Hyatt v. ABR Logistics, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 22, 2023
Docket2:22-cv-04004
StatusUnknown

This text of Hyatt v. ABR Logistics, LLC (Hyatt v. ABR Logistics, LLC) 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
Hyatt v. ABR Logistics, LLC, (E.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA MICHAEL HYATT ) CIVIL ACTION NO-: 2:22-cv-04004 VERSUS JUDGE ELDON E. FALLON ABR LOGISTICS, LLC.,. THOMAS JOHNSON, MAGISTRATE KAREN W. ROBY AND QBE UK LIMITED )

ORDER AND REASONS The Court has before it cross motions for summary judgment by Defendant and Third- Party Plaintiff ABR Logistics, LLC, Thomas Johnson, and QBE UK Limited and by Third-Party Defendant Alabama Shipyard, LLC. After reviewing the parties’ briefings and the applicable law, the Court now rules as follows. I. BACKGROUND This case arises out of an alleged personal injury to Plaintiff Michael Hyatt (“Hyatt”) by Defendants ABR Logistics, Thomas Johnson, and QBE UK Limited (collectively “ABR Logistics”). Complaint, R. Doc. 1 at 2. Hyatt was an employee of Alabama Shipyard, LLC (“ASY”) and alleges that he was injured on October 20, 2021, as he was taken from Port Fourchon to the rig HERCULES 202, acold stacked jack-up rig which ASY had recently purchased as scrap.! Third-Party Complaint, R. Doc. 10 at 3; Memo for Summary Judgment, R. Doc. 29-1 at 4. The HERCULES 202 was located approximately seven miles offshore. R. Doc. | at 2. On or about October 5, 2021, ASY entered into a Master Time Charter Agreement (“MTCA”) with ABR Logistics, which owned and operated the M/V MISS WYNTER, an offshore

ASY is a ship repair and ship breaking and scrapping business with its facility located in Alabama on the Mobile River. R. Doc. 29-1 at 4.

supply vessel captained by Thomas Johnson. R. Doc. 10 at 2; R. Doc. 1 at 3. Pursuant to the MTCA, Hyatt and other ASY employees were aboard the MISS WYNTER in transit from Port Fourchon to the decommissioned rig in order to “dead tow” the rig back to ASY for dismantling. R. Doc. 29-1 at 1-2. Hyatt was a crane operator whose task was to board the rig by ladder from the MISS WYNTER and then use the crane to bring the rest of the ASY employees aboard the rig. Id.

ABR Logistics describes this ladder as the “lone remaining ladder on the [rig]” and the “sole means of ingress to board the” HERCULES 202, and that Hyatt was the only employee who was required to access the rig by ladder because he would bring the rest of the ASY employees over via crane. R. Doc. 10 at 3. While Hyatt attempted to transfer to the ladder, the MISS WYNTER crashed into the ladder and crushed his right hand, causing him to sustain “the severing of several arteries and tendons and partial amputation of his fingers.” R. Doc. 1 at 2. Hyatt brought suit against ABR Logistics asserting negligence through respondeat superior as to negligent hiring, training, and supervision of Captain Johnson and asserting that he was not warned by ABR Logistics as to impending ship maneuvers and that ABR Logistics failed to control

the vessel, thereby creating a dangerous situation resulting in his injuries. Id. at 2-4. ABR Logistics soon after filed a Third-Party Complaint against ASY as Hyatt’s employer, arguing (1) that the MTCA allocates risk and indemnities between ABR Logistics and ASY such that ASY is obligated to hold ABR Logistics harmless for claims asserted by ASY employees, and (2) that the MTCA required ASY to provide additional insurance coverage to ABR Logistics. R. Doc. 10 at 5-6. ABR Logistics alleges that after tendering their defense and requesting the additional insurance coverage, ASY’s insurer declined coverage, specifically citing “that the watercraft exclusion of its general liability policy was not deleted nor was it requested to be deleted.” Id. at 6. ABR Logistics asserts that this failure to indemnify and this failure to obtain additional insurance coverage naming ABR Logistics as an insured pursuant to the MTCA constitutes a breach of the MTCA. Id. at 6-7. II. PRESENT MOTIONS ABR Logistics and ASY have filed cross motions for summary judgment asking the Court to rule as a matter of law on the meaning of the various disputed provisions in the MTCA. ASY

argues in its motion that (1) the Longshore & Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”) voids the contractual indemnity provided by the MTCA, and (2) insurance coverage from ASY is excluded under the MTCA. R. Doc. 29-1 at 2-3.2 As to contractual indemnity, ASY acknowledges that Articles 14 and 15 of the MTCA purport to provide for reciprocal indemnity for personal injury claims, but argues that 33 U.S.C. § 905(b) voids such provisions. Id. at 7-8. ASY relies on the following statutory language: In the event of injury to a person covered under this chapter caused by the negligence of a vessel, then such person, or anyone otherwise entitled to recover damages by reason thereof, may bring an action against such vessel as a third party in accordance with the provisions of section 933 of this title, and the employer shall not be liable to the vessel for such damages directly or indirectly and any agreements or warranties to the contrary shall be void.

33 U.S.C. § 905(b) (emphasis added). As to the insurance requirement, ASY notes that ABR Logistics is not prevented “from seeking insurance coverage from a longshore employer as an additional insured where the parties have clearly reached an agreement.” R. Doc. 29-1 at 8. However, ASY argues that ABR Logistics misreads the language in the MTCA and that Article 12 of the MTCA “expressly and explicitly excludes ASY from obtaining insurance to benefit ABR Logistics.” Id. at 9. To support this position, ASY points to the sentence in Article 12, which reads:

2. The motion presents an additional claim arguing that the LHWCA also excludes tort indemnity, but in a telephone status conference on November 7, 2023, counsel represented to the Court that the tort issue can be disregarded in adjudicating these cross motions. See Minute Entry, R. Doc. 31. Therefore, this Order will not address the tort indemnity question but reserves its right to rule on it at a later date if the parties so move. “It is understood and agreed that CLIENT’s [ASY’s] liability insurance shall exclude coverage for those risks assumed or insured by COMPANY [ABR Logistics] in this MASTER AGREEMENT.” Id. (quoting the MTCA, R. Doc. 29-3 at 26). ASY also points to Exhibit B of the MTCA, arguing that it is in fact ABR Logistics who is required to obtain additional insurance naming ASY as a named insured. Id. at 9.

On the other hand, ABR Logistics argues that the terms of the MTCA clearly provide for a “knock-for-knock indemnity agreement as is common in the maritime industry.” Memo for Summary Judgment, R. Doc. 30-1 at 4. ABR Logistics claims that, as to the contractual indemnity issue, ASY selects one sentence from Article 12 as the basis for its position but that the MTCA, when read in whole, requires an opposite conclusion. Id. at 5. Relying on Articles 12, 13, 14, and 15, ABR Logistics asserts that the MTCA requires that each party to the MTCA indemnify the other as to personal injury claims by its own employees, that is, that ABR Logistics is to indemnify ASY for any injuries sustained to ABR Logistics employees, and that ASY is to indemnify ABR Logistics for any injuries sustained to ASY employees, like Hyatt. Id. ABR Logistics emphasizes

the language in Articles 14 and 15, the reciprocal indemnity provisions, that states such indemnity is agreed even if the injury was as a result of the other party’s negligence or fault. Id. In essence, ABR Logistics reads the MTCA to say that even if Hyatt were injured because of ABR Logistics’s negligence or fault, ASY is to indemnify them because Hyatt is an ASY employee. See id.

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Bluebook (online)
Hyatt v. ABR Logistics, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyatt-v-abr-logistics-llc-laed-2023.