Great Lakes Business Trust v. M/T Orange Sun

855 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2012 WL 685251
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 2, 2012
DocketNo. 08 Civ. 941 (KBF)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 855 F. Supp. 2d 131 (Great Lakes Business Trust v. M/T Orange Sun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Lakes Business Trust v. M/T Orange Sun, 855 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2012 WL 685251 (S.D.N.Y. 2012).

Opinion

AMENDED OPINION & ORDER

KATHERINE B. FORREST, District Judge.

The NEW YORK (referred to “the Dredge”) is the biggest and most powerful backhoe excavator dredge authorized to carry out dredging in U.S. waters. On January 24, 2008, it was stationary and carrying out dredging operations in Newark Bay. At just before 2:00 p.m. that day, the M/T ORANGE SUN, an ocean-going cargo vessel, collided with the Dredge, causing extensive damage. Defendants M/T ORANGE SUN, Arctic Reefer Corp. — that vessel’s owner, and Atlanship, S.A., the operator and manager of the M/T ORANGE SUN, conceded liability and paid between $5 and $6 million to settle the costs of salvage and repair.

Plaintiffs Great Lakes Business Trust (“Great Lakes”) — the Dredge’s owner— and Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., LLC (“GLDD”), which chartered the Dredge, brought this action for consequential damages: loss of use or lost profits damages, overhead, liquidated damages and prejudgment interest. Each category of damages relates to plaintiffs’ claim that during the period in which the Dredge was under repair, plaintiffs were unable to put the Dredge to productive use. The most significant damages claim is that for loss of use. Altogether, however, plaintiffs have asserted a damage claim in excess of $13 million.

This Court held a bench trial on January 23-25, 2012.1 The following individuals testified on plaintiffs’ behalf: Bruce Biemeck, President and Chief Financial Officer of Great Lakes, Christopher Gunsten, Project Manager for Great Lakes, Brian Goetchius, the Northeast Region Port Engineer and Dredge New York Technical Manager [134]*134for Great Lakes, John Vickers, who testified as both an expert on vessel repairs and as a fact witness who had seen certain of the repairs in progress, and Samuel Rosenfarb, a damages expert who testified as to an appropriate measure of lost profits. This Court found each of plaintiffs’ fact witnesses credible. In addition, this Court found that the expert testimony of Messrs. Vickers and Goldfarb was helpful to the Court, and based in sound analytics and experience; the Court therefore credits their testimony.

The defendants did not present any percipient witnesses. They presented testimony from three experts: Rik Van Hem-men, an expert on vessel repair, Robbert Ten Veen, an expert on vessel repair, and Louis Magnan, a damages expert who testified that no lost profits ought to be awarded. Each of Messrs. Van Hemmen and Ten Veen work with individuals who were in the presence of the Dredge for periods of time in which repairs to it were ongoing. (Those individuals included Wayne Thomas, who worked for defendants’ insurer and wrote a number of reports about the Dredge’s repairs, see Exs. 36-42, none of which contains a single complaint regarding the repair process.) Defendants did not call those individuals.

This Court found defendants’ experts ultimately unhelpful, to the determinations that it needed to make in this matter. Neither of the experts on the repairs to the Dredge offered specific, detailed opinions based in more than ipse dixit, that particular repair items took an unreasonable length of time.2 While both testified that the overall period was unreasonable, and Mr. Ten Veen testified that the repairs associated with the crane were unreasonable, those opinions were without sufficient basis in the actual facts relating to the repair situation of the Dredge. Defendants’ damages expert opined that various assumptions contained in Mr. Rosenfarb’s analysis were flawed. However, after careful consideration of the reports of both damages experts and their testimony at trial, this Court credits the testimony of Mr. Rosenfarb and not that of Mr. Magnan.

Neither party made any Daubert motions to preclude the testimony of any proposed expert.

This Opinion constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. As set forth below, this Court finds that the plaintiffs are entitled to an award of demurrage damages in the amount of $11,736,643 and prejudgment interest calculated at the rate of 3.66 percent.

This Court declines to award liquidated damages or overhead. The testimony at trial was sufficiently unclear as to the reasons why the Army Corps of Engineers might have withheld liquidated damages and whether it would in fact continue to withhold such monies. In addition, the Court did not find that plaintiffs proved by a preponderance of the evidence the amount of overhead recoverable.

OVERVIEW OF THE DISPUTE

New facts are in dispute. The parties agree on when and how the allision (ie., when a moving, waterborne vessel collides with another, stationary vessel) occurred and that, as a result, the Dredge required significant repairs.

The outcome of this matter, and the primary focus at trial, turns on two sets of related legal and factual issues: (1) whether plaintiffs proved their claimed lost prof[135]*135its with the requisite level of “reasonable certainty;” and (2) for what period of time should lost profits be calculated? Put another way, for what period of time should defendants be charged for the plaintiffs’ inability to put the Dredge to productive use during repairs?3 Issues relating to liquidated damages, overhead and prejudgment interest were tangential to these two primary issues.

FINDINGS OF FACT

A. The Parties

1. Plaintiff GREAT LAKES BUSINESS TRUST No. 1998-Dtd 10/10/98 (defined above as “Great Lakes”) is a trust organized under Delaware law. (Joint Pretrial Order (Dkt. No. 40), Stipulated Facts (cited herein as “SF”) ¶ 1.)

2. The Dredge NEW YORK (defined above as the “Dredge”) is a baekhoe-type dredge based in New York Harbor. Great Lakes owns the Dredge New York and chartered it to GLDD. (Biemeck Aff. ¶¶ 14, 16-17.) Pursuant to the terms of the bareboat charter, Great Lakes has the use of the Dredge through April 1, 2020. The term of the charter is fixed and was not extended as a result of the allision and the subsequent repair period. (Biemeck Aff. ¶ 51.) As a result, there are a fixed number of days for which Great Lakes can use the Dredge to earn income. (Id.)

3. Plaintiff GLDD is a dredging company that performs dredging work around the world — both in North America and elsewhere. GLDD operates a fleet of dredges and other support vessels. (Biemeck Aff. ¶¶ 9,11-12.)

4. Great Lakes’ most significant client in and around the New York Harbor is the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the “Army Corps”). (Biemeck Aff. ¶24, 34-36, 38.)

5. Defendant ARCTIC REEFER CORP., INC. (“Arctic Reefer”) is a corporation organized under the laws of Liberia. (SF ¶ 5.) Defendant Arctic Reefer owns the M/T Orange Sun, an ocean-going cargo tanker. (SF ¶¶ 4-5.) Defendant ATLANSHIP, S.A. is a Swiss corporation that operates and manages the M/T ORANGE SUN. (SF ¶ 6.)

B. The Dredge NEW YORK

6. No one has disputed that the Dredge has characteristics that set it apart from any other dredge currently operating in U.S. waters. It is a mechanical dredge that uses a large, sophisticated excavator with a suspended bucket to excavate the sea bottom. The Dredge is 192.1 feet long, 57.4 feet in breadth, and is capable of operating with bucket sizes from 13 to 24 cubic yards. It is unique in its size and power. (Biemeck Aff. ¶20; see also SF ¶¶ 23-24; Tr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
855 F. Supp. 2d 131, 2012 WL 685251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-lakes-business-trust-v-mt-orange-sun-nysd-2012.