Case Information
*1 Before BARKETT and WILSON, Circuit Judges, and DOWD [*] , District Judge.
WILSON, Circuit Judge:
Fishman & Tobin ("Fishman") and MacClenny Products ("MacClenny"), two manufacturers that ship clothing from the Caribbean to the United States, appeal the amount of judgment awarded to them when a carrier lost their cargo at sea. In resolving their dispute, this Court for the fourth time enters the murky waters of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA), 46 U.S.C. § 1300 et seq. More specifically, we endeavor to provide clarity to the reoccurring issue of what constitutes a "package" under section 1304(5) of COGSA, since the term is not defined in the statute. After thorough review of the record and the proceedings below, we now affirm the district court's ruling on the matter.
BACKGROUND
Fishman and MacClenny are two out of a number of American clothing manufacturers who have their clothing assembled in Santiago, Dominican Republic and shipped to the United States under the Caribbean Basin Initiative program.
Fishman imports children's clothing. The company ships its product in a unit referred to in the industry as a "big pack." A "big pack," which is akin to a pallet, has 4 × 4 ft. dimensions, is slotted at the bottom so that it can be picked up by a forklift, and is partially enclosed in corrugated cardboard with a base and cover made of plastic. Inside these containers are bundles of boys' pants and the like which are wrapped in paper and sorted by style.
* Honorable David D. Dowd, Jr., U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.
MacClenny is an importer of men's suits and jackets. For the past ten years, MacClenny sent all of its shipments with the same carrier, Tropical Shipping ("Tropical"), until the incident culminating in this suit. On a weekly basis, MacClenny routed four ocean containers of cloth, buttons, zippers, labels, hangers, and plastic bags to Santiago to be assembled. Every week, between seven and twelve containers of assembled men's jackets were returned to Florida. The assembled suit jackets were shipped in extra-tall containers to which structural beams are attached to place these "garment-on-hanger packages." Nylon ropes were hung from these beams and knotted at certain intervals so that the hangers held during shipping. Each garment-on-hanger container could hold between 4500 and 5500 hangers. Tropical regularly sent its employees to MacClenny's local partner, X-Cell Fashions, to have these specially-designed containers cleaned, lining installed, and ropes checked so that the newly pressed suits enclosed in plastic bags did not become wrinkled or soiled during transport.
Both shippers regularly dealt with Tropical Shipping to transport their clothing. A truck owned by Tropical would pick up the clothing at the shippers' respective warehouses along with a cargo manifest and drive it to port. Once the cargo arrived at the port, it would be transferred to the ship's containers and a bill of lading would be prepared and sent back to the warehouses in accordance with industry custom. Typically, the bills of lading arrived after the ships set sail.
During one such routine voyage, Tropical Shipping had a number of containers fall overboard due to improper storage on the vessel. Tropical admits its liability and asserts that section 1304(5) of COGSA limits its liability to $500.00 per package lost. The parties disagree, however, on the application of the COGSA definition of package to the units that were shipped.
The parties brought their disagreement before the district court on competing motions for summary judgment. After reviewing the facts before it, the district court decided in favor of Tropical, concluding that the Fishman package was a big pack and fair recovery was the amount of $19,500 or 39 "big pack" packages at $500 per package. MacClenny would receive only $500 in compensation for the loss of only one container. The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 46 U.S.C. § 1304(5), provides in part: Neither the carrier nor the ship shall in any event be or become liable for any loss or damage to or in connection with the transportation of goods in an amount exceeding $500 per package lawful money of the United States, or in case of goods not shipped in packages, per customary freight unit, or the equivalent of that sum in other currency, unless the nature and value of such goods have been declared by the shipper before shipment and inserted in the bill of lading. This declaration, if embodied in the bill of lading, shall be prima facie evidence, but shall not be conclusive on the carrier.
Both Fishman and MacClenny now appeal that ruling.
DISCUSSION
The main point of contention between the two sides is how to apply the COGSA definition of
package to the units shipped. We previously adopted the Second Circuit's definition of "package".
See
Hayes-Leger Assocs., Inc. v. M/V Oriental Knight,
Fishman & Tobin
A. The Fishman Dozen
Fishman suggests that the smaller bundles of its pants, referred to as "dozens", should be considered
packages rather than the "big packs" used to store those dozens before they go into the containers.
[3]
See Mitsui
& Co., Ltd. v. American Export Lines, Inc.,
Any grouping demonstrating some preparation may be considered a package. Yet, it is clear that
the number of packages should be fully and accurately disclosed and easily discernable by the carrier,
otherwise carriers will suffer unforeseen liability.
See Hayes-Leger,
765 F.2d at 1082;
Binladen BSB
Landscaping v. M.V. "Nedlloyd Rotterdam",
759 F.2d 1006, 1012-14 (2d Cir.1985). As a result, "the
touchstone of our analysis" is the contractual agreement between the parties as set forth in the bill of lading.
See Hayes-Leger,
_______________________________________________________________________________
marks & numbers quantity description of goods gross weight _______________________________________________________________________________
As Addr. 1 × 40' Stc. 39 Big Pack Containing 27,908 units boy's pants 2 4 2 0 7 _______________________________________________________________________________
As Addr. 1 × 40' Stc. 17 Big Pack Containing 13,719 Units Boy's Pants 1 0 5 5 2 _______________________________________________________________________________ The customs declaration form made out by Fishman includes all the same information but also indicates the value of the items being shipped. Neither form refers to the number of dozens of pants being shipped.
Fishman contends that the cargo manifest and reembarque are the relevant documents to be examined
as they were prepared by Fishman and were simply miscopied from Fishman's form to the bill of lading.
See
In re Belize Trading, Ltd. v. Sun Ins. Co. of New York,
_______________________________________________________________________________
cantidad de bultos clases de bultos detalles de las mercancias
_______________________________________________________________________________
quantity/number of packages type of packages description of goods [5] _______________________________________________________________________________ big pack containing: 2,325.08childrens' pants [6] _______________________________________________________________________________ As both Tropical's interpretation of the bill of lading and the reembarque agree as to the type and number of packages shipped, there is no need to look further. Recovery will be based on the thirty-nine big packs indicated.
Even without such clarification, Fishman would be hard pressed to support their claim that "dozens" are the relevant unit of measurement. By its own admission, Fishman acknowledges that "dozens" as a unit of measurement and packaging in this case could refer to any number of pants from one to twelve. The designation really referred to the total number of pants in the container rather than some common form of packaging that facilitates transportation. As a result, not only is a Fishman "dozen" an inaccurate unit of measurement, it is one not clearly denoted on the cargo manifest, customs declaration, or bill of lading. As such, the Fishman dozen cannot be used as the measure of packaging referred to by COGSA. Accordingly, we find nothing wrong with the district court's conclusion that the "big packs" as opposed to the "dozens" were the appropriate unit of measurement.
Based on this analysis, Fishman received a fair settlement from the district court. The cargo manifest and the bill of lading each indicate 39 big packs and state nothing about the smaller dozens. The recovery it received of $19,500, or $500 per big pack, is also slightly more than the declared value of the product This is a loose translation of the reembarque which is written in Spanish. The invoice and other reembarque forms are slightly different in that they state "DZ" after listing the number of pants being shipped. ("DZ"utilized as an abbreviation for dozen).
The cargo declaration contains a slightly different description of the goods. It states "1 × 40' STC. 39 big pack containing 27,908 units boy's pants," which is roughly the number of dozens multiplied by 12.
(although significantly less than the insured value).
B. Collateral Estoppel
Fishman also argues that it is entitled through the doctrine of collateral estoppel to benefit from the
district court's favorable ruling in a related case where the relevant "package" was defined as each "dozen"
of pants.
See Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Tropical Shipping & Constr. Co., Ltd.,
No. 97-1782-CIV-King, ---
F.Supp.2d ---- (S.D. Fla. June 2, 1998)(unpublished). Collateral estoppel forecloses re-litigation of an issue
of fact or law where an identical issue has been fully litigated and decided in a prior suit.
See Grosz v. City
of Miami Beach, Fla.,
In the related case, both the cargo manifest and the bill of lading clearly indicated the "dozens" of
pants being shipped.
See Ins. Co.,
No. 97-1782-CIV-King. There was also evidence that the "dozen" referred
to in that opinion was actually packaged units of twelve pair rather than the Fishman dozen at issue here.
Thus, the carrier in that case was on notice that the dozens would constitute packages.
See Sony Magnetic
Prods. Inc. v. Merivienti O/Y,
Furthermore, Tropical rightly asserts that the cases are factually dissimilar and legally incomparable because there is no indication that the Insurance Co. district court considered all the relevant case law in the matter, i.e., Hayes-Leger and the Second Circuit case law adopted therein. As a result, we find that the cases are factually and legally distinct and that collateral estoppel does not apply.
MacClenny Products
A. Containerized Packaging
For MacClenny, the case is different. It argues that a single jacket packaged on a hanger and
enclosed in a poly bag is understood in the industry to be the unit of packaging. Furthermore, uncontroverted
Furthermore, if Fishman wanted greater insurance coverage on its clothing, it could have paid
additional freight charges, thus opting out of COGSA coverage.
See Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. v. Tropical
Shipping & Constr. Co. Ltd.,
Case No. 96-8341-CIV-Ryskamp (S.D.Fla.1997);
New Hampshire Ins. Co.
v. Seaboard Marine, Ltd.,
evidence in the form of affidavits state that U.S. Customs compels the parties to specify the jackets as units, thus establishing each packaged jacket as a standard shipping unit. The cargo manifest given to Tropical Shipping indicates that 5000 units or packages are being shipped for a total value of $23,750. The bill of lading also corroborates this description.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Marks and Numbers Quantity Description of goods Gross weight _______________________________________________________________________________
As Addr. 1 × 40' Stc. 5,000 UnitsMen's Jackets 7515 _______________________________________________________________________________
Tropical, nonetheless, offers two reasons why MacClenny should recover only $500 for a single
container lost instead of the 5,000 units MacClenny claims. The first reason is that while most courts are
reluctant to recognize containers as packages because it "is inconsistent with a congressional purpose of
establishing a reasonable minimal level of liability,"
Mitsui,
The world of cargo shipping has changed substantially since the implementation of COGSA in 1936.
See generally,
Joseph C. Sweeney,
The Prism of COGSA,
30 J. Mar. L. & Com. 543 (1999); Howard M.
McCormack,
Uniformity of Maritime Law, History, & Perspective from the U.S. Point of View,
73 Tul. L.
Rev. 1481 (1999); Schmeltzer & Peavy,
Prospects and Problems of the Container Revolution,
1 J. Mar. L.
& Com. 203 (1970). At the time of the law's enactment, Congress did not and could not foresee the advent
of containerized shipping.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Inversiones Navieras Imparca, C.A.,
Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo,
[W]e cannot escape the belief that the purpose of § 4(5) of COGSA was to set a reasonable figure
below which the carrier should not be permitted to limit his liability and that "package" is thus more
sensibly related to the unit in which the shipper packed the goods and described them than to a large
metal object, functionally a part of the ship, in which the carrier caused them to be "contained."
Leather's Best, Inc. v. S.S. Mormaclynx,
Moreover, our inquiry into the matter does not end where Tropical would like at a quick glance at
the "number of packages" column on the bill of lading.
[9]
While the "number of packages" column is plainly
our starting point in determining these issues, the analysis does not end there.
See Hayes-Leger,
765 F.2d
at 1081;
Seguros "Illimani" S.A. v. M/V Popi P,
This Court has also stated that the limitation on recovery will not be followed where the carrier
description is self-serving.
See Belize Trading,
bill of lading is nothing more than a contract of adhesion, and rarely does a shipper intend to provide
COGSA coverage to the container alone and not to some form of the goods stowed inside it. Allowing
recovery for the container where no other explicit reference was made to packaging is simply a legal
convenience to ensure a minimal level of recovery.
See Mitsui,
agreement here. In the bill of lading sent to MacClenny after the ship set sail, Tropical listed only the dimensions of the container in the quantity column.
In this case, while the dimensions of the container were indicated in the quantity column, the description states that "5000 units men's suits" are inside the container. MacClenny presented evidence that the description of 5000 units may be attributed to U.S. Customs rules and regulations and represents a kind of de facto shipping unit. MacClenny's reembarque contains roughly the same information as the bill of lading but the commercial invoice on the other hand clearly indicates that each jacket is a package. [11] This internal conflict between the documents written by MacClenny's agents further complicates the issue.
Despite the ambiguities and conflicts among the evidence presented at summary judgment, a review
of both the customs declaration form and reembarque indicate that MacClenny of their own will stipulated
under the number of packages column only one. The evidence presented in competing motions for summary
judgment that each garment-on-hanger is a recognized shipping unit is inconclusive.
[12]
Furthermore, our
precedent has clearly required that the number of packages that are declared must be indicated in the
number/quantity of packages column on the bill of lading.
See Hayes-Leger,
After more than ten years in the shipping business, MacClenny is hard pressed to argue that it did not understand the significance of correctly completing all the declaration forms and bills to COGSA recovery. In light of the fact that neither the bill of lading nor the reembarque or customs form offer any clear indication that each garment-on-hanger was the relevant unit of packaging being shipped and our precedent holding that such information need be provided, we affirm the district court's award of $500 for a single container A quick sampling of the commercial invoice reveals the following designations: UNITS DESCRIPTION
Packages: Men's Jackets
1,706 50% wool 50% lambswool
1,264
74% polyester 21% wool 5% silk
MacClenny is also unable to argue that each unit is a "customary freight unit" as they are not
"customarily used as the basis for the calculation of the freight rate to be charged."
Caterpillar Overseas
S.A. v. Marine Transport, Inc.,
shipped. [13]
B. Intra-Court Comity
Finally, appellants ask us to consider whether the district court erred in not applying intra-court comity and following the decisions of Dorby Frocks, No. 95-0331-CIV-LENARD. We will address this issue only briefly. We are aware of the need for consistency in the administration of the judicial process. The issue takes on greater saliency in cases such as this where an attempt is made not just to divine the thoughts of Congress but to create judicial precedent consistent with the opinions of this Circuit, the federal judiciary generally, and, as this is a matter of international convention, a result not entirely devoid of the awareness of the potential for international disparity.
Nonetheless, it should be noted that there is a paucity of case law dealing with intra-court comity.
Courts follow the doctrine to provide a uniform interpretation of the law.
See United States v. Anaya,
509
F.Supp. 289, 293 (S.D.Fla.1980),
aff'd sub nom United States v. Zayas-Morales,
685 F.2d 1272 (11th
Cir.1982). Unlike circuit court panels where one panel will not overrule another,
see Julius v. Johnson,
755
F.2d 1403, 1404 (11th Cir.1985), district courts are not held to the same standard.
See Anaya,
509 F.Supp.
at 293 n. 2 (holding that even district court cases decided by panels of three have no precedential value).
While the decisions of their fellow judges are persuasive, they are not binding authority.
See Aguirre v.
United States,
CONCLUSION
This is not to say that there may never be a case where the conflict between the information provided in the quantity column and description column would lead to a different result. There was simply not enough evidence to support that conclusion in this case. It is also our hope that by providing a bright-line rule now, such conflicts may be avoided in the future and shippers and carriers alike will be on notice as to how to proceed. Appellants also raise the issue of stare decisis. We choose not to address that issue as it can only
apply in situations where a court is bound by its own controlling decisions or that of courts to which it is
obedient.
See Jaffree v. Wallace,
After thorough review of the issues before us, we affirm the district court's ruling as to both Fishman & Tobin and MacClenny Products.
AFFIRMED. _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________
