In Re 1994 70' Hatteras M/Y Madame Musique bearing HIN HATD 4421934 and ON 999308

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 28, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00303
StatusUnknown

This text of In Re 1994 70' Hatteras M/Y Madame Musique bearing HIN HATD 4421934 and ON 999308 (In Re 1994 70' Hatteras M/Y Madame Musique bearing HIN HATD 4421934 and ON 999308) 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
In Re 1994 70' Hatteras M/Y Madame Musique bearing HIN HATD 4421934 and ON 999308, (M.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

RANDAL TOCA,

Petitioner, Case No. 2:23-cv-303-KCD

v.

DEBONAIR PROPERTIES LLC, TED HOBSON,

Claimants. /

ORDER This maritime case stems from a collision between two vessels in the Fort Myers Yacht Basin during Hurricane Ian. (See Doc. 1 ¶¶ 11-12.)1 The vessel Madame Musique became loose from its mooring and struck Knot Speed, which was secured to the adjacent dock. Madam Musique’s owner—Petitioner Randal Toca—seeks “exoneration from liability” under the Shipowner’s Limitation of Liability Act. (Id. ¶ 28.) He now moves for summary judgment, claiming “the undisputed record evidence establishes [he] is free from negligence and is entitled to exoneration as a matter of law.” (Doc. 72 at 2.) He also moves to exclude Claimants’ maritime expert under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms.,

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all internal quotation marks, citations, case history, and alterations have been omitted in this and later citations. Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993). (Doc. 73.) For the reasons below, both motions are DENIED.

I. Background The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. As Hurricane Ian approached Southwest Florida, Knot Speed’s owner—Claimant Ted Hobson—reserved a slip in the yacht basin and secured his ship. At the same

time, Madame Musique was undergoing repairs on Gasparilla Island. (Doc. 1 ¶ 13.) Toca was also aware of the storm, so he reserved a slip near Lake Okeechobee and hired a crew to take it there. Captain Daniel Tamm would pilot the boat, along with engineers Robert Burich and Tristian Long. (Id. ¶¶

14-15.) But Madame Musique never reached its destination. Although Toca sent Captain Tamm to Florida five days before the hurricane, he did not arrive until the night of September 26, less than two days before landfall. (See Doc. 72-2 at

54:9-14, 55:7-9.) Making matters worse, the tides were too low for the crew to leave the marina the next morning. (See Doc. 72-5 at 14:20-25, 15:1-9.) As a result, Madame Musique did not depart Gasparilla Island until the afternoon of September 27. (Id.)

To reach Lake Okeechobee, the crew proceeded up the Caloosahatchee River. Shortly after passing Fort Myers, they found their path blocked by an unattended railroad bridge. Unable to continue upriver, the crew searched for alternatives, ultimately deciding to return to Fort Myers and the yacht basin where Knot Speed was moored.

When they arrived, the crew found plenty of space on B dock. (Doc. 72-5 at 70:5-8.) According to the yacht basin’s Dockmaster, Mary Grace VanVliet, that’s because B dock had been cleared in anticipation of Ian’s arrival. (See Doc. 72-6 at 24:1-4; Doc. 72-11 at 30; Doc. 74-15.) It was the yacht basin’s most

exposed dock, setting the boundary between the marina and the Caloosahatchee River. It also had shorter pilings and only allowed for parallel parking, meaning vessels could only secure themselves along one side. (See Doc. 72 at 8; Doc. 72-6 at 31:21-25.)

Working within the dock’s structural limitations, the crew—under Toca and Captain Tamm’s instruction—secured Madame Musique with “as many lines as possible”: two lines from the front, two from the middle, and one from the rear. (Doc. 72-4 at 23:20-25, 24:1-24.) Although Captain Tamm thought the

lines were secured and he would not have done anything differently, (Doc. 72- 2 at 25:20-25), he acknowledges that the ultimate success of this configuration depended on the strength of the concrete piling to which the center lines were tied, (id. at 16:20-25, 17:1-3).

The next afternoon, Hurricane Ian arrived in earnest. As the storm intensified, a one-hundred-foot ship, which had been moored to Madame Musique’s outside, pulled away, exposing it to the brunt of the wind and waves. (Doc. 72-3 at 8.) As a result, Madame Musique began to yo-yo between the dock and the limits of its lines. (Doc. 72-4 at 30:23-25, 31:1-14.) As it snapped back

to the dock, Madame Musique pounded the concrete piling to which its middle lines were attached. It did this forty times or so before the crew heard a loud crack, indicating that the hull had been breached, and the ship began taking on water. (Doc. 72-4 at 31:6-25.) Then, the concrete piling to which the middle

lines were tied gave out. (Id.) Suddenly, three lines—those extending from its front and rear—were all that was holding Madame Musique to the dock. (Doc. 72-2 at 16:20-17:3.) Taking on water and hardly moored, the crew abandoned ship.

The remaining lines did not hold for long. Shortly after the crew left, Madame Musique was on the loose and drifting towards Knot Speed. Each member of Madame Musique’s crew believes the Knot Speed sank before the collision. (See Doc. 72-2 at 40:3-25, 41:1-7, 43:10-16, 51:19-25, 52:1-

4; Doc. 72-4 at 43:1-18, 52:10-19; Doc. 72-5 at 35:4-25.) Yet none appear to have seen the boats collide, nor do they know when the Knot Speed breached its hull. Instead, it appears they’ve each deduced that Knot Speed had already sunk based on how it sits in a handful of still-frame photographs. (Id.)

Hobson (Knot Speed’s owner) disagrees. He questions whether the crew—who spent much of the night concerned with the viability of their own ship, before plunging into raging waters to save their own lives—were able to judge the viability of Knot Speed. What is more, Hobson suggests the crewmembers’ uniform deductions may result from an effort to create a single

story that minimizes their role in Knot Speed’s demise. Hobson is not alone in believing Madame Musique destroyed Knot Speed. Ken Winchester witnessed the collision, and he offers a different version of events. (Doc. 72-7 at 54:19-24.) Unlike Madame Musique’s crew, who were

docked across the yacht basin, Winchester was familiar with Knot Speed and had the opportunity to see it throughout the day. (Id. at 26:1-25.) According to him, the ship was “rocking back and forth” in the surf and knocking the pylons that lined its slip, like “almost every [other] boat” in the yacht basin. (Id. at

25:18-26:21.) But it didn’t appear to be impaled before colliding with Madame Musique. (Id. at 26:5-8, 53:15-17.) In fact, Winchester did not witness any notable damage to Knot Speed before the collision. (Id. at 54:13-18.) Later that night, however, Winchester watched as Madame Musique slid alongside Knot

Speed, “pinned it against [a] piling,” and began to smash it “wildly.” (Id. at 27:22-28:15.) This lasted for “[m]ost of the evening,” (id. at 28:17-18, 46:19-21), and “made so much noise” that Winchester could hear tearing fiberglass over the storm, (id. at 28:1-5).

Regardless of whether Knot Speed suffered catastrophic damage and began to sink before the collision, or only did so because of its contact with Madame Musique, one thing is undisputed: when the storm passed, Knot Speed was destroyed and Madame Musique lay atop it. (See Doc. 73-1 at 4-5.) Because it is unclear how this came to be, the parties each hired experts to

opine on the cause and timing of Knot Speed’s demise. Toca retained David Morris, who surveyed Knot Speed, Madame Musique, and the Fort Myers Yacht Basin. (See Doc. 72-3.) He also interviewed Hobson, Winchester, Madame Musique’s crew, and several witnesses. (Id.)

Having considered this evidence, in addition to photographs taken during the storm, Morris concluded that the Knot Speed had become “partially submerged” before its allision with Madame Musique, when several dock pilings penetrated its hull. (Id. at 28-29.)

Hobson retained George M. Zeitler, a retired Coast Guardsman who spent most of his service conducting “commercial vessel safety inspections and casualty investigations.” (Doc.

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In Re 1994 70' Hatteras M/Y Madame Musique bearing HIN HATD 4421934 and ON 999308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-1994-70-hatteras-my-madame-musique-bearing-hin-hatd-4421934-and-on-flmd-2025.