International trade under English law frequently employs CIF (Cost, Insurance and Freight) and FOB (Free on Board) contracts as standard forms for the sale of goods carried by sea. The statement under consideration posits that the primary distinctions between these contracts lie in the importance of shipping documents and the timing of property transfer. While these elements represent significant points of divergence, a critical examination reveals that the contracts differ more broadly in their allocation of obligations, risk, and commercial function, with document significance and property passage serving as consequences rather than the sole or primary markers of difference.
Defining FOB and CIF Contracts
FOB contracts require the seller to deliver goods on board a vessel nominated by the buyer at the named port of shipment. Once goods are placed on board, the seller’s physical obligations typically conclude. In contrast, CIF contracts obligate the seller to procure carriage to the destination port, arrange insurance, and tender a set of documents that enable the buyer to obtain the goods. These foundational differences shape subsequent issues of documents and property, rather than being defined by them.
The Role of Shipping Documents
Shipping documents assume central importance in CIF contracts. The seller must tender a bill of lading, insurance policy or certificate, and commercial invoice. Tender of these documents operates as symbolic delivery, allowing the buyer to pay against documents even before physical arrival of the goods (Todd, 2016). This mechanism facilitates trade finance through letters of credit. Under FOB contracts, documents are less pivotal; the bill of lading functions mainly as a receipt and contract of carriage, with delivery occurring physically when goods cross the ship’s rail. Although documents retain evidentiary value in both, their role as a mechanism for payment and transfer of control is markedly more pronounced in CIF sales.
Passage of Property in the Goods
The timing of property transfer also diverges. In CIF contracts, property frequently passes upon tender and payment against documents, reflecting the documentary character of the transaction (Bridge, 2017). This may occur while goods remain afloat. In FOB contracts, property generally passes when goods are shipped, coinciding with the delivery point, unless the parties stipulate otherwise through retention of title clauses. Nevertheless, section 19 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 permits sellers in both contract types to reserve the right of disposal, demonstrating that property passage remains flexible and party-driven rather than rigidly dictated by contract form alone.
Allocation of Risk and Other Distinctions
The statement underplays further critical distinctions. Risk in both contracts typically passes upon shipment, yet the seller’s duty to procure insurance under CIF terms shifts the practical burden significantly. Obligations regarding nomination of the vessel, payment of freight, and obtaining export licences also differ materially. These variations influence commercial risk allocation and financing arrangements more directly than document use or property transfer. Moreover, the buyer’s remedies for non-conforming goods may be asserted against documents in CIF sales, introducing layers of complexity absent in most FOB arrangements.
Limitations of the Statement
While the highlighted features are analytically useful, they are not exhaustive. The essential commercial purpose—seller-arranged carriage and insurance in CIF versus buyer-arranged shipping in FOB—underpins the differences in documents and property. Courts have emphasised contractual intention over rigid categorisation, as seen in cases such as The Albazero [1977] AC 774, where property passage was determined by the overall terms rather than contract label. Thus, the statement captures observable outcomes but overstates their primacy.
Conclusion
The statement correctly identifies two important areas of difference between CIF and FOB contracts under English law. However, these differences stem from deeper variations in party obligations and risk distribution. A more accurate analysis recognises that the significance of shipping documents and the timing of property transfer are manifestations of distinct commercial structures rather than the primary points of divergence. This broader perspective better reflects the functional reality of international sales and the flexible approach of English commercial law.
References
- Bridge, M. (2017) The International Sale of Goods. 4th edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Todd, P. (2016) Maritime Law. 3rd edn. London: Informa Law.

