Orion Marine Construction, Inc. v. Mark Dawson

918 F.3d 1323
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 2019
Docket17-11961
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 918 F.3d 1323 (Orion Marine Construction, Inc. v. Mark Dawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orion Marine Construction, Inc. v. Mark Dawson, 918 F.3d 1323 (11th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:

*1325 This admiralty appeal requires us to navigate uncharted waters in order to determine what constitutes sufficient notice of a claim under the Shipowner's Limitation of Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 30501 , et seq. The Act establishes a procedure by which a shipowner can limit its liability for certain claims involving one of its vessels to the value of the vessel plus its then-pending freight. Id . § 30505(a). Importantly here, to invoke the Act's protection, the shipowner must bring a limitation-of-liability action in federal court "within 6 months after a claimant gives the owner written notice of a claim." Id. § 30511(a). If the owner meets the six-month statutory deadline, and then creates a qualifying limitation "fund," all related lawsuits against the owner "shall cease," leaving the claimants to pursue their rights in the limitation proceeding. Id. § 30511.

In connection with a large bridge-construction project in Florida, Orion Marine Construction used four barges to drive piles into the seabed. After numerous local residents complained that their homes had been damaged by vibrations caused by the barges' pile-driving activities, Orion filed a limitation action under the Act. Claimants Mark and Christine Dawson moved to dismiss Orion's suit, arguing that Orion had received adequate notice of the claims against it more than six months before it filed, that the action was therefore time-barred, and, accordingly, that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. The district court agreed and granted the Dawsons' motion to dismiss. We reverse.

This appeal presents several interesting and important questions about the meaning and operation of the Act:

First , does § 30511(a)'s six-month filing deadline erect a jurisdictional barrier to suit, as the Dawsons contend and the district court concluded? We hold that it does not, and that it is instead (like most timely-filing requirements) a non-jurisdictional claim-processing rule.

Second , what constitutes "written notice of a claim" within the meaning of § 30511(a)? We hold that in order to trigger the six-month filing period, a claimant (not someone else) must provide the shipowner or its agent (not someone else) with written (not oral) notice that reveals a "reasonable possibility" that his claim will exceed the value of the vessel(s) at issue.

Third , does a shipowner incur a duty to investigate known or potential claims immediately upon receipt of a claimant's notice, as the district court concluded? We hold that it does not, and that the duty to investigate arises only if the notice reveals the required "reasonable possibility."

Finally , did Orion receive the statutorily required written notice-revealing a reasonable possibility of claims that would exceed the value of its barges-more than six months before it filed its limitation action? We hold that it did not, and, accordingly, that its suit was timely filed.

I

A

The pertinent facts here are undisputed. In 2011, Orion-a company specializing in *1326 marine construction-contracted with the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) to rebuild the Pinellas Bayway Bridge in Pinellas County, Florida. As part of the project, Orion's barges were used to drive concrete piles into the bay floor. Hundreds of local residents complained that the vibrations created by Orion's pile-driving damaged their surrounding properties, and 247 of them eventually filed formal claims in the limitation action that gave rise to this appeal.

Early on, though, the claims trickled in slowly. Between March 2012 and June 2014, only nine residents lodged complaints-typically alleging cracks in their homes, patios, and driveways, or leaks in their pools-with either Orion, FDOT, or Orion's third-party administrator, FARA Insurance. We focus here on these first nine claimants because they (alone among the 247) made their complaints before November 11, 2014-and thus, critically, more than six months before Orion filed suit on May 11, 2015.

In response to a few of these early complaints, Orion dispatched an investigator to assess the alleged damage. Some of the cracks that he observed, he reported, were "old," and others were "minor" and "cosmetic." As for one of the reported pool leaks, he found that it was "just a crack in a PVC pipe." Orion installed vibration monitors at two residents' homes; the numbers came back "low" at one and "very, very low" at the other.

According to Orion, around December 2014 or January 2015 it began to receive property-damage claims "in bulk" from a public adjuster, beginning with 11 additional complaints during those two months alone. This flood of new claims, Orion says, prompted it to file its limitation action on May 11, 2015.

B

Mark and Christine Dawson-who lodged one of the original nine complaints-moved to dismiss Orion's action on the ground that it was untimely and, therefore, that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Orion's action was time-barred, they asserted, because Orion had received "written notice of a claim" within the meaning of 46 U.S.C. § 30511 (a) prior to November 11, 2014-and thus earlier than the statutorily specified six-months mark before it filed. Orion responded that none of the nine original claims provided it with proper notice under the Act because (1) a number of the complaints were not "written," as the Act requires, and (2) in any event, the complaints failed to reveal a "reasonable possibility" that the claims would exceed the aggregate value of the four vessels used during the bridge construction.

Because it "lacked sufficient factual information" about which of the original nine claims were made when, to whom, and in what form, the district court denied the Dawsons' motion without prejudice and ordered the parties to conduct limited discovery on the timeliness issue. Discovery revealed a hodge-podge of formal and informal oral and written complaints, which were submitted to various employees at Orion, FDOT, and FARA. When FDOT received complaints, it memorialized them in written summaries or emails, which it then forwarded to Orion.

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Bluebook (online)
918 F.3d 1323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orion-marine-construction-inc-v-mark-dawson-ca11-2019.