Recovery Ltd. Partnership v. Wrecked & Abandoned Vessel S.S. Central America

790 F.3d 522, 2015 A.M.C. 1845, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 10455, 2015 WL 3826156
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 2015
Docket14-1950
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 790 F.3d 522 (Recovery Ltd. Partnership v. Wrecked & Abandoned Vessel S.S. Central America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Recovery Ltd. Partnership v. Wrecked & Abandoned Vessel S.S. Central America, 790 F.3d 522, 2015 A.M.C. 1845, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 10455, 2015 WL 3826156 (4th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge DUNCAN and Judge THACKER joined.

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

The S.S. Central America, loaded with tons of gold en route from San Francisco to New York, sank in a hurricane off the coast of South Carolina in 1857. Columbus-America Discovery Group (“Columbus-America”), acting as the agent for Recovery Limited Partnership (“Recovery Limited”), discovered the wreck in the 1980s, and the district court subsequently granted Columbus-America salvage rights.

For over two decades, Richard T. Robol and Robol Law Office, LLC (collectively, “Robol”) represented Columbus-America in the proceedings to establish its salvage rights. During the same period, Robol also defended Columbus-America, Recovery Limited, and several other related business entities, including EZRA, Inc., against claims made by others for portions of the gold recovered from the sunken vessel. In addition, Robol leased commercial property in Columbus, Ohio, to EZRA, where documents relating to the salvage operation were stored.

In June 2013, an Ohio court placed several of the companies into receivership and ordered the Receiver to collect their property from all persons holding such property, including the companies’ attorneys. The Receiver gave notice of the order to Robol, and thereafter — in July and August 2013 — Robol turned over 36 file cabinets of *525 materials that he had accumulated as' counsel and landlord. Robol also encouraged Milton T. Butterworth, Jr., an officer of Columbus-America, to turn over to the Receiver photographs, videos, and other materials related to the salvage of the S.S. Central America.

After Robol withdrew as counsel for the companies, he filed a claim in this in rem admiralty action to obtain a salvage award for himself, alleging that he had provided voluntary assistance to the Receiver in turning over files and documents related to the salvage operation, which proved useful in the continuing salvage of the sunken vessel.

The district court dismissed Robol’s claim for failure to state a claim, concluding that Robol had been obligated to return the files and documents to his former clients under the applicable rules of professional responsibility and principles' of agency law and therefore that his act of returning the materials to his former clients was not a voluntary act, as would be required for him to obtain a salvage award.

We agree with the district court and affirm.

I

In the mid-1980s, Thomas G. Thompson undertook to locate the wreck of the S.S. Central America and to recover its cargo' of gold, valued at approximately $1.2 million in 1857. To that end, he set up a series of related business entities, including Recovery Limited, which he created to finance the project; Columbus-America, which he formed to locate and salvage the ship on Recovery Limited’s behalf; Columbus Exploration, LLC, which he set up to market the recovered gold; and EZRA, which he set up to pay labor costs associated with Recovery Limited’s employees and consultants.

After several years of searching, Columbus-America located the wrecked ship 160 miles off the coast of South Carolina. In 1987, with Robol as counsel of record, it commenced this in rem action in admiralty, and the district court subsequently granted Columbus-America salvage rights in the ship and its cargo. Continuously from 1988 until 1991, Columbus-America conducted salvage operations, recovering large amounts of gold and other artifacts. Following two trials and two appeals, we determined in 1995 that Columbus-America was entitled to a salvage award of 90% of the value of the gold and artifacts recovered and that various insurance companies that had paid claims for portions of the lost gold were entitled to the remainder. See Columbus-Am. Discovery Grp. v. Atl. Mut. Ins. Co., 56 F.3d 556, 568-75 (4th Cir.1995). Columbus-America and the insurance companies thereafter divided the treasure in specie, and, in July 2000, the district court closed the case.

Several years later, minority investors and former employees who had assisted in locating the S.S. Central America and recovering its cargo initiated legal actions in Ohio state court against Thompson and the related business entities to obtain portions of the award. Robol represented all of the defendants, including Recovery Limited, in these actions until he withdrew as counsel in June 2011. During the course of the proceedings, which were consolidated and removed, to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, it was discovered that 500 gold coins belonging to the related business entities had disappeared. See Williamson v. Recovery Ltd. P’ship, 731 F.3d 608, 617 (6th Cir.2013). The district court ordered Thompson to appear to explain the coins’ whereabouts, but Thompson failed to do so, and, in August 2012, the court issued a bench warrant for his arrest. Thompson. then fled and became a fugitive. In April 2015, *526 after the ,U.S. Marshals Service finally located and arrested Thompson in a hotel room in Florida, he pleaded guilty to criminal contempt for failing to appear in federal court. His assistant later testified that Thompson had smuggled the missing gold coins to Belize.

Because of Thompson’s disappearance, the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County, Ohio, placed Recovery Limited and Columbus Exploration into receivership in June 2013, appointing Ira Kane as the Receiver. By order dated June 14, 2013, the court directed “[a]ny person who has (or, as of the time of the filing of this Entry, had) any fiduciary duty towards the Companies, by virtue of being either an officer, former officer, or person holding any asset, object or thing that is, or at the time of the filing of this Entry was, the property of the companies, or either of them, ... to surrender to and transfer to said Receiver any and all such property.” The court also directed the Receiver to “conduct such maritime operations that are designed to make a positive financial return for the companies.”

Pursuant to the court’s order, “the Receiver served notice on all of the companies’ attorneys,” including Robol, “to turn over all company files and other property in their possession.” Williamson v. Recovery Ltd. P’ship, No. 2:06-CV-00292, 2014 WL 1884401, at *3 (S.D.Ohio May 9, 2014), appeal docketed, No. 14-4231 (6th Cir. Dec. 12, 2014). Thereafter, during the period between July 25 and August 1, 2013, the Receiver retrieved 36 file cabinets of records from Robol that had been stored at Robol’s property at 433 West Sixth Avenue in Columbus, Ohio (the “West Sixth Avenue property”), a portion of which Robol had leased to EZRA. Id.

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Related

Williamson v. Recovery Ltd. Partnership
2016 Ohio 1087 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2016)
Dymarkowski v. Savage (In re Hadley)
541 B.R. 829 (N.D. Ohio, 2015)
Recovery Ltd. Partnership v. The Wrecked & Abandoned Vessel
120 F. Supp. 3d 500 (E.D. Virginia, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
790 F.3d 522, 2015 A.M.C. 1845, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 10455, 2015 WL 3826156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/recovery-ltd-partnership-v-wrecked-abandoned-vessel-ss-central-ca4-2015.