American Boat Co., Inc. v. Unknown Sunken Barge

567 F.3d 348, 2009 A.M.C. 2822, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 11961, 2009 WL 1544431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 2009
Docket08-2166
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 567 F.3d 348 (American Boat Co., Inc. v. Unknown Sunken Barge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Boat Co., Inc. v. Unknown Sunken Barge, 567 F.3d 348, 2009 A.M.C. 2822, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 11961, 2009 WL 1544431 (8th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

SHEPHERD, Circuit Judge.

The appellants (“American Boat”) brought this negligence action against the United States for failing to maintain the navigable channel of the lower Mississippi River. After the district court granted summary judgment for the United States, American Boat filed a Motion to Amend Judgment, or in the Alternative for Reconsideration. The district court denied this motion, and the time for appeal expired without any action by American Boat. Four months later, American Boat filed a Motion to Reopen the Time to File an Appeal, claiming it did not receive notice of the denial of its Motion to Amend. The district court denied the Motion to Reopen, finding that American Boat received timely electronic notice. American Boat appealed, and we reversed the district court’s judgment and remanded for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether American Boat should be permitted to reopen the time to file an appeal. 1 After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the district court 2 again denied American Boat’s Motion to Reopen. We now affirm.

I.

American Boat operates towboats that push barges on the Mississippi River. On February 15, 2000, one of its towboats collided with a submerged wreck. American Boat brought a claim against the United States for negligently failing to maintain the navigable channel of the lower Mississippi River. During the proceedings, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri began using a case management and electronic case filing system (“CM/ECF”). Parties that register with the district court’s CM/ ECF system receive notice of court filings via email and are not entitled to service of paper copies. American Boat’s trial counsel, from Greenville, Mississippi, did not register with CM/ECF. However, American Boat’s local counsel, Donald Dickerson of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and his see *350 retary, Heather Greable, did register with CM/ECF. Two attorneys for the United States also registered to receive electronic notice.

On September 2, 2003, the district court granted summary judgment for the United States, holding that the discretionary function exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act exempted the United States from liability. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). American Boat filed a Motion to Amend Judgment, or in the Alternative for Reconsideration. On November 5, 2003, the district court issued an order (“Document 60”) denying the motion. That afternoon, CM/ECF automatically generated a Notice of Electronic Filing for Document 60 (“the Notice”), which it emailed to Dickerson, Greable, and the two registered government attorneys.

American Boat claims that it did not receive the Notice via email and did not learn of the district court’s order until March 4, 2004, when American Boat’s trial counsel discovered Document 60 through the Public Access to Court Electronic Records website (“PACER”). On March 9, 2004, American Boat filed a Motion to Reopen the Time to File an Appeal. On July 1, 2004, the district court denied the motion, finding that American Boat had received timely electronic notice and, therefore, did not meet the requirements of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(6). 3 American Boat appealed. On August 16, 2005, this court held that a presumption of delivery and receipt should apply to emails sent via the court’s CM/ ECF system. See Am. Boat Co., Inc. v. Unknown Sunken Barge, 418 F.3d 910, 914 (8th Cir.2005). However, we found that American Boat made a sufficient showing to warrant an evidentiary hearing on the issue of whether it adequately rebutted this presumption. Id.

At the evidentiary hearing, Greable testified that she was responsible for checking both Dickerson’s and her email accounts. She testified that she always printed paper copies of Dickerson’s emails because he did not have his own computer. Greable also testified that, in addition to using the computer at her desk, she sometimes used the computer at the office’s front desk. Dickerson testified that he was on vacation in November 2003 when the district court’s CM/ECF system transmitted the Notice. He further testified that his law office did not routinely monitor its cases via PACER.

Both parties presented testimony from computer experts who had worked cooperatively in examining the hard drive on Greable’s office computer. 4 The government’s expert witness, Trey Blalock, testified with “99.9 percent” certainty that the Notice left the CM/ECF system destined for the correct email addresses for Dickerson and Greable — ddickerson@clas.net and hgreable@clas.net — and was successfully received by the server for the Dickerson law firm’s Internet service provider *351 (“Clas.net”). However, Blalock also testified that Greable’s hard drive contained no record of the Notice. American Boat’s expert, Dr. Johnette Hassell, agreed with these conclusions.

Blalock explained that emails received by Clas.net are stored on the server; they are not automatically sent to the end user’s computer. Instead, the user must download emails from the Clas.net server to her own computer by using an email software program such as Microsoft Outlook. Once the end user has accessed an email on her own computer, the default setting on most email software programs, including the program installed on Dickerson law firm computers, is to delete the email from the server. 5 Unless the user changes this default setting, the email exists only on the user’s hard drive and nowhere else once it has been accessed from the server. Therefore, Blalock testified, if Greable checked Dickerson’s and her email accounts from a different computer, the emails would never reach her own office computer.

According to Blalock, CM/ECF transmitted the Notice at 4:29 p.m. on November 5, 2003, over ten minutes after the last human activity occurred on Greable’s computer that day. The first human activity on Greable’s computer the following morning occurred when the user opened an Internet site that contained instructions on how to POP email from another computer. Based on these findings and Greable’s testimony that she sometimes used the computer at the office’s front desk, Blalock testified that he was “95 percent” certain that Greable received the Notice when she checked Dickerson’s and her email accounts on a different computer, thereby deleting the Notice from the Clas.net server and preventing the Notice from reaching Greable’s office computer.

In response to Blalock’s expert opinion, Hassell offered general testimony about other reasons an email might not reach an end user’s computer, such as spam filters or CM/ECF glitches. However, Hassell did not offer an opinion as to why, in this particular case, the Notice failed to reach Greable’s computer.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Villamor v. Metcalfe
D. Nevada, 2025
King v. Shoate
W.D. Tennessee, 2023
Braitberg v. Charter Communications, Inc.
836 F.3d 925 (Eighth Circuit, 2016)
Blakley v. Schlumberger Technology Corp.
648 F.3d 921 (Eighth Circuit, 2011)
Usery v. Anadarko Petroleum Corp.
606 F.3d 1017 (Eighth Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
567 F.3d 348, 2009 A.M.C. 2822, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 11961, 2009 WL 1544431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-boat-co-inc-v-unknown-sunken-barge-ca8-2009.