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Furnish Correct Information to Forwarder

CEB Section 17. Upon receipt of documents (such as waybills, Bills of Lading, consular invoices, licences, Certificates of Origin, insurance policies) sent to him by the forwarding agent, the principal undertakes to examine them carefully and to advise him immediately of any discrepancies or errors so that the forwarding agent can make the necessary corrections. If the principal fails to do so, the forwarding agent shall be cleared of all responsibility.

CIFFA Section 7
The Customer warrants that all information in whatever form relating to the general and dangerous character of the Goods, their description, Bar-Coding, marks, number, weight, volume and quantity of the Goods, as furnished by the Customer or on its behalf, was accurate and complete at the time the Goods were taken in charge by the Company or any third party whose services it has engaged. The Customer further undertakes to provide independent confirmation of such particulars on the request of the Company.

FIATA Model Rules Section 16.

The Customer shall be deemed to have guaranteed to the Freight Forwarder the accuracy, at the time the Goods were taken in charge by the Freight Forwarder, of all particulars relating to the general nature of the Goods, their marks, number, weight, volume and quantity and, if applicable, to the dangerous character of the Goods, as furnished by him or on his behalf.

SSV Section 18.
The customer is liable for its own errors and omissions and for those of its sub-contractors, in particular in respect of all consequences arising from:
Incorrect, inaccurate or missing information in the order or for or on the goods for shipment, in particular for goods which, as a result of their characteristics, would be accepted for transport only under special conditions if at all, or whose handling is the subject of special regulations.

Peter Jones' Commentary:

These clauses use different language -"undertakes"; "warrants"; "guarantees", or "duty to furnish information". It is safe to say that despite differences in the language, the legal effect is the same- the customer is responsible. 

Robert Vogel's Commentary:

This liability has two sides: If an error in or an omission from information provided by a customer causes a damage to the forwarder, the customer has to make good the loss. If the error or omission causes damage to the customer himself, he can’t claim any indemnification.

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