Cape Fear, Inc. v. Martin

312 F.3d 496, 2002 A.M.C. 2733, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 22713, 2002 WL 31439367
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 2002
Docket02-1153
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 312 F.3d 496 (Cape Fear, Inc. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cape Fear, Inc. v. Martin, 312 F.3d 496, 2002 A.M.C. 2733, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 22713, 2002 WL 31439367 (1st Cir. 2002).

Opinion

COFFIN, Senior Circuit Judge.

This case arises from the sinking of a clamming vessel off the coast of New Bed-ford, Massachusetts, causing the deaths of two crew members. Appellant, the vessel’s owner, 1 filed a petition in admiralty seeking exoneration or limitation of liability under the Limitation of Liability Act (“the Limitation Act”), 46 U.S.C. app. §§ 181-196. The district court rejected the petition and found that the vessel was unseaworthy, leaving appellant fully exposed to pending damage claims. We affirm.

I. Background

The F/V CAPE FEAR had been on a routine clamming trip out of New Bedford, Massachusetts, in January 1999 when the vessel, fully loaded with ocean quahogs, ran into trouble in stormy weather as it .headed back to port. The boat carried a crew of five: Captain Steven Novack, Mate James Haley, and deckhands Steven Reeves, Paul Martin, and Joseph Lem-ieux. 2 As the boat approached New Bed-ford, the waves washing up on deck were *498 not receding as they usually did. Novack ordered the crew members to don survival suits, and, a few minutes later, ordered them to abandon ship. Novack and Reeves, with their survival suits only partially on, slid down the starboard side hull as the vessel rolled to port, but Lemieux, with his suit unzipped at the neck, was thrown into the water on the port side of the now capsized vessel. Those three had last seen Haley and Martin in the galley putting on their survival suits.

Lemieux testified that, once he was in the water, he heard other crew members screaming. Lemieux’s suit was filling up with water because it was not fastened at the neck, but Haley soon approached with a board and told Lemieux to grab onto it. Haley and Lemieux then swam to Captain Novack, apparently the closest other crew member. The three men heard Reeves crying for help, but could not find him. After about ten minutes, Reeves’ yelling stopped.

Another clamming vessel, the F/V MISTY DAWN, approached and rescued Novack, Haley and Lemieux. The MISTY DAWN unsuccessfully searched for Martin and Reeves for thirty to forty-five minutes. The next day, Martin’s body was found floating off a beach, on Buzzard’s Bay, where the boat sank. According to the testimony of Officer Michael Camire of the State Environmental Police, Martin’s survival suit was on, but zipped only to, his navel. His strobe light was in the off position. Reeves’ body was never found.

The cause of the vessel’s sinking is the central dispute in this case. The district court concluded that the CAPE FEAR, as it began its return to port, “was unseawor-thy because substantially overloaded with clams in cages, a practice that had become common....” It found that the heavy load, which weighed the boat down and risked its stability, was the primary reason the boat capsized in the rough conditions it encountered on its last voyage. The court ruled that the overloading rendered the boat unseaworthy, and that appellant was strictly liable for damages resulting from that condition. The court listed additional factors that contributed to the boat’s unseaworthiness, including problems with safety equipment, but it did not rely on these in finding that the CAPE FEAR was unseaworthy.

Appellant, however, argues that the CAPE FEAR sank because the crew members on that particular day negligently failed to close a hatch cover over one of the clam tanks, allowing water to build up in the lower level of the vessel and undermining its stability. A total of six clam tanks stood on the CAPE FEAR’s lower deck. They were arranged side-by-side, forward to aft, running from bow to stern. The two most forward tanks were labeled as # 1 port and starboard, the two in the middle were #2 port and starboard, and the last two were # 3 port and starboard. Each tank had a separate hatch cover that was attached to a set of rails and was moved into place using a pulley system. A watertight longitudinal bulkhead separated the starboard clam tanks from the port clam tanks, but the transverse bulkheads separating the # 1, # 2 and # 3 tanks on each side were not watertight.

Lemieux’s undisputed testimony was that the # 3 port side tank cover was left open that day about three to five inches. There is. a dispute, however, concerning the reason for that opening. Lemieux reported that the hatch cover was prevented from closing completely by a problem with the rope that was used to pull the cover into place. The rope had broken on other occasions, he testified, and crew members would tie a knot in it until the line could be spliced. The knot, however, would interfere with the pulley system and leave the *499 hatch cover partially open. 3 Appellant, by contrast, maintained that the cover was left open improperly by the crew members responsible for closing it, unbeknownst to either Captain Novack, Mate Haley, or company president Alexander. The opening created by the partially closed cover was a “downflooding” point, 4 and the district court concluded that it contributed to the vessel’s unseaworthiness; as with the safety equipment, however, the court did not rely on the hatch cover to reach its unseaworthiness determination.

The evidence showed that another possible location for water to accumulate and contribute to flooding was the space between the # 2 and # 3 hatch covers on both the port and starboard sides. The # 3 hatch covers were about four inches below the # 2 hatch covers, and they slid beneath the # 1 and # 2 hatch covers on a separate set of rails. Lemieux testified

that, with the covers closed, about a one-inch gap remained. 5

Appellant filed its Petition for Exoneration from and/or Limitation of Liability on June 17, 1999 and submitted an appraisal reporting that the F/V CAPE FEAR had no value and no pending freight. 6 Under the Limitation Act, a vessel owner may seek to limit its liability for any maritime injury or loss to the value of the vessel and its pending freight, provided that the owner lacks privity or knowledge concerning the events that gave rise to the damage. Lewis v. Lewis & Clark Marine, Inc., 531 U.S. 438, 453, 121 S.Ct. 993, 148 L.Ed.2d 931 (2001); Hellenic Inc. v. Bridgeline Gas Distribution Lie, 252 F.3d 391, 394 (5th Cir.2001); Carr v. PMS Fishing Corp., 191 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir.1999). In the process of seeking limited liability under the statute, a vessel owner also may request exoneration, or freedom from all liability. Lewis, 531 U.S. at 453, 121 S.Ct. 993. 7

*500 After hearing six days of testimony, the district court found that appellant was entitled to neither exoneration nor limitation of liability.

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312 F.3d 496, 2002 A.M.C. 2733, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 22713, 2002 WL 31439367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cape-fear-inc-v-martin-ca1-2002.