Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position

Documentary sanctity is the norm; the backbone of the international sale transactions particularly when it involves contract of carriage by sea. Under this norm, the trader is able to rely on the statements in the bill of lading as conclusive since the bill of lading is regarded as an essential part...

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Main Author: Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina
Format: Book Section
Language:English
Published: Universitas Islam Riau Indonesia 2010
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/1/NURRETINA.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/
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spelling my.uum.repo.27222011-05-05T04:04:35Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/ Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina K Law (General) Documentary sanctity is the norm; the backbone of the international sale transactions particularly when it involves contract of carriage by sea. Under this norm, the trader is able to rely on the statements in the bill of lading as conclusive since the bill of lading is regarded as an essential part of shipping documents where sea carriage is envisaged. Hence, the bill of lading in the hands of the consignee or endorsee representing goods to have been shipped on board a vessel shall be conclusive evidence of such shipment as against the master or other person signing it, regardless of the fact that the goods may not have been shipped on board. However, the decision in the common law rule in Grant v Norway seems to defeat the object of a bill of lading and effectively derogates the sanctity of the bill of lading. Since Malaysia inherited the common law principle from the colonial, this paper seeks to examine to what extent the courts in Malaysia would be willing to uphold the sanctity of documents in cases of fraudulent misstatements as to quantity of goods in the bills of lading? Whether the diverse methods by which the English and other commonwealth judges have conferred protection on the holder of the bills of lading be seen as strands that may influence the local court? Universitas Islam Riau Indonesia 2010 Book Section NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/1/NURRETINA.pdf Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina (2010) Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position. In: International Seminar, Economic Regional Development, Law and Governance in Malaysia and Indonesia, 7-9 June 2010, Universitas Islam Riau Indonesia. Universitas Islam Riau Indonesia, Pekan Baru, Riau, pp. 1-10. ISBN 9789832078425
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic K Law (General)
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina
Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
description Documentary sanctity is the norm; the backbone of the international sale transactions particularly when it involves contract of carriage by sea. Under this norm, the trader is able to rely on the statements in the bill of lading as conclusive since the bill of lading is regarded as an essential part of shipping documents where sea carriage is envisaged. Hence, the bill of lading in the hands of the consignee or endorsee representing goods to have been shipped on board a vessel shall be conclusive evidence of such shipment as against the master or other person signing it, regardless of the fact that the goods may not have been shipped on board. However, the decision in the common law rule in Grant v Norway seems to defeat the object of a bill of lading and effectively derogates the sanctity of the bill of lading. Since Malaysia inherited the common law principle from the colonial, this paper seeks to examine to what extent the courts in Malaysia would be willing to uphold the sanctity of documents in cases of fraudulent misstatements as to quantity of goods in the bills of lading? Whether the diverse methods by which the English and other commonwealth judges have conferred protection on the holder of the bills of lading be seen as strands that may influence the local court?
format Book Section
author Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina
author_facet Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina
author_sort Ahmad Sharif, Nurretina
title Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
title_short Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
title_full Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
title_fullStr Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
title_full_unstemmed Documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): Overview of Malaysian position
title_sort documentary sanctity in contract of carriage by sea (with special reference to the bills of lading): overview of malaysian position
publisher Universitas Islam Riau Indonesia
publishDate 2010
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/1/NURRETINA.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/2722/
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score 13.160551