Charles C. Jones and Clara E. Jones v. Sea Tow Services Freeport Ny Inc.

30 F.3d 360, 1994 A.M.C. 2661, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19155, 1994 WL 387206
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1994
Docket966, Docket 93-7804
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 30 F.3d 360 (Charles C. Jones and Clara E. Jones v. Sea Tow Services Freeport Ny Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles C. Jones and Clara E. Jones v. Sea Tow Services Freeport Ny Inc., 30 F.3d 360, 1994 A.M.C. 2661, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19155, 1994 WL 387206 (2d Cir. 1994).

Opinion

MINER, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs-appellants Charles C. Jones and Clara E. Jones, his wife, appeal from an order entered in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Glasser, J.) denying their motion for summary judgment in their declaratory judgment action against defendant-appellee Sea Tow Services Freeport NY, Inc. (“Sea Tow”) and staying the action pending arbitration in England. By their complaint, Mr. and Mrs. Jones sought a declaration of their rights and responsibilities under a Lloyd’s Standard Form of Salvage Agreement, also known as Lloyd’s Open Form (“LOF”). Sea Tow has counterclaimed for salvage fees claimed to be due and owing under the LOF.

In arriving at its conclusion, the district court determined that the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Ar-bitral Awards, New York, June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, 330 U.N.T.S. 38 (1970) (“Convention”), as implemented by the provisions of 9 U.S.C. §§ 201-208 (1988), applies to the LOF. According to the district court, the LOF provision for arbitration in England under English law provides a reasonable relation with a foreign state sufficient to allow arbitration to proceed under the Convention and the LOF. We think that the district court exceeded its jurisdiction in directing arbitration to proceed in England. We rest our conclusion on the fact that the parties to this action are U.S. citizens engaged in a purely domestic salvage dispute. In such circumstances, the relation with a foreign state that is required to invoke the Convention is lacking, despite the provisions in the LOF for arbitration in London under the English law of salvage.

BACKGROUND

The circumstances giving rise to this litigation comprise a cautionary tale for the owners of small vessels in distress. The lesson to be learned is that pleasure craft are just as much subject to the law of the sea, including the law of salvage, as their ocean-going commercial counterparts. The saving grace in this case is that the plaintiffs will be able to defend in the United States, rather than in a foreign forum, the salvage claim asserted against them.

Mr. and Mrs. Jones were the owners of the MISS JADE II, a thirty-three-foot pleasure craft whose home port was Freeport, New York. They apparently navigated the vessel *362 too close to shore while on a voyage from Essex, Connecticut to Freeport on August 20, 1991. At some point during this navigation, the vessel was struck by a wave and rolled over, landing on Atlantic Beach, Long Island at about 8:30 p.m. on a cold and rainy night. Mr. and Mrs. Jones were assisted to shore by a passerby, who tied a line to the MISS JADE II to prevent her from drifting and then telephoned the Nassau County Police Department for assistance. Earlier, Mr. Jones had communicated with the Coast Guard by radio from his vessel regarding the situation. After determining that the Jones-es were not seriously injured, the Coast Guard contacted Sea Tow, a professional salvage company.

The first to arrive at the scene was Officer Daly of the Nassau County Police Department. He attended to Mr. and Mrs. Jones, who had sustained minor injuries. He took Mrs. Jones into the police ear to shelter her from the rain and cold. Thereafter, Captain Raia and Michael Marsh of Sea Tow arrived, and Marsh set the vessel’s anchor to prevent drifting. Officer Daly then left the scene, whereupon Mr. and Mrs. Jones entered “Mobile I,” a Sea Tow land vehicle. It was while they were inside the vehicle that the LOF was presented to the Joneses for their signatures. Mr. and Mrs. Jones contend that Mr. Jones was unable to read the LOF without his glasses and that Mrs. Jones thumbed through the document and was not able to comprehend it; that there was insufficient light in the vehicle to read; that Mrs. Jones returned the form unsigned to Captain Raia, who advised that it merely authorized Sea Tow to tow the vessel back to Freeport; that Captain Raia said that Boat/U.S., the insurer of the vessel, was familiar with the LOF and that there would be no problem if the form were signed; that they understood that they would be left stranded on the beach and would not be helped by Sea Tow if they refused to sign; and that they were unfamiliar with the term “salvage.”

Captain Raia denies that he took advantage of Mr. and Mrs. Jones in any way. He asserts that Mrs. Jones read the form before signing her husband’s name after he had fully explained the document and that he emphasized that the agreement was for salvage and not towage. He does not recall, however, whether he explained the LOF provision for arbitration. Although it was dark outside, he asserts that there was sufficient light in “Mobile I” for Mrs. Jones to read by. It seems undisputed that the conversation inside the vehicle lasted for 3(M5 minutes. Captain Raia acknowledges that, after Mrs. Jones told him that she wished to consult with an attorney, he told her that he “would be unable to render assistance without a signed contract.” As to the Boat/U.S. insurance, Captain Raia claims that he explained to Mrs. Jones that “her Boat/U.S. towing insurance would not cover salvage.” After the LOF was signed, Captain Raia arranged for a vehicle to drive the Joneses home and later towed the MISS JADE II to Mako Marina, a full-service marina located about 400 yards from the vessel’s usual mooring at Yachtman’s Cove in Freeport. The vessel was towed a total distance of approximately six miles.

The LOF is a six-page document entitled “Lloyd’s Standard Form of Salvage Agreement (Approved and Published by the Council of Lloyd’s).” At the head of the form appears a legend in bold type: NO CURE— NO PAY. (This is said to mean that no payment is due unless the salvage is successful). Although the LOF was signed by Mrs. Jones in the Sea Tow land vehicle, the place of signing is filled in as “On board the MISS JADE II.” In the first of 19 separate sections, some containing subdivisions within subdivisions, Sea Tow as “Contractor” agrees to use its “best endeavours ... to salve the ‘MISS JADE II’ and/or her cargo[,] freight!,] bunkers!,] stores and other property.” Section 1(c) provides that “[t]he Contractor’s remuneration shall be fixed by Arbitration in London,” and section 1(g) recites as follows: “This Agreement and Arbitration thereunder shall except as otherwise expressly provided be governed by the law of England, including the English law of salvage.”

The remaining sections of the LOF are grouped under the following headings: Provisions As To The Services; Provisions As To Security; Provisions As To Arbitration; Representation; Conduct Of The Arbitration; *363 Interest; Provisions As To Appeal; Conduct Of The Appeal; Provisions As To Payment; and General Provisions. At the end of the LOF, preceding the signatures of the parties, four articles of the International Convention on Salvage are set forth: Article 1 (Definition); Article 8 (Duties of the Salvor and of the Owner and Master); Article 18 (Criteria for Fixing the Record); and Article H (Special Compensation). Following the signature blocks on the last page of the LOF, there appears a legend printed by hand and subscribed by Captain Raia and by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.3d 360, 1994 A.M.C. 2661, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19155, 1994 WL 387206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-c-jones-and-clara-e-jones-v-sea-tow-services-freeport-ny-inc-ca2-1994.