Marine Carriers Corp. v. Fowler

429 F.2d 702
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 1970
DocketNo. 839, Docket 34547
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 429 F.2d 702 (Marine Carriers Corp. v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marine Carriers Corp. v. Fowler, 429 F.2d 702 (2d Cir. 1970).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge:

Like all maritime nations of the world, the United States treats its coastwise shipping trade as a jealously guarded preserve. In order to participate in this trade, a vessel’s credentials must be thoroughly American. The ship must have been built in an American shipyard and be owned by American citizens. Moreover, it must not have trifled with its American heritage.

Under the first proviso to section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, the statute we are required to construe in this case, any vessel which has acquired “the lawful right to engage in the coastwise trade, either by virtue of having been built in, or documented under the laws of the United States,” and which has later lost that right by being sold to a foreign owner, is prohibited from ever regaining its eligibility for the coastwise trade.

[704]*704I. Facts

The OBSERVER, the vessel whose eligibility for the coastwise trade we must adjudicate in this ease, is the issue of a marriage of convenience — and as occasionally happens with such marriages, the lineage is difficult to determine. In this case, the end product is the result of “jumboizing,” a process whereby the stern of one oil tanker is attached to the forebody of another in order to produce a tanker with a greater carrying capacity.

The OBSERVER’S ancestry begins with the tanker WAPELLO, a vessel constructed in 1953 in an American shipyard for Panamanian owners and placed under Panamanian registry. Some years later the WAPELLO was dismembered, and in a Japanese shipyard its forebody was joined to the stern of the tanker ESSO CHITTAGONG, an American built vessel which was later sold to a foreign owner and registered Panamanian. The product of this coupling became known as the SANTA HELENA, and was placed under Liberian registry. But the SANTA HELENA was to be no more than a way station for the old forebody of the WAPELLO. In 1966 the SANTA HELENA’S forebody (previously the forebody of the WAPELLO), was sold to Marine Carriers, who.then proceeded to attach it to the stern of the TRUSTCO, a vessel built in America in 1943, American owned ever since that date, and enrolled in the coastwise trade. The connection took place in an American shipyard, and the progeny was named the OBSERVER. The OBSERVER'S fore-body, which, as we have noted, was the forebody of the WAPELLO, comprises three-quarters of its total length. On the other hand, its stern, formerly the stern of the TRUSTCO, apparently is far more valuable than the forepart.

Before contracting for the purchase of the forebody of the SANTA HELENA, Marine Carriers commenced negotiations with various administrative agencies for appropriate documentation of the OBSERVER as an American vessel. The shipping laws provide for two basic types of documentation: registration and enrollment. Registration entitles a vessel to engage in foreign trade; enrollment is a prerequisite for participation in coastwise trade. See 46 U.S.C. §§ 11, 252. In April 1966, Marine Carriers inquired of the United States Maritime Administration whether the OBSERVER would be considered a privately owned American flag vessel and was advised that the OBSERVER “will be a vessel rebuilt in the United States.’’ In October 1966, however, in response to renewed inquiries by Marine Carriers, the Commissioner of Customs ruled that the OBSERVER would be ineligible for the coastwise trade. The basis for the Commissioner's ruling was that the OBSERVER’S forebody had formerly been the forebody of the WAPELLO, a ship which, under his interpretation of the first proviso to section 27, had forfeited the right to engage in the coastwise trade by having been built in the United States and later sold to a foreign owner.

When the joining of the stern of the TRUSTCO and the forebody of the SANTA HELENA, nee WAPELLO, to the OBSERVER had been completed, Marine Carriers applied to the Bureau of Custons for registration of the OBSERVER as an American ship. Since registration merely requires that a ship be owned by United States citizens, see 46 U.S.C. § 11, the Bureau issued a temporary Certificate of Registry and a new registration number to the OBSERVER. The Certificate of Registry recited that the OBSERVER was a rebuilt ship which had originally been built in the year 1943, the year of the TRUSTCO’S construction.

What Marine Carriers really desired to secure for the OBSERVER, however, was not merely registration as an American vessel but also enrollment in the coastwise trade. Accordingly, it petitioned the Secretary of the Treasury to review the determination of the Commissioner of Customs that the OBSERVER was ineligible for enrollment. The Treasury replied that it had carefully [705]*705considered the issues involved and agreed with the decision of the Commissioner. A request for rehearing proved equally unavailing.

Having exhausted all possible avenues of administrative relief, Marine Carriers commenced this action in the Southern District of New York in October 1967, seeking a declaratory judgment that the OBSERVER was entitled to enrollment in the coastwise trade and an injunction ordering those who had excluded the OBSERVER to approve her enrollment. Having submitted affidavits and exhibits, both the plaintiff and the defendants moved for summary judgment. Judge Tenney granted the motion of Marine Carriers and ordered the defendants to approve the OBSERVER’S application for coastwise trading privileges.

II. The Decision Below — Eligibility of the WAPELLO for the Coast-wise Trade

Due to the OBSERVER’S somewhat peculiar and involved origins, troublesome and potentially material issues of fact abounded in this case at the time the parties moved for summary judgment. Should the OBSERVER be characterized as an entirely new ship, as a rebuilt TRUSTCO or as a rebuilt SANTA HELENA? Under one view of the law, however, all of these issues were immaterial. The OBSERVER, as we have stated, was constructed in an American shipyard from the forebody of the WAPELLO and the stern of the TRUST-CO. The TRUSTCO’S eligibility for coastwise trade was not subject to question; it was, in fact, enrolled in this trade. If the WAPELLO, and a fortiori its forebody, were also eligible, it would follow that the OBSERVER, however it may be characterized, was entitled to coastwise trading privileges. The district court opted for this view and concluded that the WAPELLO was eligible for the coastwise trade and, accordingly, granted Marine Carriers’ motion for summary judgment. Only if this conclusion is correct may we avoid the knotty factual issues lurking in this case and uphold the grant of summary judgment. Accordingly, the first issue we proceed to discuss is the WAPELLO’S eligibility for the coastwise trade. In order to achieve some clarity in this complex case, we shall assume that Marine Carriers purchased not just the forebody of the WAPELLO but the entire vessel. Obviously, there can be no objection to the admission of the WAPELLO’S forebody to the coastwise trade if the entire vessel were entitled to be admitted.

To be admitted to the coastwise trade, a vessel must meet two basic requirements: it must have been built in an American shipyard and it must be owned by American citizens.1 46 U.S.C. §§ 11, 252.

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Marine Carriers Corporation v. Fowler
429 F.2d 702 (Second Circuit, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
429 F.2d 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marine-carriers-corp-v-fowler-ca2-1970.