NOUN
- a receipt given by the carrier to the shipper acknowledging receipt of the goods being shipped and specifying the terms of delivery
How To Use bill of lading In A Sentence
- If anything herein contained to be invalid or unenforceable under the provisions of said act such circumstances shall not affect the validity or enforceability of any other part or term of this Bill of Lading.
- In contrast, the charter party bill of lading did not contain the charter party contract, but incorporated it by reference.
- If no bill of lading is required, other evidence showing point of origin, destination, and weight shall be required. EXECUTIVE ORDER 9805
- The same suggestion applies to methods of establishing the existence and contents of bill of lading telecommunications.
- He walked back to the driver, signed the document, handed him the bill of lading, and said, "You're cleared. FALLOUT
- [Yet] we put the vast business of a custom house in the hands of a flathead who does not know a bill of lading from a transit of Venus [laughter and a pause] — never having heard of either of them before, [and entrusted the Treasury Department to] an ignorant villager who never before could wrestle with a two-weeks 'wash-bill without getting thrown. The Atlantic | July/August 2001 | Mark Twain's Reconstruction | Blount Jr.
- If property in excess of the amount allowable under these regulations is shipped on a Government bill of lading or purchase order, the employee shall immediately upon completion of the shipment pay to the proper officer of the department or establishment an amount equal to the charge for the transportation of such excess computed from the total charges according to the ratio of excess weight to the total weight of the shipment. EXECUTIVE ORDER 9805
- This name would also be entered on the documentary bill of lading deposited in SeaDocs' vault.
- The Protest Letter to a shipping company must be presented within the time stipulated on the Bill of Lading, truck or air waybill, which is normally within three days of taking delivery of the consignment. 4.1 Local Facilities, Capabilities and Requirements
- When a shipper is unable to insert the name of the consignee at the time the bill of lading is made out, a _bill to order_ is drawn up wherein the consignee's name is superseded by the words _shipper's order_, or simply _order_; it being thus understood that the goods shall be delivered to whomsoever presents, at point of destination, the bill of lading duly indorsed by the shipper. Up To Date Business Home Study Circle Library Series (Volume II.)