Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading

The purpose of this study is to verify the carrier's liability limitation through analyzing two cases. According to the court judgments in the two cases, if the accident occurs during the shipment without issuance of Bill of Lading (B/L), the reverse-side clause of B/L does not apply to the cal...

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Main Author: Jung Sun Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-03-01
Series:Asian Journal of Shipping and Logistics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2092521218300026
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spelling doaj-0a21af7465ca464085ee6910e0bb3d042020-11-24T23:26:42ZengElsevierAsian Journal of Shipping and Logistics2092-52122018-03-013411318Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of LadingJung Sun Lee0Gyeongnam National University of Science and Technology, Korea; (First and Corresponding Author).The purpose of this study is to verify the carrier's liability limitation through analyzing two cases. According to the court judgments in the two cases, if the accident occurs during the shipment without issuance of Bill of Lading (B/L), the reverse-side clause of B/L does not apply to the calculation of damage, and the law of the country most closely related to both parties is set as the governing law. The absence of a timely B/L often occurs in transport practice due to the complicated nature of transport practice. So, through analyzing the court judgments in the two cases, this study recommends that transport parties take precautions. First, in order to reduce and settle disputes arising from the absence of evidence of transportation contracts, it is necessary to issue a received B/L bearing in mind the risk of accidents occurring during the shipment process. Second, the use of a Sea Waybill (SWB) which can be issued after the receipt of a cargo shipment, can be an alternative, except when a Letter of Credit (L/C) requires a B/L. Finally, expanding the function of the Commercial Invoice (C/I) to allow it to serve as evidence of the contract of carriage by inserting the contract of carriage phrase into the C/I when the B/L is not issued could be an alternative. Keywords: Limitation of Liability of Carrier, Governing Law, Bill of Ladinghttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2092521218300026
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jung Sun Lee
spellingShingle Jung Sun Lee
Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
Asian Journal of Shipping and Logistics
author_facet Jung Sun Lee
author_sort Jung Sun Lee
title Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
title_short Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
title_full Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
title_fullStr Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
title_full_unstemmed Limitation of Liability and Governing Law for Accidents Occurring before Issuance of Bill of Lading
title_sort limitation of liability and governing law for accidents occurring before issuance of bill of lading
publisher Elsevier
series Asian Journal of Shipping and Logistics
issn 2092-5212
publishDate 2018-03-01
description The purpose of this study is to verify the carrier's liability limitation through analyzing two cases. According to the court judgments in the two cases, if the accident occurs during the shipment without issuance of Bill of Lading (B/L), the reverse-side clause of B/L does not apply to the calculation of damage, and the law of the country most closely related to both parties is set as the governing law. The absence of a timely B/L often occurs in transport practice due to the complicated nature of transport practice. So, through analyzing the court judgments in the two cases, this study recommends that transport parties take precautions. First, in order to reduce and settle disputes arising from the absence of evidence of transportation contracts, it is necessary to issue a received B/L bearing in mind the risk of accidents occurring during the shipment process. Second, the use of a Sea Waybill (SWB) which can be issued after the receipt of a cargo shipment, can be an alternative, except when a Letter of Credit (L/C) requires a B/L. Finally, expanding the function of the Commercial Invoice (C/I) to allow it to serve as evidence of the contract of carriage by inserting the contract of carriage phrase into the C/I when the B/L is not issued could be an alternative. Keywords: Limitation of Liability of Carrier, Governing Law, Bill of Lading
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2092521218300026
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