Limitation of Liability under the Maritime Law

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An exceptional feature of maritime law is the privilege awarded to shipowners and charterers in some cases to limit the amount of their liability under certain circumstances, in respect of tort and contract claims. In certain countries like the USA, apart form the claims for personal injury and wrongful death, the limits are the value of the ship and the earnings of the voyage on which it was engaged at the time of the casualty. On the other hand, in the United Kingdom and the other countries that have ratified the Brussels Limitation of Liability Convention of 1957 or enacted domestic legislation admitting to its terms and conditions, the limit is £28 or its equivalent, multiplied by the adjusted net weight of the vessel, regardless of its actual value.

The primary condition of the privilege is that the party claiming it must be free from “privity or knowledge”, if we go by the words of the United States statute, or “actual fault or privity,” in the words of the convention. Generally speaking, this formula means that the shipowner is entitled to limit his liability for the negligence of the master or crew, but not for his negligence or that of his managerial staffs. Apparently, the limited liability of shipowners may be compared to the limited liability that any investor may achieve by incorporating his enterprise.

However, limited liability in maritime law long predates the development or invention of the modern corporation or limited company. Its initial appearance in maritime law may be taken as an acknowledgement of the extraordinary hazards of seaborne commerce and the need to protect the adventurous shipowners from the extreme burden of liability, that is, in the days before even the earliest forms of insurance had been made available. Some modern commentators have suggested that the peculiar features of maritime limitation of liability have outlived their usefulness and that the development of insurance and the modern limited liability company has radically altered the conditions out of which the privilege of the shipowners originally grew. Although no maritime country has yet gone to the extent of abolishing limitation of liability, ship owning interests appear to have become concerned about the possibility of such a development.

In most maritime countries the principle of limitation of liability was considered to be a part of the general maritime law. The idea that developed in Europe, generally stated that a shipowner entitled to limitation could satisfy his liability by abandoning the ship and its pending freight to claimants. Since the privilege of limitation was, and is, typically invoked following a large-scale maritime disaster, the abandonment theory meant that claimants got the value of the ship as it was following the disaster. If the ship had sunk or was a total loss with no freight pending, the claimants got nothing. This theory was carried over into the law of many South American countries.

The Great Britain and the United States were once the only maritime countries that refused to admit the principle of limitation as part of the general maritime law. In both countries, however, the competitive needs of the shipping industry compelled its introduction by statute.
In general, the limitation law of any country will be applied by its courts in favour of foreign shipowners as well as citizens. From the point of view of ship owning interests, however, a major weakness of limitation law has been the fact that limitation proceedings were not given international recognition. That has meant that a shipowner whose ships moved in international trade could find himself sued in several countries as a result of one disaster and forced to set up limitation funds in each country. The Brussels Convention of 1957 makes limitation decrees delivered by admiralty courts in ratifying countries internationally effective, i.e., a shipowner is required to set up only one limitation fund, out of which all claims are to be paid no matter in how many countries proceedings might be instituted against him. Thus, the convention, which increases the liability of shipowners in most countries, does offer in return this considerable advantage to shipowners.

Top 3 Law Colleges In India

Being a law student, I would like to guide the upcoming law aspirants and help them choose the best law college in our country. So, in this blog, I would like to enlist India 10 ten law colleges where a law aspirant can enroll after their law entrance examinations. The colleges are as follows:-

  1. National Law School, Bangalore :
Competition on Urban Imagination by NLSIU, Bangalore: Submit by Dec 31
  1. The NATIONAL LAW SCHOOL OF INDIA UNIVERSITY came into existence through a Notification under the NATIONAL LAW SCHOOL OF INDIA UNIVERSITY Act (Karnataka Act 22 of 1986). It signified the culmination of efforts by the Judiciary, the Bar Council of India, the Karnataka Bar Council, the Bangalore University and the Government of Karnataka to reform legal education and to establish a center of excellence for legal education and research in India. The Chief Justice of India is the Chancellor.

Courses offered by NLS, Bangalore are:-

B.A. LL.B (Hons.): A Five year Integrated Course for under-graduates – Admission to this program is purely on merit as assessed through a Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) conducted by the CLAT Committee constituted for the purpose. A total of 120 students are ordinarily admitted.

They also offer Post-graduate Course like : Post Graduate LLMs (Masters in Law), Post Graduate in Public Policy, Research Degree (M. Phil – Masters of Philosophy) and Distance Education as well.

NLS, Bangalore has been ranked at India`s no.1 law college.

2. NALSAR, Hyderabad:

NUL-Nalsar University of Law

The National Academy of Legal Studies and Research (NALSAR) was established in 1998 by a Statute of the State of Andhra Pradesh. Since its inception, the University has been home to vital conversations on law and justice. These conversations have acknowledged that questions of justice arise in all legal pursuits whether in the world of courts, corporations, education or administration. Using law as an instrument of social change the University has supported crusades for land rights, disability empowerment and against moral policing and hate speech. NALSAR is committed to the creation of an ethical legal culture, which protects and promotes the rule of law. The social justice agenda is no laughing matter but the University believes that the cause of building a rule of law society is a continuous enterprise, which is sustainable if it is undertaken with optimism and good cheer.

Courses offered are :-

  1. B.A. LL.B. (Hons) (5 years)
  2. M. Phil. in Law (1 year)
  3. LL.M. in Legal Consumer Law and Practice (1 year)
  4. LL.M. in Public Law and Legal Theory (1 year)
  5. Master in Space and Telecommunications Law (2 years)
  6. LL.M. in Personal Law (1 year)
  7. Ph.D. in Law (3 years)
  8. Ph.D. in Law (2 years)
  9. Post Graduate Diploma in GIS and Remote Sensing Law (1 year)
  10. Post Graduate Diploma in Media Law (1 year)
  11. Post Graduate Diploma in International Humanitarian Law (1 year)
  12. LL.M. in International Trade and Business Law (1 year)
  13. LL.M. in Intellectual Property Rights (1 year)
  14. LL.M. in Criminal Law (1 year)
  15. Masters in Aviation Law and Air Transport Management (2 years)
  16. Post Graduate Diploma in Parents Law (1 year)
  17. Masters in Taxation and Business Law (2 years)
  18. Post Graduate Diploma in Aviation Law and Air Transport Management (1 year)
  19. LL.M. in Corporate and Commercial Law (1 year)
  20. LL.M. in Pedagogy and Research (1 year)
  21. Post Graduate Diploma in Cyber Law (1 year)
  22. Masters of Business Administration (MBA) (2 years)

This is also one of the most renuoned law colleges in India.

3. The West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata: The WBNUJS was established under the WBNUJS Act, 1999 (West Bengal Act IX of 1999) adopted by the West Bengal Legislature in July, 1999. The University was notified under Clause (f) of Section 2 of the UGC Act, 1956 in August 2004 and has been granted permanent affiliation by the Bar Council of India in July 2005. The NUJS, Kolkata has the honourable Chief Justice of India as the Chancellor. The Chief Justice of India is the Chancellor of NUJS and is also the Chairman of the General Council, the supreme policy-making body of the University. Prof. (Dr.) Nirmal Kanti Chakrabarti is the Vice Chancellor of the University. Admissions are based on CLAT Examinations Result.

The WB National University of Juridical Sciences (NUJS), Kolkata ...

Courses offered by WBNUJS are:-

B.A. LL.B (Hons) for under-graduates (1 year)

Post-graduate Programs:-

  1. LL.M. degree course (1 year)
  2. M. Phil Degree Program (3 years)
  3. Ph.D and LL.D degrees 

Diploma Courses offered:-

  1. Post Graduate Diploma in Air and Space Law (PGDASL)
  2. Post Graduate Diploma in Nuclear Law (PGDNL)
  3. Post Graduate Diploma in Business Laws (PGDBL)
  4.  Post Graduate Diploma in Human Rights (PGDHR) 
  5. Post Graduate Diploma in Public Health Care and Medical Laws
  6. Post Graduate Diploma on Intellectual Property Rights Law (PGDIPRL) 

NUJS Certificate Courses

1. Certificate Course in Consumer Law

NUJS Collaborative Courses

with IP Leaders

1. Diploma in Entrepreneurship Administration and Business Laws  
2. Certificate Course in Sexual Harassessment 

with HPCL

1. PG Diploma in Industrial and Commercial Laws.

So, I would wish luck to all the law aspirants of our country and hope that this article helps them in deciding which college to opt for.

BEING A NATIONAL

“Into the heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake” – Rabindranath Tagore

Photo by Still Pixels on Pexels.com

The country always assumes importance when interests of an individual and the country collide against one another. And it is the country under whose parentage an individual thrives and lives. When being a national, there is a sense of dignity and belongingness to the nation, and a nationality is that mark of indentifying an individual with the greater and the more important area of categorization of a nation. So, this Independence Day, let us be proud of our Mother from within and give Her a chance to feel the same for us too.

” One individual may die for an idea; but that idea will, after his death incarnate itself in a thousand lives”. – Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose.

This quote by Netaji means that we are the human incarnation of ideas that our ancestors have thought of. We must strive harder everyday of our life for a better India that is prosperous and equal to all it`s citizens. The National Flag hoisted on every 15th August also represents those thousands of heads, beheaded while fighting for what we have today – our freedom. Us, as citizens of independent India should always keep our past, present and future glory alive in every moment of this day and everyday. We must celebrate this day with pride and honour and cherish our freedom as it is the most precious gift given to us by our national heroes.

Being a citizen is not just a myopic enjoyment of right and privileges as entitled to people of the land. If it is inhabiting a land it also entails taking care and feeling for the land at the same time. This reciprocity of relationship churns out quite a befitting definition of national or a citizen of a nation. While there has been intervals of foreign rule and continuous interventions in ethnic indignity, religious and political wars, nevertheless the society of India kept evolving and its dynamicity shaped a composite culture much quoted in the refrain “Unity in Diversity”.

Jai Hind!

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