Gabarick v. Laurin Maritime (America), Inc.

54 F. Supp. 3d 602, 2014 A.M.C. 2668, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135248, 2014 WL 4794758
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 25, 2014
DocketCivil Action Nos. 08-2161, 08-4007, 08-4023, 08-4046, 08-4156, 08-4600
StatusPublished

This text of 54 F. Supp. 3d 602 (Gabarick v. Laurin Maritime (America), Inc.) 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
Gabarick v. Laurin Maritime (America), Inc., 54 F. Supp. 3d 602, 2014 A.M.C. 2668, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135248, 2014 WL 4794758 (E.D. La. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

IVAN L.R. LEMELLE, District Judge.

Before the Court is Laurin Maritime (America) Inc., Laurin Maritime AB, Whi-tefin Shipping Co. Ltd., and Anglo-Atlantic Steamship Limited’s (collectively the “Tintomara Interests”) “Motion for Summary Judgment Against National Liability and Fire Insurance Company.” (Rec. Doc. 1542). American Commercial Lines LLC (“ACL”) and National Liability and Fire Insurance Company (“National Liability”) filed a joint opposition thereto, and the Tintomara Interests filed a reply. (Rec. Docs. 1547 & 1556).

Also before the Court is ACL’s Motion for Disbursement of Funds from Registry of Court. (Rec. Doc. 1545). The Tinto-mara Interests have filed opposition thereto, and ACL filed a reply. (Rec. Docs. 1548 & 1558).

[604]*604IT IS ORDERED that the Tintomara Interests’ Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED (Rec. Doc. 1542) and judgment be entered in favor of the same and against National Liability in the amount of $387,215.41, plus costs and interest.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that ACL’s Motion for Disbursement of Funds (Rec. Doc. 1545) is DENIED without prejudice to reurge as an ex parte motion with certification that no other claimants oppose disbursement of the funds it seeks, especially in view of findings, infra.

FACTS OF THE CASE AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:

The facts underlying this consolidated matter are well-known to the Court and the Parties, and they need not be set forth with any detail here.1 These matters arise out of the July 23, 2008 collision between barge DM-932, which was under tow by the MTV MEL OLIVER, and the MTV TINTOMARA. ACL owned both the MEL OLIVER and barge DM-932, although both were operated by D.R.D. Towing Company, LLC (“DRD”) under a demise charter at the time of the collision. The collision split the barge into pieces and released its load, over 300,000 gallons of oil, into the Mississippi River.

That event spawned a number of suits in this Court. Most pertinent here, each of DRD, ACL, and the Tintomara Interests filed limitation actions (see respectively, Civil Action Nos. 08-4261, 08-4600, and 08-4023) and, separately, DRD’s liability insurers filed an interpleader action, in which they ultimately deposited $9,000,000.00, DRD’s policy limit. (See Civil Action No. 08-4156). Each of these actions was consolidated with the instant matter (Civil Action No. 08-4007, Rec. Docs. 10 & 206; Civil Action No 4600, Rec. Doc. 7).

In November of 2008, the Tintomara Interests filed a verified claim in ACL’s consolidated limitation action, seeking judgment against the MEL OLIVER, in rem, and against ACL in personam for damages incurred by TINTOMARA as a result of the collision. After several years of motion proceedings, settlement of individual claims made in various other cases consolidated with those implicated here,2 appeals and related litigation, DRD, ACL, and the Tintomara Interests proceeded to trial before the bench on their consolidated limitation actions, and tried their numerous and alternative claims against each other. After trial began in July of 2011, but before closing arguments in September of the same year, ACL and the Tinto-mara Interests stipulated to their respective damages sought from each other and with respect to claims pending against DRD. (Rec. Doc. 1368). That stipulation was entered into “with the consent and approval of ACL’s interested underwriters[,]” and stipulated Tintomara’s relevant damages to be $750,000 and ACL’s to be $70,000,000. Id. After a lengthy bench trial, the Court, by written opinion, found DRD and the MEL OLIVER to be solely at fault for the incident and entered Judgment that “D.R.D. Towing Company, LLC, in personam and the MTV MEL OLIVER, in rem, are liable to and shall pay ... [the Tintomara Interests and ACL] ... their respective stipulated recoverable damages, plus interest and costs, as set forth in” the aforementioned stipulation. (Rec. Docs. No. 1435 at 29-30, 1436). While appeal on such judgment was pending, the Court granted both (i) the Tintomara Interests’ [605]*605motion for disbursement of $750,000 (the amount of their principal damages) (Rec. Doc. 1483), and (ii) ACL’s'motion for disbursement of $7,100,000 in partial satisfaction of that party’s principal damages. (Rec. Doc. 1492). In each instance, the funds were drawn from the $9,000,000 in DRD’s insurer-initiated interpleader action. The Court’s judgment has since been affirmed in a one-paragraph per cu-riam opinion. (Rec. Doc. 1550).

The Tintomara Interests now seek pre- and post-judgment interests, along with costs, and move for judgment against the letter of undertaking (“LOU”) furnished by National Liability in ACL’s limitation action in the amount of $387,215.41, an amount comprised of that party’s calculations of $266,702.06 in prejudgment interest, $107,639.91 in costs, $7,388.95 in “post-judgment interest on pre-judgment interest and on the costs,” and $5,484.50 in interest incurred after payment was ordered but before it was delivered on the $750,000 principal judgment. (Rec. Doc. 1542 at 2).

Separately, ACL moves for disbursement of what remains in the interpleader action, less $3,401.25 in payment to DRD’s counsel, in further satisfaction of its stipulated damages. (Rec. Doc. 1545). Both motions are opposed and have been adequately briefed.

CONTENTIONS OF THE TINTOMARA INTERESTS

The Tintomara Interests move this Court to grant summary judgment awarding pre- and post-judgment costs and interests, for which the MEL OLIVER has been held liable in rem, by having that judgment enforced against the LOU furnished by ACL’s underwriter in ACL’s original limitation action, National Liability. (See Rec. Doc. No. 1542-3 at 1). The Tintomara Interests’ argument is premised upon the notion that the LOU furnished by National Liability was effectively substituted in the place of the MEL OLIVER as a res against which an in rem judgment is enforceable to the same extent that such judgment would be enforceable against the vessel itself. The movants characterize an action for limitation of liability in the admiralty context as one premised on both in personam and in rem liability. Thus, as security furnished in ACL’s limitation of liability action, the fact that ACL was exonerated from in personam liability is immaterial in light of the residual in rem liability of the MEL OLIVER, which was also covered by the LOU as security in that action.

CONTENTIONS OF ACL

For purposes of enforcement of the in rem judgment against the LOU, ACL argues that limitation of liability is a personal defense and that the LOU was furnished as security only for successful claims in ACL’s limitation action. Because ACL was exonerated from liability, ACL contends there are no “successful claims” in that limitation action which can be enforced against the LOU, to the extent that it only secures ACL’s potential in person-am liability as owner of the MEL OLIVER. Alternatively, ACL argues that if the in rem judgment against the MEL OLIVER is enforceable against National Liability’s LOU, then ACL and the Tinto-mara Interests ought to share a pro-rata distribution of the funds secured by that instrument.

BACKGROUND LAW

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Bluebook (online)
54 F. Supp. 3d 602, 2014 A.M.C. 2668, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135248, 2014 WL 4794758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabarick-v-laurin-maritime-america-inc-laed-2014.