by common
law; and (iii) the plaintiff-buyer, having obtained a decree
against the seller in the American court, could not maintain
the present suit for damages.
The first point was not raised till now and, therefore, we
can. not permit the learned counsel to raise it for the
first time before us.
The second point, namely, what is the American law? is a
question of fact. We have not got sufficient material on
the record to know what the American law on the subject is.
We cannot, therefore, permit the appellant to raise this
point either.
The third point is also one not pressed in the courts below
and, therefore, does not call for our decision.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
104