Conrad Shipyard, LLC v. Franco Marine 1, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 2023
Docket2:19-cv-10864
StatusUnknown

This text of Conrad Shipyard, LLC v. Franco Marine 1, LLC (Conrad Shipyard, LLC v. Franco Marine 1, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conrad Shipyard, LLC v. Franco Marine 1, LLC, (E.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

CONRAD SHIPYARD, L.L.C. CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 19-10864

FRANCO MARINE 1, LLC, ET AL. SECTION: “J” (1)

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW This case involves a breach of contract claim brought by Conrad Shipyard, LLC, located in Morgan City, Louisiana, against Harley Marine Services (HMS), a marine transportation company located in the State of Washington. Conrad alleged that it built two offshore vessels for HMS, which then refused to pay, resulting in Conrad having to sell the vessels to another party at a financial loss. Harley Franco is the founder of HMS and, until March 2019, was its Chairman, President, and CEO. In 2017, Harley Franco wished to build two new vessels to service a marine transportation contract with an existing customer, Phillips 66. By that time, the HMS board did not want the additional cost of two new vessels on its balance sheet because it was in the process of negotiating securitization. After discussions, Harley Franco formed two LLCs, Franco Marine 1 (“FM1”) and Franco Marine 2 (“FM2”), in July 2017 for the sole purpose of being the contracting parties for the construction of the two vessels by Conrad. Harley Franco, on behalf of FM1, FM2, and HMS, executed the Vessel Construction Contracts on September 12, 2017, for a total amount of $19,652,000.00. When the HMS/Franco Parties (Harley Franco, FM1, and FM2) ceased making

required payments, Conrad was forced to sell the vessels to another party at a reduced price. Conrad then commenced the present action against the Franco LLCs and HMS for breach of contract, under the single business enterprise theory. Conrad also brought a detrimental reliance claim against HMS. HMS counterclaimed for conversion1 against Conrad, brought a cross-claim for indemnity against FM1 and FM2, and brought a third-party indemnity claim against Harley Franco. FM1 and

FM2 filed cross-claims against HMS seeking reimbursement of the $2 million that FM1 paid to Conrad for the Vessels, and Franco filed a counterclaim against HMS seeking indemnification. A jury trial took place from December 12, 2022 to December 16, 2022. At the close of the trial, the jury rendered a verdict, answering eleven of fourteen questions on the verdict form. The jury was unable to agree on answers to questions 6 (regarding the single business enterprise theory), 12, and 13 (regarding the Franco

LLCs’ detrimental reliance claims against HMS). However, the Court found that the jury’s answers sufficiently resolved the claims in the trial, excluding the indemnification issues that the parties had previously reserved for the Court’s determination. The jury found in favor of Conrad and against HMS, awarding the full $7,494,930.00 sought for breach of contract based on two theories: first, that the

1 HMS dismissed their conversion claim at trial. HMS had alleged that Conrad converted two tow winches that belonged to HMS because Conrad sold the tow winches after it did not receive payment for the vessels. Franco Parties had actual or apparent authority to transact with Conrad as HMS’s agents and, second, that Conrad detrimentally relied on promises made by HMS employees when making its decision to build the two vessels.2

As to the Franco Parties’ claims, the jury found that the Franco Parties’ $2 million down payment and expenses related to the Conrad vessels were incurred within the scope of their authority as HMS’s agents, but that HMS did not agree, implicitly or explicitly, to reimburse them for the $2 million.3 Finally, the jury found that HMS owes no damages to the Franco LLCs related to down payments to Conrad for construction of the vessels.

Shortly before trial began, the Franco Parties and HMS agreed that the Court, rather than the jury, should decide all indemnification issues after the jury’s verdict. At the close of trial, the Court ordered the parties to submit briefing on the remaining indemnity issues between HMS and the Franco Parties. On January 17, 2023, the Franco Parties moved for indemnification, arguing that HMS’s implied indemnification claims should be dismissed, and that the Court should rule in Franco’s favor on his own indemnification claim. (Rec. Doc. 146).

HMS also moved for indemnification, arguing that the Court should enter judgment in HMS’s favor on its indemnification claims against the Franco Parties for $7,464,930 and dismiss Franco’s claim for indemnification under HMS’s by-laws.

2 At trial, HMS also moved for a directed verdict on the single business enterprise issue. The jury was unable to resolve whether HMS and the Franco LLCs operated as a single business enterprise. After the jury rendered the verdict for Conrad, HMS re-urged the motion, and the Court granted it, dismissing the single business enterprise claim. 3 The jury was also unable to determine the outcome of the Franco Parties’ detrimental reliance claim. The Court determined that this claim did not affect the completeness of the jury verdict, so the Court accepted the jury verdict. (Rec. Doc. 148). In essence, HMS acknowledges its liability to Conrad on the breach of contract claim based on the jury’s findings that FM1 and FM2, in signing the contracts with Conrad, were acting pursuant to actual or apparent authority as fully

disclosed agents of HMS. However, HMS contends that it is only constructively or vicariously liable to Conrad because the Franco parties breached their obligations to HMS and exceeded the authority given to them by HMS. HMS seeks indemnification from the Franco entities for the full amount of the judgment in favor of Conrad. At the same time, the Franco entities seek reimbursement or indemnification from HMS for the expenditures made as agents for HMS, and for attorney’s fees in defending

the claims by HMS. DISCUSSION: I. REIMBURSEMENT OF THE $2 MILLION DOWN PAYMENT The Franco Parties assert that HMS must reimburse them for the $2 million down payment for the vessels because the jury found that FM1 and FM2 were acting within the scope of their authority as agents when they made the down payment. (Rec. Doc. 145-1, at 2-3). In response, HMS argues that the Franco parties failed to

timely object to the verdict form,4 which indicates that HMS is not required reimburse the Franco LLCs and also that the Franco Parties were not entitled to damages based on the verdict form and jury instructions on agency. (Rec. Doc. 147)

4 HMS contends that the Franco Parties failed to object to alleged inconsistencies between a general verdict and answers to verdict questions, thus waiving the arguments in their motion. (Rec. Doc. 147, at 5). The Court disagrees with HMS’s framing that the Franco Parties’ motion for an interim judgment (Rec. Doc. 145) is an objection to inconsistencies in the verdict form. In fact, the Franco Parties’ motion contends the opposite: that the jury’s answers are both internally consistent and consistent with agency law. Thus, the Court finds that the Franco Parties did not waive their argument by not objecting at the time the verdict was read. An agency relationship is formed when a person, the principal, confers authority on another person, the agent (or mandatary in Louisiana law), to transact affairs for the principal. La. Civ. Code art. 2989; Restatement (Third) Of Agency §§

1.01–03 (2006). An agent who contracts in the name of a disclosed principal within the limits of his authority does not bind himself personally for the performance of the contract. La. Civ. Code art. 3016; Restatement (Third) Of Agency § 6.01 (2006).

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Bluebook (online)
Conrad Shipyard, LLC v. Franco Marine 1, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-shipyard-llc-v-franco-marine-1-llc-laed-2023.