Barnes v. Sea Hawaii Rafting, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedMarch 2, 2020
Docket1:13-cv-00002
StatusUnknown

This text of Barnes v. Sea Hawaii Rafting, LLC (Barnes v. Sea Hawaii Rafting, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Sea Hawaii Rafting, LLC, (D. Haw. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF HAWAI`I

) CHAD BARRY BARNES, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) ) SEA HAWAI`I RAFTING, LLC; ) KRIS HENRY; ALOHA OCEAN ) Civ. No. 13-00002 ACK-WRP EXCURSIONS, LLC; JOHN ) DOES 1-20; MARY DOES ) 1-20; DOE CORPORATIONS ) 1-20; DOE PARTNERSHIPS ) 1-20; DOE ASSOCIATES ) 1-20; DOE GOVERNMENTAL ) AGENCIES 1-20; AND OTHER ) ENTITIES 1-20, in personam; ) AND M/V TEHANI, HA 1629-CP, ) AND HER ENGINES, EQUIPMENT, ) TACKLE, FARES, STORES, ) PERMITS, FURNISHINGS, CARGO ) AND FREIGHT; DOE VESSELS 1-20,) in rem. ) ) Defendants. ) )

ORDER IMPOSING ENHANCED SANCTIONS PURSUANT TO THIS COURT’S INHERENT POWER ON DEFENDANT ALOHA OCEAN EXCURSIONS, LLC AND DEFENDANT KRISTIN KIMO HENRY

In a prior order issued on August 29, 2019, ECF No. 608 (the “First Sanctions Order”), the Court imposed sanctions jointly and severally on Defendant Aloha Ocean Excursions, LLC (“Defendant AOE”) and Defendant Kristin Kimo Henry (“Defendant Henry”) for their sanctionable conduct that the Court found was “tantamount to bad faith.” Specifically, Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry were sanctioned based primarily on Defendant Henry’s misrepresentations that led to the transfer in ownership of a commercial use permit for the vessel M/V Tehani from Defendant Sea Hawai`i Rafting, LLC (“Defendant SHR”) to Defendant

AOE. In the First Sanctions Order, the Court made clear that the sanctions would be “subject to significant enhancement” should the permit not be reissued to Defendant SHR. First Sanctions Order at 17. Contrary to the Court’s clear direction, Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry prevailed on DOBOR to confirm and maintain the transfer of the permit to Defendant AOE. Thus, nearly six months later, the permit remains with Defendant AOE. For that reason and those discussed below, the Court hereby imposes enhanced monetary sanctions on Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry, payable to Plaintiff Chad Barry Barnes (“Plaintiff Barnes”). The enhanced sanctions will be calculated and assessed to compensate Plaintiff Barnes for the measurable

loss resulting from Defendant AOE’s and Defendant Henry’s sanctionable conduct. Specifically, the Court will calculate the sanctions in two parts: (1) the value of the permit, which represents the loss suffered by Barnes as a result of the permit being wrongfully transferred from Defendant SHR to Defendant AOE and then never reissued to Defendant SHR, and (2) attorney’s fees and costs incurred by Plaintiff Barnes in responding to Defendant AOE’s and Defendant Henry’s sanctionable conduct. BACKGROUND This case has a long and complicated history, which the Court will not recount here. Instead, the Court discusses those

facts and events specifically relevant to the issues implicated in this Order: (1) whether enhanced sanctions should be imposed against Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry for their ongoing failure to comply with this Court’s directives and (2) if so, the appropriate way to measure such enhanced sanctions. A. Relevant Prior Orders It is helpful to begin in early 2019 with two hearings held in June and July addressing Plaintiff Barnes’s Motion to Stay Dispersal of Funds (the “Motion to Stay”), ECF No. 565. In the Motion to Stay, Plaintiff Barnes had asked the Court to stay disbursement of the $35,000 in sale proceeds (from the sale of the vessel Tehani) then being held in the registry of the Court.

Following the two hearings, the Court issued a minute order (the “July 17 Order”), ECF No. 585, (1) denying Plaintiff Barnes’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and (2) denying Plaintiff Barnes’s motion to stay the disbursement of the proceeds of the sale of the vessel. In the same order, the Court disbursed $17,000 plus interest to Plaintiff Barnes and directed that Defendant AOE’s share be disbursed only after the vessel Tehani’s commercial use permit was transferred back to Defendant SHR.1/ Plaintiff Barnes quickly appealed the July 17 Order,

challenging “the Court’s finding that the Court does have jurisdiction over a contract for the sale of a vessel.” ECF No. 588. A few days later and still within the reconsideration period, Defendant AOE moved for reconsideration of the same July 17 Order, arguing that the Order functionally deprived Defendant AOE of property without due process of law. ECF No. 592. While Defendant AOE’s motion for reconsideration was pending, the Court advised the parties that it was considering sanctioning Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry for “wrongfully transferring the commercial use permit for the vessel M/V Tehani by Defendant Henry[‘]s misrepresentation to the harbormaster that he was simply requesting a change in name from Sea Hawaii

Rafting, LLC to Aloha Ocean Excursions, LLC.” ECF No. 601. The parties submitted briefing and the Court held a hearing on August 22, 2019, on whether to impose sanctions. See ECF No. 606. At the same hearing, the Court heard arguments on Defendant AOE’s pending motion for reconsideration of the July 17 Order. See id. One week later, the Court issued two orders—

1/ Defendant Henry had previously caused the permit to be transferred from Defendant SHR to Defendant AOE by misrepresenting that the change in owner was merely a name change when indeed it represented a different legal entity entirely. See July 17 Order at 3-4. one imposing sanctions against Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry (the First Sanctions Order), and one denying Defendant AOE’s motion for reconsideration of the July 17 Order, ECF No. 609 (the “Reconsideration Order”).2/ B. The First Sanctions Order

In the First Sanctions Order, the Court held that Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry had acted deliberately, recklessly, wrongfully, and with an improper purpose, and that their conduct was tantamount to bad faith and therefore sanctionable within the Court’s inherent power. First Sanctions Order at 7-8, 13. Sanctions were imposed jointly and severally against Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry in the amount of $25,000, which was to be payable to Plaintiff Barnes. Id. at 16. The Court directed the Clerk of Court to disburse $18,000 plus interest—which was being held in the registry of the Court—

to Plaintiff Barnes as partial payment of the sanctions. Id. The Court then instructed Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry to pay the remainder of the sanctions to Plaintiff Barnes no later than September 30, 2019. Id.

2/ The Court held that it had jurisdiction to decide the motion for reconsideration despite Plaintiff Barnes’s earlier-filed appeal of the original July 17 Order. Jurisdiction existed under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(4)(B)(i), pursuant to which Defendant AOE’s timely filing of a motion for reconsideration meant that Plaintiff Barnes’s notice of appeal would only become effective upon entry of an order disposing of Defendant AOE’s motion. The First Sanctions Order also specifically directed Defendant AOE and Defendant Henry to “take appropriate steps to effectuate the successful transfer of the commercial use permit

back to Defendant SHR” and to “pay any fine or transfer fee assessed in the course of transferring the permit back to Defendant SHR.” Id. Finally—and critically here—the Court advised the parties that “the $25,000 sanction shall be subject to significant enhancement should the permit not be reissued to Defendant SHR.” Id. at 17. C. Defendant AOE’s and Defendant Henry’s Failure to Comply With the First Sanctions Order

On September 10, 2019, Defendant AOE sua sponte notified the Court that it had taken steps to comply with the First Sanctions Order. ECF No. 610 (the “Notice of Compliance”).

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Bluebook (online)
Barnes v. Sea Hawaii Rafting, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-sea-hawaii-rafting-llc-hid-2020.