National Marine Service, Inc. v. C. J. Thibodeaux & Co.

380 F. Supp. 1076, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11805
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1973
DocketCiv. A. 71-H-907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 380 F. Supp. 1076 (National Marine Service, Inc. v. C. J. Thibodeaux & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Marine Service, Inc. v. C. J. Thibodeaux & Co., 380 F. Supp. 1076, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11805 (S.D. Tex. 1973).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER:

SEALS, District Judge.

This is a suit to collect the value of services rendered in the repair of a vessel in the sum of $18,683.76. Jurisdiction of this Coui’t is based on 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332 and 1333. The Plaintiff, National Marine Services, Inc., is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Saint Louis, Missouri. It operates a shipyard in Hartford, Illinois, where the repairs here at issue were performed on the vessel GRAND LAKE between December, 1969 and February, 1970. The Defendants are C. J. Thibodeaux and Company, a Texas corporation, and two individuals, D. J. Glenney III and J. Franklin Morris, and the Prairie Company, a partnership composed of the above named Defendants. 1 The Prairie Company was the owner of the vessel GRAND LAKE at the time the repairs were made. The parties have stipulated the reasonable value of the repairs to be $18,683.76.

The GRAND LAKE was chartered by Prairie Company to River Gulf Corporation, a Texas corporation owned and run by Fred Thompson, an employee of C. J. Thibodeaux and Company. River Gulf had no offices of its own. Thompson conducted its business from his desk in Thibodeaux’s brokerage house. The GRAND LAKE charter contained a prohibition against liens clause. A notice posted in the wheelhouse of the vessel identified Prairie Company as the owner, River Gulf as the charterer, and stated that, under the terms of the charter, River Gulf was not empowered to incur liens upon the vessel except for crew’s wages and salvage. Prairie Company at all relevant times was listed as the owner of the GRAND LAKE in “Merchant Vessels of the United States.” National Marine Sei'vice repaired and released the vessel without examining the charter, inspecting the wheelhouse, observing the notice, or contacting the owner in any way. 2

Upon the passage of a hundred days without being paid, National Marine contacted River Gulf and its President, Fred Thompson. Thompson said that River Gulf was seeking insurance coverage on the crankshaft repairs and would pay as soon as the insurance claim was paid. He asked National Marine to write a letter to the carrier concerning the claim, which it did; but no reply was ever received. National Marine then resorted to judicial process, filing a suit against River Gulf in the state courts in Houston on November 3, 1970, and a libel against the vessel in federal court in New Orleans on February 17, 1971. 3 The federal suit was instituted too late as the GRAND LAKE had burned, and sunk in April of 1970. In the state suit a default judgment was *1078 rendered against River Gulf on January 4, 1971. 4

Finding that River Gulf was judgment proof, National Marine filed the present action on August 18, 1971. National Marine now alleges inter alia that River Gulf was a corporate shell and an alter ego of Prairie Company; that the bareboat charter was a fiction; and that the repairs of the GRAND LAKE, done at River Gulf’s behest, were performed for the benefit of Prairie Company with its actual or constructive knowledge.

The evidence supports the Plaintiff’s contentions. C. J. Thibodeaux and Company is a marine charter brokerage house and shipping agent. Wishing to engage in the ownership and operation of vessels and barges, but unwilling to compete directly with its clients or use a name with an established brokering reputation, Thibodeaux formed a subsidiary corporation, Prairie Corporation, to handle such business.

The Prairie Corporation purchased the GRAND LAKE. Then in September of 1967, Thibodeaux liquidated its subsidiary corporation, but continued the operations through the Prairie Company partnership which it established with Morris and Glenney. 5 James Chadwick served as the President of both D. J. Thibodeaux and Company and Prairie Company. The partnership between C. J. Thibodeaux and Company and Morris and Glenney dissolved in December, 1970, as part of the dissolution the assets of Prairie Company were distributed and it ceased business in May, 1971. The Prairie Company partnership existed from at least January 1, 1968 to December 31, 1970, which encompasses all of the time relevant to this lawsuit. The “Prairie Company” entity owned the GRAND LAKE. In January, 1968, the GRAND LAKE and four barges chartered by C. J. Thibodeaux and Company, with an option to purchase, were chartered to Coastal Barge Lines of New Orleans. 6 Coastal Barge operated the tows as a unit, but failed to pay its charter hire. In January, 1969 Thibodeaux retrieved the tow when Coastal owed $120,000 in charter hire.

In the meantime, Fred Thompson, a Thibodeaux employee, had formed River Gulf Corporation in May of 1968 for the express purpose of operating vessels to carry marine freight. 7 River Gulf did not begin operations immediately; but in January, 1969 Thompson capitalized it with the minimum $1,000 and commenced operations. In January Thompson and Chadwick were discussing the GRAND LAKE, and according to Chadwick, Thompson said that he could handle the GRAND LAKE through River Gulf and have Mark Shurden operate it. Chadwick readily agreed and turned the vessel, worth $110,000 and the four barges, worth $181,000 over to his employee’s corporation without ever investigating the corporation or its assets. Chadwick prepared a bareboat charter between Prairie Company and River Gulf, but it was never presented for signature. 'The charter expired by its own terms in six months, but it was never renewed and no new charter was ever executed. Thompson then contracted with Shurden to operate the GRAND LAKE and her tow. Shurden hired the crew and paid wages. Thompson directed River Gulf’s operations, i. e., the *1079 GRAND LAKE and her tow, from his office at C. J. Thibodeaux and Company. In April of 1969, River Gulf engaged to purchase the four barges from Crekow Towing taking up Thibodeaux’s option. River Gulf executed a promissory note for $181,623.56 in favor of Crekow. Acting for Prairie Company, Chadwick orally guaranteed the note to Crekow. By June, River Gulf owed Prairie Company $40,000 in charter hire. At that time, River Gulf purchased another vessel M/V JACK T. In November, 1970, the JACK T was seized for seaman’s wages and eventually sold at auction. River Gulf ceased operations.

The relationship between River Gulf and Prairie Company cannot be regarded as arm’s length. Valuable property was turned over to River Gulf on no other basis than Chadwick’s professed confidence in Thompson. The charter was never executed. Prairie Company gratuitously guaranteed River Gulf’s promissory note to Crekow. Thompson ran River Gulf’s operations out of C. J. Thibodeaux and Company. Chadwick’s testimony that he did not discuss the purchase of the JACK T with Thompson when River Gulf’s operations were beginning to flounder is not credible.

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Bluebook (online)
380 F. Supp. 1076, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-marine-service-inc-v-c-j-thibodeaux-co-txsd-1973.