This book furnishes a quick and clear exposition of the statutory and
regulatory responsibilities of those participating in the sale,
processing, and transportation of cargo shipped from the United States.
It analyzes in detail the duties imposed by the Shipping Act of 1984 on
those engaged in U.S. oceanborne trade. Vessel operators can learn about
their agreement filing obligations, the scope of their tariffs, what
practices are prohibited, the statutory protection in place against
abuses by foreign countries, and the numerous governing regulations with
which they must comply. Shippers will be informed about their legal
obligations for freight charges, carrier services due them, how to
obtain a refund or form a shipper's association, and their
responsibilities under a shippers' credit agreement. For marine terminal
operators, the book spells out the extent of the Federal Maritime
Commission's jurisdiction, tariff filing requirements, authorized
charges, and their areas of liability. Nonvessel-operating common
carriers by water can ascertain which provisions of the 1984 Act govern
their conduct, and how they can comply with the bonding requirement and
co-loading rules.