Government property which was being carried by sea under a
standard form government bill of lading was lost by enemy action
before reaching its destination. The government bill of lading
provided that, "unless otherwise specifically provided or otherwise
stated hereon," the shipment would be governed by the rules and
conditions applicable to commercial shipments, but payment was
conditioned on presentation of the bill of lading "properly
accomplished," and of a "freight voucher prepared on the authorized
Government form." A "goods or vessel lost or not lost" provision in
the carrier's commercial bill of lading would have entitled the
carrier to payment of the freight had the shipment been a
commercial one.
Held: the terms of the government bill of lading,
considered with provisions of the required voucher, were
inconsistent with the "goods or vessel lost or not lost" provision,
and the United States was not liable for the freight on the lost
property. Pp.
338 U. S.
422-429.
175 F.2d 661, affirmed.
In a suit against the United States under the Tucker Act, now 28
U.S.C. § 1346, to recover a sum alleged to have been due under
a contract of affreightment, the District Court gave judgment for
the claimant. 80 F. Supp. 158. The Court of Appeals reversed. 175
F.2d 661. This Court granted certiorari. 338 U.S. 813.
Affirmed, p.
338 U. S.
429.
Page 338 U. S. 422
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is principle of American maritime law that ocean carrier
freight charges are not earned unless and until the goods are
delivered to destination. [
Footnote
1] But contractual provisions establishing the shipper's
liability for freight regardless of actual delivery have been
uniformly held valid, [
Footnote
2] and have become common stipulations in carriers' bills of
lading. Shipments of government property are made subject to the
conditions of the carrier's usual contract of carriage unless the
government standard form bill of lading specifically provides
otherwise. [
Footnote 3] At bar
is the single question of contract interpretation whether a
carrier's "Goods or Vessel lost or not lost" provision survives the
terms of the government standard form bill of lading. Has the
government bill provided against liability for freight charges on
public goods lost at sea?
On June 13, 1942, petitioner's ship, S.S.
Gunvor,
shipped a cargo of lumber at Mobile, Alabama, bound for Trinidad
under a government form bill of lading. On her first day out, she
was torpedoed by enemy submarine. Ship and cargo were a total loss.
In spite of
Page 338 U. S. 423
the carrier's failure to deliver the shipment, the bill of
lading was surrendered to it, and its claim for freight on the lost
cargo was paid by the War Department on September 15, 1942. On
audit, however, the Comptroller General disallowed the payment on
the ground that the freight had not been earned, and the sum was
offset against other claims admittedly owing to petitioner.
Petitioner instituted this suit under the Tucker Act in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York to
recover the freight claimed. The case in no way concerns liability
for the value of the cargo lost. Reversing the conclusion of the
District Court, 80 F. Supp. 158, the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit found in the provisions of the standard government
form bill of lading a "carefully devised plan" to pay freight
charges only if the shipment actually arrives at destination.
[
Footnote 4] We granted
certiorari because determination of the issue raised here will
guide adjustment of a large body of similar claims now pending. 338
U.S. 813.
Review of existing case law and prevailing commercial usage
respecting the earning of freight provides no assistance in solving
the narrow problem raised by the specific contract now before us.
Further, in view of our conclusion in the case, we need not decide
whether we may properly consider the Government's extensive
argument regarding past administrative practice, nor rule upon its
relevance or weight. As to petitioner's citation to two instances
where, allegedly, claims similar to this were honored by the
Comptroller General, we agree with the court below that a case of
consistent administrative practice has not been made out, if indeed
such practice is a relevant consideration. We therefore deal only
with the bare words of the contract.
Page 338 U. S. 424
A brief statement of the general scheme of payment of carrier
charges under the government bill of lading will facilitate
discussion of the niceties in the draftsmanship. The standard form
bill of lading is filled out by the consignor at the time of
shipment, signed by the carrier's agent and transmitted to the
consignee. The consignee, upon receipt of the goods shipped,
endorses the consignee's certificate printed on the bill and hands
the bill over to the carrier. The carrier then submits to the
appropriate agency the endorsed bill and a standard form government
voucher in support of its claim for the freight charges. Setting
forth the details of this disbursing machinery, there are printed
on the reverse of the bill of lading "General Conditions and
Instructions," clearly referred to upon the face of the bill.
[
Footnote 5]
"Condition 2" of the government bill provides the initial basis
for the controversy here:
"Unless otherwise specifically provided or otherwise stated
hereon, this bill of lading is subject to the same rules and
conditions as govern commercial shipments made on the usual forms
provided therefor by the carrier."
Clause 6 of petitioner's bill of lading provides that:
"Full freight to destination . . . and all advance charges
against the Goods are due and payable . . . as soon as the Goods
are received for purposes of transportation; . . . Goods or Vessel
lost or not lost. . . ."
It is therefore conceded by all parties that, under these two
quoted provisions, the United States is obligated to pay freight on
the lost
Gunvor cargo unless the terms of the government
bill "specifically" negative the carrier's provision. With due
regard to the principle of
Page 338 U. S. 425
strict construction against the draftsman of a contract, we have
concluded that the terms of the government bill of lading are
inconsistent with petitioner's Clause 6, and that the United States
is not liable for freight on this lost public property.
Occupying first place among the "Conditions" to the bill, and
central to the issue here, is the payment provision.
"1. Prepayment of charges shall in no case be demanded by
carrier, nor shall collection be made from consignee. On
presentation to the office indicated on the face hereof of this
bill of lading, properly accomplished, attached to freight voucher
prepared on the authorized Government form, payment will be made. .
. ."
The simple provision against "prepayment" does not, we think,
force the conclusion that freight will be paid only on delivered
goods. This clause seems to us not to forbid accrual of the freight
charge obligation in advance of delivery, but only to prohibit
payment in advance. [
Footnote
6] But it does seem clear that the second sentence of
"Condition 1" expressly conditions payment upon submission of two
documents, the bill of lading "properly accomplished," and a
freight voucher prepared on the authorized government form. If the
carrier is put on express notice that fulfillment of either of
these conditions posits actual delivery of the cargo, petitioner's
"lost or not lost" provision must be held vitiated. In fact, both
specifically contemplate actual delivery.
Page 338 U. S. 426
I
It is petitioner's construction that the bill of lading
condition has been fully satisfied. "Accomplishment" he argues to
be a technical term of ancient use in the law of the sea signifying
no more than surrender of the bill to the carrier by the consignee
or other authorized holder. This may be conceded immediately, and
indeed the government bill seems to imply this usage where the term
is used alone. But, in this one provision on the bill, the term is
not used alone. Payment is not conditioned upon submission of an
"accomplished" bill of lading; the bill must be "properly
accomplished." [
Footnote 7]
Unless the modifier be held to mean nothing, it can only be
inferred that more than bare "accomplishment" is contemplated. The
requisites to a "properly accomplished" bill are specifically set
forth. We italicize the pertinent words.
Reference to "Instruction 2" informs the carrier that:
"The consignee,
on receipt of the shipment, will sign
the consignee's certificate on the original bill of lading and
surrender the bill of lading to the last carrier. The bill of
lading
then becomes
the evidence upon which
settlement for the service will be made."
This consignee's certificate, printed on the face of the bill,
is denominated a "Certificate of Delivery," and is introduced by
the words:
"I have this day
received . . . the public property
described in this bill of lading, in apparent good order and
condition, except as noted on the reverse hereof. "
Page 338 U. S. 427
"Condition 6" recites that:
"
Receipt of the shipment is made subject to the 'Report
of Loss, Damage, or Shrinkage' noted hereon."
and "Instruction 6" calls for notation of all loss or damage
before accomplishment, if possible. In sum, "the" evidence upon
which the carrier may rely for payment is the "accomplished," or
surrendered, bill of lading, accompanied by the "Certificate of
Delivery" signed "on receipt of the shipment," with the "receipt"
subject to the loss or damage report.
The entries made in the situation at bar are those that could be
anticipated from the terms of the bill. The consignee's Certificate
of Delivery is endorsed only:
"ss. 'Gunvor' has been lost due to enemy action. . . . For the
Acting District Engineer [signature illegible] Superintendent,
August 8, 1942."
The indicated spaces on the form were not filled in, nor was any
entry made in the "Report of Loss, Damage, or Shrinkage." We do
not, of course, suggest that the particular entries made on this
bill determine the contractual issue, but it seems inescapable that
the entry was made entirely for the record in explanation of the
failure of the lumber to arrive. Without receipt of the goods, the
bill was not, and could not have been, filled in under the strict
terms of the standard form which we have stressed, so as to be
"properly accomplished" for purposes of payment to the carrier.
II
By the terms of "Condition 1" of the bill of lading, payment is
further conditioned upon submission of the authorized government
form voucher, a separate document. [
Footnote 8] On the reverse of this voucher form are
"Instructions
Page 338 U. S. 428
to Carriers," referred to on the face of the voucher. In these
voucher "Instructions" appears in unequivocal language, statement
of the Government's position that it shall not be held liable for
freight on undelivered goods. "Instruction 6" reads explicitly:
"Payment for transportation charge will be made only for the
quantity of stores delivered at destination. . . . [
Footnote 9]"
We think of but one argument which can be advanced against the
conclusiveness of this clause. "Condition 2" on the bill of lading
invokes the usual commercial contract terms "unless otherwise
specifically provided or otherwise stated hereon;" it is arguable
that "hereon" does not mean "thereon," and that, consequently, the
clear provision of the voucher forbidding payment for nondelivered
goods cannot be considered. But, assuming for argument that no
reliance may be placed upon the further condition that the bill of
lading be "properly accomplished," this reasoning leads to the
anomalous conclusion that (1) under the piece of paper labeled
"bill of lading," freight is "earned" though the goods are not
delivered, but (2) payment will be made only on a voucher, which
expressly denies the right to payment for undelivered goods. Such a
construction yields an accrued obligation without means of
collection. We think it more reasonable to accept the available
alternative reading, and hold that the words in "Condition 2"
"otherwise stated hereon" are satisfied by the express reference
on
Page 338 U. S. 429
the bill to the standard voucher and the specific conditioning
of payment upon submission of that voucher.
To hold petitioner to the terms of the voucher comports with
practicalities. The intent of the Government to condition payment
upon delivery we think abundantly clear, and the basic question is
whether the Government's draftsmanship succeeds in giving
unequivocal notice of this stipulation. The bill expressly summons
attention to the voucher; the provision on the voucher is
unmistakable. An experienced carrier could not have been unfamiliar
with the express terms of a document which it uses regularly, a
prescribed document upon which every claim against one of its
largest customers must be made.
Since it seems to us that the bill of lading's specific
conditions for payment can only be satisfied upon delivery of the
shipment to destination, we hold the terms of the government bill
to be inconsistent with petitioner's "Goods or Vessel lost or not
lost" provision. The decision below is correct, and is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE BURTON dissent on the
grounds expressed below in the opinion of Judge Augustus N. Hand.
175 F.2d 661, 663.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
See, e.g., 62 U. S.
Barnaby, 21 How. 527,
62 U. S. 533;
Caze & Richaud v.
Baltimore Ins. Co., 7 Cranch 358,
11 U. S. 362;
Robinson, Admiralty, § 82 (1939); Borchard, The Earning of
Freight on Uncompleted Voyages, 30 Yale L.J. 362 (1921).
[
Footnote 2]
E.g., International Paper Co. v. The Gracie D.
Chambers, 248 U. S. 387;
Allanwilde Transport Corp. v. Vacuum Oil Co., 248 U.
S. 377.
[
Footnote 3]
Government Bill of Lading, Standard Form 1058, approved by the
Comptroller General, August 24, 1928; 8 Comp.Gen. 698; "Condition
2" quoted p.
338 U. S. 424
infra.
[
Footnote 4]
175 F.2d 661, 663.
[
Footnote 5]
Also printed on the back of the bill are a series of
"Administrative Directions" and a form for "Report of Loss, Damage,
or Shrinkage."
[
Footnote 6]
The provision was required by law. For more than a century, it
had been the expressed legislative will that "no advance of public
money shall be made in any case whatever. . . ." Act Jan. 31, 1823,
3 Stat. 723. The Government interprets a further provision of this
statute that " . . . payment shall not exceed the value of the
service rendered . . . " to resolve the issue at bar in its favor.
Like the court below, we find it unnecessary to pass upon this
contention.
[
Footnote 7]
The only other use of the modifier significantly appears in the
parallel provision on the reverse of the voucher. Voucher
Instruction 1 reads: "Payment . . . will be made . . . upon this
voucher form, accompanied by the corresponding bills of lading,
properly receipted. . . ." (Italics supplied.)
[
Footnote 8]
Standard Form 1068, approved by the Comptroller General, June
26, 1931; 10 Comp.Gen. 588. All claims against the Government for
freight or express charges must be made upon this standard
voucher.
[
Footnote 9]
The balance of the sentence is not relevant here. It reads:
". . . except that, in case of loss of weight from natural
shrinkage en route
and weight shipped, as shown by the
bill of lading, will be paid for, provided packages are delivered
intact."
The syntax of this exception clause is destroyed by the
conjunction in italics. Reference to the official copy at 10
Comp.Gen. 589 shows that "and" is a printer's error. The correct
word is "the."