Voyage Charters
Page 257
Chapter 10
Delivery
[clause 1 continued] | |
… and there deliver the cargo … | 18 |
[clause 1 is continued below] |
What constitutes delivery?2
10.2 In the early days of the carriage of goods by sea, the giving and taking of possession of cargoes by receivers was a self-evident physical operation, but, with growing complexity of commerce, more modern practical mechanisms for effecting delivery were, and continue to be, developed (akin to the old-fashioned transfer of the “key to the warehouse”), but the principles remain the same.3 It has been said that delivery occurs when “the goods are so completely under the control of the consignee that he may do what he likes with them”,4 or when they are “placed under the absolute dominion and control of the consignees”.5 In practice, upon the discharge of the goods from the ship they are frequently in the custody of agents or contractors rather thanPage 258
Goods were carried to Viborg on f.i.o. terms. Upon arrival, the port authority took possession of the goods and discharged them, without presenting a bill of lading, and delivered them to X, who was not in possession of the bill of lading and had no title to the goods.