Case Information
*2 Before KENNEDY, [1] JONES and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
DeMOSS, Circuit Judge:
*3 This appeal involves loss and damage to five separate famine relief shipments made by the United States of America (the United States) to certain African ports. Plaintiff-shipper, the United States appeals a final judgment awarding only limited damages in the amount of $7,300.08 on its claims for cargo loss and damage in the amount of $203,319.87 under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA), 46 U.S.C. §§ 1300-1315. The United States asks this Court to vacate the district court's limited judgment and to render judgment in favor of the United States for the full extent of its damages. Defendants-carriers (defendants) cross-appeal, arguing that the United States failed to establish a prima facie case of loss or damage and that the United States failed to submit competent proof to support the damages claimed. Having reviewed the record, the arguments of the parties, and the relevant law, we vacate the district court's judgment awarding $7,300.08 and render judgment in favor of the United States in the amount of $203,319.87 plus prejudgment interest.
I.
Between 1994 and 1996, the United States, through its Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), and with the assistance of several private relief organizations, shipped cargoes to famine- stricken areas of Africa on behalf of the Agency for International Development (AID). The cargoes were shipped under various charter parties made expressly subject to COGSA on the M/V OVERSEAS *4 HARRIETTE and the M/V OVERSEAS MARILYN, vessels owned by the defendants, Ocean Bulk Ships, Inc., and Transbulk Carriers, Inc. The shipments included a variety of foodstuffs such as vegetable oil, corn, and bulgur wheat, which were shipped to the African ports of Mombasa, Kenya; Beira and Maputo, Mozambique; Freetown, Sierra Leone; and Tema, Ghana. Clean bills of lading were issued for each shipment after the cargo was stowed, indicating that the cargo was received by the carrier in good condition. Unfortunately, the goods were not received in the same quantity or quality when discharged in Africa. Survey reports documenting the loss and damage indicated several problems. Some parts of the cargo were simply not received at all. Some parts of the cargo were received in a damaged and unusable condition. For example, bags were torn and spilled, and some of the cargo was wetted and rotten. The total amount of documented loss and damage to the cargo was $203,319.87.
In December 1998, the United States filed the first of five lawsuits, seeking damages for the lost and damaged cargo under COGSA. In February 1999, these suits were consolidated. In September 1999, the matter was tried to the bench. In December 1999, the district court entered judgment in favor of the United States for the limited sum of $7,300.08, the amount of damage that the defendants admit occurred prior to discharge. This appeal ensued.
II.
When COGSA was enacted in 1936, one of its express purposes was to “redress the edge in bargaining power enjoyed by carriers over shipper and cargo interests by setting out certain duties and responsibilities of carriers that cannot be avoided even by express contractual provision.” 2 Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Admiralty and Maritime Law § 10-15 (3d ed. 2001) (citing 46 U.S.C. § 1303(8)). COGSA applies to “all contracts for carriage of goods by sea to or from ports of the United States in foreign trade.” 46 U.S.C. § 1312. The provisions of COGSA are not generally applicable to charter parties. Id . § 1305. A shipper and carrier may agree, however, to a “Clause Paramount” by which the terms of COGSA are incorporated into a charter party. Schoenbaum, supra , § 10-15, at 89 & n.6. In this case, the charter agreements, shipping contracts, and bills of lading contain clauses making the shipments subject to the terms of COGSA. Thus, the parties agree that COGSA governs the resolution of this dispute.
COGSA sets up a “complex system of shifting burdens and
accompanying presumptions of liability.”
Id
. § 10-23, at 115.
This use of presumptions and shifting burdens of proof “predates
the statutory schemes of liability” and is “thus rooted in strong
policy considerations” specific to the context of cargo loss. Most
of these rules developed to alleviate the perceived unfairness of
certain common law rules requiring a shipper to conclusively prove
*6
the cause of cargo loss or damage notwithstanding the fact that the
circumstances surrounding the loss or damage were primarily
accessible to the defendant-carrier.
Id
. Those policy
considerations are evident in COGSA's current statutory scheme,
which shifts the burden of proof “more frequently than the winds on
a stormy sea.”
Id
.; see also
Tubacex, Inc. v. M/V Risan
, 45 F.3d
951, 954 (5th Cir. 1995) (characterizing COGSA's statutory scheme
as a “ping-pong” game of burden shifting). The first stage of
COGSA's statutory framework requires the shipper to establish a
prima facie case of loss or damage by “proving that the cargo for
which the bill of lading was issued was loaded in an undamaged
condition, and discharged in a damaged condition.”
Tubacex
, 45
F.3d at 954; see also
Quaker Oats Co. v. M/V Torvanger
, 734 F.2d
238, 240 (5th Cir. 1984). A clean bill of lading issued by the
carrier to the shipper is prima facie evidence that the goods were
received in an undamaged condition.
Shell Oil Co. v. M/T Gilda
,
A shipper's prima facie case creates a presumption of
liability.
Blasser
, 628 F.2d at 382. At that point, the
burden of proof shifts to the defendant-carrier, which must prove
(1) that it exercised due diligence to prevent the loss or damage
to the cargo, 46 U.S.C. § 1304(1), or (2) that the loss or damage
was the result of one of the Act’s enumerated “uncontrollable
causes of loss,”
id
. at § 1304(2). See also
Tubacex
,
If the carrier successfully rebuts the shipper’s prima facie
case, then the presumption of liability vanishes and the burden
returns to the shipper to show that carrier negligence was at least
a concurrent cause of the loss or damage to the cargo.
Tenneco
Resins, Inc. v. Davy Int’l, AG
,
We review the district court's application of this burden
shifting paradigm and other legal issues de novo. See
Mendes Jr.
Int’l. Co. v. M/V Sokai Maru
,
III.
On appeal, the United States claims that it established a
prima facie case by producing clean bills of lading as proof that
the carriers received the goods in an undamaged condition and
survey reports showing that the goods were either missing upon
discharge or were discharged in a damaged condition. Such a
showing is clearly sufficient under COGSA. , e.g. ,
Quaker Oats
,
The defendants seek to avoid that conclusion in this case by arguing that the district court found the survey reports offered by the United States as evidence of loss or damage to be incredible. Thus, defendants maintain that the district court did not find credible evidence establishing the United States' prima facie case.
We disagree. The district court accepted the clean bills of
lading as evidence that the cargo was delivered to the defendants
*9
in good condition. The district court did not question the
reliability of the survey reports as tendered to establish loss or
damage to the cargo upon discharge. To the contrary, the district
court accepted the virtually undisputed fact that the cargo was
either lost or damaged upon discharge, and then held that the
defendants were not responsible for the losses, either (1) because
the damage occurring during discharge could have been caused by
third parties, such as the port authority or its agents, see
U.N./F.A.O. World Food Programme v. M/V Tay
,
To the extent that the district court raised any question at all about the United States' reliance upon the survey reports, that question was limited to the issue of whether the survey reports *10 were probative on the issue of causation , rather than damage. The district court referred to language appearing in two of the five survey reports, stating its opinion that the reports listed several possible causes without settling upon a single cause as more probable than another. Thus, the district court suggested that those two reports standing alone did not tend to establish what caused that portion of the loss and damage (about 35 percent) documented in those surveys. The issue of causation, however, and the shipper's burden to prove concurrent causation in particular, is not a required element of the shipper's prima facie case and is, likewise, limited to the later stages of COGSA's burden shifting framework. For the foregoing reasons, we reject the defendants' argument that the district court implicitly rejected the United States' evidence of damage upon discharge and conclude that the United States satisfactorily established a prima facie case of loss or damage under COGSA by producing clean on board bills of lading for each shipment, paired with records unambiguously documenting that the cargo was either missing or damaged when discharged at the destination port.
IV.
The United States claims that the carriers failed to rebut its prima facie case. As set forth above, COGSA lets carriers rebut the shipper's prima facie case by showing that the facts and circumstances surrounding the loss fall within one of seventeen *11 statutory exceptions denominated as “uncontrollable causes of loss” or, more directly, by demonstrating that the carrier exercised due diligence in its stowage, carriage, and discharge of the cargo. 46 U.S.C. § 1304(2). There is considerable controversy, and even an intra-circuit conflict, as to whether the carrier's rebuttal burden with respect to most of those exceptions is one of production or persuasion.
The first sixteen of the seventeen statutory exceptions to carrier liability set out at 46 U.S.C. § 1304(2) merely provide that the carrier is not liable for losses or damages caused by one of the listed causes. In this group are included losses attributable to such things as an act of God, id . § 1304(2)(d), an act of war, id . § 1304(2)(e), and the primary exception at issue in this case, a shipper’s own improper packaging, id . § 1304(2)(n). The seventeenth exception, § 1304(2)(q), is a catch-all exception, which states that the carrier is not liable for losses or damages resulting from “any other cause arising without the actual fault and privity of the carrier” or its agents. That subsection goes on, however, to provide that, with respect to § 1304(2)(q), “the burden of proof shall be on the person claiming the benefit of this exception” to show that the carrier’s fault or neglect did not contribute to the loss or damage. Id . § 1304(2)(q). Thus, the exception codified at § 1304(2)(q) expressly requires that the *12 carrier prove the applicability of the exception, while the remaining statutory exceptions are silent on the point.
Some Fifth Circuit panels have relied upon the additional
statutory language in § 1304(2)(q) to implicitly place a heightened
burden of proof on the carrier under § 1304(2)(q) and to permit a
more lenient burden under the remaining exceptions. Specifically,
some panels of this Court have required a carrier proceeding under
§ 1304(2)(q) to bear, not just the burden of going forward with
evidence, but the burden of persuasion with respect to any defense
premised upon that subsection.
Tubacex
, 45 F.3d at 954-55
(“The burden on the carrier under” § 1304(2)(q) “is more than
merely a burden of going forward with evidence, but rather it is a
burden of persuasion with the attendant risk of non-persuasion.”);
Quaker Oats
,
The earliest Fifth Circuit decision to address the issue,
however, at least implicitly reaches a different conclusion. In
Waterman S. S. Corp. v. United States Smelting, Refining & Mining
Co.
, 155 F.2d 687, 691 (5th Cir. 1946), this Court held that a
carrier seeking to avoid liability on the theory that the damages
were caused by perils of the sea, § 1304(2)(c), or latent defects
in the cargo, § 1304(2)(p), bore both the “burden of going forward”
to demonstrate the applicability of the exceptions and “the risk of
non-persuasion.”
Id
. at 691. The proposition that a carrier bears
both the burden of production and the burden of persuasion with
respect to those exceptions was drawn from
Commercial Molasses
Corp. v. New York Tank Barge Corp.
, 62 S. Ct. 156 (1941). In
Commercial Molasses
, the Supreme Court held that “the shipowner, in
order to bring himself within a permitted exception to the
obligation to carry safely, whether imposed by statute or because
he is a common carrier or because he has assumed it by contract,
must show that the loss was due to an excepted cause and not to
breach of his duty to furnish a seaworthy vessel.”
Id
. at 109.
Furthermore, “since the burden is on the shipowner, [if] he does
*15
not sustain it, . . . the shipper must prevail if, upon the whole
evidence, it remains doubtful whether the loss is within the
exception.”
Id
. The
Commercial Molasses
court explained that this
burden rests upon the carrier “not in consequence of his being an
ordinary ‘bailee’ but because he is a special type of bailee who
has assumed the obligation of an insurer.”
Id
. In addition to
Waterman
, which has never been overruled, there are decisions by
this Court and others, which either suggest that the carrier bears
the burden of persuasion for all § 1304(2) exceptions or fail to
delineate any difference between the applicable burden for those
exceptions codified at § 1304(2)(a)-(p) and the catch-all exception
codified at § 1304(2)(q).
Shell Oil Co. v. M/T Gilda
, 790 F.2d
1209, 1213 (5th Cir. 1986) (“Section [130]4(2)(q) provides that the
carrier has the burden of proving it was not at fault if the cause
of the loss is not listed in § [130]4(2)(a)-(p). 46 U.S.C.
§ 1304(2)(q). Congress therefore could not have intended the
shipper to bear the burden of proving negligence in every case.
Most courts and commentators have concluded from the structure of
§ [130]4(2) that Congress did not intend to place such a burden on
the shipper in any case.”); see also
Servicios-Expoarma, C.A. v.
Industrial Mar. Carriers, Inc.
, 135 F.3d 984 (5th Cir. 1998)
(“[T]he burden rests upon the carrier of goods by sea to bring
himself within any exception relieving him from the liability which
the law otherwise imposes on him.”);
Tokio Marine & Fire Ins. Co.
*16
Ltd. v. Vessel Sammi Aurora
,
The defendants raised two of the seventeen statutory exceptions in the district court. The defendants' main contention at trial was that a significant portion of the damage was caused by the United States' failure to package the goods in a manner *17 sufficient to survive the voyage. 46 U.S.C. § 1304(2)(n) (exonerating carrier from liability for loss or damage caused by “insufficiency of packaging”). Exception (n) is one of those exceptions set out at § 1304(2)(a)-(p) as to which the precise scope of the rebuttal burden is unclear. While we have noted the apparent conflict or, alternatively, the incomplete resolution of this issue in our circuit precedent, we are not, in this case, compelled to decide whether the defendants’ rebuttal burden with respect to their § 1304(2)(n) defense was one of production or persuasion. This is so because the defendants failed to produce competent evidence to meet either standard with respect to their § 1304(2)(n) defense.
Without regard to whether the carrier's rebuttal burden under
§ 1304(2)(n) is one of production or persuasion, the law is
absolutely clear that the carrier must do more than offer mere
speculation as to the cause of lost or damaged cargo.
Pacific
Employers Ins. Co. v. M/V Gloria
, 767 F.2d 229, 241 (5th Cir.
1985);
Harbert Int’l Establishment v. Power Shipping
,
To satisfy this burden, defendants relied solely upon survey reports prepared at discharge. While those reports documented the quantity and compromised quality of lost and damaged cargo with some precision, three of the five survey reports failed to provide even a speculative assessment with regard to the cause of the missing and damaged cargo. Thus, defendants failed to offer any probative evidence whatsoever with respect to their § 1304(2)(n) defense as it relates to those three shipments. The two remaining survey reports, both involving shipments to Tema, Ghana, included *19 a list of five causes which may have contributed in some way to the loss, including the use of bags with very thin liners to package a portion of one shipment to Ghana and the entirety of a second shipment to Ghana. Together, the losses that can even potentially be associated with the surveyor's remarks about the packaging of these shipments is slightly less than one-third of the total loss claimed by the United States.
With regard to the first shipment to Ghana, as to which the
surveyor's remarks are limited to only one of the commodities
included in the shipment, the survey does not in any way tend to
establish that insufficient packaging, rather than one of the other
listed causes, was the cause of the damage. Clearly, with regard
to this shipment, the surveyor's speculation is insufficient to
meet even a burden of production with respect to establishing their
§ 1304(2)(n) defense.
Pacific Employers
, 767 F.2d at 241;
Harbert Int’l Establishment
,
With regard to the second shipment, the survey report also
includes the surveyor's remark that the portion of the overall
damage attributable to “excessive spilling” during discharge
“occurred due to poor packaging.” This is clearly some evidence
that poor packaging was at least a concurrent cause of some of the
loss and damage arising from this second shipment. This evidence,
however, is likewise insufficient to exonerate the defendants. As
an initial matter, the surveyor's brief comment is not the only
*20
record evidence concerning the sufficiency of the packaging. The
United States called Benjamin Myatt, a well-credentialed packaging
expert employed by the Department of Agriculture, who is personally
responsible for the development and specification of packaging
systems used for foreign food assistance programs. Myatt testified
that the cargos were packed in the standard packaging used for
these commodities and that the United States had used the same type
bags to ship 345,000 tons of food commodities the previous year.
Myatt testified that such packaging is subject to rigorous field
and laboratory testing for burst strength and other qualities and
that he had personally observed the discharge of famine relief
cargo packaged in the very same bags without significant problems.
In light of the record evidence as a whole, we conclude that the
brief comments in the survey report for this second shipment to
Tema, Ghana, are insufficient to satisfy the defendants' rebuttal
burden, without regard to whether that burden was one of production
or persuasion. Moreover, and even if the survey report, standing
alone, was sufficient to satisfy a burden of production, we would
still hold that the United States is entitled to recover. The
defendants conceded that some of the damage was attributable to
their own negligence, a concession which determined the damages
awarded after bench trial. Even assuming the defendants satisfied
their burden of rebutting the United States' prima facie case as to
this single shipment, the record establishes that carrier
negligence was at least a concurrent cause of the loss, and the
*21
defendants therefore bore the burden of establishing which portion
of the loss was not attributable to carrier negligence. Defendants
did not submit any evidence on the appropriate allocation of loss,
and the United States is therefore entitled to recovery of the
claimed damages for this shipment.
Tenneco Resins
,
The defendants also raised the applicability of the catch-all
exception to liability codified in § 1304(q). Specifically, the
defendants suggested that a portion of the loss and damage to the
five shipments was attributable to pilferage, either from the
vessel or from the docks and environs during discharge. The
district court stated that a COGSA carrier is not responsible for
careless discharge. This is an incorrect statement of the law.
COGSA extends through discharge, and a COGSA carrier is subject to
statutory obligations to “properly and carefully load, handle,
stow, carry, keep, care for, and discharge the goods carried.” 46
U.S.C. § 1303(2). This Court has recognized, however, that
§ 1304(2)(q) may shield a carrier from liability when the carrier
has absolutely no control with respect to the selection of port
stevedores or the rate they will be paid and, further, no control
with respect to how or when the cargo is discharged. See
U.N./F.A.O. World Food Programme v. M/V Tay
,
To satisfy this burden, the defendants submitted several
exhibits tending to establish that pilferage occurred from the
vessel or from the docks during discharge at the ports of
destination or other ports. While these exhibits are probative on
the issue of whether some pilferage occurred, they do not tend to
establish that the defendants had no control over either the
stevedores or the discharge process. To the contrary, several of
the exhibits demonstrate that the ship agents were in some
circumstances able to exert influence to have certain vessels
docked at berths considered more efficient or less prone to
pilferage. The documents further reflect that defendants intended
to rely upon contractual provisions to support a cause of action
seeking recompense for any losses that the defendants were required
to bear as the result of stevedore negligence. We further note
that the defendants neither developed any arguments or testimony
relating to these exhibits at trial nor raised the applicability of
this exception on appeal. In light of the record as a whole, we
*23
conclude that the defendants did not satisfy their burden of
persuasion with respect to their § 1304(2)(q) defense. Moreover,
this defense suffers from the same weakness as the defendants'
§ 1304(2)(n) defense. That is, even if we were to assume that the
defendants carried their rebuttal burden, the record establishes
that carrier negligence was at least a concurrent cause of the
damages claimed, and the defendants failed to make any attempt to
apportion or separate the losses attributable to their own
negligence as compared to the losses attributable to pilferage or
some other cause.
Tenneco Resins
,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the defendants failed to rebut the United States' prima facie case. Further, even if the defendants had carried such burden, the United States established that at least some of the loss and damage was attributable to the defendants' negligence, and the defendants failed to respond with evidence tending to establish precisely what portion of the claimed loss and damage was attributable to another concurrent cause.
VI.
The United States asks us to render judgment in its favor. The United States contends that the extent of liability is established by declarations in the bills of lading covering the shipments. COGSA expressly allows a shipper to declare the value *24 of its cargo as long as “the nature and value of such goods have been declared by the shipper before shipment and inserted in the bill of lading.” 46 U.S.C. § 1304(5). “This declaration, if embodied in the bill of lading, shall be prima facie evidence, but shall not be conclusive on the carrier.” Id .
The district court found that the declarations of the cargo’s value embodied in the bills of lading were sufficient evidence of damages claimed in this case. We agree. Id . The carriers’ only rebuttal to this proof of value is that the bills of lading were inadmissible “double hearsay.” The carriers state that “[t]he information for the value as listed on the bills of lading is not based on personal knowledge of the agents of defendants who issued the bills of lading.” Regardless of whether this is true, it is irrelevant. The statute allows the shipper to declare the cargo’s value, and inclusion of this value on the bill of lading evidences the carrier’s acquiescence to this declaration. The United States' declared value was prima facie evidence of the cargo’s value and, absent any rebuttal evidence from the carrier, is adequate to set the value of the cargo for damage calculation purposes.
Moreover, we are comforted in this case by testimonial evidence from the government employee responsible for setting the value of the cargo, who testified that the very precise bill of lading values declared were drawn from invoices reflecting the government's actual purchase price for the commodity. We are not, *25 therefore, dealing with a potential differential between the value declared for shipping purposes and the value as measured by the price paid for the commodity. In addition, the record contains the government's claim forms for the various cargos. The damages detailed therein are based upon a unit price for the commodities plus freight costs. Testimonial evidence established that these documents would likewise have been checked against and premised upon the government's actual purchase price for the goods. Thus, the damages claimed are not premised upon a unitary value taken directly from the bill of lading, but are instead calculated using the actual costs to the government. We agree with and, therefore, affirm the district court's factual determination that the United States produced competent evidence of the damages claimed. We, therefore, see no barrier to a decision rendering judgment in favor of the United States.
V.
The United States requests that this Court award prejudgment
interest running from the date of last discharge through the time
of judgment, calculated in accordance with 31 U.S.C. § 3717. The
United States preserved error on this issue in the district court.
In this Circuit, there is a strong presumption in favor of awarding
pre-judgment interest.
Ryan Walsh Stevedoring Co., Inc. v.
James Marine Serv., Inc.
,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district court is VACATED and judgment is RENDERED in favor of the United States in the amount of $203,319.87 plus pre-judgment interest. g:\00-20117.opn
Notes
[1] Circuit Judge of the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
[2] We note that, to the extent that
Waterman
and similar Fifth
Circuit cases constitute a direct holding on the issue of a
defendant-carrier's rebuttal burden under COGSA, those cases are
controlling under the “well-established prior panel precedent rule
of this Circuit,” which provides that “the holding of the first
panel to address an issue is the law of this Circuit, thereby
binding all subsequent panels unless and until the first panel's
holding is overruled by the Court sitting en banc or by the Supreme
Court.”
Smith v. GTE
,
