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The Term Introduction
require the seller to contract for carriage on usual terms at his own expense. Therefore,
a point up to which he would have to pay transport costs must necessarily be indicated
after the respective "C-term. Under the CIF and CIP terms the seller also has
to take out insurance and bear the Insurance cost. Since the point for the division
of costs is fixed at a point in the country of destination, the "C"-terms
are frequently mistakenly believed to be arrival contracts, in which the seller
would bear all risks and costs until the goods have actually arrived at the agreed
point. However, it must be stressed that the "C"-terms are of the same
nature as the "F"-terms, in that the seller fulfils the contract in the
country of shipment or dispatch. Thus, the contracts of sale under the "C"-terms,
like the contracts under the "F"-terms, fall within the category of shipment
contracts.
It is in the nature of shipment contracts that, while the seller is bound to pay
the normal transport cost for the carriage of the goods by a usual route and in
a customary manner to the agreed place, the risk of loss of or damage to the goods,
as well as additional costs resulting from events occurring after the goods having
been appropriately delivered for carriage, fall upon the buyer. Hence, the "C"-terms
are distinguishable from all other terms in that they contain two "critical"
points, one indicating the point to which the seller is bound to arrange and bear
the costs of a contract of carriage and another one for the allocation of risk.
For this reason, the greatest caution must be observed when adding obligations of
the seller to the "C"-terms which seek to extend the seller's responsibility
beyond the aforementioned "critical'' point for the allocation of risk. It
is of the very essence of the "C"-term that the seller is relieved of
any further risk and cost after he has duly fulfilled his contract by contracting
for carriage and handing over the goods to the carrier and by providing for insurance
under the CIF- and CIP-terms.
The essential nature of the "C"-terms as shipment contracts is also illustrated
by the common use of documentary credits as the preferred mode of payment used in
such terms. Where it is agreed by the parties to the sale contract that the seller
will be paid by presenting the agreed shipping documents to a bank under a documentary
credit, it would be quite contrary to the central purpose of the documentary credit
for the seller to bear further risks and costs after the moment when payment had
been made under documentary credits or otherwise upon shipment and dispatch of the
goods. Of course, the seller would have to bear the cost of the contract of carriage
irrespective of whether freight is pre-paid upon shipment or is payable at destination
(freight collect); however, additional costs which may result from events occurring
subsequent to shipment and dispatch are necessarily for the account of the buyer.
If the seller has to provide a contract of carriage which involves payment of duties,
taxes and other charges, such costs will, of course, fall upon the seller to the
extent that they are for his account under that contract. This is now explicitly
set forth in the A6 clause of all "C"-terms.
If it is customary to procure several contracts of carriage involving transhipment
of the goods at intermediate places in order to reach the agreed destination, the
seller would have to pay all these costs, including any costs incurred when the
goods are transhipped from one means of conveyance to the other. If, however, the
carrier exercised his rights under a transhipment - or similar clause - in order
to avoid unexpected hindrances (such as ice, congestion, labour disturbances, government
orders, war or warlike operations) then any additional cost resulting therefrom
would be for the account of the buyer, since the sellers obligation is limited to
procuring the usual contract of carriage.
It happens quite often that the parties to the contract of sale wish to clarify
the extent to which the seller should procure a contract of carriage including the
costs of discharge. Since such costs are normally covered by the freight when the
goods are carried by regular shipping lines, the contract of sale will frequently
stipulate that the goods are to be so carried or at least that they are to be carried
under "liner terms". In other cases, the word "landed" is added
after CFR or CIF. However, it is advisable not to use abbreviations added to the
'C"terms unless, in the relevant trade, the meaning of the abbreviations is
clearly understood and accepted by the contracting parties or under any applicable
law or custom of the trade.
In particular, the seller should not - and indeed could not, without changing the
very nature of the "C" Terms - undertake any obligation with respect to
the arrival of the goods at destination, since the risk of any delay during the
carriage is borne by the buyer. Thus, any obligation with respect to time must necessarily
refer to the place of shipment or dispatch, for example, "shipment (dispatch)
not later than…" An agreement for example, "CFR Hamburg not later than..."
is really a misnomer and thus open to different possible interpretations. The parties
could be taken to have meant either that the goods must actually arrive at Hamburg
at the specified date, in which case the contract is not a shipment contract but
an arrival contract or, alternatively, that the seller must ship the goods at such
a time that they would normally arrive at Hamburg before the specified date unless
the carriage would have been delayed because of unforeseen events.
It happens in commodity trades that goods are bought while they are at sea and that,
in such cases, the word "afloat" is added after the trade term. Since
the risk of loss of or damage to the goods would then, under the CFR- and CIF-terms,
have passed from the seller to the buyer, difficulties of interpretation might arise.
One possibility would be to maintain the ordinary meaning of the CFR- and CIF-terms
with respect to the allocation of risk between seller and buyer, namely that risk
passes on shipment: this would mean that the buyer might have to assume the consequences
of events having already occurred at the time when the contract of sale enters into
force. The other possibility would be to let the passing of the risk coincide with
the time when the contract of sale is concluded. The former possibility might well
be practical, since it is usually impossible to ascertain the condition of the goods
while they are being carried. For this reason the 1980 United Nations Convention
on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods article 68 stipulates that "if
the circumstances so indicate, the risk is assumed by the buyer from the time the
goods were handed over to the carrier who issued the documents embodying the contract
of carriage". There is, however, an exception to this rule when "the seller
knew or ought to have known that the goods had been lost or damaged and did not
disclose this to the buyer'. Thus, the interpretation of a CFR- or CIF-term with
the addition of the word "afloat" will depend upon the law applicable
to the contract of sale. The parties are advised to ascertain the applicable law
and any solution which might follow therefrom. In case of doubt, the parties are
advised to clarify the matter in their contract.
In practice, the parties frequently continue to use the traditional expression C&F
(or C and F, C+F). Nevertheless, in most cases it would appear that they regard
these expressions as equivalent to CFR. In order to avoid difficulties of interpreting
their contract the parties should use the correct Incoterm which is CFR, the only
world-wide-accepted standard abbreviation for the term "Cost and Freight (...
named port of destination)".
CFR and CIF in A8 of Incoterms 1990 obliged the seller to provide a copy of the
charterparty whenever his transport document (usually the bill of lading) contained
a reference to the charterparty, for example, by the frequent notation "all
other terms and conditions as per charterparty". Although, of course, a contracting
party should always be able to ascertain all terms of his contract - preferably
at the time of the conclusion of the contract - it appears that the practice to
provide the charterparty as aforesaid has created problems particularly in connection
with documentary credit transactions. The obligation of the seller under CFR and
CIF to provide a copy of the charterparty together with other transport documents
has been deleted in Incoterms 2000.
Although the A8 clauses of Incoterms seek to ensure that the seller provides the
buyer with "proof of delivery", it should be stressed that the seller
fulfils that requirement when he provides the "usual" proof. Under CPT
and CIP it would be the "usual transport document" and under CFR and CIF
a bill of lading or a sea waybill. The transport documents must be "clean",
meaning that they must not contain clauses or notations expressly declaring a defective
condition of the goods and/or the packaging. If such clauses or notations appear
in the document, it is regarded as "unclean" and would then not be accepted
by banks in documentary credit transactions. However, it should be noted that a
transport document even without such clauses or notations would usually not provide
the buyer with incontrovertible proof as against the carrier that the goods were
shipped in conformity with the stipulations of the contract of sale. Usually, the
carrier would, in standardized text on the front page of the transport document,
refuse to accept responsibility for information with respect to the goods by indicating
that the particulars inserted in the transport document constitute the shipper's
declarations and therefore that the information is only "said to be" as
inserted in the document. Under most applicable laws and principles, the carrier
must at least use reasonable means of checking the correctness of the information
and his failure to do so may make him liable to the consignee. However, in container
trade, the carrier's means of checking the contents in the container would not exist
unless he himself was responsible for stowing the container.
There are only two terms which deal I with insurance, namely CIF and CIP. Under
these terms the seller is obliged to procure Insurance for the benefit of the buyer.
In other cases it is for the parties themselves to decide whether and to what extent
they want to cover themselves by insurance. Since the seller takes out insurance
for the benefit of the buyer, he would not know the buyers precise requirements.
Under the Institute Cargo Clauses drafted by the Institute of London Underwriters,
insurance is available in "minimum cover" under Clause C, "medium
cover' under Clause B and "most extended cover" under Clause A. Since
in the sale of commodities under the CIF term the buyer may wish to sell the goods
In transit to a subsequent buyer who in turn may wish to resell the goods again,
it Is impossible to know the insurance cover suitable to such subsequent buyers
and, therefore, the minimum cover under CIF has traditionally been chosen with the
possibility for the buyer to require the seller to take out additional insurance.
Minimum cover is however unsuitable for sale of manufactured goods where the risk
of theft, pilferage or improper handling or custody of the goods would require more
than the cover available under Clause C. Since CIP, as distinguished from CIF, would
normally not be used for the sale of commodities, it would have been feasible to
adopt the most extended cover under CIP rather than the minimum cover under CIF.
But to vary the sellers insurance obligation under CIF and CIP would lead to confusion
and both terms therefore limit the seller's insurance obligation to the minimum
cover. It is particularly important for the CIP-buyer to observe this should additional
cover be required, he should agree with the seller that the latter could take out
additional insurance or, alternatively, arrange for extended insurance cover himself.
There are also particular instances where the buyer may wish to obtain even more
protection than is available under Institute Clause A, for example insurance against
war, riots, civil commotion, strikes or other labour disturbances. If he wishesthe
seller to arrange such insurance he must instruct him accordingly in which case
the seller would have to provide such insurance if procurable.