Tan Tien Phong Company Limited -TTP

Tan Tien Phong Company Limited -TTP International Freight Forwarder
Logistics Service Provider
Offices in Hanoi, Hai Phong & Ho Chi Minh City

TAN TIEN PHONG COMPANY (TTP CO.,LTD) was established on February 1st ,1997. It is a leading company acting as an international freight forwarder in Vietnam. Tan Tien Phong is your reliable business partner in freight forwarding and logistics matters. The company proudly has a well-professional board of managers with over 20 years of business experience in shipping and freight forwarding fields. Mo

reover, it is smoothly operated by a team of accomplished and qualified staffs who are able to handle effectively and efficiently stevedoring, transportation, customs clearance, packing, warehousing, consolidating, shipping agent and creating favorable conditions to cargo on transit. The main task of TTP CO., LTD is to facilitate your business. We seek to distinguish ourselves by providing the most possible flexibility and reliability in customer services. Hence we provide the best compromise between cost, speed and reliability. Furthermore, Tan Tien Phong serves and meets all your shipping and freight forwarding questions. We are able to help you deciding your best solutions to new challenges with a view to promoting your business.

17/12/2018

The Vietnam National Shipping Lines (Vinalines) will open a logistics centre for container shipping on December 17 as part of moves to restructure the State-owned firm, according to Deputy Director General Đỗ Thị Ngọc Trang.

17/12/2018

Party General Secretary, President Nguyễn Phú Trọng asked the northern port city of Hải Phòng to develop a strong sea-based economy during a meeting between the Politburo and the municipal Party Committee in Hà Nội on Thursday.

17/12/2018

The Vietnamese logistics sector must take advantage of global integration to reach its full potential, deputy minister of industry and trade Cao Quốc Hưng said at a meeting on Friday.

17/12/2018

Seoul-based Mirae Financial Group and Naver have acquired two logistics centres in Việt Nam for 53 billion won (US$47.01 million), said industry sources on Friday.

17/12/2018

A lack of investment into inland waterways has stunted the development of water-borne shipping and made Việt Nam’s logistics sector heavily dependant on more expensive road transport.

17/12/2018

Red tape must be removed for domestic logistics firms to develop and compete in a market which had great potential, driven by a boom in international trade, but was now dominated by foreign rivals, attendees were told at a conference held by the Central Institute for Economic Management (CIEM) on Mo...

10/10/2018

Kerry Logistics Consolidates Global Project Logistics Services under New Kerry Project Logistics Brand

02/05/2018
02/05/2018

 Việt Nam’s maritime and inland waterway transport continue to suffer from the lack of sustainable inland ports and planning for container depots. They’re also plagued by limited connecting modes of transport and high logistics costs that reduce their potential for market expansion and custom...

09/11/2017

The elephant in the room – a cautionary tale for freight forwarders
October, 2017
By Henry Holland, Lawyer and Frazer Hunt, Partner

The District Court of New South Wales has ruled that a freight forwarder engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct by issuing house bills of lading with all the hallmarks of negotiable bills of lading where the ocean carriers had issued negotiable bills of lading for the same shipments. *

The freight forwarder issued house bills of lading at the request of his client, a shipper involved in the export of sheep skins from Australia to China. The shipper gave the house bills of lading to a financier to secure the advancement of funds under a loan facility. The financier wrongly thought that the house bills gave title to the goods, such that the goods could not be collected without the financier’s consent. When the shipper failed to make repayments under the loan facility, the financier made enquiries of the freight forwarder, only to find out that the goods had already been collected by third parties in China.

In each instance:

the freight forwarder issued 3 house bills of lading stamped “original”, as well as 3 copy bills of lading stamped “copy non-negotiable”;
the ocean carrier was named in the house bills, and the freight forwarder signed the bills “as agents only”; and
the bills of lading were consigned “To Order”, but were not endorsed.
The Court cited a textbook description of bills of lading: “Like an elephant, a bill of lading is generally easier to recognise than to define”. The Court found that while the financier may not have been able to identify every technical aspect, the financier recognised the essential features of a bill of lading, which appeared on its face to give the right to obtain delivery of the goods if there was default in repayment of the loan. i.e. the financier could recognise the elephant.

As the ocean carriers had also issued negotiable bills of lading that named the same parties, there were two sets of negotiable bills of lading for the same shipment. Even though the house bills of lading were not endorsed, and so could never have been presented to the ocean carriers named on the face to obtain delivery of the shipments, the Court still determined that the freight forwarder had engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct, and was liable for the financier’s losses.

The judge also ruled that the freight forwarder was liable for breach of warranty of authority, by executing bills of lading as agent for ocean carriers, without authority from the ocean carriers.

The case is a warning to freight forwarders who think that they are assisting their clients by issuing separate house bills of lading for “banking purposes” or for ”customs purposes” when such document was never intended to be a contract of carriage or to be negotiated through the banking system. Freight forwarders need to review their practices and understand that house bills of lading are a legal document that can potentially be acted upon by third parties in unrelated transactions. Importantly, freight forwarders should never issue separate house bills of lading if the ocean carriers have issued negotiable bills of lading for the same shipment. Contrary to some initial commentary on this case, the wording of the house bills of lading was not in issue, only that house bills of lading should never have been issued in the first place.

*Australia Capital Financial Management Pty Limited v Freight Solutions (Vic) Pty Limited [2017] NSWDC 279

Contact Mills Oakley

For further information, please do not hesitate to contact:


Frazer Hunt | Partner
T: +61 2 8035 7972
E: [email protected]

Source: http://www.millsoakley.com.au/the-elephant-in-the-room-a-cautionary-tale-for-freight-forwarders/

International Freight Forwarder
Logistics Service Provider
Offices in Hanoi, Hai Phong & Ho Chi Minh City

09/11/2017

The Review of Maritime Transport 2017 says that seaborne trade grew by 2.6 per cent in 2016, reaching 10.3 billion tons. Although this was a welcome improvement to the 2.1 per cent growth recorded in 2015, the boost in demand was offset by a 3.2 per cent increase in the industry's carrying capacity,...

11/10/2017

Gemadept Corporation (GMD) has completed the transfer of capital in its two subsidiary firms to Korean CJ Logistics Corporation, the Vietnamese company has announced.

Address

Artex Building, 172 Ngoc Khanh Street, Ba Dinh Dist.
Hanoi

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