A 26-pound bag containing $1 million in currency went missing en route by air from New York to Moscow. The shipper, Republic National Bank of New York (“Republic”), has sued the carrier, Delta Air Lines (“Delta”), for the loss. Delta interposed as a defense the per-pound limitation of liability for lost cargo under the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to International Transportation by Air, Oct. 12, 1929, 49 Stat. 3000, T.S. 876, reprinted in note following 49 U.S.C. § 40105 (“Warsaw Convention”; “Convention”; “Article”).
Delta now appeals the judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Martin, J.), denying Delta (as carrier) the conditional right to limit its liability for lost cargo under the Warsaw Convention,
see Republic Nat’l Bank v. Delta Air Lines,
No. 98 Civ. 8729(JSM),
The limitation of a carrier’s liability under the Warsaw Convention is conditioned upon,
inter alia,
the inclusion of specified particulars in the air waybill, which is the paper used to process the cargo.
See
Arts. 8, 9. One indispensable particular is the waybill’s place of execution.
See id.
at Art. 8(a). The waybill at issue was executed at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, but there is no entry for the place of execution in the spot designated for that datum on the face of the waybill; “JFK” appears on the face of the waybill, but in only the spot marked “Airport of Departure.” The district court, after employing a “reasonable person[’s] reading” of Delta’s air waybill, concluded that the waybill lacked one of the required particulars, and granted summary judgment to Republic.
See Republic I,
We affirm.
I
A. The Shipping Armngements
On December 9, 1997, Republic shipped 12 bags of U.S. currency from John F. Kennedy International Airport (“JFK”) to the Moscow Collection Board at the Sher-emetyevo International Airport (“SVO”) using Delta as its carrier. One 26-pound bag, containing $1 million in cash, was missing when the shipping container was opened in Moscow.
Delta submitted affidavits, which are credited for purposes of summary judgment, showing that Republic and Delta had an arrangement whereby, in exchange for a reduced freight charge, Republic would prepare the waybills for its shipments, using blank Delta forms.
Republic would then deliver the currency shipments together with the completed waybills to Delta at the airport of departure.
B. The Warsaw Convention
This claim arises under the Warsaw Convention.
1
The Convention “regulate[s] in a uniform manner the conditions of international transportation by air in respect of the documents used for such transportation and of .the liability of the carrier.” Warsaw Convention (Introduction). If the requirements of the Convention are observed, a carrier’s liability for lost cargo is limited.
See id.
at Art. 22(2);
see also Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Franklin Mint Corp.,
The limited liability provision requires that the air waybill contain, inter alia: “[t]he place and date of [the waybill’s] execution” and “[t]he place of departure and of destination.” Convention at Art. 8(a), (b).
The lost bag was one of twelve money-filled bags transported under air waybill no. 006 5800 5570 (“the Air Waybill”). Delta’s form of air waybill contains numerous blanks and boxes for the entry of information. One box is designated “Airport of Departure”; and another (as shown in the margin 2 ) recites that the waybill was “Executed On” a “Date”, at a “Time”, and at a “Place”. On the back of the waybill, an additional clause reads: “The first Carrier’s address is the airport of departure shown on the face hereof.”
The “Airport of Departure” on the Air Waybill is given as “JFK — SVO”; the “Executed On” section is blank except for the sub-entry “Date”, which is given as “12/9/97”.
The New York branch of Republic is in the practice of typing “NY” in the blank for place of execution; the Air Waybill in question, however, was prepared by Republic’s London branch, which makes a practice of leaving blank the spot that calls for “Place” of execution. Delta does not dispute that notwithstanding Republic’s help, Delta had ultimate responsibility for ensuring that the Air Waybill contained the necessary particulars. Appellant’s Reply Brief at 8.
D. Prior Proceedings
Republic filed suit against Delta on December 10, 1998, and moved for summary judgment dismissing Delta’s limited liability defense on the ground that no “place of execution” was contained in the Air Waybill. Delta cross-moved to enforce the limitation.
On June 23, 2000, the district court ruled that because the Air Waybill did not contain the place of execution as required by Article 8(a) of the Warsaw Convention, Delta could not benefit from Article 22(2)’s limitation of liability.
See Republic I,
II
It is undisputed that this case is governed by the Warsaw Convention, and that the Warsaw Convention limits Delta’s liability for the lost currency only if the Air Waybill “contains” the “place of execution”. See Art. 8 (“The air waybill shall contain the following particulars: (a) The place and date of its execution; ...”); Art. 9 (“[I]f the air waybill does not contain all the particulars ... the carrier shall not be entitled to avail himself of the provisions of this convention which exclude or limit his liability.”).
On appeal, Delta urges two closely related arguments. First, Delta argues that because (a) the Air Waybill was executed at JFK Airport in New York, and (b) “JFK” appears on the face of the document as the “Airport of Departure”, it therefore cannot be denied that the document “contains” “JFK” and thus contains what we know to be the place of execution. Second, Delta argues that the terms printed on the reverse side of the Air Waybill state that the airport of departure is also “[t]he first Carrier’s address”, and that caselaw supports the view that the first carrier’s address is the place of execution.
Republic is apparently unable to deny that the Air Waybill was executed at JFK, and it is incontestible that “JFK” is contained in the Air Waybill under “Airport of Departure”. Republic argues, however, that the document contains nothing about the place of execution, that the entry for that datum is blank, and that there is no basis for inferring that “JFK” is the place of execution because there is no basis for finding that the airport of departure is always the place of execution.
The district court found that “a reasonable person examining the waybill in this case would not be able to determine where the waybill was executed. The airport of departure is not necessarily the place where all air waybills are executed. It is not clear from the air waybill exactly where the document was executed.... Thus, a reasonable person could not be certain that JFK was the actual place of execution.”
Republic I,
Ill
We review the grant or denial of summary judgment
de novo. See Federal Ins. Co. v. Yusen Air & Sea Servs. Pte. Ltd.,
The first principle is that we may not “alter[ ] even slightly the plain, unambiguous language of a treaty negotiated among diverse sovereign nations.”
Maritime Ins. Co. v. Emery Air Freight Corp.,
However, this Court has also recognized that “the text of Articles 8 and 9, when considered separately or together, offers little guidance as to the
manner
in which an air carrier must include the particulars in the air waybill.”
Brink’s,
[I]f an air waybill includes an essential particular, but deviates in language or some other respect, the question of whether or not Article 9 deprives the air carrier of limited liability may be determined with the assistance of traditional methods of interpretation.
Id. at 1033-34. “[TJraditional methods of interpretation” includes:
consider[ing] sources outside of the text to determine whether a particular air waybill satisfies Article 8. Proper sources include the drafting history of the Convention and of the specific provisions in question, the decisions of other courts interpreting the provisions in question, particularly those of sister signatories to the Convention, and other rules of construction.
Id. at 1034. Then, “[ajfter considering these sources, we must determine whether the manner of compliance, or the information provided, satisfies the purpose of requiring the specified particular to be included in the waybill.” Id. (emphasis added).
The purpose of the Convention itself is to “regulat[e] in a uniform manner the conditions of international transportation by air in respect of the documents used for such transportation and of the liability of the carrier.” Warsaw Convention (Introduction);
accord El Al Israel Airlines, Ltd. v. Tsui Yuan Tseng,
Particulars (a) — (f) listed in Article 8, of which the place of execution is the first, serve to notify shippers (and courts) of the “international character of the transportation and the applicability of the Warsaw Convention.”
Brink’s,
Article 8(a) in particular has an evident additional utility: it specifies one forum in which actions arising under the Warsaw Convention can be brought. Article 28(1) provides that a plaintiff may sue in any of four places, of which one is the place of the execution.
See
Art. 28(1) (“An action for damages must be brought ... before the court of the domicile of the carrier or of his principal place of business, or where he has a place of business through which the contract has been made, or before the court at the place of destination.”);
see also Nebco Int’l, Inc. v. Iberia Airlines,
No. 89 Civ. 2929(CBM),
The district court examined the Air Waybill through the eyes of a “reasonable person” and concluded that “[i]t is not clear from the air waybill exactly where the document was executed.”
Republic I,
Delta’s alternative argument rests on
Martin Marietta Corp. v. Harper Group,
[t]he waybill’s place of execution is clearly indicated by the appearance of the [carrier’s] address in the box marked “name and address of issuing carrier/agent.” The fact that it is not literally identified as the “place of execution” or that the waybill contains two other [carrier] addresses is immaterial for the purposes of satisfying Article 8(a).
Id.
at 1253. Thus the court in
Martin Marietta
allowed a single entry on the waybill to satisfy two requirements: the place of execution, Article 8(a); and the address of the first carrier, Article 8(e).
See also General Elec.,
However, neither Martin Marietta nor General Electric discuss why a carrier’s address (or the airport of departure) should be construed to be the place of execution. 3 Certainly, Delta offered no evidence to the district court that industry custom or practice supports that equation.
Finally, Delta emphasizes that under the judgment, Republic benefits from its own fault or wrong: “Republic’s attempt to rely on its own procedures to avoid the ... limitation of liability raises troubling questions as to the true reasons for [the manner in which Republic] preparted] ... air waybills. * * * Republic itself not only prepared the air waybill, but for reasons known only to Republic, decided not to write the place of execution in the space provided.” Appellant’s Brief at 7, 19. But these “troubling questions” bear on potential defenses at law and equity to Republic’s contract claim for its un-limited $1 million loss, such as estoppel, negligent agency, or fraud, or the parties’ mutual intent to limit liability or to liquidate damages. We express no view as to whether any of these lines of defense would have had merit; none of them were raised for the district court’s consideration.
Notes
. Article 1(2) of the Warsaw Convention requires that the international transportation of goods be conducted within the territories of two parties to the Convention; both the United States of America and the Russian Federation are parties to the Convention.
. Furthermore, as Republic argues, in this case there was a section of the Air Waybill for place of execution, and it was left blank; it does not appear that there was any such omission in Martin Marietta or General Electric.
