Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE EAST AND WEST STEAMSHIP COMPANY,GEORGE TOWN, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. K. RAMALINGAM CHETTIAR.(And connected appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/05/1960
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1058
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC1405 (57)
RF 1972 SC1935 (11)
ACT:
Carrier of goods by sea-Loss or damage, meaning of-Liability
of carrier-Delivery of goods-Time for-The Indian Carriage of
Goods Act, 1925 (XXVI Of 1925), Schedule, Art III, Para. 6,
cl. 3.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant in the first case (C. A. No. 88/56) and the
respondents in the other two cases (C. As. Nos. 91 & 92 of
1958) were shipping companies carrying goods by sea from one
port to another. They carried goods of the opposite parties
by ships to their places of destination but failed to
deliver the whole of the goods consigned. In the suits
brought by the owners of the goods for compensation the main
question related to the interpretation of the 3rd clause of
para. 6 of Art. III in the Schedule to the Indian Carriage
of Goods by Sea Act, 1925 (XXVI Of 1925) which runs thus:-
" In any event the carrier and the ship shall be discharged
from all liability in respect of loss or damage unless suit
is brought within one year after the delivery of the goods
or the date when the goods should have been delivered ".
In the first case the Madras High Court expressed the
opinion that the above clause did not provide for the
extinction of the consignor’s right to claim compensation
but merely prescribed a rule of limitation. It also held
that the term in the bill of lading requiring that the claim
for compensation should be made within one month from the
date of arrival of the vessel was repugnant to Rule 8 to
Art. III of the Schedule and was void. The Bombay High
Court held that Art. 111(6) dealt with all cases of loss or
damage whether the loss or damage was caused by the
deterioration of the goods or by their non-delivery and
further that the words " the loss or damage " included any
loss or damage caused to the consignee in respect of his
claim for compensation from the shipping company. If also
held that the goods should have been delivered as soon as
they were landed. On appeal by special leave:
Held, that the word " loss " in cl. 3, para. 6 of Art. III
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in the schedule to the Indian Carriage of Goods Act, 1925,
meant and included any loss caused to a shipper or consignee
by reason of the inability of the ship or the carrier to
deliver part or whole of the goods, to whatever reason such
failure might be due.
Spens and another v. The Union Mayine Insurance Co. Ltd., 3
Common Pleas 427, distinguished,
821
Sandeman & Sons v. Tyzack and Branfoot Steamship Co. Ltd.,
[1913] A. C. 680, referred to.
The words "discharged from liability" were intended to mean
and did mean that the liability had totally disappeared and
not only that the remedy as regards the liability had
disappeared.
The date when the goods should have been delivered for the
purpose Of cl. 3, para. 6 of Art. III of the Act was the
date when the ship by which the goods were carried left the
port of delivery.
The stipulation in the bill of lading requiring claim for
compensation being made within one month from the date of
arrival of the ship was null and void.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 88 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
February 11, 1954, of the Madras High Court in Civil
Revision Petition No. 921 of 1952, arising out of the
judgment and decree dated November 2, 1951, of the Court of
Small Causes, Madras, in Suit No. 4076 of 1950 (N. T. A.
No. 113 of 1951).
With
Civil Appeals Nos. 91 and 92 of 1958.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 10, 1955, of the Bombay High Court in Appeals Nos.
66/X and 67/X of 1954, arising out of the judgment and
decree dated February 15, 1954, of the said High Court in
Suits Nos. 1693 of 1949 and 105 of 1950, respectively.
B. Sen, S. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghosh, for the appellant
(in C. A. No. 88 of 1956).
C. B. Pattabhiraman and Ganapathy Iyer, for respondent (in
C. A. No. 88 of 1956).
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, S. N. Andley,
J. B. Dadachanji and Rameshwar Nath, for the appellants (In
C. As. Nos. 91 and 92 of 1958).
G. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent (In C. A. No.
91/58).
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and G. Gopalakrishnan, for the
respondent (In C. A. No. 92 of 58).
1960. May 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
107
822
DAS GUPTA, J.-These three appeals-Civil Appeal No. 88 of
1956, Civil Appeal No. 91 of 1958 and Civil Appeal No. 92 of
1958, of which one is from a decision of the High Court of
Madras and the other two from decisions of the High Court of
Bombay raise some common questions of general importance to
carriers of goods by sea and of shippers as regards the 3rd
clause of paragraph 6 of Art. III in the Schedule of the
Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (hereinafter called " the Act
"). This clause provides that " in any event the carrier
and the shipper shall be discharged from all liability in
respect of loss or damage unless a suit is brought within
one year after the delivery of the goods or the date when
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the goods should have been delivered ". In all the three
appeals before us the carriers’ main defence to claims of
compensation by the owners of the goods was based on this
clause and the courts had to consider whether this defence
was available to the carrier.
The appeal from the Madras High Court was in respect of a
consignment of 90 bundles of brass circles which were
consigned to the respondent at Madras from Bombay to Madras
per S. S. Fakira, a Steamer belonging to the East and West
Steamship Co. The Ship arrived in Madras on August 1, 1948,
and 78 out of the 90 bundles were delivered on August 25,
1948, to the appellant through his clearing agent, the
second respondent. Five more bundles were delivered on
September 25, 1948. After some correspondence between the
Shipping Company and the first respondent regarding the
seven bundles not, delivered the appellant company
repudiated finally the respondent’s claim on March 24, 1950.
The first respondent brought the present suit on June 27,
1950, claiming Rs. 1,023-5-0 as compensation-Rs. 974-13-0
for the value of the undelivered goods and Rs. 48-8-0 as the
profit of which he had been deprived. The claim for this
amount of profit was given up at the Trial. The appellant’s
defence was: (1) that the suit having been filed beyond the
period prescribed in cl. 6 of Art. 3 of the Act; (2) that
the suit was also barred as no claim had been made within
the period of one month from the date of
823
arrival of the vessel as stipulated in the bill of lading
and (3) that the goods were insufficiently packed and
therefore carrier was not liable for the alleged loss. The
learned Judge of the Small Causes Court who tried the suit
as also the Judge who heard the matter on a new trial
application held that the plaintiff’s right to claim
compensation was extinguished before the date of the suit.
As regards the second defence based on the stipulation in
the bill of lading that notice has to be given within one
month the Trial Court held that this term in the bill of
lading was void and of no effect. The learned Judges who
heard the new trial application disagreed with this and
accepted the defence on this point also. In the result they
dismissed the new trial application and confirmed the order
of dismissal made by the learned Trial Judge. Against this
order the High Court of Madras was moved by the plaintiffs
under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The learned
Judge held that the term in the bill of lading as regards
one month’s notice was repugnant to Rule 8 to Art. III of
the Schedule to the Act and was void. He was also of
opinion that the date of the final repudiation of liability
by the Shipping Company as regards the short delivery or
non-delivery is the date " when the goods should have been
delivered " within the meaning of the 3rd clause of the 6th
paragraph of Art. III and so whether this clause provided
for extinction of a right or only prescribed a rule of
limitation, the defence based on this clause of the Act
could not succeed. He expressed his own opinion, however,
that this clause did not provide for extinction of the right
but merely prescribed a rule of limitation. In view of his
conclusions he set aside the decision of the lower courts
and remanded the suit for further disposal to the trial
court. After remand the trial court on May 4, 1954, decreed
the suit for a sum of Rs. 974-13-0. Against that decree no
steps were taken by the Shipping Company. It was after that
date that the Shipping Company applied for and obtained from
this Court special leave to appeal on October 11, 1954. It
has to be noticed that as the decree made in the suit has
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become final and unassailable, this appeal is really of
824
academic interest. In view however of the fact that the
main question of law raised, viz., as regards the scope and
interpretation of the 3rd Clause of para. 6 of Art. III of
the Schedule to the Act is being raised before us in the
other two appeals from the Bombay High Court also we have
heard the counsel for both sides in this appeal in full.
Of the two appeals from Bombay-the one Civil Appeal No. 92
of 1958 is in respect of some consignments at Bombay by S.
S. Tweedsmuir Park, S. S. Finnamore Hill and S. S. Ismalia-
all vessels belonging to the first defendant, the British
India Steam Navigation Company Ltd. S. S. Tweedsmuir and S.
S. Finnamore Hill arrived in the port of Bombay on or about
September 10, 1948, and steamer Ismalia arrived in Bombay on
September 6,1948. The vessels discharged their cargoes
alongside on to the docks belonging to the Trustees of the
Port of Bombay. The plaintiffs took delivery of the goods
packed in bags which bore their distinctive and identifying
marks, but were unable to obtain delivery of 164 bags out of
the consignment sent by Ismalia, 869 bags out of the
consignment sent by Finnamore and 1,657 bags out of the
consignment sent by Tweedsmuir Park. The suit was brought
on a claim of Rs. 1,10,323-8-0 as compensation for the bags
not delivered. The Trustees of the Port of Bombay were also
made defendants. We are no longer concerned with them as
after the suit was dismissed by the Trial Judge against both
the defendants the plaintiffs did not prefer any appeal
against the order of dismissal as against the Trustees.
The main defence of the first defendant, the Shipping
Company, was that the company was discharged from all
liability in respect of the loss or damage alleged in the
plaint by reason of the provisions of the Act inasmuch as
the suit had not been brought within one year of the date "
when the goods should have been delivered". Another defence
was that the company was not liable as no notice within 3
days after discharge and before goods were removed from the
quay or ship’s side or place of discharge had been given and
so in view of Clause 20 of the bill of lading the company
was free from all liability. The trial judge held that
825
in view of the fact that S.S. Finnamore Hill completed
discharging her cargo on 19th September, 1948, S.S. Ismalia
completed discharging her cargo on 25th September, 1948, and
S.S. Tweedsmuir Park completed discharging her cargo on 27th
September, 1948, the suit was clearly not brought " within
one year " from the date " when the goods should have been
delivered". He held therefore that the defendants were
discharged from all liability by reason of the provisions of
the Act. Accordingly he dismissed the suit. In appeal from
this order of dismissal the plaintiffs contended that Art.
III (6) did not deal with cases of loss or damage arising
from non-delivery of goods; in the alternative it was
contended that the expression " loss or damage " in Art.
III (6) must be limited to the loss or damage to the goods
themselves and if the goods have not been lost this clause
had no application. The learned judges of the High Court
rejected both these contentions. They were of opinion that
Art. III (6) deals with all cases of loss or damage whether
the loss or damage is caused by the deterioration of the
goods or is caused by the non-delivery of the goods and
further that " the loss or damage" as used was used by the
Legislature to include any loss or damage caused to shipper
or consignee in respect of which he claims compensation from
the shipping company. The learned judges also held that so
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far as the shipping company was concerned the delivery of
goods is given or ought to be given as soon as the goods are
landed and therefore in this case the goods with regard to
the three ships having been cleared on September 19, 1948,
September 25, 1948, and September 27, 1948, respectively.
These were the dates on which the goods " should have been
delivered " for the purposes of the application of the 3rd
clause of paragraph 6 of Art. Ill. Accordingly agreeing
with the Trial Judge that the liability of the shipping
company was discharged and the suit was not maintainable
they dismissed the appeal.
The other appeal from the Bombay High Court, viz., Civil
Appeal No. 91 of 1958 is in respect of a consignment of
6,000 bags of coconut from Cochin and 4,733 bags of copra
and coconuts from Badagara
826
consigned to the plaintiffs for carriage to Bombay by the
steamer " Bharatjal " belonging to the appellant, the Bharat
Lines Ltd. The steamer arrived in Bombay Port some time in
the middle of September, 1948. The plaintiffs however
failed to obtain delivery of 596 bags from the Badagara
consignment and 470 bags from the Cochin consignment. They
brought the suit on December 5, 1949, against the shipping
company, the Bharat Lines Ltd., and also against the
Trustees of the Port of Bombay on a claim of Rs. 1,05,726-1-
6 on which Rs. 45,725-7-5 appear to have been claimed as
compensation in respect of the bags not delivered and the
remainder as compensation for damage to the goods in the
bags of which delivery was taken. We are no longer
concerned with the second defendant, the Trustees of the
Port of Bombay, as after the suit was dismissed by the Trial
Court the plaintiffs did not pursue the claim against them.
The main defence of the first defendant, the shipping
company, was that the suit was barred " by reason of the
Indian Carriage of Goods by Sea Act ". It was also urged
that the suit was not maintainable as under the terms of the
bill of lading the plaintiffs were bound to notify to the
defendants their claim in writing about the alleged non-
delivery within one month from the date of the arrival of
the vessel which the plaintiffs had failed to do. It
appears to have been conceded before the Trial Judge in the
Bombay High Court that the suit had not been filed within
one year after the delivery of the goods or the date on
which the goods should have been delivered. The plaintiffs’
counsel also appears to have conceded that cl. 6 of Art.
III applied to the case. The learned Judge therefore held
that the first defendant had been discharged from all
liability in respect of the loss or damage alleged in the
plaint and dismissed the suit. It appears however that in
the appeal from this order of dismissal the plaintiffs urged
that Art. III (6) of the Act did not apply to the facts of
the case and also the date on which the goods should have
been delivered should be construed to mean the date " when
the loss was finally ascertained " and the shipping company
was in a position to finally declare that they were or were
not
827
in a position to deliver the goods in question. In
dismissing the appeal the learned judges of the High Court
who heard the appeal did not give any separate reasons but
stated that the appeal was being dismissed on the same
ground as given in their judgment in Appeal No. 66 of 1954.
This is the judgment from which Civil Appeal No. 92 of 1958
of this Court has been preferred.
From what has been said above it is clear as we have already
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indicated that the main questions in this appeal are as
regards the interpretation of the 3rd Clause of paragraph 6
of Art. III in the Schedule to the Act.
The first and the most important of these questions is as
regards the meaning of the word " loss " as used in the said
clause. Does it mean only such loss as occurs when one says
" the goods have been lost" or does it include also such
loss as is sustained by the owners of the goods-whether the
shipper or the consignee-when the carrier fails to deliver
the whole or part of the cargo shipped ? The second question
that arises for consideration is whether this clause only
prescribes a rule of limitation or also provides for the
extinction of the right to compensation after a certain
period of time. The next question is as regards the as
certainment of the date on which the goods not delivered "
should have been delivered " for the purposes of’ this
clause. Apart from these questions as regards the
interpretation of the 3rd clause of paragraph 6 of Art. 111,
it will be necessary to consider also whether the
requirement in the bill of lading as regards the time within
which the notice of claim must be made in order that the
carrier may be responsible is void as being against the 8th
paragraph of Art. III.
As has been mentioned in the preamable to the Act it was
passed to give effect to the recommendation of the
International Conference of Maritime Law at Brussels in
October, 1922. The circumstances which led to the holding
of the conference and were responsible for the
recommendations have been stated by Scrutton on Charter
Parties, 15th Edition, at p. 439, in these words:-
828
In recent years, as the terms of bills of lading became
more diverse, the need for standardisation became more and
more insistent and an increasing demand was made on the part
of importers and exporters for the imposition by
legislation, on the lines of the American Harter Act or the
Australian Sea Carriage of Goods Act, 1904, or the Canadian
Water Carriage of Goods Act, 1910, of certain minimum
liabilities on sea-carriers who issued bills of lading."
x x x
The movement in favour of legislation finally resulted in
the decision of the delegates at the Diplomatic Conference
on Maritime Law held at Brussels in October, 1922, to
recommend to their respective Governments the adoption of
the Hague Rules with slight modifications as a basis of
legislation."
It is this recommendation which has been referred to in the
preamble to the Indian Act. It is important to mention that
apart from our own country, U. K., Australia, Canada,
Ceylon, Newfoundland, New Zealand as well as Belgium, France
and U. S. A. have given statutory effect wholly or partially
to the Hague Rules. This international character of the
provisions of law as incorporated in the articles to the
schedule to the Act makes it incumbent upon us to pay more
than usual attention to the normal grammatical sense of the
words and to guard ourselves against being influenced by
similar words in other acts of our Legislature.
it is helpful to remember in this connection the caution
uttered by Lord Atkin in State Line Ltd. v. Foscold (1)
about the importance of giving words in these rules their
plain meaning, and not to colour one’s interpretation by
considering whether a meaning otherwise plain should be
avoided if it alters the previous law. After stating that
this caution would be well founded if the Act merely
purported to codify the law, he went on to observe:-
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" But if this is the canon of construction in regard to a
codifying Act, still more does it apply to an Act like the
present which is not intended
(1) [1932] A.C. 328.
829
to codify the English law, but is the result (as expressed
in the Act) of an international conference intended to unify
certain rules relating to bills of lading. It will be
remembered that the Act only applies to contracts of
carriage of goods outwards from ports of the United Kingdom;
and the rules will often have to be interpreted in the
courts of the foreign consignees. For the purpose of
uniformity it is therefore important that the courts should
apply themselves to the consideration only of the words used
without any predilection for the former law...".
The House of Lords was in that case interpreting certain
provisions of the English Carriage of Goods by Sea Act,
1924. Our own Act applies to contracts of carriage of goods
outwards from the ports of India. Section 2 states that the
rules set out in the Schedule shall have effect in relation
to and in connection with the carriage of goods by sea in
ships carrying goods from any port in India to any other
port whether in or outside India. Though in the appeals
before us we are concerned with only contracts of carriage
of goods from one Indian port to another Indian port, it is
necessary to remember that these rules will often have to be
interpreted in the courts of the foreign consignees. That
is an additional reason why we should be careful not to
attach to the words used in the rules set out in the
Schedule to the Act anything more or less than their normal
meaning consistent with the context in which they appear and
consistent with the scheme of the legislation.
Art. III of the Schedule with which we are specially
concerned in the present case purports to mention the
responsibilities and liabilities of the carriers. The first
paragraph lays down the responsibilities and liabilities of
the carrier in the matter of making ships seaworthy,
properly manning, equipping and supplying the ship and
making the holds and the different parts of the ship where
goods are carried fit and safe for their reception, carriage
and preservation. The second paragraph places on the
carrier the duty of properly and carefully loading,
handling, stowing, carrying, keeping, caring for and
discharging the goods, subject to Art. IV. The 3rd
paragraph provides for the issue of a bill of lading
830
to the shipper of the goods showing among other things the
identifying marks, the number of packages or pieces or the
quantity or weight as also the apparent order and condition
of the goods. Paragraph 4 provides that the bill of lading
shall be the prima facie evidence of the receipt by the
carrier of the goods as described in accordance with
paragraph 3. The fifth paragraph provides that the shipper
shall be deemed to have guaranteed to the carrier the
accuracy as regards the details of marks, number, ’quantity
and weight as furnished by him. It provides further that
the shipper shall indemnify the carrier against all loss,
damages and expenses arising or resulting from such
inaccuracies. Then comes paragraph 6, the whole of which it
is proper to set out :-
Unless notice of loss or damage and the general nature of
such loss or damage be given in writing to the carrier or
his agent at the port of discharge before or at the time of
the removal of the goods into the custody of the person
entitled to delivery thereof under the contract of carriage,
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or if the loss or damage be not apparent, within three days,
such removal shall be prima facie evidence of the delivery
by the carrier of the goods as described in the bill of
lading. "
" The notice in writing need not be given if the state of
the goods has at the time of their receipt been the subject
of joint survey or inspection. "
" In any event the carrier and the ship shall be discharged
from all liability in respect of loss or damage unless suit
is brought within one year after the delivery of the goods
or the date when the goods should have been delivered. "
" In the case of any actual or apprehended loss or damage.
the carrier and the receiver shall give all reason-able
facilities to each other for inspecting and tallying the
goods.
The seventh paragraph contains provisions as regards issue
of a shipped bill of lading.
The eighth paragraph is in these words:-
" 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
831
goods arising from negligence, fault or failure in the
duties and obligations provided in this article or lessening
such liability otherwise than as provided in these Rules,
shall be null and void and of no effect.
A benefit of insurance or similar clause shall be deemed to
be a clause relieving the, carrier from liability."
It has to be noticed that before providing in the 6th
paragraph an immunity to the carrier from " all liability in
respect of loss or damage " in certain circumstances the
Legislature had in the earlier paragraphs laid on the
carrier the duty of making the ships seaworthy, properly
manning, equipping and supplying the ship, and making the
holds and all other parts of the ship fit and safe for the
reception, carriage and preservation of the goods; properly
and carefully loading, handling, stowing, carrying, keeping
and caring for and discharging the goods carried and
provided that ordinarily the bill of lading should show the
quantity or weight of the goods or the number of packages or
pieces. " Loss or damage " which paragraph 6 speaks of
should therefore reasonably be taken to have reference to
such loss or damage which may result from the carrier not
performing some or all of the duties which had been
mentioned earlier. One of those duties is to discharge the
goods carried in accordance with the quantity or weight or
the number of packages or pieces as mentioned in the bill of
lading. The shipper and the consignee of goods are more
concerned with the duty of the carrier to discharge the
goods in proper order and condition and in full than
anything else. Indeed the other duties cast on the carriers
so far as the owners of the goods are concerned, are really
incidental to this duty of discharging the goods in full and
in good order and condition. When in the context of the
previous paragraphs of Art. III the 6th paragraph seeks to
provide an immunity to the carrier "from all liability in
respect of loss or damage " after a certain time, it is
reasonable to think that it is loss or damage to the owner
of the goods, be he shipper or the consignee, which is also
meant, in addition to the " loss of the goods ". When
832
the goods themselves are lost, e.g., by being jettisoned, or
by being destroyed by fire or by theft, there will be
failure to discharge the goods in full and loss to the owner
of the goods will occur. Even where the goods are not lost
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the carrier may fail to discharge the goods in full or not
in proper order and there also loss will occur to the owner
of the goods. In such a case, even though there may not
have been " loss of the goods " the goods are lost to the
owner. The word " loss " as used in paragraph 6 is in our
opinion intended to mean and include every kind of loss to
the owner of the goods-whether it is the whole of the
consignment which is not delivered or part of the
consignment which is not delivered and whether such non-
delivery of the whole or part is due to the goods being
totally lost or merely lost to the owner by such fact of
nondelivery there is in our opinion "loss" within the
meaning of the word as used in paragraph 6.
It is worth noting in this connection that while paragraph 5
makes it clear that loss there means loss to the carrier and
paragraph 6 speaks of loss or damage to or in connection
with the goods, the Legislature has in the 6th paragraph of
this Article left the words "loss or damage" unqualified.
The object of the rule however being to give immunity to the
carriers and the shippers from claims of compensation made
by the owners of the goods in respect of loss sustained by
them, it will be unreasonable to read the word " loss " in
that paragraph as restricted to only loss of the goods ".
When the object of this particular paragraph and the setting
of this paragraph in the Article after the previous
paragraphs are considered there remains no doubt whatsoever
that the learned judges of the Bombay High Court were right
in their conclusion that the loss or damage in this
paragraph is a wide expression used by the Legislature to
include any loss or damage caused to shipper or consignee in
respect of which he makes a grievance and in respect ,of
which he claims compensation from the shipping company.
The argument that loss due to failure to deliver the goods
is not covered by this clause is merely to be mentioned to
deserve rejection. The very use of the
833
words " the date on which the goods should have been
delivered" clearly contemplates a case where the goods have
not been delivered. The clause gives the owner of the goods
one year’s time to bring the suit the year to be calculated
from the date of the delivery of the goods where the goods
have been delivered and from the date when the goods should
have been delivered where all or some of the goods have not
been delivered. The fact that the first clause of the 6th
paragraph speaks of removal of the goods may be an argument
for thinking as the Bombay High Court thought that clause
has no application when goods are not delivered. It may be
mentioned that some authorities (See Carver’s Carriage of
Goods by Sea, 10th Edition, p. 191) have suggested that the
first clause of this paragraph appears to have little
meaning. That is a matter which need not engage our
attention. It is sufficient to mention that the fact that
the rule of evidence provided in the first clause of the
paragraph may have no application to cases of non-delivery
is wholly irrelevant in deciding whether the third clause
applies to cases of non-delivery. As we have already said
the date when the goods should have been delivered
necessarily contemplates a case where loss has arisen
because goods have not been delivered.
Reliance was sought to be placed on behalf of the appellants
in the two Bombay appeals on Spens v. The Union Marine
Insurance Co. Ltd. (1). What had happened in that case was
that cotton belonging to different owners was shipped in
bales specifically marked, including 43 bales belonging to
the plaintiffs. In the course of the voyage the ship was
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wrecked; all the cotton was more or less damaged, some of it
was lost, some was so damaged that it had to be sold before
reaching the port and marks on a very large number of the
bales were so obliterated by sea water that none of the
cotton that was lost or sold and only a portion of what was
carried to the port could be identified as belonging to any
particular consignment. The plaintiffs had insured the
goods with the defendant company against the usual risks.
The question
(1) (1868) L.R. 3 C.P. 427.
834
arose whether there was a total loss of a part of each
owner’s cotton or whether there was a total loss of the
plaintiffs’ consignment. The court held that it could not
be said that there was an actual total loss of the
plaintiffs’ consignment nor a constructive total loss of
these, that the principle of proportion applied in cases of
general average or jettison where it is not known whose
goods are sacrificed should be properly applied to cases of
this nature where because of the bales of different shippers
being undistinguishable by reason of the action of the sea
and without the fault of the respective owners it becomes
impossible to ascertain to whom the goods actually lost
belonged.
This case it has to be noticed had to consider in view of
the special terms of an insurance policy, whether there was
a total or partial loss for the purposes of claims under the
policy and the argument that there was a total loss within
the meaning of the policy because it was impossible for the
ship-owner to deliver the plaintiffs’ own bales of cotton to
them was rejected. This case is of no assistance in the
interpretation of the word " loss " in the Articles of the
Schedule.
In cases of such mixture of cargo of different owners it was
pointed out by Lord Moulton in Sandeman & Sons v. Tyzack and
Branfoot Steamship Co. Ltd. (1) which was cited by the
learned Solicitor-General himself :
" It may well be that they could assert the position of
joint owners in the mixed cargo, and as such take action
against any person who sought to get possession of it or
convert it to his own use. But it does not follow that the
ship-owners would have performed their contract of carriage.
Their duty is to deliver the goods entrusted to them for
carriage, and they do not perform that duty if all that the
consignee obtains is a right to claim as tenant in common a
mixture of those goods with the goods of other people. No
doubt, if such a right is of some value, and the consignee
avails himself of it, the shipowners are entitled to credit
for whatever value the goods possessed if they were
delivered
(1) [1913] A.C. 680, 697.
835
mixed up with some extraneous substance which lessened their
value or compelled the consignee to go to expense in
separating it out."
There is nothing however to justify the conclusion that the
consignee is bound to avail himself of the right to claim as
tenant in common. The breach of contract remains and the
claim for compensation for such breach is in no way
affected. Neither authority nor principle therefore
supports the contention of the learned Solicitor-General
that where the goods are in existence but cannot be
delivered because they have been mixed up with the cargo of
other owners there has been no " loss " within the meaning
of the third clause of the 6th paragraph of Art. III.
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On the first question, therefore, we have come to the
conclusion that the word "loss" in the third clause of the
6th paragraph of Art. III to the Act means and includes any
loss caused to a shipper or a consignee by reason of the
inability of the ship or the carrier to deliver part or
whole of the goods, to whatever reason such failure may be
due.
On the next question whether this clause prescribes only a
rule of limitation or provides for the extinction of a right
to compensation, it will be observed that the Bombay High-
Court has not discussed it at all, apparently because on the
facts of the case before it would have mattered little
whether the provision was one of limitation or of extinction
of right. The question is however of some importance in the
facts of the Madras Case. For if the provision is one of
limitation there would be some scope for argument in the
facts of that case that the period was extended by
acknowledgments of liability within the meaning of Art. 19
of the Limitation Act. The question we have to decide is
whether. in saying that the ship or the carrier will be "
discharged from liability ", only the remedy of the shipper
or the consignee was being barred or the right was also
being terminated. It is useful to remember in this
connection the international character of these rules, as
has been already emphasised above. Rules of limitation are
likely to vary from country to country. Provisions for
extension of periods prescribes for limitation would
similarly vary,.
836
We should be slow therefore to put on the word " discharged
from liability " an interpretation which would produce
results varying in different countries and thus keeping the
position uncertain for both the shipper and the shipowner.
Quite apart from this consideration, however, we think that
the ordinary grammatical sense of "discharged from
liability" does not connote " freed from the remedy as
regards liability " but are more apt to mean a total
extinction of the liability following upon an extinction of
the right. We find it difficult to draw any reasonable
distinction between the words "absolved from liability" and
" discharged from liability " and think that these words "
discharged from liability " were intended to mean and do
mean that the liability has totally disappeared and not only
that the remedy as regards the liability has disappeared.
We are unable to agree with the learned Judge of the Madras
High Court that these words merely mean that " that even
though the right may inhere in the person who is entitled to
the benefits, still the liability in the opposite party is
discharged by the impossibility of enforcement." The
distinction between the extinction of a right and the
extinction of a remedy for the enforcement of that right,
though fine, is of great importance. The Legislature could
not but have been conscious of this distinction when using
the words " discharged from all liability " in an article
purporting to prescribe rights and immunities of the
shipowners. The words are apt to express an intention of
total extinction of the liability and should, specially in
view of the international character of the legislation, be
construed in that sense. It is hardly necessary to add that
once the liability is extinguished under this clause, there
is no scope of any acknowledgment of liability thereafter.
This brings us to the question as to how the date " when the
goods should have been delivered " should be calculated.
References were made at the Bar to some of the numerous
decisions in the different courts in India as regards the
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interpretation of somewhat similar words in Art. 31 of the
Limitation Act in respect of suits for recovery of
compensation for
837
non-delivery. Indeed the learned Judge in the Madras High
Court himself has based his conclusion on this question on
the view of law he had earlier expressed as regards Art. 31
of the Limitation Act that the starting point of limitation
there is the final repudiation of the liability by the
company. With great respect to the learned Judge, we are of
opinion that the cases as regards the ascertainment of the
date when the goods " ought to be delivered " as used in
Art. 31 of the Limitation Act are of no assistance for our
present purpose. Most, if not all of the cases which have
considered the question of the ascertainment of the date
when the goods " ought to be delivered " for the purpose of
Art. 31 deal with cases of transport by Railways where no
date has been or can be specified in the contract for
carriage. We cannot however ignore the fact that the
conditions of carriage of goods by ship are essentially
different from contracts of carriage of goods by Railways in
one respect, viz., that whereas in contracts of carriage of
goods by Railways there is ordinarily no knowledge as to by
which particular train the goods will be despatched nor is
there any undertaking by the Railways as regards such
trains, there is ordinarily in contracts of carriage of
goods by sea distinct arrangement that the goods will be
shipped by a particular vessel.Whether the bill of lading
in the older form beginning with the words " shipped on
board the........ or in the form more recently employed by
some shipping companies, beginning with the words " Received
for shipment by......... (See Scrutton on Charter Parties,
15th Edition, p. 10) the name of the vessel is ordinarily
indicated in the bill of lading itself. The duty of the
carrier under the contract of carriage is to carry the goods
by a particular ship and then to deliver the same on the
arrival of the ship at the port. The manner in which the
delivery will take place will depend on the particular terms
of the bill of lading and on the custom of the port of
destination. But whether the delivery has to be made to the
consignee at the ship’s side or is made on the quay side
there can be little doubt that the carrier’s duty is to
start the delivery of goods as soon as the ship arrives at
the
109
838
port of destination and to complete the delivery before the
ship leaves the port. In a particular case the carrier may
not do his duty. That cannot however alter the fact of the
existence of his duty to complete the delivery between the
arrival of the ship at the port and the departure of the
ship from the port. If as regards any particular goods this
duty remains unperformed at the time when the ship leaves
the port there can be no escape from the conclusion that the
point of time when the ship leaves the port is the latest
point of time by which the goods should have been delivered.
On the records of both the Bombay appeals we find the bills
of lading for these carriages of contract. Paragraph 10 of
the bill of lading in Civil Appeal No. 92 of 1948 contains
the terms as regards the discharge of cargo in these words:-
" 10. Discharge of goods: The goods may be discharged as
soon as the ship is ready to unload and as fast as she is
able, continuously day and night. Sundays and holidays
included, and if the consignee fails to take delivery of his
goods immediately the ship is ready to discharge then the
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company shall be at liberty to land the said goods on to the
wharf or quay or into warehouse, or discharge into hulk,
lazaretto or craft or any other suitable place without
notice and the goods may be stored..................... The
company shall have the option of making delivery of goods
either over the ship’s side or from lighter or store ship of
hulk or custom house or warehouse or dock or wharf or quay
at consignee’s risk. In all cases the company’s liability
is to cease as soon as the goods are lifted from and leave
the ship’s desk".
In the Civil Appeal No. 91 of 1958 the terms of delivery are
in paragraph 15 and is in these words:
" 15. The company is to have the option of delivering these
goods or any part thereof, into receiving ship or board or
craft or landing them at the risk and expense of the shipper
or consignee as per scale of charges to be seen at the
Agents Offices........"
In these appeals we are not concerned with the facts of
these terms of delivery of contract except that they
839
show that it is clearly understood between the parties to
the contract that delivery is to commence as soon as
possible after the arrival of ship at port and completed
before the ship leaves the port. Indeed even if there were
not definite terms in the bill of lading as regards the
delivery it would follow necessarily from the very nature of
the carriage of goods by ship that the delivery of the cargo
carried by the ship should be made between the date of the
arrival at the port and its departure from the port. For
our present purpose it is unnecessary to consider whether
delivery to the dock authority in any of there cases was or
would have been equivalent to the delivery to the consignee.
That would depend upon the custom of the port of discharge
or on statutory provisions or express stipulations in the
bill of lading. But whether the delivery is to be made to
the consignee or to anybody else on his behalf the duty of
the ship’s master is to start the delivery as soon as
possible after the ship’s arrival at the port and to
complete it before the date of departure from the port.
Before the ship has actually left, the port it is not
possible to say that the time when delivery should be made
has expired. Once however the vessel has left the port it
cannot but be common ground between the carrier and the
consignee that the time when delivery should have been made
is over. It is this point of time, viz., the time when the
ship leaves the port, which in our opinion should be taken
as the time when the delivery should have been made. The
fact that after this point of time correspondence started
between the carrier and the consignee as regards the failure
to deliver and at a later point of time the carrier
communicates his inability to deliver cannot affect this
question. Nor can the ultimate repudiation of any claim
that may be made by the shipper or the consignee affect the
ascertainment of the date when the goods should have been
delivered. The arrival at port of the vessel by which the
goods have been contracted to be carried being known and the
departure being equally an ascertainable thing and the duty
of the carrier being necessarily to complete the delivery
before leaving the port, the date ’by which the delivery
should have been made is
840
already a fixed point of time and later correspondence,
claims or repudiation thereof can in no way change it.
We have therefore come to the conclusion that whatever be
the proper mode of ascertaining the date when delivery "
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ought to be made" under Art. 31 of the Limitation Act-
whether that be the reasonable time for delivery in the
circumstances of the case or the date when after
correspondence the carrier intimates its inability to
deliver or the date of the final repudiation of the claim on
a claim for compensation having been made or in the case of
part delivery the date when the bulk of the consignment was
delivered the date when the goods should have been
delivered for the purpose of the third clause of the 6th
paragraph of Art. III of the Act is the date when the ship
by which the goods were contracted to be carried has left
the port at which delivery was to be made.
Applying the above clause to the facts of the cases before
us it is obvious that these suits for compensation were not
maintainable. It is hardly necessary therefore to consider
the additional defence raised in all the three suits by the
shipping companies, viz., that the claim for compensation
not having been made within thirty days from the date of
arrival of the vessel in accordance with the terms of the
bill of lading no compensation is payable. The learned
Judges of the Bombay High Court did not think it necessary
to consider this additional defence as they accepted ,the
defence based on the third clause of the 6th para.graph of
Art. III which has been discussed above. The learned Judge
in the Madras High Court had however to consider this
additional defence in view of his conclusions against the
shipping company on the other defence. He held that the
stipulation in the bill of lading that if no claim for
compensation is made within thirty days from the date of
arrival of the ship the shipping company will not be liable
for compensation is void as it offends against para. 8 of
Art. 111. The relevant portion of this paragraph is in
these words:-
8. 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
841
with goods arising from negligence, fault or failure in the
duties and obligations provided in this article or lessening
such liability otherwise than as provided in these Rules,
shall be null and void and of no effect."
It cannot be seriously disputed that the stipulation under
consideration does directly offend against the provisions of
the 8th paragraph. For it seeks at least to " lessen ",
otherwise than provided in the rules in the Schedule the
liability of the ship or carrier for loss or damage to goods
or in connection with goods caused by the failure to
deliver. This stipulation requiring claim for compensation
being made within one month from the date of arrival of the
ship is therefore null and void.
Though the additional defence raised by the shipping
companies must therefore fail, the main defence, as we have
already found, succeeds. None of the suits were brought
within a year from the date when the ship carrying the goods
left the port of discharge. We therefore dismiss with costs
the Civil Appeals Nos. 91 and 92 of 1958 and confirm the
order of dismissal made by the Bombay High Court. One set
of hearing costs will have to be paid.
Civil Appeal No. 88 of 1956 is infructuous because of the
fact, as already indicated, that after the order of remand
now appealed from was made by the Madras High Court the suit
was heard in the Small Causes Court and a decree was passed
and that decree has become final. We therefore dismiss
Civil Appeal No. 88 of 1956, as already ordered by this
Court when giving leave to appeal; the appellant will pay
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the costs of the appeal to the respondent.
Appeals dismissed.
842