Bergman v. Moffitt

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 2025
Docket7:23-cv-01064
StatusUnknown

This text of Bergman v. Moffitt (Bergman v. Moffitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bergman v. Moffitt, (E.D.N.C. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA SOUTHERN DIVISION Case No. 7:23-CV-01064-M-BM MARY BETH BERGMAN, Plaintiff, V. ORDER GEORGE REESER MOFFITT, III and MICHELE MOFFITT, Defendants.

This matter comes before the court on Defendants George Reeser Moffitt, II] □□□□□□ Moffitt”) and Michele Moffit’s (“Ms. Moffitt”) motion for summary judgment [DE 31]. For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied in part. I. Factual Background In late 2019, Plaintiff Mary Beth Bergman (“Ms. Bergman’’) and her husband, Josh Bergman (“Mr. Bergman’) began the search for a new boat. DE 32-1 at 10-11. Around the same time, George and Michele Moffitt listed their boat, a “Palmetto 33,” for sale. DE 32-2 at 9. The Moffitts’ Palmetto was a vessel 33 feet in length, with twin 300-horsepower engines and a center console for navigation. Jd. at 13-15. Using the services of a boat broker, the Bergmans connected with the Moffitts and arranged for a sea trial of the Moffitts’ vessel. DE 32-1 at 10, 14. Mr. Moffitt “didn’t want to do” a sea trial because “[t]he boat wasn’t ready.” DE 32-2 at 17. At the time, Mr. Moffitt was in the process of fixing some electronics that were not firmly fastened to the center console of the vessel. Jd. at

18. But he decided to move forward with the sea trial because he “wanted to sell the boat.” Jd. at 17. The Bergmans arrived at the Moffitt residence on the morning of July 3, 2020, and shortly thereafter departed on the sea trial. DE 32-1 at 15; DE 32-2 at 23. The occupants of the vessel included Mr. Moffitt, the Bergmans, the Bergman’s broker, and a marine surveyor. Jd. Ms. Bergman and the broker were seated on a bench at the helm, or front, of the vessel. Jd. at 25. Mr. Moffitt, Mr. Bergman, and the surveyor stood around the center console. Jd. Ms. Moffitt did not accompany the group on the sea trial. DE 32-1 at 15; see also id. at 46. The Moffitts had their own broker as well, but he was out of town for the weekend and did not attend the sea trial either. DE 32-2 at 17. Although one of the brokers typically conducts the sea trial, in this case Mr. Moffitt operated the vessel. DE 33-6 at 7. There is conflicting testimony about why Mr. Moffitt conducted the sea trial instead of the Bergman’s broker, but it is undisputed that Mr. Moffitt was operating the vessel that day. Compare id. at 8 (broker’s testimony that Mr. Moffitt “was insistent” that he conduct the sea trial), with DE 32-2 at 17, 27 (Mr. Moffitt’s testimony that he had to conduct the sea trial because his broker was out of town, and that he offered to let Mr. Bergman operate the vessel, but Mr. Bergman declined); but see also DE 33-6 at 10 (broker’s testimony that she had □□ torn meniscus” at the time of the sea trial). Mr. Moffitt is an experienced boater; he has “‘been on the water a long time,” “probably 30-some years.” DE 32-2 at 7. He has experience with boats ranging from 8 to 55 feet in length. Id. at 8. He also took and passed a captain’s course at Cateret Community College, although he did not submit the requisite paperwork in order to obtain his captain’s license. See id. at 8-9.

There is no dispute that the boating conditions on July 3 were less than ideal. Ms. Bergman testified in her deposition that “[i]t was pretty windy,” the water was “really choppy,” and being that it was the day before the Fourth of July, the water was trafficked by boats of “all shapes” and “sizes.” DE 32-1 at 16. Mr. Moffitt agreed that it was “[w]indy” and “choppy,” but expressed that the conditions were not “crazy bad.” DE 32-2 at 28; but see id. at 41 (later testifying that the conditions were “[vJery choppy, very windy”). And the broker indicated that there were “[a] lot of boats” and “current coming from different directions.” DE 33-6 at 10. Mr. Moffitt navigated the vessel through Beaufort Inlet towards the Atlantic Ocean. DE 32-1 at 16. There is a factual dispute about whether the incident in question occurred while Mr. Moffitt was piloting the vessel out of Beaufort Inlet into the Atlantic Ocean, or on the way back through the inlet after returning from the ocean. Compare id. at 19, with DE 32-2 at 29. But it is undisputed that the incident occurred in Beaufort Inlet. See id. And it is also undisputed that the tide was going out from the inlet into the ocean at the time of the incident. See DE 32-2 at 29, 41- 42. As the vessel traveled through Beaufort Inlet, Ms. Bergman overheard Mr. Moffitt tell Mr. Bergman that he wanted to demonstrate how smoothly the vessel could operate in choppy waters. DE 32-1 at 18-19. For that demonstration, Mr. Moffitt started “going faster” through the inlet. Jd. at 19. Mr. Moffitt estimated that he was “running about 25 knots,” which is approximately 29 miles per hour. DE 32-2 at 30-31. Mr. Moffitt described that rate of speed as “[a] little bit over plan[ing speed].” Jd. at 30.' The broker, who is also an experienced boater, observed that there

| “Planing speed is the velocity at which an accelerating ship’s hull rises to the top of the water’s surface.” Hines v. Triad Marine Ctr., Inc., 487 F. App’x 58, 60 n.3 (4th Cir. 2012).

were “[a] lot of boats” in Beaufort Inlet and stated that Mr. Moffitt “was driving faster than [she] would drive.” DE 33-6 at 10. Mr. Moffitt similarly testified that “there was [sic] boats coming in” through the inlet, and that he observed two large “sport fishers” passing “‘on each side” of the vessel.” DE 32-2 at 36; see also id. (testimony that there was “[a] lot of boat traffic”). The two sport fishing boats passed on either side of the vessel at a point where “‘[t]he channel chokes in” and it was “tight.” Jd. at 37. Mr. Moffitt “observed them passing” but “didn’t see anything different than what [he] always see[s].” Jd. Mr. Moffitt continued operating the vessel at 25 knots when passing between the two sport fishing boats and did not reduce his speed. Jd. The broker testified that when ‘“‘there’s a ton of boats going by, you’ll have large wake.” DE 33-6 at 19. As Mr. Moffitt navigated the vessel between the two sport fishing boats, he was “talking” to Mr. Bergman “about electronics” on the vessel and could not “recall” whether that conversation “diver[ted]” his attention. DE 32-2 at 37. The vessel then struck two large waves in rapid succession. Ms. Bergman “wasn’t really looking forward to where” the vessel was “going,” DE 32-1 at 21, but testified that they “caught two rogue big waves,” id. at 19. Mr. Moffitt described the waves as “a rogue situation,” “unforeseen,” and that he had no idea where the waves “‘c[a]me from.” DE 32-2 at 29-30. Because of the speed of the vessel, the broker could not see over its helm but testified that they must have hit “a big wave” for the impact “‘to slam [her and Ms. Bergman] like that.” DE 33-6 at 18. Because there were large sport fishing boats passing nearby in Beaufort Inlet, the broker testified that Mr. Moffitt “must [have] stuffed it into a wake.” Jd. at 11. The impact of the first wave “catapulted” Ms. Bergman off her seat, though she was “able to hold on” to a pole next to her seat. DE 32-1 at 19-20. But the second wave “threw” Ms.

Bergman up and she “lost [her] grip on the pole and ended up” on the deck of the vessel, at which point Mr. Moffitt “killed the engines” and “got control” of the vessel again. /d. at 20; see also DE 33-6 at 11 (broker’s testimony that she and Ms. Bergman “were thrown [o]nto the floor’). On impact, multiple pieces of electronic equipment were dislodged from the center console, id., though that could also be attributable to the fact that Mr. Moffitt was in the process of reattaching the electronics to the center console at the time of the sea trial, DE 32-2 at 18. The entire incident “happened pretty quickly.” DE 32-1 at 21. After Mr. Moffitt regained control of the vessel, he “turned the boat around” and headed back to the Moffitt residence.

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Bergman v. Moffitt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bergman-v-moffitt-nced-2025.