Reino De España v. American Bureau of Shipping, Inc.

691 F.3d 461, 2012 WL 3711734
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 29, 2012
Docket10-3518-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 691 F.3d 461 (Reino De España v. American Bureau of Shipping, Inc.) 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
Reino De España v. American Bureau of Shipping, Inc., 691 F.3d 461, 2012 WL 3711734 (2d Cir. 2012).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge:

In November 2002, the oil tanker Prestige sank off the northwestern coast of Spain, releasing large quantities of oil into the ocean. Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellant Reino de España (“Spain” or “Plaintiff’) alleges that this oil, on washing up on the Spanish coastline, caused serious environmental and economic damage to Spain and its citizens. Spain, in reaction to the alleged effects of this marine casualty, brought suit against DefendanWCounter-Claimant-Appellee American Bureau of Shipping (“ABS”) and its subsidiaries (collectively, “Defendants”).

ABS is a classification society — an organization that, as relevant to the present appeal, is contracted by shipowners regularly to survey their vessels for compliance with ABS’s requirements on, inter alia, structural soundness. ABS, one of the world’s leading classification societies, is engaged to inspect (or “class”) thousands of vessels worldwide. One such vessel was the ill-fated tanker Prestige, which was classed by ABS for its entire working life until its casualty.

Spain alleges that by virtue of the surveys it conducts, ABS (like other comparable classification societies) forms a crucial link in the “maritime safety chain,” by which a range of parties, from individual sailors all the way to the world’s coastal nations as a whole, are protected against accidents, shipwrecks, pollution, and the like. In particular, Spain alleges that it *463 and other nations like it are not in a position to inspect the seaworthiness of every vessel passing through their waters, and rely on classification societies to ensure the seaworthiness of those vessels. More precisely, Spain argues that ABS owes a duty in tort to perform its classification surveys with due care not simply to the vessel’s owner who contracted for the survey (or to the insurers of the vessel and its cargo), but to third-party coastal nations generally.

Though this Court has previously suggested that “a shipowner is not entitled to rely on a classification certificate as a guarantee to the owner that the vessel is soundly constructed,” Sundance Cruises Corp. v. Am. Bureau of Shipping, 7 F.3d 1077, 1084 (2d Cir.1993), we there distinguished the situation of “a suit brought by an injured third party who relied on the classification ... certificate! ],” id. We have not decided the question whether a classification society can be held liable to a third party for negligent conduct in connection with a classification survey. That said, Spain concedes in the present appeal that the “policy interests” described by the Sundance Cruises Court “justify!] an exemption for classification societies from the general rule of negligence liability,” Appellant’s Br. 39; see also id. at 30 (same). Spain maintains, however, that such interests “do not ... extend to reckless conduct,” id. at 39 (emphasis added). Thus, Spain argues, because the claim here is that ABS was not simply negligent but reckless in its actions that led to the wreck of the Prestige, ABS is not shielded from liability to third parties such as Spain who putatively suffered harm as a result of those actions. The district court, however, did not agree. Rather, applying U.S. maritime law, the court concluded first that Spain was outside the (quite limited) set of parties to whom a classification society might normally be liable in tort for conduct relating to its surveys. Moreover, it held that reckless conduct such as alleged here would still not give rise to tort liability to a third party such as Spain, absent a preexisting specific relationship between Spain and the society of a sort not present here. The district court therefore granted summary judgment to Defendants, from which Spain now appeals.

We conclude that we need not resolve the question whether a classification society may be held liable in tort to a third party such as Spain for reckless conduct in connection with the classification of vessels. 1 Rather, we assume arguendo for purposes of this appeal that Defendants did owe the claimed duty to Spain. In our view, Spain has nonetheless failed to adduce sufficient evidence to create a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether Defendants recklessly breached that duty such that their actions constituted a proximate cause of the wreck of the Prestige. We therefore Affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendants, albeit on alternative grounds.

Background

1. Facts

1. Classification Societies and Classification Surveys

The Prestige was an 800-foot long, 40,-000-gross-ton oil tanker, first launched in 1976. 2 From that time until it sank in November 2002, the Prestige was classified *464 (or “classed”) by ABS, a not-for-profit corporation founded in 1862 and one of the leading classification societies in the world. Classification societies such as ABS, inter alia, establish rules for the design, construction, and continued structural and mechanical fitness of vessels that they class, and certify that, at minimum, a vessel is “in class,” or in compliance with the applicable rules and requirements of the society. Such a certification is embodied in a “classification” (or “class”) certificate. 3 ABS is paid for these services by the vessel’s owner.

As relevant here, ABS typically classes vessels on a five-year survey cycle. This cycle, broadly speaking, consists of one survey performed every five years (the “Special Survey”), an “Intermediate Survey” halfway through the cycle, and “Annual Surveys.” The Special Survey, unsurprisingly the most extensive, includes direct inspection of the interior of a ship’s structure (especially, in an oil tanker, the vessel’s ballast and cargo tanks) for corrosion and fatigue. The inspection involves examination of the structure both visually and through ultrasonic measurement of the thickness of the hull and interior bulkheads (known as “gauging”). ABS directs the owner to make repairs to the vessel as required to satisfy ABS requirements. If these repairs are completed to the survey- or’s satisfaction, and the vessel otherwise meets the applicable requirements of ABS rules and international conventions, the surveyor recommends the renewal of the class and statutory certificates. ABS reserves the right to reconsider, cancel, or suspend classification for noncompliance with its rules.

2. SafeHull

At relevant times, in addition to these ABS surveys, a for-profit subsidiary of ABS, known at one point as ABS Marine Services (“Marine Services”) and eventually as ABSG Consulting Inc., 4 offered an additional service to owners of marine vessels — the structural modeling of a computer program known as SafeHull. SafeHull was used, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
691 F.3d 461, 2012 WL 3711734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reino-de-espana-v-american-bureau-of-shipping-inc-ca2-2012.