Continental Insurance v. Federal Express Corp. , 454 F.3d 951 ( 2006 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY,          
    a corporation,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,         No. 03-57162
    v.                            D.C. No.
    FEDERAL EXPRESS CORPORATION, a              CV-00-00696-NMM
    corporation,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY,          
    a corporation,
    No. 03-57214
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.                             D.C. No.
    CV-00-00696-NMM
    FEDERAL EXPRESS CORPORATION, a
    OPINION
    corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Nora M. Manella, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    October 17, 2005—Pasadena, California
    Filed June 29, 2006
    Before: Procter Hug, Jr., Harry Pregerson, and
    Richard R. Clifton, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Hug
    7153
    7156      CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    COUNSEL
    Robert J. Taitz and David R. Shane, Shane & Taitz, Green-
    brae, California, for the defendant-appellant/appellee.
    Timothy R. Lord and Bernadette M. Chala, Lewis Brisbois
    Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Costa Mesa, California, for the
    plaintiff-appellee/appellant.
    OPINION
    HUG, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal is from a stipulated judgment for $109,023.24
    in favor of Continental Insurance Company (“Continental”)
    for goods lost in shipment by Federal Express Corporation
    (“FedEx”). We have jurisdiction because the parties reserved
    the right to appeal the district court’s rulings on the applica-
    bility of the Original Warsaw Convention and its subsequent
    amending agreements, the Hague Protocol and the Montreal
    Protocol No. 4.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    On March 31 and April 15, 1999, FedEx and Comet Elec-
    tronics Co., Ltd., entered into a contract of carriage, whereby
    FedEx agreed to ship by air packages containing integrated
    circuits and memory modules from Hong Kong to Pasadena,
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS                7157
    California, with delivery to Viken Electronics. Four packages
    never arrived. The insurer of these cargoes, Continental, was
    subrogated to the rights of Viken Electronics, the consignee
    and owner of the goods. Continental filed an action against
    FedEx in the California Superior Court, alleging causes of
    action for loss of cargoes under the Warsaw Convention, neg-
    ligence, breach of contract, breach of the duty to care for
    property and bailment, and conversion. Continental alleged
    the losses of shipments “including, but not necessarily limited
    to, air waybill number[s] 8101 8095 3045 . . . [and] 8101
    8095 3137” (“3045” and “3137”). FedEx removed the case to
    the United States District Court for the Central District of Cal-
    ifornia. It is undisputed that the Warsaw Convention preempts
    the state law causes of action.
    A.   First Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.
    FedEx sought partial summary judgment that its liability
    was limited as to waybills 3045 and 3137 under the amended
    version of the Warsaw Convention presently in force between
    Hong Kong and the United States, which it alleged either to
    be The Hague Protocol of 1955 (“The Hague Protocol”)1 or
    the Montreal Protocol No. 4 (1975).2 Compared to the Origi-
    nal Warsaw Convention, both versions substantially relax pre-
    conditions to limited liability.
    The Original Warsaw Convention presumes liability of the
    carrier for goods lost or destroyed while entrusted to the car-
    rier, but limits permissible recovery unless a special declara-
    1
    Protocol to Amend the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules
    Relating to International Carriage by Air, signed at Warsaw on 12 October
    1929, opened for signature Sept. 28, 1955, art. XI, 478 U.N.T.S. 371, 381.
    2
    Montreal Protocol No. 4 to Amend the Convention for the Unification
    of Certain Rules Relating to International Carriage by Air, signed at War-
    saw on 12 October 1929, amended by Protocol Done at the Hague on 28
    September 1955, Sept. 25, 1975, ICAO Doc. 9148, reprinted in Lawrence
    B. Goldhirsch, The Warsaw Convention Annotated: A Legal Handbook
    401 (2000).
    7158          CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    tion of value is made when the goods are delivered to the
    carrier, and the shipper has paid a supplementary sum accord-
    ing to the value. See Original Warsaw Convention art. 22(2).
    However, Article 9 provides that “the carrier shall not be enti-
    tled to avail himself of the provision of this convention which
    excludes or limits his liability . . . if the air waybill does not
    contain all of the particulars set out in Article 8 (a) to (i),
    inclusive and (q).”3 Article 8(i) requires the air bill to contain
    the weight of the goods. By contrast, The Hague Protocol
    only requires notice of stop-over destinations on the waybill.
    The Montreal Protocol No. 4 abandons the cargo documenta-
    tion provisions of the Original Warsaw Convention entirely,
    permitting limitation of liability even in the absence of an air
    waybill.
    Before the district court ruled on FedEx’s first motion,
    Continental broadened the scope of its suit to include two
    3
    Specifically, the air waybill must contain the following particulars:
    (a) the place and date of its execution;
    (b) the place of departure and of destination;
    (c) the agreed stopping places, provided that the carrier may
    reserve the right to alter the stopping places in case of necessity
    ...;
    (d) the name and address of the consignor;
    (e) the name and address of the first carrier;
    (f) the name and address of the consignee . . . ;
    (g) the nature of the goods;
    (h) the number of packages, the method of packing, and the par-
    ticular marks or numbers upon them;
    (i) the weight, the quantity, the volume, or dimensions of the
    goods;
    ...
    (q) a statement that the transportation is subject to the rules relat-
    ing to liability established by this convention.
    Warsaw Convention art. 8(a)-8(q) (emphasis added).
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS        7159
    additional waybills — 8101 8095 3067 and 8101 8095 3056
    (“3067” and “3056”). FedEx maintained that Continental was
    barred from pursuing claims for additional waybills. How-
    ever, the district court also permitted Continental to proceed
    on waybills 3067 and 3056.
    Because weight notations appeared on the waybills in evi-
    dence for 3045 and 3137, FedEx stated “for the purposes of
    this motion only, Federal Express will concede that this mat-
    ter is governed solely by the Original Warsaw Convention.”
    Obviously, this concession was made because the waybills
    complied with all the requirements of the Original Warsaw
    Convention, including the weight requirement. Thus, partial
    summary judgment was granted for FedEx on those two way-
    bills.
    The district court permitted Continental to proceed on way-
    bills 3067 and 3056 because Continental’s complaint stated
    that the action involved the loss of shipments “including but
    not necessarily limited to, air waybill numbers 3045 and
    3137.” The copies of waybills number 3067 and 3056 did not
    contain the weight of the goods shipped on the copies of the
    waybills before the court; therefore, the district court denied
    partial summary judgment limiting liability as to those ship-
    ments.
    B.   Second Motion For Partial Summary Judgment.
    FedEx’s second motion for partial summary judgment ref-
    erenced waybills 3067 and 3056 specifically. Because the
    billing copies of waybills 3067 and 3056, on which the cargo
    weights were clearly marked, were then in evidence, FedEx
    conceded again only for purposes of summary judgment that
    the Original Warsaw Convention applied. However, this time
    the district court ruled that waybills 3067 and 3056 were tech-
    nically deficient under Article 8 of the Original Warsaw Con-
    vention because the sender’s copies, which omit the cargoes’
    weight, had also been entered into evidence.
    7160           CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    C.     Law Of The Case Doctrine.
    In telephonic conferences on July 7 and July 30, 2003, the
    district court relied on FedEx’s limited concessions and held
    that the Original Warsaw Convention was the law of the case,
    thereby barring further consideration at trial of what treaty
    governs, and, in the district court’s view, resolving all out-
    standing legal issues. Only the factual question of damages
    remained. To posture the case for appeal, the parties stipu-
    lated to damages and entered a consent judgment, which
    explicitly reserved their rights of appeal. We have jurisdiction
    over this appeal of the stipulated judgment due to this reserva-
    tion of the right to appeal. See U.A. Local 342 Apprenticeship
    & Training Trust v. Babcock & Wilcox Construction Co., 
    396 F.3d 1056
    , 1058 (9th Cir. 2005).
    FedEx appeals the district court’s use of the law of the case
    doctrine and challenges the district court’s holding that the
    Original Warsaw Convention controls the case and precludes
    consideration of The Hague Protocol or the Montreal Protocol
    No. 4.
    II.     DISCUSSION OF FEDEX’S APPEAL
    We review de novo a district court’s interpretation of trea-
    ties to which the United States is a party. Motorola, Inc. v.
    Federal Express Corp., 
    308 F.3d 995
    , 999 n.6 (9th Cir. 2002).
    We review applications of law of the case doctrine for abuse
    of discretion. Milgard Tempering, Inc. v. Selas Corp. of
    America, 
    902 F.2d 703
    , 715 (9th Cir. 1990). Here, the district
    court abused its discretion in applying the law of the case doc-
    trine for two reasons.
    First, the court misunderstood the effect of its summary
    judgment rulings. FedEx sought summary judgment on
    whether liability is limited even if the Original Warsaw Con-
    vention applies. It did not concede that this applied for the
    purposes of trial if the motion was denied. Denying summary
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS          7161
    judgment rendered no decision on what law governed; no
    actual ruling on the issue of applicable law was made. The
    record bears this out: nowhere is it evident that the court actu-
    ally analyzed the treaties in force. By invoking the law of the
    case doctrine to prevent judicial consideration of a dispositive
    legal issue not yet ruled upon for the purposes of trial, the dis-
    trict court abused its discretion.
    Second, the district court erred by applying the Original
    Warsaw Convention to this case. Given that various nations
    have ratified either the Original Warsaw Convention or its
    various amending agreements, the question as to what law
    applies has ordinarily been determined on a “lowest common
    denominator” basis. See, e.g., G.D. Searle & Co. v. Federal
    Express Corp., 
    248 F. Supp. 2d 905
    , 907-09 (N.D. Cal. 2003);
    see also Paul S. Dempsey, International Air Cargo & Bag-
    gage Liability And The Tower Of Babel, 36 GEO. WASH. INT’L
    L. REV. 239, 240 (2004). The latest treaty ratified by both ori-
    gin and destination countries supplies the governing law. The
    most recent common treaty in force between Hong Kong and
    the United States is not the Original Warsaw Convention, but
    The Hague Protocol.
    A.   Hong Kong.
    [1] From July 1, 1997, the People’s Republic of China
    resumed the exercise of sovereignty over Hong Kong from
    the United Kingdom, becoming a Special Administrative
    Region (“SAR”) of China. Prior to that date, the U.K. had rat-
    ified treaties and other international agreements on Hong
    Kong’s behalf. Upon changing status to a SAR, Hong Kong
    neither automatically ceased to honor its past obligations nor
    automatically became subject to China’s agreements. Rather,
    China issued a joint statement with the U.K. to the effect that
    certain enumerated treaties to which China was a party would
    be applied to Hong Kong from July 1, 1997, while certain
    treaties to which China was not yet a party, but which applied
    to Hong Kong prior to July 1, 1997, would continue to apply.
    7162        CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    See The Position Of The People’s Republic Of China And The
    United Kingdom On Multilateral Treaties Applying To The
    Hong Kong Special Administration Region, 36 I.LM. 1671,
    1676-1678 (1997). This document gave renewed effect in
    Hong Kong to both The Hague Protocol and the Original
    Warsaw Convention. See id. at 1678, 1684; see also DEPT. OF
    STATE, TREATIES IN FORCE: A LIST OF TREATIES AND OTHER
    INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS OF THE UNITED STATES IN FORCE ON
    JANUARY 1, 2004, 349 n.3 (2004).
    [2] By contrast, the Montreal Protocol No. 4 did not
    become effective in the U.K. until June 14, 1998, long after
    Hong Kong’s change of status. See RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF
    THE FOREIGN RELATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES § 322(1) (1986)
    (observing that “the provisions of an international agreement
    do not bind a party in relation to any act or fact that took place
    . . . before the date of the entry into force of the agreement
    with respect to that party”). Because the Montreal Protocol
    No. 4 never came into force in Hong Kong, was never subject
    to the Chinese/British note on multilateral treaties applying to
    Hong Kong, and, indeed, was ratified by China itself only
    within the last year—without application to Hong Kong—the
    Montreal Protocol No. 4 cannot apply.
    B.     The United States.
    [3] The United States expressly ratified The Hague Proto-
    col on December 14, 2003. However, the question before the
    court is whether, by adopting the Montreal Protocol No. 4, the
    United States acceded to The Hague Protocol, such that the
    terms of the Original Warsaw Convention as amended by The
    Hague Protocol should govern this matter. This is a question
    of first impression in this circuit.
    [4] In dictum, the Ninth Circuit has noted that “The Hague
    Protocol did not enter into force for the United States until the
    Montreal Protocol No. 4 was ratified by the Senate” on March
    4, 1999, Motorola Inc., 
    308 F.3d at
    999 n.6, implying that
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS         7163
    upon ratification of the Montreal Protocol No. 4, the United
    States became bound by the terms of The Hague Protocol.
    District courts in the Southern, Central, and Northern Districts
    of California have adhered to Motorola and the March 4,
    1999 date. See, e.g., Polanski v. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines,
    
    378 F. Supp. 2d 1222
    , 1226 (S.D. Cal. 2005) (“[O]n Septem-
    ber 28, 1998, the United States ratified a later amending
    treaty, Montreal Protocol No. 4, which became effective as to
    the United States on March 4, 1999. By doing so, the United
    States acceded to the Warsaw Convention as amended by the
    Hague Protocol.”) (citations omitted); In re Air Crash at Tai-
    pei, Taiwan, 
    2002 WL 32513726
    , *4 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 19,
    2002) (Not Reported in F. Supp. 2d) (“[R]atification [of Mon-
    treal Protocol No. 4] made the Hague Protocol effective in the
    U.S. as of March 4, 1999.”); G.D. Searle, 
    248 F. Supp. 2d at 907-909
     (concluding that by ratifying the Montreal Protocol
    No. 4 the U.S. “did in fact express its consent to accede to the
    Warsaw Convention as amended by the Hague Protocol”).
    [5] The Second Circuit agreed in Fujitsu Ltd. v. Federal
    Express Corp., 
    247 F.3d 423
    , 431 (2d Cir. 2001). The Second
    Circuit stated that the United States was not governed by The
    Hague Protocol “until another international agreement, Mon-
    treal Protocol No. 4, was ratified by the Senate on September
    28, 1998 and became effective on March 4, 1999.” Even
    Chubb & Son, Inc. v. Asiana Airlines, 
    214 F.3d 301
    , 307 n.4
    (2d Cir. 2000), relied on heavily by Continental, accepts that
    the United States “acceded to the Warsaw Convention as
    amended by the Hague Protocol” upon ratification of the
    Montreal Protocol No. 4. See also Schopenhauer v. Compag-
    nie Nat’l Air Fr., 
    255 F. Supp. 2d 81
    , 86 (E.D.N.Y. 2003)
    (“When referring specifically to the 1955 Hague revisions of
    the original Warsaw Convention, the Court occasionally
    refers to the ‘Hague Protocol,’ even though those revisions
    did not take effect in this country until the ratification of
    Montreal Protocol No. 4 in 1999.”); Royal & Son Alliance
    Ins. v. Am. Airlines, et al., 277 F. Supp 2d 265, 268 (S.D.N.Y.
    2003) (“The Second Circuit has twice recognized that the
    7164        CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    United States has acceded to the Hague Protocol, as has the
    Ninth Circuit.”).4
    [6] This treatment is consistent with the language of the
    Montreal Protocol No. 4, the Vienna Convention on the Law
    of Treaties, and positions taken by the Executive Branch. A
    review of the express language of the Montreal Protocol No.
    4 indicates that by ratifying the Montreal Protocol No. 4, the
    United States expressed its consent to accede to The Hague
    Protocol. Article XVII(2) of the Montreal Protocol No. 4 pro-
    vides:
    This provision incorporates by reference the revi-
    sions to the Warsaw Convention made at The Hague
    in 1955 and defines the resulting single instrument as
    the Warsaw Convention as amended at The Hague,
    1955, and by Protocol No. 4 of Montreal, 1975.
    (emphasis added)
    Likewise, Article XVII provides that
    Ratification by any state which is not a party to the
    Warsaw Convention and to The Hague Protocol has
    the effect of accession to the new single instrument
    defined in Article XV. Paragraph 2 of this article has
    the important function of making clear that it is not
    necessary to ratify the Warsaw Convention or The
    Hague Protocol in order to become a party to the
    new single instrument created by Protocol 4.
    (emphasis added)
    Read in conjunction, this language supports our position, as
    does Article 40 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Trea-
    4
    In a recent case, however, the Second Circuit retreated from this posi-
    tion, treated Fujitsu’s statements adopting the March 4, 1999 date as dicta,
    and arrived at a different construction. See Avero Belgium Ins. v. American
    Airlines, Inc., 
    423 F.3d 73
    , 82-90 (2nd Cir. 2005).
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS                7165
    ties, reprinted in 63 AM. J. INTL. L. 875 (1969). Article 40
    addresses the amendment of multilateral treaties and provides
    that:
    5. Any state which becomes a party to the treaty
    after the entry into force of the amending agreement
    shall, failing an expression of a different intention by
    that state:
    (a) be considered as a party to the treaty as
    amended; and
    (b) be considered as a party to the unamended treaty
    in relation to any party to the treaty not bound by the
    amending agreement.5
    See also Saul Sorkin, Goods In Transit § 9.19 (2003) (“[I]f a
    State failed to become a party to the original Warsaw Conven-
    tion but thereafter adhered to the Hague Protocol to the War-
    saw Convention it thereby became a party to the Warsaw
    Convention.”); Dana L. Christensen, Comment, The Elusive
    Exercise of Jurisdiction Over Air Transportation Between The
    United States and South Korea, 10 PAC. RIM L. & POL’Y J.
    653, 688-89 (2001) (“[M]ost scholars agree that . . . adherence
    to an amending agreement binds a new party to the terms of
    the original treaty with respect to parties that adhere solely to
    that treaty.”)
    [7] The authorities cited above are persuasive. We hold that
    the ratification of the Montreal Protocol No. 4 brought The
    Hague Protocol into full force and effect in the United States
    on March 4, 1999.
    5
    The Second Circuit in Avero Belgium did not apply section 5(b)
    because the court held that the United States, in ratifying Protocol No. 4
    of Montreal, expressed an intention that this provision did not apply. We
    reach a contrary conclusion, holding that no such intention was expressed
    by Congress.
    7166       CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS
    We observe that President Bush’s transmittal to the Senate
    on July 31, 2002 of The Hague Protocol for advice and con-
    sent, S. Treaty Doc. No. 107-14, 
    1955 WL 45606
     (2002),
    does not undermine this holding. The transmittal took no posi-
    tion on The Hague Protocol’s then-current status. It was
    offered to dispel future uncertainty as to whether the United
    States is bound by The Hague Protocol. In a June 2003 State
    Department white paper, offered as testimony before the Sen-
    ate Foreign Relations Committee, the Administration clarified
    that it sought to eliminate any ambiguity for the future,
    observing only that:
    If the courts were to conclude that Montreal Protocol
    No. 4 does not create treaty relations under The
    Hague Protocol, the United States’ treaty relations
    with the 79 countries that are parties to both the
    Warsaw Convention and The Hague Protocol, but
    not to Montreal Protocol No. 4, would be based on
    the Warsaw Convention, unamended by any later
    protocol . . . . This is an unsatisfactory result . . . .
    Ratification of The Hague Protocol will eliminate
    any ambiguity and secure for the U.S. industry The
    Hague Protocol’s more modern cargo documentation
    rules, which are critical to the efficient movement of
    air cargo.
    John R. Byerly, U.S. Aviation Policy: the Montreal Conven-
    tion and The Hague Protocol, at http://www.state.gov/e/eb/
    rls/rm/2003/21869.htm.
    III.   CONTINENTAL’S CROSS-APPEAL
    Because Continental later discovered the sender’s copies of
    waybills 3045 and 3137, which omitted the cargoes’ weight,
    Continental requested that the district court revisit its grant of
    summary judgment as to waybills 3045 and 3137 and “apply
    the same rule . . . that it later applied to waybills Nos. 3056
    and 3067.” The district court declined, noting this evidence
    CONTINENTAL INSURANCE v. FEDERAL EXPRESS          7167
    was available earlier, and the failure to present it was an over-
    sight. On cross-appeal, Continental challenges the district
    court’s refusal to harmonize its two rulings.
    This type of oversight does not ordinarily meet the criteria
    for granting a motion for reconsideration. See C.D. Cal. L.R.
    7.16. Furthermore, because we have held that The Hague Pro-
    tocol governs all four waybills, the issue becomes moot. We
    deny Continental’s cross-appeal.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    [8] The Montreal Protocol No. 4 brought The Hague Proto-
    col into force in the United States on March 4, 1999. The
    Hague Protocol was in force in both Hong Kong and the
    United States at the time Continental’s claims arose, which
    was March 31 and April 15, 1999, for the first and second
    shipments, respectively, and the district court erred by apply-
    ing the Original Warsaw Convention. Because a district court
    abuses its discretion when it applies incorrect law, see Casey
    v. Albertson’s Inc., 
    362 F.3d 1254
    , 1257 (9th Cir. 2004), we
    VACATE the stipulated judgment, and REMAND for further
    proceedings consistent with the liability provisions of The
    Hague Protocol.
    VACATED and REMANDED.