Falco Lime, Inc. v. Tide Towing Company Marine Office of America Corporation

29 F.3d 362
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 1994
Docket93-2923
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 29 F.3d 362 (Falco Lime, Inc. v. Tide Towing Company Marine Office of America Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falco Lime, Inc. v. Tide Towing Company Marine Office of America Corporation, 29 F.3d 362 (8th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Falco Lime, Inc., appeals the District Court’s 1 judgments in favor of Tide Towing Company and Marine Office of America Corporation (MOAC). We affirm.

At the times relevant to this case, Falco owned numerous barges that it used to move lime along the Mississippi River from its supplier in Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, to its facilities in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Falco and Tide had entered into a contract whereby Falco chartered the MTV Senator Sam, a towboat owned and operated by Tide, to move its barges on the river. During the summer of 1988, the lower Mississippi River was experiencing extremely low water conditions, so the Coast Guard limited navigation on the river to one-way traffic. On July 25, 1988, the Senator Sam, northbound on the river with twelve empty barges in tow, seven of which belonged to Falco, stopped at Memphis to allow downriver traffic to pass. The towboat then found itself unable to move the barges, as they had become grounded on a sandbar. *364 The barges remained stranded for some time until a commercial salvor began salvage operations in September, with all seven barges returned to service by October 14, 1988.

In May 1990 Falco filed suit against Tide seeking damages for the stranding. In February 1992 Falco filed an amended complaint, adding causes of action against MOAC. As discussed in greater detail in Part II, only the action for damages against Tide went to jury trial in December 1992, judgment having been entered for MOAC on the basis of the District Court’s pretrial rulings.

Falco’s first witness at the trial was Fred Farrell, president and co-owner of Falco. On cross-examination, Farrell testified that Faleo’s towing contract with Tide was negotiated by Falco’s marine broker and that he, Farrell, had reviewed it point by point before signing it. Farrell testified that the Senator Sam had a mechanical problem before the grounding and that, as a consequence, the Falco barges were stranded and delayed, resulting in consequential damages to Falco. Counsel for Tide asked Farrell to read a provision of the charter agreement between Falco and Tide for the services of the Senator Sam, and then moved for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50. After hearing arguments from counsel, the District Court granted the motion and entered judgment as a matter of law for Tide. Trial Transcript at 255-76.

I.

On appeal as to Tide, Falco challenges the judgment and also argues that the court erred in some of its evidentiary rulings and in holding, as a matter of law, that Falco could not sue for punitive damages in these circumstances. Because the judgment was made as a matter of law, we review the District Court’s decision de novo. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 50.

The relevant portion of the charter agreement that served as grounds for the judgment as a matter of law reads as follows:

Owner will not be liable to Charterer for lost income or profits or any incidental or consequential damages caused by any delay in transportation of barges by the vessel’s condition.

Agreement for Charter of Fully Found Motor Vessel (hereinafter Charter Agreement) at ¶ 5. We agree with the District Court that Farrell admitted all of the necessary facts to invoke this unambiguous contract provision. Any questions of fact that remained at the start of the trial were resolved by his unequivocal admissions. On appeal, however, Falco proposes several reasons why the court erred in granting Tide’s motion.

Falco claims that there was no delay here, but a complete failure to deliver the barges, as the barges were not returned to service for nearly three months and Senator Sam never brought them in. We cannot agree. The unambiguous provision limits “damages caused by any delay in transportation of the barges.” Id. (emphasis added). The provision does not specify that a delay that lasts beyond a certain period of time becomes a failure in transportation, nor does it require that Tide be the one that ends the delay. The court’s refusal to allow Farrell to elaborate upon his own understanding of the clause was proper. Parol evidence as to the meaning of a contract is inadmissible when the contract is unambiguous, as this one is. The court properly refused to allow Farrell to attempt to create ambiguities with his proffered testimony, especially given the facts that he already had admitted. See Unigroup, Inc. v. O’Rourke Storage & Transfer Co., 980 F.2d 1217, 1222 (8th Cir.1992) (applying Missouri law).

Falco’s contention that Tide was in breach of its “representation that vessel is seaworthy and in good condition,” Charter Agreement at ¶ 5, may be well-founded, but that does not require reversal of the judgment as a matter of law. It is true that, ordinarily, a breach of contract will mean that damages, if proved, may be recovered against the breaching party. Here, however, in the very same paragraph, Tide and Falco agreed to a limitation of damages. 2 Parties *365 bargaining at arm’s length, as Farrell admitted were the circumstances here, surely may limit the recovery of actual damages resulting from a breach that is caused by specified circumstances. The fact that Tide may have breached the contract cannot void the damages limitation agreement. Indeed, we have here the specific kind of situation to which the limitation was intended to apply.

Falco also argues that the delay was not due to the vessel’s condition, as ¶ 5 requires, and therefore its consequential damages are recoverable. It is Faleo’s position that it was Tide’s negligence that resulted in the grounding. But Farrell clearly agreed, under oath, that it was the mechanical condition of the Senator Sam that caused the grounding of the barges and that, as a consequence of the grounding, the barges were delayed in reaching their destination. Moreover, Fal-co’s brief on appeal reiterated that position. According to Falco, the Senator Sam’s starboard generator “ceased operating,” and the backup generator “too was inoperable.” Brief of Appellant at 12. Falco argues, “A vessel with one defective generator is simply unseaworthy—the MTV SENATOR SAM’s condition was beyond mere garden variety unseaworthiness.” Id. The brief goes on to explain how the loss of power to the tow ultimately resulted in the grounding of the barges. Falco further noted that “the vessel was inadequately manned; this also rendered her unseaworthy.” Id. at 11 n. 7 (emphasis added). Falco clearly is arguing that it is the unseaworthy condition of the Senator Sam that precipitated the grounding of Fal-co’s barges.

Falco attempts to circumvent these admissions of unseaworthiness by arguing that Tide’s negligence in the maintenance of the vessel and in the hiring and supervision of its employees was the cause of the unseaworthiness of the vessel, and therefore also was the cause of the grounding and the consequent delay. Falco thus would have us read into the clause language that is not there.

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29 F.3d 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falco-lime-inc-v-tide-towing-company-marine-office-of-america-ca8-1994.