OPINION AND ORDER
SHIRA A. SCHEINDLIN, District Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
On January 15, 2008, Cala Rosa Marine Co. Ltd. (“Cala Rosa” or “plaintiff’) commenced this action and requested an ex parte order directing attachment and garnishment (“Attachment Order”) of up to $889,463.59 of the assets of Sucden Middle East Part of Sucres Et Denrees Group (“Sucden” or “defendant”) and affiliated companies. Plaintiff requests this Court to order that any process served on a garnishee shall be deemed continuously served through the end of the next business day. Plaintiff farther requests this
Court to appoint a special process server, designated by plaintiff, to serve the process. The request for a maritime attachment order is granted but, for the reasons stated below, the requests for continuous service and a specially appointed process server are denied.
II. BACKGROUND
A. The 2004 Memorandum of Agreement and Subsequent Arbitration
On September 22, 2008, Cala Rosa, as owner of a vessel, and Sucden, as charterer, executed a Charter Party Agreement (“Charter Party”) for the carriage of a cargo of sugar from Brazil to Algeria. Under the terms of the Charter Party, defendant was responsible for the pre-loading condition of the cargo and any inherent defect in the cargo.' The Algerian cargo receivers claimed that the sugar was delivered to the Algerian port in a damaged condition and required plaintiff to post security in the amount of $284,977 to secure this claim.
Further, plaintiff alleges that defendant failed to pay $380,864.63 in freight and demurrage costs. Plaintiff alleges that defendant is liable to plaintiff for all these sums.
The Charter Party contains a clause mandating London arbitration for all claims arising under the Charter Party, and plaintiff has commenced London arbitration.
On January 15, 2009, plaintiff commenced this action under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (“REFAA”), 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-209, which permits attachment in actions that seek to enforce foreign arbitral awards.
Including estimated attorneys’ fees and costs, plaintiff seeks an attachment in the amount of $889,463.59.
Plaintiff seeks, inter alia, to attach Electronic Funds Transfers (“EFTs”) as they pass through New York banks.
Plaintiff alleges “on information and belief [that] defendants have or will have during the pendency of this action” assets in the hands of the garnishee banks.
In the affidavit in Support of attachment, plaintiff requests that the Attachment Order contain two special provisions.
First,
plaintiff requests that the Attachment Order contain a provision for continuous service. Plaintiff explains:
In order to avoid the necessity of physically serving the garnishees/banks daily and repetitively, plaintiff respectfully seeks leave of the Court, for any process that is served on a garnishee to be deemed effective and continuous service throughout the remainder of the day upon which service is made, commencing from the time of such service and such service to be further deemed effective and continuous through the end of the next business day, provided that another
service is made that day.
Second,
plaintiff requests that the Court appoint a plaintiff-retained special process server who, along with the United States Marshal, will be authorized to serve the Attachment Order, as well as any supplemental process that might issue, on the garnishees. Plaintiff states that this is necessary because “daily service of Rule B orders would impose upon the United States Marshal an overwhelming burden and would cause to be visited on litigants ... disproportionate costs and inefficiency.”
III. LEGAL BACKGROUND
A. Attaching After-Acquired Property
In
Reibor International Limited v. Cargo Carriers (KACZ-CO.) Limited,
the Second Circuit considered whether a maritime plaintiff may attach “after-acquired property” — i.e., property that was not in the hands of the garnishee at the time the attachment order was served.
In
Reibor,
plaintiff served an order of maritime attachment on a garnishee bank at about 10:25 a.m., but the bank did not receive the transferred funds until 2:21 p.m. that afternoon.
The bank attached the funds. The district court vacated the attachment, holding that a plaintiff may only attach funds that are in the hands of the garnishee at the time the attachment order is served.
The Second Circuit affirmed. Addressing the permissibility of attaching after-acquired property under Rule B, the court first noted that
The Admiralty Rules themselves offer little guidance. Rule B does not mention attachment of after-acquired property. Two other rules, Rule C and Rule E, appear to contemplate service on garnishees actually in possession of the property to be attached, but neither addresses the issue of after-acquired property directly.
Because federal case law also failed to provide guidance, the court adopted, under federal common law choice of law principles, the New York rule against attaching property not in the hands of the garnishee at the time of service. Quoting Judge Joseph McLaughlin’s commentary on New York practice, the court found New York’s law to be clear in this regard: “Where the order of attachment is left with a third-party garnishee ... the levy is
absolutely void
unless the garnishee has some property belonging to the defendant or owes the defendant a debt
at the time the order is left with him.”
The court decided to adopt the New York rule because “ ‘a decision ... contrary to the general rule of the state might have disruptive consequences for the state banking system’ ” and adopting state law “minimize[s] disruptive divergences between state and federal law.”
The court rejected Reibor’s equitable argument against enforcing the New York rule in a case where the funds came into the garnishee bank mere hours after the attachment order was served. In rejecting this argument, the court dryly noted that “the rule works, to be sure, to the
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OPINION AND ORDER
SHIRA A. SCHEINDLIN, District Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
On January 15, 2008, Cala Rosa Marine Co. Ltd. (“Cala Rosa” or “plaintiff’) commenced this action and requested an ex parte order directing attachment and garnishment (“Attachment Order”) of up to $889,463.59 of the assets of Sucden Middle East Part of Sucres Et Denrees Group (“Sucden” or “defendant”) and affiliated companies. Plaintiff requests this Court to order that any process served on a garnishee shall be deemed continuously served through the end of the next business day. Plaintiff farther requests this
Court to appoint a special process server, designated by plaintiff, to serve the process. The request for a maritime attachment order is granted but, for the reasons stated below, the requests for continuous service and a specially appointed process server are denied.
II. BACKGROUND
A. The 2004 Memorandum of Agreement and Subsequent Arbitration
On September 22, 2008, Cala Rosa, as owner of a vessel, and Sucden, as charterer, executed a Charter Party Agreement (“Charter Party”) for the carriage of a cargo of sugar from Brazil to Algeria. Under the terms of the Charter Party, defendant was responsible for the pre-loading condition of the cargo and any inherent defect in the cargo.' The Algerian cargo receivers claimed that the sugar was delivered to the Algerian port in a damaged condition and required plaintiff to post security in the amount of $284,977 to secure this claim.
Further, plaintiff alleges that defendant failed to pay $380,864.63 in freight and demurrage costs. Plaintiff alleges that defendant is liable to plaintiff for all these sums.
The Charter Party contains a clause mandating London arbitration for all claims arising under the Charter Party, and plaintiff has commenced London arbitration.
On January 15, 2009, plaintiff commenced this action under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (“REFAA”), 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-209, which permits attachment in actions that seek to enforce foreign arbitral awards.
Including estimated attorneys’ fees and costs, plaintiff seeks an attachment in the amount of $889,463.59.
Plaintiff seeks, inter alia, to attach Electronic Funds Transfers (“EFTs”) as they pass through New York banks.
Plaintiff alleges “on information and belief [that] defendants have or will have during the pendency of this action” assets in the hands of the garnishee banks.
In the affidavit in Support of attachment, plaintiff requests that the Attachment Order contain two special provisions.
First,
plaintiff requests that the Attachment Order contain a provision for continuous service. Plaintiff explains:
In order to avoid the necessity of physically serving the garnishees/banks daily and repetitively, plaintiff respectfully seeks leave of the Court, for any process that is served on a garnishee to be deemed effective and continuous service throughout the remainder of the day upon which service is made, commencing from the time of such service and such service to be further deemed effective and continuous through the end of the next business day, provided that another
service is made that day.
Second,
plaintiff requests that the Court appoint a plaintiff-retained special process server who, along with the United States Marshal, will be authorized to serve the Attachment Order, as well as any supplemental process that might issue, on the garnishees. Plaintiff states that this is necessary because “daily service of Rule B orders would impose upon the United States Marshal an overwhelming burden and would cause to be visited on litigants ... disproportionate costs and inefficiency.”
III. LEGAL BACKGROUND
A. Attaching After-Acquired Property
In
Reibor International Limited v. Cargo Carriers (KACZ-CO.) Limited,
the Second Circuit considered whether a maritime plaintiff may attach “after-acquired property” — i.e., property that was not in the hands of the garnishee at the time the attachment order was served.
In
Reibor,
plaintiff served an order of maritime attachment on a garnishee bank at about 10:25 a.m., but the bank did not receive the transferred funds until 2:21 p.m. that afternoon.
The bank attached the funds. The district court vacated the attachment, holding that a plaintiff may only attach funds that are in the hands of the garnishee at the time the attachment order is served.
The Second Circuit affirmed. Addressing the permissibility of attaching after-acquired property under Rule B, the court first noted that
The Admiralty Rules themselves offer little guidance. Rule B does not mention attachment of after-acquired property. Two other rules, Rule C and Rule E, appear to contemplate service on garnishees actually in possession of the property to be attached, but neither addresses the issue of after-acquired property directly.
Because federal case law also failed to provide guidance, the court adopted, under federal common law choice of law principles, the New York rule against attaching property not in the hands of the garnishee at the time of service. Quoting Judge Joseph McLaughlin’s commentary on New York practice, the court found New York’s law to be clear in this regard: “Where the order of attachment is left with a third-party garnishee ... the levy is
absolutely void
unless the garnishee has some property belonging to the defendant or owes the defendant a debt
at the time the order is left with him.”
The court decided to adopt the New York rule because “ ‘a decision ... contrary to the general rule of the state might have disruptive consequences for the state banking system’ ” and adopting state law “minimize[s] disruptive divergences between state and federal law.”
The court rejected Reibor’s equitable argument against enforcing the New York rule in a case where the funds came into the garnishee bank mere hours after the attachment order was served. In rejecting this argument, the court dryly noted that “the rule works, to be sure, to the
detriment of an attaching creditor, but that is simply the way the law was intended to operate.”
Further, Reibor’s proposed rule “could have considerable impact on international banking practices” and prove “extremely and unfairly taxing” on New York banks.
In
ContiChem LPG v. Parsons Shipping Company, Limited,
the Second Circuit addressed whether a maritime plaintiff “could accomplish indirectly, by means of an order restraining to-be-attached property, that which it could not do directly in light of the well-established prohibition against maritime attachments of after-acquired property.”
In an effort to circumvent
Reibor’s
prohibition on attaching after-acquired property, ContiChem obtained a temporary restraining order from the district court preventing the bank from releasing any funds belonging to the defendant that transferred through the bank.
Once EFTs were held pursuant to the restraining order, plaintiff served a maritime attachment order on the bank and attached the funds that were then in the hands of the garnishee bank.
The district court first found that the restraining order was invalid under New York law and then vacated the Rule B attachment under
Reibor.
The Second Circuit affirmed, holding that plaintiff “improperly attempted to circumvent, the rule against attachment of property not yet in [the garnishee bank’s hands].”
In
Winter Storm Shipping Limited v. TPI,
the Second Circuit held that EFTs emanating from defendant’s bank account are “property” belonging to defendant subject to attachment.
Upon receiving initial process of the attachment order, the garnishee bank decided, without a court order, to place a hold on any funds that transferred through the bank emanating from the defendant’s .accounts.
In this respect, the bank effectively treated the service of process of the attachment order as being continually served. Once the bank held defendant’s EFTs, plaintiff served supplemental process of the Attachment Order while the funds were at the bank and attached the funds.
The fact that the attachment was served
while the funds were at the bank,
the Court held, placed the case outside the ambit of
Reibor’s
well-established rule agáinst attachment of after-acquired property.
Further, the case did not fall within the ambit of
ContiChem
because the bank made the unilateral decision to place a hold on future transfers and plaintiffs actions were, therefore, “entirely blameless.”
In recent years, many district courts have begun to issue attachment orders that direct the garnishee to treat the order as continuously served for a day. Given the
Reibor
prohibition on attachment of after-acquired property and given that “ ‘[a]n EFT may be in the, possession of a financial institution for only a very short period of time,’ and may move through the bank ‘almost instantaneously,’ it follows
that it would be virtually impossible for plaintiffs to attach EFTs unless garnishee banks are permitted to accept continuous service.”
The continuous service provision is thus “intended to avoid ‘the absurdity, security problems, and inconvenience of requiring the garnishee banks to accept service repeatedly throughout the day.’ ”
Indeed, “the absence of such a continuing service provision — either by court order or by consent from the garnishee — would inevitably result in the posting of lawyers and/or process servers at bank offices around the clock in an attempt to capture EFTs at the precise moment of their arrival.”
IV. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Continuous Service
Under Rule B of the Supplemental Admiralty Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Supplemental Rules”), a “verified complaint may contain a prayer for process to attach the defendant’s tangible or intangible personal property— up to the amount sued
for
— in
the hands of garnishees named in the process.”
No provision in the Supplemental Rules authorizes a court to issue an attachment order that permits continuous service. Equally, “ ‘[njothing in the Admiralty Rules prohibits this Court from issuing such an order.’ ”
Notwithstanding the “well-established prohibition against maritime attachments of after-acquired property,”
every court in this district to reach the issue has held that it is
permissible
for a court to issue an order directing that service shall be deemed continuous for a day
and for a garnishee, without a court order, to consent to treat service as continuous for a day.
However, no court has held that a district court
must
authorize continuous service and there is no caselaw discussing the parameters of a court’s discretion in this regard.
B. Specially Appointed Process Server
Supplemental Rule B provides that when serving an attachment order that authorizes the. attachment of intangible property such as EFTs,
[T]he summons, process, and any supplemental process must be delivered to a person or organization authorized to serve it, who may be (A) a marshal; (B) someone under contract with the United States; [or] (C) someone specially ap
pointed by the court for that purpose....
Y. DISCUSSION
Although this Court is clearly permitted to include a continuous service provision in the attachment order, it is not required to do so. Because (1) the Federal and Supplemental Rules make no provision for “continuous service,” (2) the relatively recent innovation of authorizing continuous service circumvents the
Reibor
prohibition against attaching after-acquired property, and (3) the practice is disruptive to the New York banking industry and flouts the New York rule that
Reibor
adopted, this Court declines to exercise its discretion to mandate banks to treat the service as continuous. If banks elect to treat the service as continuous— as the bank did in
Winter Storm
— they may do so; and if funds are subsequently attached, the overwhelming authority provides that no vacatur will follow. But absent the bank’s consent, this Court no longer believes it is wise to require New York banks to do what New York law does not require them to do.
This conclusion is buttressed by the relative lack of interest the United States forum has in this dispute: there is no reason to believe that defendant’s property was in the United States at the time this motion was filed or will be in the United States before the arbitration is settled,
the merits of the dispute will be resolved in London arbitration according to foreign law and pursuant to a mandatory foreign arbitration clause, the operative facts all occurred abroad, and the parties have no discernable ties to the United States. In light of this forum’s very slight interest in the dispute, there is little reason to impose enormous strains on the New York banking system
and to create disparities between New York and federal law.
Moreover, because plaintiff alleges only that defendant’s funds will be in the district sometime during the next two years — confirming this Court’s experience that many attachment orders are continually re-served over a period of many months — a continuous service provision may cause a lasting burden on New York banks in circumstances where the plaintiff has little reason to be assured of any success in attaching the funds in the near future (if at all). Finally, if deference is to be paid to the forum most interested in the dispute — the arbitration body in London— there is no strong interest in attaching the funds because London does not permit pre-arbitration attachment. Supplemental Rule B confirms this conclusion, in that it contemplates that attachment orders will be served only to acquire property “in the hands of garnishees named in the process.”
Many courts, including this one, have noted that in light of
Reibor
a continuous service provision is necessary, in practice, to allow attachment of EFTs. That is no doubt true. But
Reibor
provides the proper response to this concern: the New York “rule works, to be sure, to the detriment of an attaching creditor, but that is simply the way the law was intended to operate.”
Many courts have also expressed concern that in the absence of a continuing service provision, plaintiffs will post process servers at bank offices around the clock in an attempt to capture EFTs at the precise moment of their arrival. I agree that this is likely and that this would be highly disruptive to New York banks. Accordingly, I decline to specially appoint any plaintiff-designated process servers. As a result, pursuant to Rule B(1)(d)(ii), I authorize only the United States Marshals to serve the process and any supplemental process.
Plaintiff expresses concern that this will impose an undue burden on the United States Marshals. Plaintiffs concern, though appreciated, is overstated: nothing requires the Marshals to repetitively serve the banks with attachment orders around the clock. Further, plaintiffs duty to bear the costs of Marshal-served processes
will help limit the Marshals’ workload.
VI. CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs application for a maritime attachment order is granted. However, for the reasons stated above, plaintiffs request for continuous service and a specially appointed process server are denied.
SO ORDERED: