NCL (Bahamas) Ltd. v. O.W. Bunker USA, Inc.

280 F. Supp. 3d 324
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedNovember 29, 2017
Docket3:17-mj-01327
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 3d 324 (NCL (Bahamas) Ltd. v. O.W. Bunker USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NCL (Bahamas) Ltd. v. O.W. Bunker USA, Inc., 280 F. Supp. 3d 324 (D. Conn. 2017).

Opinion

RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO STAY OR ENJOIN ARBITRATION

HAIGHT, Senior District Judge:

This declaratory action pits the owner of a Bahamas-flag ocean going passenger ship against the American affiliate of a Danish supplier of marine fuel oils who contracted with the shipowner to fuel the vessel at a Greek port, and initiated arbitration proceedings in London when the shipowner refused to pay the invoice for that fueling.

The shipowner, invoking the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, seeks a declaration that it is not liable to pay that invoice and is not obligated to arbitrate the supplier’s claim that it should do so, and now moves [Doc. 2] for an order of this Court staying or enjoining the arbitration, in London or elsewhere. The American supplier resists that motion. This Ruling resolves it.

I

The means of propelling ships across the world’s oceans has changed over the centuries. In the age of sail shipowners utilized the winds, free of charge but subject to uncontrollable vagaries; in May 1588, for example, the Spanish Amada was bound for England but “the wind was' blowing hard off the sea, right down the throat of the passage,” and “blockaded by the elements, the Amada lay for almost three weeks, anchored off Belem” in Portugal. Garrett Mattingly, The Armada 245-46 (1959). That complication changed when “in the 1840s, steam propulsion began to seriously compete with sail on the high seas.” Alex Roland, W. Jeffrey Bolster, & Alexander Keyssar, The Way of the. Ship 158(2008). .“The introduction of steam gave rise to a new naval requirement — coal— which soon became vital. Commerce under steam quickly settled down upon fixed routes, and depots of coal were established to meet its needs” Encyclopedia Britannica (1911 edition).

The limitations and disadvantages of coal gave rise in turn to its replacement by fuel oil as the means Of propulsion for ocean-going ships. “Bunker fuel,” the name commonly acquainted with marine uáe, is descended from the days of coal. This general term for marine fuel oil “is a legacy from the early days of shipping when coal was the main source of fuel ánd the coal was loaded into coal bunkers.” 5 Paul A. Russell & E.A. Stokoe Reeds Marine Engineering and Technology: Ship Construction for Marine Engineers 9 (6th ed, 2016). Liquid bunker fuel is now. stored aboard ship in “bunker tanks.” Id. The word “bunker” is also used as a verb: “[t]he operation of filling or replenishing a ship’s bunker with fuel is known as bunk-ering.” The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea 119 (Peter Kemp ed., 1st ed. 1976). The use of bunker fuel remains to this day the means of propelling the world’s .merchant fleets. While naval nuclear propulsion is used within naval warships such as supercarriérs and submarines, nuclear-powered non-combatant vessels have not developed beyond a few experimental ships. J.P. Ghose & R.P. Gokarn, Basic Ship Propulsion 3 (2004).

II

Until very recently, a leading company in the global business of refueling ships was O.W. Bunker, a Danish company founded in 1980, and by October of 2014 the world’s largest bunker supplier.1 According to publicly available business publications, O.W. Bunker owned and directly supplied to vessels some deliveries of bunkers, but for the most part the Danish entity conducted its world-wide business by setting up regional affiliated corporations, which- would in turn sub-contract with local suppliers to fuel a particular ship on a particular date at a particular port. That commercial practice is illustrated by the case at bar, which arises in the following manner.

Plaintiff NCL, (Bahamas) Ltd., doing business as Norwegian Cruise Lines .(“NCL”), is, despite its nordic name, a Bahamas corporation with its principal place of business in Miami, Florida. At the pertinent times, NCL owned and operated, among other vessels, the passenger ship M/V' NORWEGIAN SPIRIT, a 75,904 grogs ton vessel flying the Bahamas flag with a guest capacity of 2,018 (double occupancy). A time came in October, 2014 when the NORWEGIAN SPIRIT required refueling at the port of Pireaus, Greece.'

On October 8, 2014, NCL ordered bunkers to be delivered to the NORWEGIAN SPIRIT (hereafter sometimes “the Vessel”) at Pireaus on October 18, 2014. NCL placed that order with Defendant O.W. Bunker USA Inc. (“O.W. USA”), a Texas corporation and a wholly owned affiliate of a Danish company, O.W. Bunker. O.W. USA’s sales order confirmation, dated October 8, 2014, and addressed to NCL [Doc. 2-2], recited under the caption “Terms”:

The sale and delivery of the marine fuels described above are subject to the OW Bunker Group’s Terms and Conditions of sale(s) for Marine Bunkers. The acceptance of the marine bunkers by the Vessel named above shall be deemed' to constitute acceptance of the said general terms applicable to you as “Buyer” and to O.W. Bunker USA Inc. as “Seller.”

O.W. USA thereupon placed an order for the bunkers destined for the NORWEGIAN SPIRIT with O.W. Bunker Malta Ltd. (“O.W. Malta”), another affiliate of the Danish company. O.W. Malta’s sales order confirmation, on the same terms and addressed to O.W. USA, is dated October 9, 2014 [Doc. 34-1].

O.W. Malta thereupon placed an order for the bunkers destined for the NORWEGIAN SPIRIT with the company that would physically deliver the bunkers to the Vessel. This was a Greek company called EKO. EKO delivered the bunkers to the Vessel without incident as she lay at Pi-reaus on October 18, 2014. The NORWEGIAN SPIRIT then departed the port, refueled and presumably refreshed. It appears to be undisputed that EKO sent its invoice for the bunkers it supplied to O.W. Malta,, which had ordered the bunkers from EKO, and O.W. Malta sent its invoice to O.W. USA, which had ordered the same bunkers from O.W. Malta. O.W. USA sent its invoice for the same bunkers to NCL. That invoice, dated October 18, 2014 [Doc. 2-4], was in- the amount of $694,548.44. The due date was November 17, 2014.

Thus, as October yielded to November to 2014, and the NORWEGIAN SPIRIT continued on her voyage, there were three outstanding invoices for the bunkers delivered to the Vessel at Pireaus on October 8. In a well-ordered world these invoices would have been promptly paid, but disorder intruded when, on November 7, the parent company, -O.W. Bunker, filed insolvency proceedings in Denmark. The global O.W. Bunker - group stopped paying invoices submitted by local physical, suppliers like EKO, resulting in a tsunami-like tidal wave of multi-jurisdiction litigation, of which the case at bar is one.

Ill

On November 13, 2014, after all three bunker invoices had been issued, but before payment became due or was made on any of them, O.W. USA filed to this District a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code.2 Compl. ¶ 5. See also Bankr. Petition, Case No. 14-51720. The OWB USA Liquidating Trust was created by. the Debtors’ First Modified Liquidation Plans, confirmed by the Bankruptcy Court for this District. Compl. ¶ 6. Defendant Kelly Beaudin Stapleton (“Beaudin Stapleton” or “the Trustee”), a citizen of Pennsylvania, was named the Liquidating Trustee. Id. ¶¶ 6-7.

Following the O.W.

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280 F. Supp. 3d 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ncl-bahamas-ltd-v-ow-bunker-usa-inc-ctd-2017.