F/V MISTY BLUE LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 18, 2018
Docket1:18-cv-10760
StatusUnknown

This text of F/V MISTY BLUE LLC (F/V MISTY BLUE LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F/V MISTY BLUE LLC, (D. Mass. 2018).

Opinion

[Dkt. No. 18, 21] IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY CAMDEN VICINAGE In re COMPLAINT OF F/V MISTY BLUE, LLC and SEA HARVEST, INC. as owners and/or owners Pro Hac Vice of F/V MISTY Civil No. 17-12773 (RMB/AMD) BLUE, FOR EXONERATION FROM OR LIMITATION OF LIABILITY OPINION BUMB, United States District Judge: This matter comes before the Court upon the parties’ responses to the Court’s March 12, 2018 Order, [Dkt. No. 18], requiring Plaintiffs F/V Misty Blue LLC and Sea Harvest, Inc. (the “Plaintiffs”) to show cause why this matter should not be transferred, pursuant to Supplemental Admiralty and Maritime Claims Rule F(9), to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts (the “District of Massachusetts”). For the following reasons, the Court will transfer this action to the District of Massachusetts. I. Background This case arises from the sinking of the F/V Misty Blue (the “Misty Blue”), a commercial fishing vessel. The Misty Blue departed on a clamming voyage from Fairhaven, Massachusetts on or about December 2, 2017, and was lost at sea on or about December 4, 2017, off the coast of Massachusetts. When the Misty Blue sank, two of her crew members were rescued, but two others— Jonathan Saraiva and Michael Roberts (the “Decedents”)—did not

survive. The Massachusetts State Police recovered the bodies of the Decedents, and Coast Guard personnel in Massachusetts are currently investigating the Misty Blue’s sinking. Plaintiffs allege that the only item salvaged from the Misty Blue is a life raft. Plaintiffs were the titled owner (F/V Misty Blue, LLC) and owner pro hac vice (Sea Harvest, Inc.) of the Misty Blue in 2017. F/V Misty Blue, LLC, is a Rhode Island LLC wholly owned by Fishing Vessel Enterprises, Inc., a Florida corporation whose sole shareholder is a resident of Florida. (See Affadavit of Sam Martin (“Martin Aff.,” Dkt. No. 21-1, at ¶5). Sea Harvest is a New Jersey corporation with its principal place of business in

Cape May, New Jersey. (Id. at ¶ 1).1

1 Based on affidavits submitted to the Court by Plaintiffs, it appears that at the time of the casualty here, Sea Harvest was in the process of transferring its responsibilities with regard to the Misty Blue to Atlantic Harvesters, LLC. Atlantic Harvesters is incorporated in Rhode Island, and is wholly owned by Galilean Seafood, LLC, a subsidiary of Atlantic Capes Fisheries, Inc., a New Jersey corporation whose sole shareholder is the same Florida resident who owns F/V Misty Blue, LLC and Sea Harvest. Each of these, and other related entities, are alleged to have administrative offices located in New Jersey. With regard to the transfer of responsibilities, Plaintiffs indicate that “[a]t the time of the casualty on December 4, 2017, [Sea Harvest] continued to make all major decisions regarding the maintenance, repair, and alterations” of the Misty The Purported Claimants are the Estates of the Decedents, which are represented by Roberts’s widow, Tammy (“Mrs. Roberts”) and Saraiva’s father, Phillip (“Mr. Saraiva”). Mrs. Roberts and

Mr. Saraiva are both Massachusetts residents, as were the Decedents. The survivors of the Misty Blue’s sinking, Captain Erik Arabian and Colby McMullen, are believed to be residents of Massachusetts. The Purported Claimants have also indicated that several vessels—namely the F/V Enterprise; the F/V Lorie Anne; the F/V Lauren and the F/V Mariette—were in the vicinity of the Misty Blue when she sank, and that the crews of those ships, believed to be Massachusetts based, are witnesses to the conditions surrounding the Misty Blue’s sinking. In addition, the Purported Claimants have provided the names of (1) several former crew members of the Misty Blue, including former Captain

Doug Capek, who are believed to live and/or work in Massachusetts and who are believed to possess information about the seaworthiness of the Misty Blue and the knowledge of her

Blue, and that Sea Harvest is the party who submitted the Report of Marine Casualty to the United States Coast Guard. (Martin Aff. ¶ 15). The Purported Claimants contend, citing news releases and dockets from Massachusetts federal court cases, that Plaintiffs have more ties to Massachusetts than they let on in this action. For the reasons discussed below, the Court need not resolve this dispute as such resolution is not material to the Court’s decision. owners; William Rebelo, the former owner of a crane that was installed on the Misty Blue, who is believed to live and/or work in Massachusetts; and several other individuals, all believed to

live and/or work in Massachusetts, who either performed work on the Misty Blue or were involved with her maintenance. On December 7, 2017, Plaintiffs filed a Complaint for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability, pursuant to the Limitation of Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 30501, et seq., seeking to limit their potential liability for the loss of the Misty Blue to $3150, the value of the remaining life raft. [Dkt. No. 1]. On December 13, 2017, the Court accepted Plaintiffs’ Ad Interim Stipulation of Value for Security, valuing Plaintiffs’ remaining interest in the Misty Blue at $3150, subject to an appraisement pursuant to Supplemental Admiralty Rule F(7) upon motion of any claimant. On the same day, the Court entered an

Order (1) admonishing all persons with claims arising out of the sinking of the Misty Blue to file such claims in this Court by March 16, 2018; (2) enjoining further prosecution of any and all suits, actions, and proceedings relating to the sinking of the Misty Blue against Plaintiffs in any court; and (3) requiring Plaintiffs to publish public notice of the Court’s Order and to mail a copy of such notice to the Estates of Saraiva and Roberts at each of the Decedents’ last known addresses. On March 1, 2018, the Purported Claimants filed a letter with the Court2, which the Court interpreted as a request for a pre-motion conference regarding a motion to transfer venue

pursuant to the Court’s Individual Rules and Procedures. [See Dkt. No. 9]. The Court held a telephone conference on March 12, 2018, at the conclusion of which it Ordered that Plaintiffs show cause, by March 26, 2018, why this matter should not be transferred, pursuant to Supplemental Admiralty and Maritime Claims Rule F(9), to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, and extended the monition period to April 18, 2018. [Dkt. No. 18]. The parties’ responses to that Order are currently pending. II. Legal Standard Venue—and transfer of venue—in admiralty suits for exoneration from or limitation of liability is governed by

2 In each of their filings with the Court, the Purported Claimants include a footnote indicating that they object to the Court’s exercise of personal jurisdiction over them. The Court does not, and need not, decide whether it would have personal jurisdiction over the Purported Claimants were they defendants in the traditional sense of the term. The Limitation of Liability Act provides for a “concursus” of claims in one federal district court. If the Purported Claimants wish to file claims against Plaintiffs, or argue that Plaintiffs are not entitled to the protections of the Limitation of Liability Act, they must go to the only court in which such claims may be filed. If every potential claimant could simply argue that the court in which the limitation action was filed lacks personal jurisdiction over them, and thus they need not file claims before that Court, a concursus of claims would not be achievable and the Limitation Act would be rendered useless. Supplemental Federal Rule of Civil Procedure F(9).

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F/V MISTY BLUE LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fv-misty-blue-llc-mad-2018.