TRANSPOLintojua Shipping Company Inc vs National Seaman Board and Gregorio P

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Lintojua Shipping Company Inc VS National Seaman Board and Gregorio P. Candongo G.R. No. L-51910 August 10, 1989 FACTS Petitioner is the duly appointed local crewing managing office of the Fairwind Shipping Corporation. On September 11, 1976 M/V Dufton Bay an ocean-going vessel of foreign registry owned by the R.D. Mullion ship broking agency under charter by Fairwind, while in the port of Cebu contracted the services (among others) of Gregorio Candongo as Third Engineer for 12 months with a monthly wage of US$500.00. The agreement was executed before the Cebu Area Manning Unit of the NSB, after which respondent boarded the vessel. On December 28, 1976 before the expiration of contract, respondent was required to disembark at Port Kilang, Malaysia. Describe in his seaman’s handbook is the reason “by owner’s arrange.” Condongo filed a complaint against Mullion (Shipping company) for violation of contract and against Litonjua as agent of shipowner. On February 1977, NSB rendered a judgment by default for failure of petitioners to appear during the initial hearing, rendering the same to pay Candongo because there was no sufficient or valid cause for the respondents to terminate the service of the complainant. Litonjua’s defense: Contends that the shipowner, nor the charterer, was the employer of private respondent; and that liability for damages cannot be imposed upon petitioner which was a mere agent of the charterer. ISSUE Whether or not Litonjua may be held liable to the private respondent on the contract of employment? HELD YES. The first basis is the charter party which existed between

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Page 1: TRANSPOLintojua Shipping Company Inc vs National Seaman Board and Gregorio P

Lintojua Shipping Company Inc VS National Seaman Board and Gregorio P. Candongo

G.R. No. L-51910 August 10, 1989

FACTS

Petitioner is the duly appointed local crewing managing office of the Fairwind Shipping Corporation.On September 11, 1976 M/V Dufton Bay an ocean-going vessel of foreign registry owned by the R.D. Mullion ship broking agency under charter by Fairwind, while in the port of Cebu contracted the services (among others) of Gregorio Candongo as Third Engineer for 12 months with a monthly wage of US$500.00. The agreement was executed before the Cebu Area Manning Unit of the NSB, after which respondent boarded the vessel.

On December 28, 1976 before the expiration of contract, respondent was required to disembark at Port Kilang, Malaysia. Describe in his seaman’s handbook is the reason “by owner’s arrange.”

Condongo filed a complaint against Mullion (Shipping company) for violation of contract and against Litonjua as agent of shipowner.

On February 1977, NSB rendered a judgment by default for failure of petitioners to appear during the initial hearing, rendering the same to pay Candongo because there was no sufficient or valid cause for the respondents to terminate the service of the complainant.

Litonjua’s defense:Contends that the shipowner, nor the charterer, was the employer of private respondent; and that liability for damages cannot be imposed upon petitioner which was a mere agent of the charterer.

ISSUE

Whether or not Litonjua may be held liable to the private respondent on the contract of employment?

HELD YES. The first basis is the charter party which existed between Mullion, the shipowner, and Fairwind, the charterer.

It is well settled that in a demise or bare boat charter, the charterer is treated as owner pro hac vice of the vessel, the charterer assuming in large measure the customary rights and liabilities of the shipowner in relation to third persons who have dealt with him or with the vessel. In such case, the Master of the vessel is the agent of the charterer and not of the shipowner. The charterer or owner pro hac vice, and not the general owner of the vessel, is held liable for the expenses of the voyage including the wages of the seamen

Treating Fairwind as owner pro hac vice, petitioner Litonjua having failed to show that it was not such, we believe and so hold that petitioner Litonjua, as Philippine agent of the charterer,

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may be held liable on the contract of employment between the ship captain and the private respondent.

There is a second and ethically more compelling basis for holding petitioner Litonjua liable on the contract of employment of private respondent. The charterer of the vessel, Fairwind, clearly benefitted from the employment of private respondent as Third Engineer of the Dufton Bay, along with the ten (10) other Filipino crewmembers recruited by Captain Ho in Cebu at the same occasion.

In so doing, petitioner Litonjua certainly in effect represented that it was taking care of the crewing and other requirements of a vessel chartered by its principal, Fairwind.

Last, but certainly not least, there is the circumstance that extreme hardship would result for the private respondent if petitioner Litonjua, as Philippine agent of the charterer, is not held liable to private respondent upon the contract of employment

Caltex [Philippines], Inc. vs. Sulpicio Lines, Inc.

Facts:

On December 20, 1987, motor tanker MV Vector, carrying petroleum products of Caltex, collided in the open sea with passenger ship MV Doña Paz, causing the death of all but 25 of the latter’s passengers. Among those who died were Sebastian Canezal and his daughter Corazon Canezal. On March 22, 1988, the board of marine inquiry found that Vector Shipping Corporation was at fault. On February 13, 1989, Teresita Cañezal and Sotera E. Cañezal, Sebastian Cañezal’s wife and mother respectively, filed with the Regional Trial Court of Manila a complaint for damages arising from breach of contract of carriage against Sulpicio Lines. Sulpicio filed a third-party complaint against Vector and Caltex. The trial court dismissed the complaint against Caltex, but the Court of Appeals included the same in the liability. Hence, Caltex filed this petition.

Issue:

Is the charterer of a sea vessel liable for damages resulting from a collision between the chartered vessel and a passenger ship?

Held: First: The charterer has no liability for damages under Philippine Maritime laws.

Petitioner and Vector entered into a contract of affreightment, also known as a voyage charter.

A charter party is a contract by which an entire ship, or some principal part

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thereof, is let by the owner to another person for a specified time or use; a contract of affreightment is one by which the owner of a ship or other vessel lets the whole or part of her to a merchant or other person for the conveyance of goods, on a particular voyage, in consideration of the payment of freight. A contract of affreightment may be either time charter, wherein the leased vessel is leased to the charterer for a fixed period of time, or voyage charter, wherein the ship is leased for a single voyage. In both cases, the charter-party provides for the hire of the vessel only, either for a determinate period of time or for a single or consecutive voyage, the ship owner to supply the ship’s store, pay for the wages of the master of the crew, and defray the expenses for the maintenance of the ship. If the charter is a contract of affreightment, which leaves the general owner in possession of the ship as owner for the voyage, the rights and the responsibilities of ownership rest on the owner. The charterer is free from liability to third persons in respect of the ship.

Second: MT Vector is a common carrier

The charter party agreement did not convert the common carrier into a private carrier. The parties entered into a voyage charter, which retains the character of the vessel as a common carrier. It is imperative that a public carrier shall remain as such, notwithstanding the charter of the whole or portion of a vessel by one or more persons, provided the charter is limited to the ship only, as in the case of a time-charter or voyage charter. It is only when the charter includes both the vessel and its crew, as in a bareboat or demise that a common carrier becomes private, at least insofar as the particular voyage covering the charter-party is concerned. Indubitably, a ship-owner in a time or voyage charter retains possession and control of the ship, although her holds may, for the moment, be the property of the charterer. A common carrier is a person or corporation whose regular business is to carry passengers or property for all persons who may choose to employ and to remunerate him. 16 MT Vector fits the definition of a common carrier under Article 1732 of the Civil Code.

The public must of necessity rely on the care and skill of common carriers in the vigilance over the goods and safety of the passengers, especially because with the modern development of science and invention, transportation has become more rapid, more complicated and somehow more hazardous. For these reasons, a passenger or a shipper of goods is under no obligation to conduct an inspection of the ship and its crew, the carrier being obliged by law to impliedly warrant its seaworthiness.

Third: Is Caltex liable for damages under the Civil Code?

The charterer of a vessel has no obligation before transporting its cargo to ensure that the vessel it chartered complied with all legal requirements. The duty rests upon the common carrier simply for being engaged in "public service." The relationship between the parties in this case is governed by special laws. Because of the implied warranty of seaworthiness, shippers of

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goods, when transacting with common carriers, are not expected to inquire into the vessel’s seaworthiness, genuineness of its licenses and compliance with all maritime laws. To demand more from shippers and hold them liable in case of failure exhibits nothing but the futility of our maritime laws insofar as the protection of the public in general is concerned. Such a practice would be an absurdity in a business where time is always of the essence. Considering the nature of transportation business, passengers and shippers alike customarily presume that common carriers possess all the legal requisites in its operation.