In re: Transporter

217 F.3d 335
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2000
Docket99-30703
StatusPublished

This text of 217 F.3d 335 (In re: Transporter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Transporter, 217 F.3d 335 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

217 F.3d 335 (5th Cir. 2000)

In Re: In the Matter of the Complaint of TRANSPORTER MARINE, INC., as Owner of M/V Transporter, and GULF TRAN INC., as Operator of the M/V Transporter, for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability.
TRANSPORTER MARINE, INC., as owner of M/V Transporter; GULF TRAN INC., As Operator of M/V Transporter, Petitioners-Appellants,
v.
NEWFIELD EXPLORATION COMPANY; ET AL., Claimants,
NEWFIELD EXPLORATION COMPANY; ST. PAUL SURPLUS LINES INSURANCE COMPANY, Claimants-Appellees,
and
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, on behalf of the United States Coast Guard, Appellee.
NEWFIELD EXPLORATION COMPANY; ST. PAUL SURPLUS LINES INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
EROICA HALL also known as RICO HALL, Defendant,
v.
TRANSPORTER MARINE, INC.; GULF TRAN INC.; Defendants-Appellants.

No. 99-30703

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS, FIFTH CIRCUIT

July 13, 2000

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of LouisianaBefore WIENER, BENAVIDES, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

This appeal involves narrow legal issues of first impression arising from a collateral skirmish in the same district court that is conducting a marine limitation of liability proceeding. That proceeding was provoked by Petitioners, the owners and operators of the M/V Transporter, after Claimant-Appellee Eroica R. Hall, a seaman on the M/V Transporter, lost both legs in a shipboard accident.1 Some time after the incident, the Coast Guard instituted administrative proceedings against Petitioners for allegedly failing properly to comply with the Coast Guard's regulations that require marine employers to test for drugs and alcohol all those on board a vessel who are directly involved in a serious marine incident.2 The Coast Guard's authority to require such testing is derived from a federal statute.3

Petitioners, whose rights to invoke court protection in exoneration or limitation of liability emanate from the Limitation of Liability Act of 1851 ("the Limitation Act"),4 obtained an order from the district court directing all persons with claims for any losses, damages, injuries, or destruction resulting from or incidental to Hall's accident to file claims in those proceedings, and restrained the commencement or continued prosecution of any action or proceeding against Petitioners. They contended that the district court's orders require the Coast Guard to assert its claims for fines and penalties under its drug and alcohol testing regulations in the exoneration and limitation action. The Coast Guard countered by insisting that its drug testing regulations and all proceedings thereunder are subject to the Administrative Procedures Act ("APA"), do not arise from and are not in connection with the maritime action underlying the Limitation Act proceedings in the district court, are temporally remote from Hall's accident, and are regulatory in nature and thus not subject to the otherwise broad sweep of the Limitation Act.

The district court agreed with the Coast Guard and denied the requests of Petitioners on two separate grounds: (1) The regulatory proceedings of the Coast Guard are not subject to limitations under the Act, and (2) those regulatory proceedings arose from a failure to act (inadequate compliance with the drug testing requirements) that occurred after Hall's accident and, as such, were not "done, occasioned, or incurred" as part and parcel of the accident. Dissatisfied with the rulings of the district court, Petitioners instituted this appeal.

I.

Petitioners proffer at least four issues on appeal:

1. Whether federal sovereign immunity exempts the Coast Guard administrative hearing from proceedings conducted in the district court under the Limitation Act;

2. Whether, as a matter of statutory interpretation or otherwise, the Coast Guard administrative proceedings are exempt from the Limitation Act;

3. Whether, as a matter of statutory interpretation, the facts of this case demand that these particular Coast Guard administrative proceedings come within the statutory ambit of the Limitation Act, assuming it is found applicable in the first place; and

4. Whether, and to what extent, a determination that Gulf Tran had "privity and knowledge" of the violationsthat give rise to the Coast Guard administrative proceedings, might be relevant, thereby removing such proceedings from the protections afforded by the Limitation Act.

As we shall proceed to analyze issues 2 and 3 and to dispose of this appeal in alternative rulings on those two issues, we need not and therefore do not address issues 1 and 4.

A. Exemption of Coast Guard Administrative Proceedings from the Limitation Act

The Coast Guard requires marine employers to test for drug and alcohol abuse all persons on board a vessel who are directly involved in a serious marine incident.5 Petitioners do not contest the authority of the Coast Guard to require such testing and to require submission of the results of such testing to the Coast Guard. Petitioners focus instead on the determination of the proper forum in which these administrative requirements can and should be enforced: (1) a Limitation Act proceeding in district court, or (2) an administrative hearing in accordance with Coast Guard procedures under the aegis of the Administrative Procedures Act. Petitioners insist that the broad language of the Limitation Act and the protection it affords apply to enjoin all other proceedings in any other forum. They argue that this is the only way to protect an owner who is personally free from blame from damages that arise out of a marine incident. In diametric opposition, the Coast Guard insists that its proceedings are exempt from the Limitation Act.

There is a dearth of jurisprudence on this point. We find some guidance in the opinion of this court in University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston v. United States.6 In that case, the United States spent some three million dollars to remove a wrecked vessel from the sea bottom. The vessel owner filed a limitation action and the United States sought exclusion. We determined that the Wreck Act, part of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899,7 which governs allocation of costs incurred in removing a wrecked vessel, creates a statutory duty to remove the vessel. This in turn results in the owner's bearing the cost of removal, regardless of limitation. Reasoning that the government should not be penalized for promptly removing the wreck, we allowed the government to recover its costs unfettered by the constraints of a limitation proceeding.

We find the implications of that case instructive. Congress has granted authority to the Coast Guard to enforce mandated drug and alcohol regulations.

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Bluebook (online)
217 F.3d 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-transporter-ca5-2000.