Possession is 9/10ths of the Responsibility  - Sisman Nichols Solicitors - Clifton, Kingswood, Bristol
skip navigation

Possession is 9/10ths of the Responsibility


 

When someone holds goods belonging to someone else, (a ‘bailee’ in legal terminology), that person owes the other person a duty of care. A recent case shows that such responsibilities should not be taken lightly.

The circumstances were that a company named Matrix had sent 5,000 Bluetooth adaptors worth £375,000 by airfreight to Hong Kong. It used a company called Birkart to ship them. Birkart’s subcontractor mistakenly delivered them to a warehouse belonging to Uniserve. They were stolen from the warehouse. Matrix sued Uniserve and Uniserve sued Birkart, Uniserve alleging that there was an implied contract between it and Birkart which was governed by the standard British International Freight Association terms.

Uniserve was not involved in the transaction but became a bailee. It therefore had a responsibility to the owner of the goods (Matrix) to exercise reasonable diligence and skill to prevent the theft.

The legal arguments were many and varied, but the court ruled that as Uniserve was a bailee, it bore the burden of proof to show either that it had taken all reasonable steps to take care of the goods or, if it had not done so, that the failure was not what caused their loss. The judge enumerated a list of failures by Uniserve which persuaded him that had the company acted correctly, the goods would not have been stolen but would have been collected by Birkart and delivered to the airport the same day. Accordingly, Uniserve’s procedural failures caused the loss and it was therefore liable to Matrix.

Uniserve’s claim against the carrier failed. There was, as a matter of fact, no contract between it and Birkart.

The contents of this article are intended for general information purposes only and shall not be deemed to be, or constitute legal advice. We cannot accept responsibility for any loss as a result of acts or omissions taken in respect of this article.
 

Latest News

  Will Your Premises Be Shown The Yellow Card? 
  Good Faith and Errors in Documents 
  Companies Act Changes Afoot 
  Companies Act Changes - Purchase of Own Shares 
  Ambiguous Terms in Insurance - When Wrong is Right 
  Surviving the Recession - The Most Common Mistakes 
  More Big Fines for Competition Law Breaches 
  Licensees Breathe Sigh of Relief As Pubwatch Challenge Fails 
  Discovering a Cover-Up - Tips for Directors  
  What Makes a Director? 
More...
 
Home | About Us | Firm News | Our Services | Library | Help | Contact Us

Sisman Nichols and Ledbury Raskin are trading names of, and businesses run by, Sisnic Legal Services Limited.
Sisnic Legal Services Limited, is registered in England and Wales, number 3512183,
registered office 11 Elmdale Road, Clifton, Bristol BS8 1SL, and is recognised and regulated by The Solicitors Regulation Authority.
[smaller] Change text size [larger]