Geico Marine Insurance Company v. Amzim Marine Services, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 12, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-00829
StatusUnknown

This text of Geico Marine Insurance Company v. Amzim Marine Services, LLC (Geico Marine Insurance Company v. Amzim Marine Services, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geico Marine Insurance Company v. Amzim Marine Services, LLC, (M.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

GEICO MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY, a Maryland Corporation,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No.: 2:21-cv-829-SPC-KCD

AMZIM MARINE SERVICES, LLC,

Defendant. / OPINION AND ORDER This case is before the Court upon conclusion of a bench trial. The Court received testimony and exhibits in evidence during trial, and the Court has also received proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law from all parties. (Doc. 119, 120, 121). The Court now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law in this maritime negligence case. Two statements during closing arguments capture the evidentiary character of this case. First, Intervenor Plaintiff’s counsel requested “the miracle of resolution in their favor in these final moments.” (Doc. 114 at 174). Second, Plaintiff’s counsel boldly announced that “there are many issues in this case that we just don’t know.” (Doc. 114 at 193). It is not in the nature of burdens of proof to accommodate miracles, so the Court cannot grant Plaintiffs the miracle they are looking for.

Findings of Fact In 2017, Intervenor Plaintiff Gregory Shand (“Shand”) bought a new 40- foot boat from Formula Boats South for “just shy of $600,000.”1 (Doc. 112 at 50). Shand insured the boat with GEICO Marine Insurance Company

(“GEICO”)2 for $600,000. (Doc. 112 at 52). He named her SVAHA. SVAHA led a troubled life. In the same year of her purchase, SVAHA’s portside trim tab was replaced by Amzim Marine Services, LLC (“Amzim”), a marine repair business. (Doc. 112 at 110). This same trim tab was replaced

again in 2019 by Amzim. (Doc. 112 at 110; Doc. 114 at 111).3 SVAHA suffered walls moving, ceilings buckling, cabinetry shifting, and a reoccurring interior crack whenever she was taken out onto the water. (Doc. 112 at 114). Shand was “not very happy” with his purchase. (Doc. 112 at 113).

Shand sent SVAHA to the manufacturer (Formula Boats) in September 2019 for evaluation and repair, and he provided Formula with a list of thirteen

1 Shand testified to buying the boat for “just shy of $600,000” without further clarification. Shand Exhibit 29 indicates that “just shy of $600,000” means “$573,600.” 2 Shand did not testify directly to the fact that he insured SVAHA with GEICO. But Shand responded to questions from counsel such as “how much money did you receive from GEICO?” and “in regards to even your insurance policy with GEICO, you didn’t have to have a separate paid captain to operate?” (Doc. 112 at 56, 101). Additionally, Amzim Exhibit 22, a settlement letter concerning SVAHA, is from Plaintiff “GEICO Marine Insurance Company.” 3 In Mike Boyd’s deposition, excerpts of which were admitted at trial, he stated that the portside interceptor was replaced three times—2017, 2018, and 2019. (Boyd Depo, 9). items he wanted addressed. (Doc. 112 at 115, 117). One item was the repeated failure of the portside trim tab. (Doc. 112 at 115). But Formula took too long

to make the repairs, and Shand asked to have SVAHA returned to him. (Doc. 112 at 112). Shand was notified in November 2019 that SVAHA had been returned to Florida and was ready for pick up. (Doc. 112 at 115, 148, 170). A few days before Shand retrieved SVAHA, Amzim employee Zachary

Haley installed SVAHA’s portside interceptor at Formula’s request.4 (Doc. 113 at 7; Doc. 114 at 29-31; Boyd Depo, 41). The interceptor he installed was provided to him by Formula, and it was a factory part. (Boyd Depo, 19). Haley did not reference the Volvo Penta QL Boat Trim System manual (“Volvo

manual”) before installation, but he had installed many interceptors before and this specific interceptor over ten times. (Doc. 113 at 7). The Volvo manual instructs that 3M 4200 Marine Adhesive Sealant5 be applied to “the interceptor neck as well as around each of the screw holes.” (Shand Ex. 2, Fig. 19). It also

specifies that “pneumatic or electric tools” should not be used during installation because their use could result in over-tightening and damage to the interceptor unit. (Shand Ex. 2, Fig. 19).

4 Throughout trial, counsel and several witnesses referred to the “trim tab” and “interceptor” interchangeably. They are not, however, interchangeable. The interceptor is a component of the overall trim tab system. (Shand Ex. 2, Fig. 1). 5 The manual lists other types of acceptable sealants, but all the testimony here concerned the 3M 4200. (Shand Ex. 2, Fig. 19). Haley did not follow the manual, but applied sealant to the transom, the screws, and “around the boot area.” (Doc. 113 at 11, 16). He also installed the

screws with a battery-operated screwdriver. (Doc. 113 at 58-59; Doc. 114 at 123). This was how he had been taught to install interceptors by Gary Tantum,6 who testified that it is much cleaner to install the interceptor that way and there is no practical difference. (Doc. 114 at 53, 126-27). The parties

dispute whether appropriate sealant was used for the installation. The invoice for the work lists “MARINE FAST CURE 4200 SEALANT,” which is 3M 4200. (Amzim Ex. 25). At trial, Haley testified he used 3M 4200.7 (Doc. 113 at 81- 82).

After her new interceptor was installed by Haley, SVAHA made two successful voyages before sinking in January 2020. Her first post-installation voyage was a five-day trip in December 2019 from Fort Myers to Miami. (Doc. 112 at 124). Shand drove the boat from Fort Myers down to Marathon and

back up to Miami—about nine hours of runtime one-way. (Doc. 112 at 124). During this trip, SVAHA’s trim tab system was operational, and she did not

6 Gary Tantum was introduced by counsel as “principal of [Amzim] and company representatives.” (Doc. 112 at 14). There was no testimony on this point, but it appears uncontested. Intervening Plaintiff’s counsel remarked during a meandering direct examination question “I think we know who Gary Tantum is, he’s been introduced as the principal of Amzim.” (Doc. 112 at 63). It is clear from the record that Gary Tantum started Amzim. (Doc. 114 at 6-7). 7 To complicate matters, counsel objected sometimes (but not all the time) to certain prior statements by Haley coming into evidence— a statement that he used silicone sealant rather than 3M 4200. Haley’s hearsay statement was ultimately considered by the Court because counsel did not object when Patrick Bihary testified to it. (Doc. 112 at 202). take on water. (Doc. 112 at 125, 127). SVAHA was docked in Miami for four or five days, and each day Shand and his wife slept onboard without incident.

(Doc. 112 at 125). SVAHA returned to Fort Myers without incident and was placed on a boat lift. (Doc. 112 at 128). SVAHA’s second post-installation voyage was from Fort Myers to Naples in January 2020. (Doc. 112 at 123-124). During the initial leg of the trip—

about an hour and a half of runtime—SVAHA’s trim tab system was operational, and she did not take on water. (Doc. 112 at 124-25). But after SVAHA was docked in Naples and Shand and his wife had gone to sleep, SVAHA took on water. (Doc. 112 at 132). SVAHA’s high water alarm did not

sound, and her bilge pumps were not operating properly. (Doc. 112 at 50, 132, 300-301; Doc. 113 at 151). The Court does not have detailed information about the height of the water intrusion.8 Sea Tow and the fire department arrived on scene. (Doc. 112 at 141, 151,

174). Identifying the source of the water intrusion, Sea Tow pulled out the trim tab cables, plugged the hole with putty, and pumped the water from SVAHA. (Doc. 112 at 179, 77-78; Doc. 114 at 56). Gary Tantum arrived on

8 The evidence on this topic consisted of vague references to “several inches of water” (GEICO Ex. 1), photos of the high-water line with no scale (GEICO Ex. 2), and testimony that there was enough water to have triggered the high-water alarm (Doc. 112 at 291; Doc. 113 at 210).

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Geico Marine Insurance Company v. Amzim Marine Services, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geico-marine-insurance-company-v-amzim-marine-services-llc-flmd-2024.