CMR: Contracts for the international carriage of goods by road
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CHAPTER 5
The performance of the carriage
The performance of the carriage
5.1 This chapter concerns the position as between the three parties concerned, namely the consignor, the carrier and the consignee, in the period during which the goods are being carried and then on the arrival of the goods. The sort of questions which might arise are such as: who has the right to dispose of the goods while they remain in transit? What is the position of the carrier where those rights of disposal are exercised? Who is entitled to require delivery of the goods? What is the position where performance of the carriage becomes impossible? The Convention deals with issues such as these in Articles 12 to 17.The right of disposal
5.2 Article 12 provides as follows:- 1. The sender has the right to dispose of the goods, in particular by asking the carrier to stop the goods in transit, to change the place at which delivery is to take place or to deliver the goods to a consignee other than the consignee indicated in the consignment note.
- 2. This right shall cease to exist when the second copy of the consignment note is handed to the consignee or when the consignee exercises his right under article 13, paragraph 1; from that time onwards the carrier shall obey the orders of the consignee.
- 3. The consignee shall, however, have the right of disposal from the time when the consignment note is drawn up, if the sender makes an entry to that effect in the consignment note.
- 4. If in exercising his right of disposal the consignee has ordered the delivery of the goods to another person, that other person shall not be entitled to name other consignees.
- 5. The exercise of the right of disposal shall be subject to the following conditions:
- (a) that the sender or, in the case referred to in paragraph 3 of this article, the consignee who wishes to exercise the right produces the first copy of the consignment note on which the new instructions to the carrier have been entered and indemnifies the carrier against all expenses, loss and damage involved in carrying out such instructions;
- (b) that the carrying out of such instructions is possible at the time when the instructions reach the person who is to carry them out and does not either interfere with the normal working of the carrier’s undertaking or prejudice the senders or consignees of other consignments;
- (c) that the instructions do not result in a division of the consignment.
- 6. When, by reason of the provisions of paragraph 5(b) of this article, the carrier cannot carry out the instructions which he receives, he shall immediately notify the person who gave him such instructions.
- 7.
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Restrictions on the right of disposal
5.5 The right of disposal is not unfettered, but is qualified in various respects by CMR. Firstly, there is the procedural requirement for production of the first copy of the consignment note endorsed with the amended instructions.8 Secondly, there is the requirement that the person exercising the right must indemnify the carrier against any expenses, loss or damage,9 and the carrier can also refuse instructions which are impracticable, or which would interfere with the normal working of his undertaking, or which would prejudice the senders or consignees of other consignments.10 The Convention offers no guidance as to when a refusal for these reasons will be justified, but in relation to interference with normal working, since any alteration to instructions will cause a degree of interference, if only through the revision of paperwork, it seems sensible to follow Loewe11 when he suggests that the provision applies only where “the carrying out of the instructions will seriously interfere with the normal activities of the carrier’s enterprise”. Finally, the rightPage 111
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Successive disposals
5.10 The sender, while he retains the right to dispose of the goods, is free to nominate an alternative consignee,22 as is the consignee if he has acquired the right to dispose of the goods under Article 12(3). However, a consignee nominated by the original consignee under that provision does not have a similar right,23 but there is no similar expressPage 113
Disposal of goods on delivery
5.12 Article 13 provides as follows:- 1. After arrival of the goods at the place designated for delivery, the consignee shall be entitled to require the carrier to deliver to him, against a receipt, the second copy of the consignment note and the goods. If the loss of the goods is established or if the goods have not arrived after the expiry of the period provided for in article 19, the consignee shall be entitled to enforce in his own name against the carrier any rights arising from the contract of carriage.
- 2. The consignee who avails himself of the rights granted to him under paragraph 1 of this article shall pay the charges shown to be due on the consignment note, but in the event of dispute on this matter the carrier shall not be required to deliver the goods unless security has been furnished by the consignee.
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The right to enforce the contract
5.18 The object of Articles 12 and 13 is to establish who at any particular time has the right to dispose of the goods comprised in a particular contract for the international carriage of goods by road. The object does not seem to have been fully achieved, in that courts in different jurisdictions have given conflicting decisions as to the interpretation of the two Articles, and also in that the Articles do not provide an exhaustive code of rules and have to be supplemented by national law.41 As a minimum, the courts are required to recognise the right given to the consignee by Article 13(1) to enforce the contract in his own name.42 The German courts, as a matter of interpretation of CMR rather thanPage 117
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Damage to the goods
5.24 Article 13 only expressly confers a right of action on the consignee in cases where the goods have been lost or delayed, no mention being made of the position in relation to damage. However, since under Articles 12(2) and 13(1) the right of disposal passes to the consignee on delivery, it would seem to follow that the consignee will equally have a right of action against the carrier from that time in respect of any damage that may have occurred, and such seems to have been consistently assumed in the Continental case law.82 As to whether or not such right of action is exclusive to the consignee, the same problem arises as discussed in the previous paragraph.Impossibility
Impossibility in relation to the carriage
5.25 Article 14 provides as follows:- 1. If for any reason it is or becomes impossible to carry out the contract in accordance with the terms laid down in the consignment note before the goods reach the place designated for delivery, the carrier shall ask for instructions from the person entitled to dispose of the goods in accordance with the provisions of article 12.
- 2. Nevertheless, if circumstances are such as to allow the carriage to be carried out under conditions differing from those laid down in the consignment note and if the carrier has been unable to obtain instructions in reasonable time from the person entitled to dispose of the goods in accordance with the provisions of article 12, he shall take such steps as seem to him to be in the best interests of the person entitled to dispose of the goods.
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Impossibility in relation to delivery of the goods
5.31 Article 15 provides as follows:- 1. Where circumstances prevent delivery of the goods after their arrival at the place designated for delivery, the carrier shall ask the sender for his instructions. If the consignee refuses the goods the sender shall be entitled to dispose of them without being obliged to produce the first copy of the consignment note.
- 2. Even if he has refused the goods, the consignee may nevertheless require delivery so long as the carrier has not received instructions to the contrary from the sender.
- 3. When circumstances preventing delivery of the goods arise after the consignee, in exercise of his rights under article 12, paragraph 3, has given an order for the goods to be delivered to another person, paragraphs 1 and 2 of this article shall apply as if the consignee were the sender and that other person were the consignee.
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Expenses
5.35 Article 16(1) provides as follows:- 1. The carrier shall be entitled to recover the cost of his request for instructions and any expenses entailed in carrying out such instructions, unless such expenses were caused by the wrongful act or neglect of the carrier.”
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Unloading and storing the goods
5.37 Article 16(2) provides as follows:- 2. In the cases referred to in article 14, paragraph 1, and in article 15, the carrier may immediately unload the goods for account of the person entitled to dispose of them and thereupon the carriage shall be deemed to be at an end. The carrier shall then hold the goods on behalf of the person so entitled. He may however entrust them to a third party, and in that case he shall not be under any liability except for the exercise of reasonable care in the choice of such third party. The charges due under the consignment note and all other expenses shall remain chargeable against the goods.107
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Sale of goods by the carrier
5.43 Article 16(3)–(5) provides as follows:- 3. The carrier may sell the goods, without awaiting instructions from the person entitled to dispose of them, if the goods are perishable or their condition warrants such a course, or when the storage expenses would be out of proportion to the value of the goods. He may also proceed to the sale of the goods in other cases if after the expiry of a reasonable period he has not received from the person entitled to dispose of the goods instructions to the contrary which he may reasonably be required to carry out.
- 4. If the goods have been sold pursuant to this article, the proceeds of sale, after deduction of the expenses chargeable against the goods, shall be placed at the disposal of the person entitled to dispose of the goods. If these charges exceed the proceeds of sale, the carrier shall be entitled to the difference.
- 5. The procedure in the case of sale shall be determined by the law or custom of the place where the goods are situated.