Freight Forwarder Liability for Unauthorized Cargo Release in South Korea
Table of Contents
- 1. What Is a D/P Transaction — and Why Did It Fail in This Case?
- 2. Master D/O vs. House D/O: The Core Distinction Under South Korean Law
- 3. What Obligations Does a Destination Freight Forwarder Owe Under South Korean Law?
- 4. Why Did South Korea’s Supreme Court Find the Forwarder Liable?
- 5. Does the One-Year Time Bar Under Commercial Act Article 814 Apply in South Korea?
- 6. Can the CEO Be Personally Liable in South Korea?
- 7. FAQ
Hypothetical scenario: A US exporter shipped walnuts to a South Korean importer under D/P (Documents against Payment) terms — meaning the importer had to pay the collecting bank before receiving the shipping documents, including the House Bill of Lading. The cargo arrived at Busan Port. But the South Korean destination freight forwarder passed a copy of the Master Delivery Order to the importer without confirming payment. The bonded warehouse released the cargo without requiring a House D/O or the original House B/L. The importer collected the goods without paying a cent. Who bears legal responsibility — and under what theory?
A Common Practice — and a Serious Legal Risk
※ The scenario above is a hypothetical illustration based on the facts of the Supreme Court ruling described below.
In short-haul trade, cargo often arrives before the original bill of lading reaches its destination. To avoid demurrage, forwarders sometimes skip the House B/L surrender process and pass the Master D/O directly to the importer. South Korea’s Supreme Court addressed this practice directly in its August 2025 ruling. A US exporter had shipped goods to a Korean importer under D/P terms. The Korean destination freight forwarder — acting as the local partner for a US-based shipping forwarder — passed the Master D/O copy to the importer without verifying that payment had been made to the collecting bank. The bonded warehouse released the cargo without a House D/O. The court held that both the freight forwarder and its CEO had committed a tort against the bill of lading holder.
1. What Is a D/P Transaction — and Why Did It Fail in This Case?
Understanding D/P (Documents against Payment) payment terms is essential to grasping why the destination freight forwarder’s conduct was found to be unlawful.
How D/P Works: The Two-Layer Safety Mechanism
In a D/P transaction, “documents” refers to the full set of shipping documents — the House Bill of Lading (House B/L), Commercial Invoice, Packing List, and any other documents required for import clearance. The House B/L is the most critical piece because it is a document of title: only the person who presents the original House B/L to the carrier can take delivery of the cargo.
The D/P process works as follows. After shipment, the exporter deposits the shipping documents with its remitting bank (Remitting Bank) with instructions to release the documents only upon payment. The remitting bank forwards the documents and a collection instruction to the importer’s collecting bank (Collecting Bank). The collecting bank holds the documents and releases them only after the importer pays in full. Once the importer pays and receives the original House B/L, it presents that document to the destination freight forwarder, which then issues a House D/O authorizing the bonded warehouse to release the cargo.
This creates two layers of protection for the exporter: the importer cannot get the House B/L without paying, and without the House B/L, the importer cannot get the cargo. In this case, the actual collection instruction read: “Documents may be delivered to [the importer] after payment of the purchase price has been received (DELIVER DOCUMENTS AGAINST PAYMENT).” The destination forwarder bypassed both layers by handing the Master D/O copy directly to the importer.
The Parties in the 2024Da270860 Case
| Party | Role | Nationality |
|---|---|---|
| X (Plaintiff) | Exporter (walnut producer and seller) | US corporation |
| A (Importer) | Buyer / importer | Korean corporation |
| Y1 (Defendant 1) | Destination freight forwarder / domestic partner for the US shipping forwarder | Korean corporation |
| Y2 (Defendant 2) | CEO of Y1 | Korean national |
The cargo — two shipments of walnuts totaling approximately USD 197,650 — arrived at Busan Port. A never paid. Y1 nonetheless passed the Master D/O copies to A. The bonded warehouse released the cargo without verifying a House D/O. X recovered nothing.
2. Master D/O vs. House D/O: The Core Distinction Under South Korean Law
The Supreme Court’s analysis turned on a fundamental distinction between two delivery documents that are frequently confused in practice.
What Each Document Does
The court stated: “A Master D/O is a delivery order issued by the actual ocean carrier to the freight forwarder after receiving freight, serving as the basis for the forwarder to remove cargo from the terminal. A House D/O is a delivery order issued by the freight forwarder to the importer only after the importer has completed payment, serving as the basis for the importer to take delivery from the bonded warehouse operator.”
| Document | Issued by | Issued to | When issued | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Master D/O | Ocean carrier | Freight forwarder (Y1) | After freight is paid | Authorizes forwarder to remove cargo from terminal — NOT a delivery order for the importer |
| House D/O | Freight forwarder (Y1) | Importer (A) | Only after importer completes payment and surrenders House B/L | Authorizes importer to collect cargo from bonded warehouse |
Why the Master D/O Cannot Be Passed to the Importer
The court was explicit: “Since the consignee and notifying party of the Master D/O were both listed as Y1 — the destination freight forwarder and domestic partner — the Master D/O cannot serve as a delivery order to [the importer].” Passing that document to the importer was not a neutral act. It gave the importer the means to obtain the cargo without paying, and the bonded warehouse used it to do exactly that.
3. What Obligations Does a Destination Freight Forwarder Owe Under South Korean Law?
The Supreme Court confirmed two specific obligations that Y1 breached.
Obligation to Preserve and Deliver to the Rightful Recipient
The court held: “A destination freight forwarder, acting as a performance assistant (履行補助者) of the [originating] freight forwarder, bears the obligation to preserve the imported cargo until customs clearance procedures are completed, and to deliver the cargo to the consignee — the rightful recipient under the maritime transport contract — or to a person designated by the consignee.” This obligation runs until completion of customs clearance, not merely until physical arrival at the port.
Obligation to Verify Payment by Requiring Surrender of the House B/L
The court identified Y1’s specific duty in concrete terms: “Y1’s role and obligation as destination freight forwarder entrusted by [the US shipping forwarder] was to confirm that [the importer] had paid for the goods by requiring [the importer] to surrender the House B/L, and only then to allow [the importer] to collect the goods.” The surrender of the House B/L was the mechanism by which payment would be confirmed — because the importer could only obtain the House B/L from the collecting bank after paying.
4. Why Did South Korea’s Supreme Court Find the Forwarder Liable?
The court’s reasoning on liability rested on three separate grounds, each independently sufficient.
Delivering to a Non-Holder of the Bill of Lading Is a Tort
The court reaffirmed: “Since maritime cargo must be delivered against surrender of the bill of lading to the holder, when a destination freight forwarder delivers cargo to a person other than the bill of lading holder and thereby makes it impossible to deliver to the holder, this constitutes an unlawful act that illegally infringes the bill of lading holder’s rights to the cargo” (citing prior rulings 2004Da12394 and 2016Da276719).
Passing the Master D/O Copy Was Itself the Cause
The court found that even if the bonded warehouse was the entity that physically released the cargo, Y1’s act of passing the Master D/O copy was sufficient causation: “Y1’s act of passing the Master D/O copy to the importer was sufficient to constitute the cause enabling the importer to remove the goods from the bonded warehouse without paying.” The court continued: “Releasing cargo based solely on a Master D/O copy is carried out entirely under the joint risk of the bonded warehouse and Y1. If the rights of the legitimate bill of lading holder are infringed as a result, it is appropriate for Y1, as well as the bonded warehouse, to bear liability for damages.”
Prior Practice Does Not Excuse the Conduct
Y1 and A had engaged in this same pattern — forwarder passing Master D/O copies, importer collecting without paying — over many previous transactions. The court treated this not as a defense but as an aggravating factor: Y1 followed the known pattern without alerting the bonded warehouse to require proper documentation, and took no steps to interrupt a practice it knew was improper.
5. Does the One-Year Time Bar Under Commercial Act Article 814 Apply in South Korea?
Y1 and Y2 argued that claims against them were extinguished by the one-year period under Article 814(1) of the South Korean Commercial Act, as well as under the US Carriage of Goods by Sea Act (COGSA) and the House B/L’s back-clause terms. The court rejected all three.
Article 814(1) Requires the Defendant to Be a Maritime Carrier
Article 814(1) of the South Korean Commercial Act provides: “The rights and obligations of a carrier toward the shipper or consignee shall be extinguished if no judicial claim is made within one year from the date the carrier delivered or was to deliver the cargo to the consignee, regardless of the cause of action.” The court confirmed that the lower court had correctly found Y1 to be a destination freight forwarder or domestic partner — not a maritime carrier or its performance assistant. On that basis, the premise for applying Article 814(1) was not satisfied, and all three arguments based on the one-year period were rejected.
This means that for freight forwarders in South Korea who are not classified as maritime carriers, the one-year Article 814 bar does not automatically apply. The applicable limitations period depends on the nature of the claim and the forwarder’s legal classification, and requires separate analysis under the Commercial Act’s freight forwarder provisions and the Civil Act.
6. Can the CEO Be Personally Liable in South Korea?
One of the most practically significant aspects of the ruling is the court’s affirmation of CEO Y2’s personal liability.
Condoning a Wrongful Practice Falls Within Business Execution Authority
The court held: “Y2, as CEO of the small company Y1, condoned and acquiesced in the practice between Y1 and [the importer] of passing Master D/O copies without confirming payment, thereby contributing to the unauthorized removal of the goods. This conduct fell within the scope of Y2’s business execution authority as CEO of Y1, which is engaged in the freight forwarding business.” This confirms that a CEO who does not personally direct each transaction but tolerates a systematically wrongful practice can bear personal tort liability under South Korean law — a meaningful consideration where the company’s assets may be limited.
7. FAQ
Atlas Legal is a corporate law firm based in Incheon Songdo, South Korea, advising domestic companies and internationally-oriented businesses in corporate disputes and international trade litigation. Our attorneys have experience handling maritime cargo disputes, freight forwarder liability claims, and D/P payment recovery matters under South Korean law, drawing on in-depth analysis of the latest Supreme Court rulings.
※ The legal information in this article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The applicable law and outcome vary depending on the specific facts of each case. Please consult a qualified attorney before taking legal action.
