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Force Majeure: Escaping Contractual Obligations by Divine Intervention.




Reprinted with permission from Marine Digest and Transportation News

Our industry is particularly susceptible to the nasty effects of nature, the whims of international politics, labor disputes, and numerous other unanticipated circumstances. Many maritime contracts, including bills of lading and service contracts, often try to accommodate the unpredictable. They include provisions freeing participants from their contractual obligations or liability based on events of force majeure [French, A superior or irresistible power.] An event that is a result of the elements of nature, as opposed to one caused by human behavior.

The term force majeure
. Depending on the source of form documentation (or its author's penchant), you sometimes see those provisions cast in terms of vis major VIS MAJOR, a superior force. In law it signifies inevitable accident.
     2. This term is used in the civil law in nearly the same same way that the words act of God, (q.v.) are used in the common law.
, or the more contemporary "Act of God."

So what kind of circumstance constitutes force majeure (or one of its cousins)? What kind of event is so extraordinary that the law will let someone off the hook for acts or omissions that otherwise would amount to actionable negligence or breach of contract? The French term literally means "greater force" (vis major is the Latin version). Courts have come up with some colorful language to answer those questions more pragmatically, usually in the context of defendants who thought loss-causing circumstances were beyond their control.

For example, courts have opined that "An act of God is a natural phenomenon so far outside the range of human experience that ordinary care did not require that it should be anticipated or provided against." force majeure is branded "a natural and inevitable necessity, and one arising wholly above the control of human agencies, and which occurs independently of human action or neglect." Pretty tough standards, huh?

Parties to maritime contracts can, and often do, specify what does and doesn't amount to an obligation or liability nullifying circumstance. Once parties have shaken hands over a definition, courts usually won't disturb their agreement when an unforeseen event materializes. So if you spell out in a contract what will constitute an event of force majeure and what won't, courts won't be excited about broadening the definition.

The law actually provides a default concept of force majeure by way of doctrines known simply as "impossibility" or "impracticability Substantial difficulty or inconvenience in following a particular course of action, but not such insurmountability or hopelessness as to make performance impossible. ." In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, even if parties don't include a specific provision in their contract, the law won't necessarily hold someone's feet to the fire for failing to fulfill a contractual obligation that turned out to be impossible (or illegal). "Act of God" also is an independent legal concept, usually asserted as a defense to negligence suits.

Regarding lost/damaged cargo, the U.S. Carriage of Good by Sea Act (COGSA COGSA Carriage of Goods By Sea Act ) provides carriers and others a "peril of the sea" defense, which works much like force majeure or Act of God. The big difference is that, again, parties to a contract can pre-decide who gets to pick up the tab for a force majeure event. Such agreed provisions will trump COGSA's version of the concept.

It's not enough to say "a storm caused the loss and, gee, what could be more uncontrollable and natural an event than a raging tempest at sea?" True, weather conditions are uncontrollable, but sailing a ship into them certainly isn't. To escape liability, those in charge have to demonstrate the storm wasn't reasonably predictable with available technology. If a skipper runs his boat through bad weather to save time, don't expect a court to be sympathetic to a force majeure defense.

The federal court sitting in the Eastern District of Missouri recently made this point clear. A barge broke from its mooring MOORING, mar. law. The act of arriving of a ship or vessel at a particular port, and there being anchored or otherwise fastened to the shore.
     2. Policies of insurance frequently contain a provision that the ship is insured from one place to another, "and till
 in the Mississippi River Mississippi River

River, central U.S. It rises at Lake Itasca in Minnesota and flows south, meeting its major tributaries, the Missouri and the Ohio rivers, about halfway along its journey to the Gulf of Mexico.
 causing all kinds of headaches for cargo owners and others. In response to the lawsuit, the barge's owner pleaded vis major, claiming that river stages and flows caused the break away. The court rejected the defense, ruling that the river conditions were not unprecedented. Moreover, for a successful vis major showing, the defendant must demonstrate it couldn't have prevented the detachment. It apparently couldn't. The party asserting vis major bears the burden of proving circumstances truly were beyond its control.

The Eastern District of Louisiana The District of Louisiana or Louisiana District was an official United States government designation for the portion of the Louisiana Purchase that had not been organized into Orleans Territory. The area north of present-day Arkansas was also known as Upper Louisiana.  took a look at a force majeure clause in a bill of lading A document signed by a carrier (a transporter of goods) or the carrier's representative and issued to a consignor (the shipper of goods) that evidences the receipt of goods for shipment to a specified designation and person.  issued for the barge transport of steel coils, again on the Mississippi. This time, the barge sprung a hull leak, allowing water to infiltrate cargo holds where the coils were stowed. True, hull deterioration is a natural process, one which is tough to predict or measure precisely. But the law imposes a nondelegable duty on carriers to operate seaworthy sea·wor·thy  
adj. sea·wor·thi·er, sea·wor·thi·est
Fit to traverse the seas: a seaworthy freighter; a seaworthy crew.
 vessels, so the defense was unavailable. You can't just say the unseaworthiness was caused by natural causes and hope to escape liability under force majeure.

Understandably, courts are reluctant to expand or define broadly circumstances constituting force majeure. If parties want to allocate risk among themselves, fine. But expect the law to apply these liability relieving principles sparingly.

Ref: American River
There is also a town on Kangaroo Island, see American River, South Australia
The American River (Río de los Americanos in the Mexican period) located in the US state of California, has a prominent place in United States history for being the
 Transportation Co. v. Paragon Marine Services, 213 F.Supp.2d 1035 (E.D. MO 2002); Sumitomo Marine & Fire Ins. Co. v. Barge ACBL ACBL American Contract Bridge League
ACBL American Commercial Barge Line LLC
 1346, et al, 2001 WL 263083 (E.D. La)

The content of this article does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied on in that way. Specific advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mr Steven Block Dr. Steven M. Block (born 1952) is a professor at Stanford University with a joint appointment in the departments of Biological Sciences and Applied Physics. In addition, he is a member of the scientific advisory group JASON, a senior fellow of Stanford's Freeman Spogli Institute  

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Publication:Mondaq Business Briefing
Article Type:Column
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 19, 2002
Words:885
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