View all text of Chapter 801 [§ 80101 - § 80116]
§ 80107. Warranties and liability
(a)General Rule.—Unless a contrary intention appears, a person negotiating or transferring a bill of lading for value warrants that—
(1) the bill is genuine;
(2) the person has the right to transfer the bill and the title to the goods described in the bill;
(3) the person does not know of a fact that would affect the validity or worth of the bill; and
(4) the goods are merchantable or fit for a particular purpose when merchantability or fitness would have been implied if the agreement of the parties had been to transfer the goods without a bill of lading.
(b)Security for Debt.—A person holding a bill of lading as security for a debt and in good faith demanding or receiving payment of the debt from another person does not warrant by the demand or receipt—
(1) the genuineness of the bill; or
(2) the quantity or quality of the goods described in the bill.
(c)Duplicates.—A common carrier issuing a bill of lading, on the face of which is the word “duplicate” or another word indicating that the bill is not an original bill, is liable the same as a person that represents and warrants that the bill is an accurate copy of an original bill properly issued. The carrier is not otherwise liable under the bill.
(d)Indorser Liability.—Indorsement of a bill of lading does not make the indorser liable for failure of the common carrier or a previous indorser to fulfill its obligations.
(Pub. L. 103–272, § 1(e), July 5, 1994, 108 Stat. 1349.)