LLOG Exploration Company, LLC v. Signet Maritime C

673 F. App'x 422
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 2016
Docket15-31123
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 673 F. App'x 422 (LLOG Exploration Company, LLC v. Signet Maritime C) 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
LLOG Exploration Company, LLC v. Signet Maritime C, 673 F. App'x 422 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Plaintiff-Appellee LLOG Exploration Company, L.L.C. (“LLOG”) filed suit against Defendant-Appellant Signet Maritime Corporation (“Signet”) in federal district court seeking a declaratory judgment that it did not owe delay damages under the parties’ maritime towing contract. The district court granted judgment in favor of LLOG and awarded attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses pursuant to the contract. For the following reasons, we affirm the declaratory judgment in favor of LLOG. Because we do not have jurisdiction over the district court’s award of attorney’s fees, we dismiss Signet’s appeal of that issue.

*423 I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

LLOG is a deepwater exploration company headquartered in Covington, Louisiana and Signet is a marine transportation and logistics services company headquartered in Houston, Texas. This case involves a dispute arising out of a contractual tow-age agreement entered into by Signet and LLOG in 2014. LLOG made arrangements for Signet and Crowley Maritime Services (“Crowley”), to tow its large offshore production facility, DELTA HOUSE (“Delta”), to a worksite in the Gulf of Mexico. Signet was hired to perform the short 17-mile inshore tow of the Delta from the Kiewet Offshore Services shipyard in In-gleside, Texas to the Aransas Pass sea buoy. Crowley was hired for the longer offshore tow of the Delta from the sea buoy to the Gulf of Mexico where the worksite was located.

In January 2014, in making arrangements for the inshore tow, Signet’s Manager for Chartering and Business Development, Jason Miura, and LLOG’s Offshore Construction Manager, Mark Farrow, began exchanging emails regarding the details of Signet’s bid for the tow project. During this time, LLOG was also working with Crowley to finalize the details of the offshore tow. In May 2014, Miura sent an email to Farrow confirming the terms of the parties’ agreement as follows: (1) designation of the vessels to be used for the tow; (2) designation of the rates for the tugs to be charged for the tow; (3) a requirement that LLOG provide Signet a minimum of seven days’ notice of the sail date for the tow; (4) a requirement that LLOG pay a minimum of four days tug hire after providing notice of sail date; and (5) a requirement that LLOG pay delay charges to Signet if the actual sail date was delayed past the date that LLOG nominated with seven days’ notice.

The potential delay charges included a “standby rate,” to be paid in addition to the four-day minimum tow charge, of 60% of the full charter hire per day until the first day of the actual tow, at which time the full charter hire plus surcharges would recommence pro rata until Signet’s vessels returned to its dock. Alternatively, a postponement fee would be assessed as a delay charge, which was calculated as the payment of the four-day minimum tow charge, with the right for LLOG to give seven days’ notice of a new, later sail date, subject to the regular applicable charges for the tow services actually rendered.

In July 2014, LLOG accepted Signet’s February 2014 bid to provide five tugs for the Delta tow project, subject to the parameters of all pertinent documents and correspondences which, together, encompassed the contract (referred to herein as “the contract”) for the project. 1 Prior to the commencement of the tow project, LLOG sent various emails to contacts involved and often included Signet on these correspondences. The dispute arose between the parties as a result of an email LLOG sent on July 15, 2014, to Crowley and multiple other contacts involved in the tow project, ie., the “tow team,” stating in relevant part:

The tow-out window has been narrowed from August 4th to August 17th with *424 anticipation we will sail at the front end of the window. All tow related activities need to be ready for August 4th. Tabitha has been notified and she will be modifying the channel closure with the USCG accordingly.

Although the email went to numerous contacts involved in the tow project, it did not go to Miura, the Signet manager with whom Farrow had negotiated the inshore tow project. Then on August 6, 2014, Farrow advised the tow team, including Crowley, that the tow window was being revised to the time period from August 29th to September 12th. Crowley responded acknowledging the new tow window and confirming that it would continue to maintain the terms and conditions of its own contract with LLOG.

Miura and Barry Snyder, Signet’s CEO and president, contacted Farrow in early August and expressed that Signet had construed the July 15th email as LLOG’s declaration of a specific sail date of either August 4th or 14th. Consequently, Signet had prepared to sail for August 4th. Since LLOG was no longer prepared to sail on that date, Signet requested that it sail no later than the last day in the window “as per the postponement fee already agreed.” Farrow responded by stating that LLOG’s agreement with Signet did not require a notification window, but only seven days’ notice of a sail date. He explained that although he had copied some Signet employees and the tow team on the email referencing the tow window declared with Crowley, his doing so was “contractually inconsequential” to Signet, who was never given notice of a sail date or directed to have its own tugs ready at that time.

The parties continued to communicate via email with respect to the purported tow delay and on September 3, 2014, LLOG provided Signet with seven days’ notice for a sail date of September 10th. Signet responded to that email and confirmed that its tugs would be ready for the tow on that date. That same day, Signet sent LLOG an invoice for a postponement fee in the amount of $650,496. LLOG refused payment of the invoice. The tow ultimately commenced on September 14th and lasted approximately twelve hours. Because the tow did not commence until four days after the nominated sail date, LLOG paid Signet for the four-day minimum tow charges, plus the charge for the actual day of the inshore tow, which totaled $912,096.

On December 10, 2014, LLOG filed a complaint for declaratory judgment in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana seeking a determination of the obligations of the parties under the contract. LLOG’s complaint sought a declaration that it did not owe the postponement fee as invoiced by Signet in the amount of $650,496. Signet filed an answer and counterclaim generally denying the allegations of LLOG’s complaint and asserting a counterclaim for “standby damages” under the contract in the total amount of $3,322,368—accounting for the days comprising the alleged tow delay from August 4th through September 9th.

After a two-day bench trial, the district court concluded that Signet had failed to carry its burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that LLOG had breached the contract. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the district court acknowledged that LLOG gave Signet seven days’ notice of a sail date on September 3rd, for a final sail date of September 10th. Because the sail actually commenced on September 14th, LLOG paid for five days of the tow as invoiced by Signet ($912,096), the four-day minimum tow charge plus the actual tow, and that was all that was owed under the contract.

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673 F. App'x 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/llog-exploration-company-llc-v-signet-maritime-c-ca5-2016.