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{{Contract law}}
{{Contract law}}
The doctrine of '''deviation''' is a particular aspect of [[legal contract|contracts]] of carriage of goods by sea. A deviation is a departure from the "agreed route" or the "usual route", and it can amount to a serious  a [[breach of contract]]  The consequences of unjustified deviation are very grave for the carrier, who is thereby prevented from relying upon any exclusion clause which limits his liability.
The doctrine of '''deviation''' is a particular aspect of [[legal contract|contracts]] of carriage of goods by sea. A deviation is a departure from the "agreed route" or the "usual route", and it can amount to a serious  a [[breach of contract]]  The consequences of unjustified deviation are very grave for the carrier, who is thereby prevented from relying upon any exclusion clause which limits his liability.
==The scope of deviation ==
The "agreed route" is identified from the [[contract of carriage]], as evidenced by the [[bill of lading]].  The ports of origin and destination (e.g. "Piraeus to Liverpool"') define the route.  The "usual route" is not necessarily the shortest route, but is a version of the agreed route, taking into account safety issues, distances, seasonal conditions and war zones.  For instance, the route "Auckland to London" could be via Suez, Panama, the Cape of Good Hope, or Cape Horn, but the usual route will be identified by reference to current practice or to any previous dealings of the  parties.
Although a deviation is primarily a departure from the agreed route or the usual route, the concept of deviation extends beyond this.  Deviation may include any unjustified delay such as remaining at authorised ports longer than necessary, or acting beyond the agreed scope of the voyage.  For example, a ship that makes an authorised call at a port, but stays on to trade or break bulk, this may amount to a deviation.
The concept of deviation has been extended ( sub nom “quasi deviation”) to cover wrongful transhipment, careless stowage, and stowage in the wrong part of the ship (such as on deck, rather than below decks).<ref>Brandt v Liverpool[1920] 1 KB 575 </ref><ref>The Berkshire [1974] 1 LL R 185</ref><ref>Royal Exchange v Dixon (1886) 12 App Cas 11 </ref><ref>The Antares [1987] 1 LL R 424 </ref><ref>The Chanda [1989] 2 LL R 494</ref>
Justifiable deviation under the Hague Visby Rules art IV, rule 4 includes deviation to save life or property at sea.  Rule 4 also excuses “any reasonable deviation”.  This term is not defined, but it has been taken to include deviation: #to avoid foul weather,
# to join a [[convoy]],
# to avoid capture or detention,
# to take stricken passengers or crew for medical attention,
# to effect necessary repairs, (though this may be evidence of unseaworthiness), or
# [[Mutiny|mutiny]] of the crew.
If a justified deviation is followed by an unjustified deviation,  the doctrine of deviation will apply from the unjustified deviation.<ref>Stag Line v Foscolo, Mango & Co [1932] AC 328</ref><ref>Scaramanga v Stamp (1880) 5 CPD 295</ref>


==Establishing the doctrine==
==Establishing the doctrine==
Deviation in carriage of good by sea is treated as a serious breach because it undermines the carrier's prime duty to the shipper of the cargo, namely to carry the cargo to its destination will "all due despatch".
Deviation in carriage of good by sea is treated as a serious breach because it undermines the carrier's prime duty to the shipper of the cargo, namely to carry the cargo to its destination will "all due despatch".
The "agreed route" is identified from the [[contract of carriage]], as evidenced by the [[bill of lading]].  The ports of origin and destination (e.g. "Piraeus to Liverpool"') define the route.  The "usual route" is a version of the agreed route, taking into account varying distances, seasonal conditions and war zones.  For instance, the route "Auckland to London" could be via Suez, Panama, the Cape of Good Hope, or Cape Horn, but the usual route will be identified by reference to current practice or to the parties' previous dealings.


The English common law of deviation is establish by two cases, Glynn v Margetson<ref>Glynn v Margetson 1893 AC351</ref> and Leduc v Ward.<ref>Leduc v Ward 188820 QBD 475</ref>
The English common law of deviation is establish by two cases, Glynn v Margetson<ref>Glynn v Margetson 1893 AC351</ref> and Leduc v Ward.<ref>Leduc v Ward 188820 QBD 475</ref>
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Th Hague-Visby rules do not define deviation (presumably relying on existing common law definitions), but Article IV Rule 4 provides: "Any deviation in saving or attempting to save life or property at sea or any reasonable deviation shall not be deemed to be an infringement or breach of these Rules or of the contract of carriage, and the carrier shall not be liable for any loss or damage resulting therefrom".
Th Hague-Visby rules do not define deviation (presumably relying on existing common law definitions), but Article IV Rule 4 provides: "Any deviation in saving or attempting to save life or property at sea or any reasonable deviation shall not be deemed to be an infringement or breach of these Rules or of the contract of carriage, and the carrier shall not be liable for any loss or damage resulting therefrom".


==Insurance regarding voyages and shipment==
==Insurance issues==
In the case of an [[insured]] voyage or [[shipment]], deviation is a voluntary departure, without necessity, or any reasonable cause, from the regular and usual course of the voyage insured.
 
From the moment this happens, the voyage is changed, the contract determined, and the insurer discharged from all subsequent responsibility. By the contract the insurer only runs the risk of the contract agreed upon, and no other; and it is, therefore, a condition implied in the policy, that the ship shall proceed to her port of destination by the shortest and safest course (or usual course), and on no account to deviate from that course, but in cases of necessity.
 
The effect of a deviation is not to vitiate or avoid the policy, but only to determine the liability of the [[underwriter]]s from the time of the deviation. If, therefore, the ship or goods, after the voyage has commenced, receive damage, then the ship deviates, and afterwards a loss happen, there, though the insurer is discharged from the time of the deviation, and is not answerable for the subsequent loss, yet he is bound to make good the damage sustained previous to the deviation. But though he is thus discharged from subsequent responsibility, he is entitled to retain the whole premium.


What amounts to a deviation is not easily defined, but a departure from the usual course of the voyage, or remaining at places where the ship is authorized to touch, longer than necessary, or doing there what the insured is not authorized to do; as, if the ship have merely liberty to touch at a point, and the insured stay there to trade, or break bulk, it is a deviation.
When goods are carried by sea, they are effectively insured twice.  First, prudent cargo-owners (shippers or consignees) will insure their cargo, and, secondly,  carriers (shipowners) will have cover for third-party liability from their [[Protection & Indemnity Club|P&I Club]].  If the carrier is responsible for causing loss or damage, the P&I Club will pay; but if the carrier can avoid liability, say, via an exemption clause or via Article IV of the Hague-Visby Rules, the cargo-owner will have to make a claim on his own insurance.


The "course of the voyage" is not meant to be the shortest course the ship can take from her port of departure to her port of destination, but the regular and customary track, if such there be, which long usage has proved to be the safest and most convenient.
If an unjustified deviation occurs, the voyage has changed, and and the insurer may be discharged from subsequent liability. Under the policy, the insurer accepts only the agreed risks.  A crucial policy requirement is that the ship shall proceed to her port of destination by the shortest and safest route (or usual route), and not to make any unjustified deviation.


A deviation that will discharge the insurer must be a voluntary departure from the usual course of the voyage insured, and not warranted by any necessity. If a deviation can be justified by necessity, it will not affect the contract; and necessity will justify a deviation, though it proceed from a cause not insured against. The cases of necessity which are most frequently adduced to justify a departure from the direct or usual course of the voyage, are
An unjustifiable deviation does not necessarily avoid the policy, but it may cancel any liability of the [[underwriter]]s for any loss incurred after the time of the deviation; but the insurer remains bound to indemnify any losses sustained prior to the deviation. Although the insurer is discharged from subsequent responsibility, he is normally entitled to retain the whole premium.
#Stress of weather,
#The want of necessary repairs,
#Joining [[convoy]],
#Succoring ships in distress,
#Avoiding capture or detention,
#Sickness of the [[ship's master]] or mariner, and
#[[Mutiny]] of the crew.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 10:49, January 6, 2014

Template:Contract law The doctrine of deviation is a particular aspect of contracts of carriage of goods by sea. A deviation is a departure from the "agreed route" or the "usual route", and it can amount to a serious a breach of contract The consequences of unjustified deviation are very grave for the carrier, who is thereby prevented from relying upon any exclusion clause which limits his liability.

The scope of deviation

The "agreed route" is identified from the contract of carriage, as evidenced by the bill of lading. The ports of origin and destination (e.g. "Piraeus to Liverpool"') define the route. The "usual route" is not necessarily the shortest route, but is a version of the agreed route, taking into account safety issues, distances, seasonal conditions and war zones. For instance, the route "Auckland to London" could be via Suez, Panama, the Cape of Good Hope, or Cape Horn, but the usual route will be identified by reference to current practice or to any previous dealings of the parties.

Although a deviation is primarily a departure from the agreed route or the usual route, the concept of deviation extends beyond this. Deviation may include any unjustified delay such as remaining at authorised ports longer than necessary, or acting beyond the agreed scope of the voyage. For example, a ship that makes an authorised call at a port, but stays on to trade or break bulk, this may amount to a deviation.

The concept of deviation has been extended ( sub nom “quasi deviation”) to cover wrongful transhipment, careless stowage, and stowage in the wrong part of the ship (such as on deck, rather than below decks).[1][2][3][4][5]

Justifiable deviation under the Hague Visby Rules art IV, rule 4 includes deviation to save life or property at sea. Rule 4 also excuses “any reasonable deviation”. This term is not defined, but it has been taken to include deviation: #to avoid foul weather,

  1. to join a convoy,
  2. to avoid capture or detention,
  3. to take stricken passengers or crew for medical attention,
  4. to effect necessary repairs, (though this may be evidence of unseaworthiness), or
  5. mutiny of the crew.

If a justified deviation is followed by an unjustified deviation, the doctrine of deviation will apply from the unjustified deviation.[6][7]

Establishing the doctrine

Deviation in carriage of good by sea is treated as a serious breach because it undermines the carrier's prime duty to the shipper of the cargo, namely to carry the cargo to its destination will "all due despatch".

The English common law of deviation is establish by two cases, Glynn v Margetson[8] and Leduc v Ward.[9]

In Glynn v Margetson a vessel was to carry a perishable consignment of Seville marmalade oranges from Malaga to Liverpool. The contract included a "liberty clause" which allowed the vessel "liberty to proceed and stay at any ports in any rotation in the Mediterranean, Levant, Black sea or Adriatic, or on the coasts of Africa, Spain, Portugal or France.." On leaving Malaga, the vessel did not head straight for Liverpool, but made her way to Burriana, 350 miles up the coast. As a result of the delay, the cargo had deteriorated by the time it reached England. The House of Lords (establishing the so-called "main purpose rule"), held that the clause, if given full effect, would defeat the main purpose of the contract and would be, in effect, an exemption clause which should be ignored. They gave the clause a limited construction, namely that the vessel could have liberty to proceed and stay at any ports on the voyage from Malaga to Liverpool, such as Cadiz or Lisbon.[10]

In Leduc v Ward, a vessel was to voyage from Fiume (modern day Rijeka) to Dunkirk. The bill of lading gave "liberty to call at any ports in any order". She did not proceed to Dunkirk, but headed for Glasgow, and was lost in a storm near Ailsa Craig. Just as in Glynn v Margetson, the Court of Appeal held that the deviation was unjustifiable and was not permitted by the liberty clause, so the carrier was liable for the lost cargo.[11] (Had the court held that the deviation was justified, the carrier would have avoided liability as the storm would have been an "Act of God"). Even though it was accepted that the shipper had been verbally informed that the vessel might make passage to Glasgow, this evidence was not admissible, because the parol evidence rule prevents recourse to extraneous evidence when construing a written document. Using the criteria of differential bargaining strength of the parties, whereby the carrier is usually deemed to have greater bargaining power than the shipper, note that the parol evidence rule may be relaxed if a shipper (rather than the carrier) seeks to rely on any verbal promises of the carrier.

The consequences of deviation

An unjustified deviation can be a serious breach of the contract of carriage, and the carrier will be prevented from relying upon any exclusion clause which limits his liability. Such clauses include the "liberty clauses" of Leduc v Ward, but also include the huge range of exemptions granted to carriers by Article IV of the Hague-Visby Rules.

Although a shipping case, the "Main Purpose Rule" within Glynn v Margetson for a time became the basis of the common law of exemption clauses in English Contract Law, as shown in the case of Karsales v Wallis.[12] Here, a comprehensive and well-drafted exemption clause could not protect a car dealer who had supplied a used Buick with its cylinder head adrift. The court held that the contract was to supply a car ("a vehicle capable of self-propulsion"), so the Buick was not a "car", and the seller could not rely on a clause when there was "breach of a fundamental obligation". (Note this seems to be merely a rewording of "breach of the main purpose").

However, the English law of contract has progressed beyond the Karsales case. The ultimate statements of the common law of contract are the Suisse Atlantique[13] and Photo Productions v Securicor[14] These two cases provide that in the event of really serious breach, or fundamental breach, whether or not an exemption clause is effective is a question of construction, not of law. That means that exemption clauses may not be automatically be ignored after a fundamental breach. The common law approach has been to some extent superseded by statutory provisions, such as the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 and the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999. However, although the general law of contract has "moved on", the strict rule of Glynn v Margetson is, for the time being, still in place.

Th Hague-Visby rules do not define deviation (presumably relying on existing common law definitions), but Article IV Rule 4 provides: "Any deviation in saving or attempting to save life or property at sea or any reasonable deviation shall not be deemed to be an infringement or breach of these Rules or of the contract of carriage, and the carrier shall not be liable for any loss or damage resulting therefrom".

Insurance issues

When goods are carried by sea, they are effectively insured twice. First, prudent cargo-owners (shippers or consignees) will insure their cargo, and, secondly, carriers (shipowners) will have cover for third-party liability from their P&I Club. If the carrier is responsible for causing loss or damage, the P&I Club will pay; but if the carrier can avoid liability, say, via an exemption clause or via Article IV of the Hague-Visby Rules, the cargo-owner will have to make a claim on his own insurance.

If an unjustified deviation occurs, the voyage has changed, and and the insurer may be discharged from subsequent liability. Under the policy, the insurer accepts only the agreed risks. A crucial policy requirement is that the ship shall proceed to her port of destination by the shortest and safest route (or usual route), and not to make any unjustified deviation.

An unjustifiable deviation does not necessarily avoid the policy, but it may cancel any liability of the underwriters for any loss incurred after the time of the deviation; but the insurer remains bound to indemnify any losses sustained prior to the deviation. Although the insurer is discharged from subsequent responsibility, he is normally entitled to retain the whole premium.

See also

References

  1. Brandt v Liverpool[1920] 1 KB 575
  2. The Berkshire [1974] 1 LL R 185
  3. Royal Exchange v Dixon (1886) 12 App Cas 11
  4. The Antares [1987] 1 LL R 424
  5. The Chanda [1989] 2 LL R 494
  6. Stag Line v Foscolo, Mango & Co [1932] AC 328
  7. Scaramanga v Stamp (1880) 5 CPD 295
  8. Glynn v Margetson 1893 AC351
  9. Leduc v Ward 188820 QBD 475
  10. Cases & Materials on Carriage of Goods by Sea, 3rd edition - Martin Dockray - ISBN1-85941-796-5
  11. Cases & Materials on Carriage of Goods by Sea, 3rd edition - Martin Dockray - ISBN1-85941-796-5
  12. Karsales v Wallis [1956] 2 All ER 866
  13. Suisse Atlantique Societe d'Armament SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361
  14. Photo Production v Securicor Transport [1980] AC 827

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