consignee

{{short description|Party who receives the good in a contract of carriage}}

{{See also|Consignment}}

{{Admiralty law}}

A consignee is a person or entity to which goods are consigned.{{cite book |editor1-last=Garner |editor1-first=Bryan A. |title=Black's law dictionary |date=2009 |publisher=West |location=St. Paul, MN |isbn=978-0314199492 |page=350 |edition=9th}} In a contract of carriage, the consignee is the entity who is financially responsible (the buyer) for the receipt of a shipment.{{cite journal |last1=Cotutiu |first1=Aurelia |title=The Essential Conditions for the Validity of the Contract of Carriage |journal=Journal of Legal Studies |date=1 June 2015 |volume=16 |issue=29 |pages=51 |doi=10.1515/jles-2015-0005|doi-access=free }}

If a sender dispatches an item to a receiver via a delivery service, the sender is the consignor, the recipient is the consignee, and the deliverer is the carrier.

A brief statement of law

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This is a difficult area of law, in that it regulates the mass transportation industry, which cannot always guarantee arrival on time or that goods will not be damaged in the course of transit. Two other problems are that unpaid consignors or freight carriers may wish to hold goods until payment is made,{{Cite web |last=Corby |first=Matt |date=2024-07-23 |title=Ultimate Guide to Freight Collect Payment Terms |url=https://www.transvirtual.com/blog/the-ultimate-guide-to-freight-collect-payment-terms/ |access-date=2024-09-16 |website=TransVirtual |language=en-AU}} and that fraudulent individuals may seek to take delivery in place of the legitimate consignees. The key to resolving such disputes lies in the documentation. The standard form of contract is a bill of lading which, in international shipping law, is simply a contract for the carriage of goods entered into between the shipper and the carrier that is not a charter party.{{Cite web |title=Bill of Lading: Meaning, Types, Example, and Purpose |url=https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/billoflading.asp |access-date=2024-09-16 |website=Investopedia |language=en}} It is always a term of that contract that the carrier must deliver the goods to a specific receiver.

= Consignee rights =

The rights of the consignee under an air waybill are regulated by the Warsaw Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules for International Carriage by Air, 1929 and the Montreal Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules for International Carriage by Air 1999 and the relevant state laws (which may be one law chosen as the proper law by the parties, or any combination of laws representing the seller, buyer, consignor, and carrier.)

This is very important as per export documents.

The receiver can be different than that of the consignee.

References