Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Joseph Hazelwood, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norrishunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company, in Re: The Exxon Valdez, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systemsl Pacific Ltd., Opinion v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company

206 F.3d 900
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 2000
Docket98-35807
StatusPublished

This text of 206 F.3d 900 (Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Joseph Hazelwood, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norrishunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company, in Re: The Exxon Valdez, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systemsl Pacific Ltd., Opinion v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Joseph Hazelwood, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norrishunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systems Pacific Ltd. v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company, in Re: The Exxon Valdez, Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc. Cook Inlet Processors, Inc. Sagaya Corp. William McMurren Patrick L. McMurren William W. King George C. Norris Hunter Cranz Richard Feenstra Wilderness Sailing Safaris Seafood Sails Rapid Systemsl Pacific Ltd., Opinion v. Exxon Corporation Exxon Shipping Company, and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company, 206 F.3d 900 (9th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

206 F.3d 900 (9th Cir. 2000)

SEA HAWK SEAFOODS, INC.; COOK INLET PROCESSORS, INC.; SAGAYA CORP.; WILLIAM MCMURREN; PATRICK L. MCMURREN; WILLIAM W. KING; GEORGE C. NORRIS; HUNTER CRANZ; RICHARD FEENSTRA; WILDERNESS SAILING SAFARIS; SEAFOOD SAILS; RAPID SYSTEMS PACIFIC LTD., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
ALYESKA PIPELINE SERVICE CO.; EXXON CORPORATION; EXXON SHIPPING COMPANY, Defendants,
and
JOSEPH HAZELWOOD, Defendant-Appellant.
SEA HAWK SEAFOODS, INC.; COOK INLET PROCESSORS, INC.; SAGAYA CORP.; WILLIAM MCMURREN; PATRICK L. MCMURREN; WILLIAM W. KING; GEORGE C. NORRIS;HUNTER CRANZ; RICHARD FEENSTRA; WILDERNESS SAILING SAFARIS; SEAFOOD SAILS; RAPID SYSTEMS PACIFIC LTD., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
EXXON CORPORATION; EXXON SHIPPING COMPANY, Defendants-Appellants,
and
ALYESKA PIPELINE SERVICE COMPANY, Defendant.
In re: THE EXXON VALDEZ,
SEA HAWK SEAFOODS, INC.; COOK INLET PROCESSORS, INC.; SAGAYA CORP.; WILLIAM MCMURREN; PATRICK L. MCMURREN; WILLIAM W. KING; GEORGE C. NORRIS; HUNTER CRANZ; RICHARD FEENSTRA; WILDERNESS SAILING SAFARIS SEAFOOD SAILS; RAPID SYSTEMSl; PACIFIC LTD., OPINION Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
EXXON CORPORATION; EXXON SHIPPING COMPANY, Defendants-Appellants,
and
ALYESKA PIPELINE SERVICE COMPANY, Defendant.

Nos. 98-35807 No. 98-36087 98-35796 ,98-36117

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

Argued and Submitted May 3, 1999
Filed March 16, 2000

[Copyrighted Material Omitted]

COUNSEL: John F. Daum, O'Melveny & Myers, Los Angeles, California, for defendants-appellants Exxon Corporation, et al.

George J. Tsimis (briefed) and Thomas M. Russo (briefed), Chalos & Brown, New York, New York, for defendant appellant Joseph Hazelwood.

Brian B. O'Neill (argued), Minneapolis, Minnesota, James Springer, Dickstein Shaprio, Morin & Oshinsky LLP, Washington, DC, David W. oesting, Stephen M. Rummage, David C. Tarshes (briefed), Davis, Wright, Tremaine, Anchorage, Alaska, for plaintiffs-appellees Baker. for plaintiffs-appellees Sea Hawk Seafoods, Inc., et al.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Alaska; H. Russel Holland, Chief District Judge Presiding. D.C. No. CV-89-00095-HRH

Before: James R. Browning, Charles Wiggins,1 and Andrew J. Kleinfeld, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Kleinfeld

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

This is one of several appeals before this panel relating to the Exxon Valdez oil spill litigation. The subject of this appeal is whether the $5 billion punitive damages verdict against Exxon, and the $5,000 punitive damages award against Hazelwood, should be set aside because of irregularities during jury deliberations. We affirm the district court order that it should not. This decision goes only to the motion to vacate the judgment for irregularities during jury deliberations. It does not purport to decide the issue of the amount of damages, compensatory and punitive, awarded to the plaintiffs.

I. Facts.

This case was tried in three separate phases. The phase with which this appeal is concerned was the punitive damages determination. After the jury awarded $5 billion, defendants filed numerous motions, and appealed from the judgment and from denial of its motion for new trial. While that appeal was pending, newly discovered evidence persuaded the district judge, andus, that remand was appropriate, under Crateo, Inc. v. Intermark, Inc.,2 for consideration in the trial court. We remanded for consideration of the Rule 60(b)(2) motion for relief from judgment based on the newly discovered evidence. This appeal concerns only the second motion for new trial, based on the newly discovered evidence, not the first motion for new trial, so we do not discuss the facts and legal determinations raised in the earlier motion. Captain Hazelwood, who piloted the Exxon Valdez in the accident, appeals, but simply joins in the arguments by Exxon Corporation and Exxon Shipping Company, so we describe the appellants collectively as "Exxon."

A retired police officer from Florida served as a Court Security Officer during the trial and deliberations. He was experienced and much decorated, as a police officer and before that in the military. He acted as one of the bailiffs, maintaining security for the jury room, escorting the jury, attending to its requests for food and other needs, and receiving its communications. The punitive damages phase of the trial took more than four months, so all the participants had considerable contact with each other.

An Anchorage newspaper published a story after the trial describing the extremely stressful summer in the jury room.3 One of the jurors, Juror A, was especially distressed and was not getting along well with the rest of the jury. That had been obvious to all participants, because she cried in the hall and otherwise acted distressed, and because the jury sent out notes expressing concern about her mental condition. Based on some of the allegations in the article, the district court held an evidentiary hearing in which the jurors were questioned by the judge under oath in open court with counsel present about possible irregularities.

One juror, Juror B, testified that the bailiff motioned him aside as he came to deliberations one morning and "said something about, you know, you guys, you're really having problems with her, or something like that, pulled his gun out, took a bullet out and said maybe if you put her out of her misery or something." Juror B said he might have told the jury foreman about it, but told no one else, and "it really shook me up." Juror B perceived the remark as a tasteless joke rather than as a threat or serious suggestion. The bailiff testified under oath that "I haven't heard anything so absurd in my life. Nothing like that ever came from me." The district judge ruled that "the court is not convinced that the incident ever occurred," but that if it did, it did not warrant a new trial, because Juror A never learned of the communication, and Juror B and the jury foreman did not understand it to be a threat directed at them.

The United States Marshal in Anchorage, John R. Murphy, directed the investigation of the alleged incident. Juror B passed a lie detector examination, and the bailiff's lie detector examination "indicated deception" in the opinion of the polygraph examiner, Investigator Robert Sheldon. Sheldon later confronted the bailiff about aspects of his interrogation that appeared contradictory. The bailiff then admitted that the bullet incident occurred as Juror B described it, but that he "was joking" and that "nothing was meant to be . . . a threat or intimidation." Marshal Murphy told the bailiff that because he had lied, the Marshals Service would pursue terminating him unless he resigned. The bailiff turned in a written resignation within five minutes. Marshal Murphy did not tell the district judge or the lawyers that Juror B had been telling the truth and that the bailiff had lied. The bailiff died of a heart attack a few months after being forced to resign, prior to adjudication of the second motion to vacate the judgment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jenkins v. United States
380 U.S. 445 (Supreme Court, 1965)
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.
438 U.S. 422 (Supreme Court, 1978)
Rushen v. Spain
464 U.S. 114 (Supreme Court, 1983)
United States v. Shay
57 F.3d 126 (First Circuit, 1995)
United States v. Harry Barfield Company, Inc.
359 F.2d 120 (Fifth Circuit, 1966)
William H. Traver v. David Meshriy
627 F.2d 934 (Ninth Circuit, 1980)
United States v. Larry D. Hall
93 F.3d 1337 (Seventh Circuit, 1996)
United States v. Plunk
153 F.3d 1011 (Ninth Circuit, 1998)
Valley Engineers Inc. v. Electric Engineering Co.
158 F.3d 1051 (Ninth Circuit, 1998)
Gilbrook v. City of Westminster
177 F.3d 839 (Ninth Circuit, 1999)
Rinker v. County of Napa
724 F.2d 1352 (Ninth Circuit, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 F.3d 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-hawk-seafoods-inc-cook-inlet-processors-inc-sagaya-corp-william-ca9-2000.