Sea King Corp. v. Eimskip Logistics, Inc.
This text of 367 F. Supp. 3d 529 (Sea King Corp. v. Eimskip Logistics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mark S. Davis, CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
This maritime matter is before the Court following a bench trial, and involves a contract dispute between third-party plaintiff CMA CGM, S.A. ("CMA") and third-party defendant Marine Repair Services of Virginia ("MRS"). Although a trial was necessary in this case, the majority of the facts are not in dispute, and the primary legal issue is whether CMA is entitled to complete indemnity from MRS pursuant *532to the "warranty of workmanlike performance" that has been recognized in this Circuit to apply in maritime stevedoring contracts, ship repair contracts, and at least some towage contracts.
I. Findings of Fact
A. Stipulated Facts
The Court adopts, and incorporates herein by reference, the forty-five stipulations of fact set forth in the final pretrial order. ECF No. 94, at 3-13. Reproduced immediately below is an abbreviated version of such stipulations.1
CMA is a French ocean carrier with its headquarters in France, and CMA conducts business in the United States through its agent, CMA CGM (America), LLC ("CMA America"). MRS is a Virginia corporation that, among other things, maintains and services refrigerated cargo containers ("reefers") at various terminals in the Port of Virginia.
In October of 2016, plaintiff Sea King Corporation ("Sea King") contacted defendant Eimskip Logistics Inc. ("Eimskip") to arrange for the transport of a cargo of frozen conch meat from Sea King's facility in Atlantic, Virginia to Hong Kong. On October 14, 2016, Eimskip made a "web booking" for such shipment with CMA America. Such booking indicated that the cargo was "frozen seafood" to be shipped from Virginia International Gateway terminal ("VIG") to Hong Kong, in a refrigerated container set at -20° Celsius, vents closed. CMA2 sent Eimskip a booking confirmation reflecting such shipping requirements, and Eimskip sent a follow up email to Sea King confirming the booking for shipment through CMA. After Sea King was paid in full for the cargo by the Hong Kong buyer, it executed a written contract with Eimskip for shipment of the frozen conch meat (valued at over $ 250,000) to Hong Kong in a 40-foot reefer set to an internal temperature of -20° Celsius. Sea King paid Eimskip approximately $ 5,500 for ocean freight, pre-carriage transport, and insurance.
Virginia International Terminals ("VIT"), the entity that operates the VIG terminal, has an "electronic data interface" ("EDI") system that permitted CMA to electronically forward the electronic booking made by Eimskip to the terminal. However, VIT had an EDI server issue beginning on October 25, 2016 that delayed certain booking entries from posting in the system until late on October 27, 2016.
As a result of the booking with Eimskip, CMA sent an email order to MRS requesting that MRS prepare a reefer for release, listing the required preset temperature as -20° Celsius. A reefer is an insulated container with a refrigeration unit powered either by an external source (plugged into shore or ship power) or by a portable generator attached to the container (commonly known as a "genset"). A genset is attached to a reefer when it is being transported by truck, and the genset is generally removed when the reefer is stored at a facility that has power or when it is loaded onto a ship. A reefer container is readily distinguishable from a standard cargo container because reefers have smooth sides and dry cargo containers have corrugated sides.
Based on CMA's email request, MRS "pre-tripped" reefer Container No. TRIU8137918 (the "Container"), which was leased by CMA and stored at MRS's *533"depot" in Chesapeake, Virginia. The pre-trip inspection, performed by MRS in Chesapeake, confirmed that the Container's refrigeration system was operating properly.
As of October 2016, CMA and MRS had a general course of dealing under which MRS agreed to: (1) pre-trip CMA's containers as needed; and (2) monitor CMA's export container temperatures twice per day after a live container with temperature requirements was in-gated at the VIG terminal. The purpose of the monitoring was to confirm that the temperature stayed within a designated range and to protect the integrity of the cargo. As a matter of practice, when MRS identifies a discrepancy between the booking temperature and the actual temperature of a reefer, it immediately notifies the ship line (here CMA) as a failsafe against cargo damage.
On October 26, 2016, third-party defendant Leighton Trucking, LLC ("Leighton"), a company hired by Eimskip to transport the empty pre-tripped Container from MRS's Chesapeake facility to Sea King's facility for loading, and then transport the loaded Container to VIG, picked up the Container in Chesapeake. On the morning of October 27, 2016, Leighton brought the Container to Sea King's facility, and the properly functioning reefer was loaded with frozen conch meat and sealed.
That same morning, Eimskip contacted CMA to inform it that the Container was actively being loaded, but that there was not a booking for such reefer in VIT's computer system (a fact that resulted from the EDI server issue). In response to this email, a CMA employee manually input the booking data into VIT's system, and although such booking identified the Container as a loaded reefer for export, it failed to reflect a temperature requirement for the Container.
VIG is an automated terminal that minimizes personal contact with containers moving through the terminal facility. The gate-in process is handled remotely, with inspection of incoming and outgoing containers performed though video and photographs. With respect to "live" reefer containers, however, VIT reefer mechanics ensure that reefers are visually checked at VIG before a delivering driver is released from the terminal. The steamship lines, like CMA, also take special precautions to ensure that human or mechanical failures do not compromise frozen cargo. At VIG, all gensets are removed by MRS employees and MRS charges all carriers, such as CMA, for genset removal services.
The Leighton truck arrived at the VIG gate and entered the terminal at 2:55 p.m. on October 27, 2016. The genset mounted on the Container was operating and the Container displayed a digital temperature of -20° Celsius. However, because of CMA's error in omitting the temperature requirement from the manual booking, VIT's booking information indicated that the Container was a reefer with no temperature requirement, i.e. not a "live" container. Although VIT inspected the Container upon arrival at VIG by video and photographs, its clerks did not notice the discrepancy between the booking information and the "live" reefer that appeared at the gate. The Container was admitted to VIG and the driver received a routing ticket from the unmanned kiosk at the gate, instructing him to take the Container to "yard location 08L." Although it is not indicated on the ticket, yard location 08L is a non-powered"stack" of containers that is not suitable for storing a "live" reefer with a temperature requirement. The Routing Ticket instructed the driver that:
If you are dropping off reefer in the stacks, proceed to 407 row first to have the genset removed.
** If parking reefer in the reefer rows WAIT WITH THE CONTAINER UNTIL
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Mark S. Davis, CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
This maritime matter is before the Court following a bench trial, and involves a contract dispute between third-party plaintiff CMA CGM, S.A. ("CMA") and third-party defendant Marine Repair Services of Virginia ("MRS"). Although a trial was necessary in this case, the majority of the facts are not in dispute, and the primary legal issue is whether CMA is entitled to complete indemnity from MRS pursuant *532to the "warranty of workmanlike performance" that has been recognized in this Circuit to apply in maritime stevedoring contracts, ship repair contracts, and at least some towage contracts.
I. Findings of Fact
A. Stipulated Facts
The Court adopts, and incorporates herein by reference, the forty-five stipulations of fact set forth in the final pretrial order. ECF No. 94, at 3-13. Reproduced immediately below is an abbreviated version of such stipulations.1
CMA is a French ocean carrier with its headquarters in France, and CMA conducts business in the United States through its agent, CMA CGM (America), LLC ("CMA America"). MRS is a Virginia corporation that, among other things, maintains and services refrigerated cargo containers ("reefers") at various terminals in the Port of Virginia.
In October of 2016, plaintiff Sea King Corporation ("Sea King") contacted defendant Eimskip Logistics Inc. ("Eimskip") to arrange for the transport of a cargo of frozen conch meat from Sea King's facility in Atlantic, Virginia to Hong Kong. On October 14, 2016, Eimskip made a "web booking" for such shipment with CMA America. Such booking indicated that the cargo was "frozen seafood" to be shipped from Virginia International Gateway terminal ("VIG") to Hong Kong, in a refrigerated container set at -20° Celsius, vents closed. CMA2 sent Eimskip a booking confirmation reflecting such shipping requirements, and Eimskip sent a follow up email to Sea King confirming the booking for shipment through CMA. After Sea King was paid in full for the cargo by the Hong Kong buyer, it executed a written contract with Eimskip for shipment of the frozen conch meat (valued at over $ 250,000) to Hong Kong in a 40-foot reefer set to an internal temperature of -20° Celsius. Sea King paid Eimskip approximately $ 5,500 for ocean freight, pre-carriage transport, and insurance.
Virginia International Terminals ("VIT"), the entity that operates the VIG terminal, has an "electronic data interface" ("EDI") system that permitted CMA to electronically forward the electronic booking made by Eimskip to the terminal. However, VIT had an EDI server issue beginning on October 25, 2016 that delayed certain booking entries from posting in the system until late on October 27, 2016.
As a result of the booking with Eimskip, CMA sent an email order to MRS requesting that MRS prepare a reefer for release, listing the required preset temperature as -20° Celsius. A reefer is an insulated container with a refrigeration unit powered either by an external source (plugged into shore or ship power) or by a portable generator attached to the container (commonly known as a "genset"). A genset is attached to a reefer when it is being transported by truck, and the genset is generally removed when the reefer is stored at a facility that has power or when it is loaded onto a ship. A reefer container is readily distinguishable from a standard cargo container because reefers have smooth sides and dry cargo containers have corrugated sides.
Based on CMA's email request, MRS "pre-tripped" reefer Container No. TRIU8137918 (the "Container"), which was leased by CMA and stored at MRS's *533"depot" in Chesapeake, Virginia. The pre-trip inspection, performed by MRS in Chesapeake, confirmed that the Container's refrigeration system was operating properly.
As of October 2016, CMA and MRS had a general course of dealing under which MRS agreed to: (1) pre-trip CMA's containers as needed; and (2) monitor CMA's export container temperatures twice per day after a live container with temperature requirements was in-gated at the VIG terminal. The purpose of the monitoring was to confirm that the temperature stayed within a designated range and to protect the integrity of the cargo. As a matter of practice, when MRS identifies a discrepancy between the booking temperature and the actual temperature of a reefer, it immediately notifies the ship line (here CMA) as a failsafe against cargo damage.
On October 26, 2016, third-party defendant Leighton Trucking, LLC ("Leighton"), a company hired by Eimskip to transport the empty pre-tripped Container from MRS's Chesapeake facility to Sea King's facility for loading, and then transport the loaded Container to VIG, picked up the Container in Chesapeake. On the morning of October 27, 2016, Leighton brought the Container to Sea King's facility, and the properly functioning reefer was loaded with frozen conch meat and sealed.
That same morning, Eimskip contacted CMA to inform it that the Container was actively being loaded, but that there was not a booking for such reefer in VIT's computer system (a fact that resulted from the EDI server issue). In response to this email, a CMA employee manually input the booking data into VIT's system, and although such booking identified the Container as a loaded reefer for export, it failed to reflect a temperature requirement for the Container.
VIG is an automated terminal that minimizes personal contact with containers moving through the terminal facility. The gate-in process is handled remotely, with inspection of incoming and outgoing containers performed though video and photographs. With respect to "live" reefer containers, however, VIT reefer mechanics ensure that reefers are visually checked at VIG before a delivering driver is released from the terminal. The steamship lines, like CMA, also take special precautions to ensure that human or mechanical failures do not compromise frozen cargo. At VIG, all gensets are removed by MRS employees and MRS charges all carriers, such as CMA, for genset removal services.
The Leighton truck arrived at the VIG gate and entered the terminal at 2:55 p.m. on October 27, 2016. The genset mounted on the Container was operating and the Container displayed a digital temperature of -20° Celsius. However, because of CMA's error in omitting the temperature requirement from the manual booking, VIT's booking information indicated that the Container was a reefer with no temperature requirement, i.e. not a "live" container. Although VIT inspected the Container upon arrival at VIG by video and photographs, its clerks did not notice the discrepancy between the booking information and the "live" reefer that appeared at the gate. The Container was admitted to VIG and the driver received a routing ticket from the unmanned kiosk at the gate, instructing him to take the Container to "yard location 08L." Although it is not indicated on the ticket, yard location 08L is a non-powered"stack" of containers that is not suitable for storing a "live" reefer with a temperature requirement. The Routing Ticket instructed the driver that:
If you are dropping off reefer in the stacks, proceed to 407 row first to have the genset removed.
** If parking reefer in the reefer rows WAIT WITH THE CONTAINER UNTIL
*534REEFER MECHANIC ARRIVES TO CHECK THE CONTAINER IN!**
** DO NOT GO TO THE STACK WITH GENSET ATTACHED**3
At the time, VIT's Operations Manual provided detailed instructions for the handling of live export reefers assigned to the "reefer rows," where the truck chassis, with reefer attached, would be parked in an assigned slot. The driver was required to wait with the reefer in the reefer rows until a VIT reefer mechanic verified the container temperature. If the temperature was acceptable, VIT would plug the container into shore power and the driver would be released. At VIG, VIT is the entity responsible for plugging reefer containers into both shore power and vessel power. Because live export reefers were not ordinarily stored in "the stacks," VIT's Operations Manual provided no procedure for sending live export reefers to the stacks. The practice of sending a live export reefer to the stacks was considered by VIT to be unusual and abnormal and only done when the reefer rows were full. Only rows 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 of the stacks contained reefer slots (i.e., these rows had shore power).
In accordance with the instructions on the printed VIG gate ticket, the Leighton driver drove to "row 407," where two of MRS's reefer mechanics confirmed (from looking at the gate ticket) that the Container was headed for the stacks, and not the reefer rows, and it therefore had to have its genset removed at that time.4 The Container's refrigeration unit was switched off by MRS at 4:41 p.m. that day (Oct. 27, 2016), and the genset was removed. The Container was then taken to the stacks and was never connected to shore power at VIG, nor to ship power during oversees transport. Although the Container was powered-off on October 27, 2016, the cargo remained frozen and undamaged at the VIG terminal through at least October 28, 2016. The cargo was discovered to be a total loss upon delivery in Hong Kong in December of 2016.
When pre-tripping the reefer in Chesapeake, MRS posted a placard on the Container next to the control panel at eye level stating the booked temperature (-20° Celsius). Both MRS reefer mechanics working at VIG on the day the Container arrived have testified that they did not know that stack 8 at VIG had no powered reefer slots. At a corporate level, MRS was aware that row 8 of the stacks did not contain reefer slots. MRS Reefer Mechanic Glen Carpenter filled out a Reefer Receive/Release *535Log showing that the Container had been received at VIG (identified by container number) and that the temperature setting was -20° Celsius. This was the only CMA reefer received at VIG on October 27 and this log page included just one entry. Carpenter turned the log page into his MRS foreman at the end of his shift on October 27, 2016. The MRS foreman, Leo Castellanos, was responsible for preparing a Refrigerated Tracking and Monitoring log. Castellanos, or occasionally other MRS reefer mechanics, would check the temperature on CMA containers twice per day and record them in this log.
VIT's server problem was fixed late on October 27, and at 7:38 p.m., the VIT system finally showed the original booking made by CMA back on October 25, which included the proper temperature setting for the Container. Such updated booking did not, however, change any container-specific information in the VIT system, meaning that if MRS accessed VIT's system for information regarding the Container (as opposed to searching the system based on the booking number) the system would indicate that the Container was a loaded export reefer but would not indicate a temperature requirement.
The parties agree and stipulate that the contract or contracts between CMA and MRS involved in this case were maritime contracts within the meaning of that term for purposes of the Court's admiralty jurisdiction and choice of law in this case. The original plaintiffs settled their maritime claims against Eimskip, and CMA and Eimskip settled its third-party claims with VIT and Leighton. CMA settled with Plaintiffs by agreeing to pay them $ 260,000 in consideration of complete releases.5
B. Facts Determined by the Court as Factfinder
1. MRS and CMA's business relationship is not governed by a written contract, but rather, such entities have established, through a long-term course of dealing, that MRS provides CMA with three distinct services relevant to this case: (a) MRS "pre-trips" reefer containers for CMA and arranges for their release; (b) MRS provides CMA with genset mounting and dismounting services at VIG, a service that is also provided to all other carrier companies that move reefers through VIG; and (c) MRS provides reefer temperature monitoring and container repair for CMA's reefers at VIG, although unlike the mounting/dismounting services, such monitoring service is not provided to all other carriers, as some carriers contract directly with VIT for similar monitoring services.
2. Although MRS monitors CMA's live reefers twice daily while they are stored at VIG, unlike other terminals in the area, MRS is not responsible for, nor is it permitted, to intake such containers at VIG and plug them into shore power. Such intake duties, which include both confirming that the reefer is operating at the time of intake within an acceptable temperature range, and connecting the reefer to shore power, are borne solely by VIT.
3. MRS bills CMA separately for each aspect of its services as they are performed. Accordingly, an invoice is issued when MRS's storage facility in Chesapeake, Virginia releases a pre-tripped container, an invoice is issued for genset removal after gensets are installed or removed from CMA's containers at VIG, and an invoice is issued for the twice daily monitoring of the CMA reefers at VIG. No written contracts govern such services *536beyond the emails/orders sent by CMA to MRS to arrange for the pre-tripping/release of reefers needed for upcoming exports.
4. In order to conduct its monitoring services at VIG, the MRS foreman maintains a handwritten monitoring log. Each morning, and each afternoon, the foreman accesses the on-terminal "SPARCS" computer database maintained by VIT and prints a list of all CMA reefer containers that have been in-gated with temperature requirements. The SPARCS information is "live" and updates constantly, including updates to the current location of each container at VIG, and this system can only be accessed by MRS while physically at the terminal. MRS cross-references the updated SPARCS list to its handwritten log twice a day to ensure that CMA's reefers are accounted for and being monitored. Pursuant to its course of dealing with CMA, MRS visually inspects each CMA reefer container with an assigned temperature requirement twice a day to ensure that the reefer is maintaining a temperature consistent with the booking information (the temperature requirement is available in the SPARCS system and is printed on the MRS "sticker" that is affixed to the exterior of the reefer when it leaves MRS's Chesapeake depot). Should there be any issues with a reefer, MRS performs necessary repairs without further guidance from CMA (and bills CMA for such repairs) except in those cases where the repair is major, in which case MRS contacts CMA to work out a plan for addressing the issue.
5. When a pre-tripped reefer is released from the MRS depot, certain MRS employees are aware of the intended local export terminal as well as the approximate date that the reefer will arrive at such terminal. However, because MRS turns over custody of the reefer, and because CMA does not notify MRS of any changes to the shipping timeframe, to include changes to the export vessel, export terminal, or the number of days that the container will be stored at the terminal prior to export, MRS does not "track" the released container. CMA failed to present evidence at trial demonstrating that MRS had an obligation, whether express, implied, or through "course of dealing," to track a reefer after it is pre-tripped and released. Rather, MRS merely reacts when a CMA reefer is in-gated at a local terminal.
6. MRS has no functions at the VIG gate, nor does it have any direct communications with the gate regarding which containers have entered the terminal. MRS also has no role in: (a) assigning the VIG location where truck drivers should deliver a reefer designated for export; or (b) moving, or directing the movement of, reefers at VIG. Rather, VIT controls the movement of all containers at VIG. If a reefer being monitored by MRS is repositioned by VIT, VIT does not communicate with MRS either before or after the container is moved, and MRS is only "informed" of the move through accessing the real-time SPARCS system.
7. Because MRS has no control over where containers are stored at the VIG terminal, it has no ability to group containers by client in order to facilitate more efficient/effective monitoring.
8. As established through the deposition of CMA's Rule 30(b) (6) representative, CMA believed that MRS knew when a live reefer arrived at VIG through two channels: (1) MRS received a "printout" of the reefers that arrived each day (the SPARCS information); and (2) MRS created its own log from the "temperature check" it performed in "the lane" as part of the receiving function at VIG. CMA believed that MRS would cross-check these lists to ensure that all live CMA reefers were accounted for.
*5379. Although CMA's representative may have accurately summarized how MRS tracks reefers at other local terminals where MRS does in fact perform initial intake temperature checks, he was mistaken as to the procedure at VIG. Notably, at VIG, the initial temperature check is performed by VIT personnel, rather than MRS personnel, and MRS therefore does not create a log of live reefers passing through a temperature check "lane" that it can later cross check against the SPARCS "printout." MRS's 30(b) (6) representative testified that MRS does maintain a log of the CMA reefers visually identified (twice daily) in the reefer rows and powered reefer stacks and cross checks that log against the SPARCS list. MRS would, of course, investigate the matter if its employees discovered a CMA reefer parked in the reefer rows, or powered reefer stacks, that did not appear on the SPARCS list; however, the Container at issue was not assigned to, nor stored in, either of these two appropriate areas.
10. Reefer containers are sometimes used to ship dry goods that do not require refrigeration, including situations where there are humidity concerns and when there is a surplus of reefers in the area.
11. MRS reefer mechanics perform genset install and removal for all reefers that arrive or depart VIG regardless of whether the carrier contracts with MRS for any monitoring services. MRS creates a genset "Mount Dismount Log" and a "Reefer Receive/Reefer Release" log when it installs or dismounts a genset at VIG, but MRS does not cross-check either of these logs with its monitoring log.
12. Because the Container at issue was in-gated without a temperature requirement (due to the EDI server issue, the CMA manual input error, and the failure of the VIT gate inspection to discover that the Container was "live") VIT never performed an initial temperature check nor did it take any steps to plug the container into shore power. The Container never appeared on the relevant SPARCS list, and MRS never attempted to locate it or monitor it.
13. Based on CMA and VIT's errors, which dictated/controlled the handling of the Container at VIG, the Container was placed in a dry stack where: (1) there was no available power; and (2) it was essentially impossible for MRS, or anyone else, to visually "discover" the Container, and/or see the MRS "sticker" while monitoring other reefers because the unpowered stacks are physically inaccessible, rendering such misfiled Container effectively "hidden" once it entered the unpowered stacks.
14. CMA was aware of the disappearance/non-existence of the booking in the VIT system before the Container was "hidden" at VIG, yet it failed to take precautions to ensure that such reefer was properly accounted for. Specifically, CMA did not notify MRS about the fact that it had to make a manual entry on October 27 to allow the Container entry to the VIG terminal.
15. If it had more robust procedures in place, and/or more knowledgeable reefer mechanics that knew which rows in the VIG stack were powered, MRS clearly "could have" discovered the error caused by CMA's and VIT's conduct. Had such error been discovered, MRS would have been obligated to investigate such issue on behalf of CMA because, within reason, MRS acts as CMA's "eyes and ears" at VIG.6 That said, if it had more robust *538procedures in place, CMA likewise clearly "could have" discovered the error caused by its erroneous manual booking.
16. Although MRS had an established "course of dealing" with CMA aimed at protecting CMA's cargo, there was not a course of dealing that rendered MRS the virtual insurer of CMA's cargo. MRS did not operate VIG, did not assign container locations, and most notably, did not "intake" reefers to confirm temperature settings and/or "plug in" live reefers to shore power. MRS was clearly obligated through course of dealing to have procedures in place to monitor the integrity of CMA's refrigerated cargo at VIG, but its primary role was to ensure that the refrigeration units continued to function properly. The trial evidence failed to establish that course of dealing required MRS to adopt the best possible procedures, regardless of the cost or likelihood that such procedures were necessary.7 Stated differently, the Court rejects CMA's suggestion that MRS was obligated to act as a "failsafe" against all errors, including booking errors committed by CMA.
17. Consistent with MRS's post-trial argument, through course of dealing, MRS was obligated to monitor all CMA reefers at VIG that were in-gated with a temperature requirement (and thus appeared on the relevant SPARCS printout), and it had the further duty to "discover" any CMA live reefer parked in the powered reefer stacks, or the reefer rows, that displayed a MRS "sticker" reflecting a temperature requirement.
II. Conclusions of Law
As set forth in the Final Pretrial Order, CMA asserts that MRS breached its contract with CMA, that such breach caused the damage for which CMA faced liability to other parties, and that MRS is liable, under maritime law, to indemnify CMA for the entire $ 260,000 settlement paid by CMA. MRS agrees that maritime law governs the instant dispute,8 but asserts that it did not commit any breach of contract or violate any existing course of dealing.
*539MRS further asserts that indemnity is not appropriate even if there was a contractual breach. The key legal disputes center on whether the maritime "warranty of workmanlike performance" applies and was breached, and whether indemnity is an available remedy.
A. Implied Warranty of Workmanlike Performance
1. Background
The implied warranty of workmanlike performance, as applicable under maritime law, is a contractual warranty rooted in the Supreme Court's decision in Ryan Stevedoring Co. v. Pan-Atlantic Steamship Corp.,
CMA and MRS acknowledge the discord among the circuits regarding the breadth of the maritime "warranty of workmanlike performance," to include disagreements over the circumstances in which such warranty applies only as a theory of liability (i.e., a violation only establishes a contractual breach) and those where a violation of the warranty requires the violator to indemnify the other party to the contract, or a foreseeable third party. Cf. Marie R. Yeates Phillip, Contribution and Indemnity in Maritime Litigation,
*540For the reasons explained below, this Court finds that, even under the broader approach applied in the Fourth Circuit, the implied warranty of workmanlike performance does not implicate the right to indemnity when the claimed breach results in cargo damage, prior to delivery to a stevedore, that was allegedly caused by a company that services and provides shore-based monitoring of refrigerated cargo containers. Alternatively, even if Fourth Circuit law recognizes a carrier's right to indemnity from a container company in such circumstances, here, CMA fails to demonstrate either that MRS had "custody" over the Container such that the warranty of workmanlike performance (and the associated right to indemnity) "attached," or that MRS violated its established course of dealing and/or violated the warranty by failing to perform its tasks with "reasonable care, skill, and diligence." Matter of Robbins Maritime, Inc.,
2. Duty to Indemnify under the Implied Warranty of Workmanlike Performance
As suggested above, the continued viability of the warranty of workmanlike performance has been called into question by numerous courts and commentators, at least to the extent that it is applied in a manner that allows for complete indemnity as a remedy for its violation. See 1 Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Maritime Law § 5:15 (6th ed. 2018) (arguing that the far better view is that the contractual maritime warranty of workmanlike performance "is very much alive" and is generally implied in any maritime services contract; however, "[a]s an indemnity theory, the Ryan [warranty of workmanlike performance] is a withered doctrine of extremely limited application"); George R. Alvey, Jr., The Implied Warranty of Workmanlike Performance in Towage: A Viable Theory?, 7 Mar. Law. 1, 17 (1982) (explaining that the " Ryan warranty is conceptually distinguishable from Ryan indemnity" and that the "reasoning which is the basis for the Ryan warranty is not the same as that which is the basis for Ryan indemnity"); David W. Robertson & Michael F. Sturley, Developments in Admiralty and Maritime Law at the National Level and in the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits, 35 Tul. Mar. L.J. 493, 532 (2011) (broadly referencing "the concept of an implied warranty of workmanlike performance" as doing "no useful work in current maritime law; it is just potentially confusing clutter"). The view held by such commentators is often supported, at least in part, by reference to Fairmont Shipping Corp. v. Chevron Int'l Oil Co.,
As explained by Professor Schoenbaum, consistent with the established law of multiple circuits, "the best view is that Ryan indemnity should be denied except in a very limited class of cases," as the genesis of the doctrine was to shift the shipowner's liability resulting from a vessel being in an "unseaworthy condition," a liability that attaches without fault, to the stevedore that created such unseaworthy condition. 1 Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Mar. Law § 5:15. As to maritime contract disputes that do not implicate a shipowner's strict liability, Schoenbaum posits that "principles of comparative fault apply." Id. at n.43; see Fairmont Shipping,
*541and that other Circuits have reached similar conclusions, including a Ninth Circuit case that found that indemnity was unavailable where a subcontractor was injured while repairing a vessel classified as a "dead ship" because such classification removed the issue of seaworthiness from the case) (citing Davis v. Chas. Kurz & Co.,
Other decisions ... have rested Ryan on the elements of expertise, control, supervision and ability to prevent accidents: The shipowner, relying on the stevedore's expertise, entrusts loading operations to its supervision and control, thereby putting the stevedore in the best position to prevent accidents. The same reasoning has been applied to 'dead tows,' Tebbs v. Baker-Whiteley Towing Co.,407 F.2d 1055 , 1058 (4th Cir. 1969) ; and ship repairs, H & H Ship Service Co. v. Weyerhaeuser Line,382 F.2d 711 , 712-713 (9th Cir. 1967). While these factors are certainly important, Italia [Societa per Azioni di Navigazione v. Oregon Stevedoring Co.], 376 U.S. [315,] 322-23,84 S.Ct. 748 [11 L.Ed.2d 732 (1964) ], they omit the most significant aspect: the fact that the absolute duty of seaworthiness requires shipowners, regardless of their fault, to pay for accidents caused by stevedores.
Fairmont Shipping,
3. Indemnity in the Fourth Circuit
Turning to the law in this Circuit, as acknowledged in Fairmont Shipping, the Fourth Circuit has historically taken a somewhat more expansive view of Ryan indemnity that is not linked to "seaworthiness." That said, it has been nearly twenty years since the Fourth Circuit discussed Ryan indemnity with any degree of detail. Chisholm v. UHP Projects, Inc.,
It appears that the next most recent substantive discussion of Ryan indemnity in a maritime case before the Fourth Circuit occurred nearly a decade earlier, but it too was a "typical" Ryan indemnity case as it involved both a stevedore and personal injuries occurring on a vessel during cargo loading operations. Heyman,
*542
Preceding Heyman by nearly ten years was Little Beaver Enterprises v. Humphreys Railways, Inc.,
This warranty need not be express to bind the ship repairer to use the degree of diligence, attention and skill adequate to complete the task. The warranty of workmanlike service, of course, does not make the repairer a guarantor of the results. Where it has performed its tasks as a skillful workman should, or where its efforts have been hindered by the actions of the other contracting party, the repair firm will not be held responsible for defects attributable to faulty workmanship. However, the warranty is otherwise very broad. It is comparable to a manufacturer's warranty of the soundness of its manufactured product. It has been applied to find fault where repair jobs are improperly performed; see, e.g., Booth Steamship Co.[ v. Meier & Oelhaf Co.,262 F.2d 310 (2d Cir. 1958) ] (engine repair contractor); where the misdelivery of goods has caused monetary damages to shipowners, see, e.g., David Crystal, Inc. v. Cunard Steam-Ship Co.,339 F.2d 295 , 299 (2d Cir. 1964) ;[11 ] and where efforts intended to prevent damage to a ship have been ineffective, see, e.g., Fairmont Shipping Corp. v. Chevron Int'l Oil Co., Inc.,511 F.2d 1252 (2d Cir. 1975)....
The significance admiralty law has historically attached to the repairer-shipowner relationship weighs heavily against Humphreys' narrow interpretation of its duties to Little Beaver. Limitations on the warranty of workmanlike service are not looked upon with favor and are strictly construed. Viewed in this light, the trial court's finding that Humphreys' selection and installation of an inadequate steering system constituted defective workmanship easily survives the clearly erroneous standard of review ....
Little Beaver,
A year-and-a-half earlier, in Salter Marine, Inc. v. Conti Carriers & Terminals, Inc.,
Having carefully considered the above authorities, as well as other earlier-in-time Fourth Circuit opinions, including Tebbs, a case involving property damage caused to a yacht by a deficient "dead-tow" operation, this Court agrees with CMA that the Fourth Circuit has permitted litigants to secure indemnity based on a breach of the maritime warranty of workmanlike performance, to include indemnity for property damage, without requiring the underlying claim to be grounded in seaworthiness, or another similar "no-fault" doctrine. This Court remains bound by such opinions notwithstanding the "recent trend" in favor of limiting Ryan indemnity to personal injury cases and/or seaworthiness cases. See 2 Benedict on Admiralty § 11c. (2018) (indicating that the "more recent trend" in maritime law "seems to be that breach of [the] warranty of workmanlike service under Ryan is not a proper basis for indemnity in property damage cases"); 1 Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Mar. Law § 5:15 n.43 ("Ryan indemnity is available only where a shipowner is exposed to strict liability for unseaworthiness ...."); LCI Shipholdings, Inc. v. Muller Weingarten AG,
B. Ryan Indemnity does not apply to the Facts of the Instant Case
Returning to the context of the instant case, MRS cites Maersk Line Ltd. v. Care,
CMA responds to MRS's attempt to limit Ryan indemnity by citing Little Beaver,
Turning next to Tebbs, such case involved property damage to a yacht from a maritime allision between a "dead ship" being undocked by three tugs and the moored yacht. Tebbs,
Synthesizing the above cases, and acknowledging the evolving interpretations of maritime law that distinguish between the general applicability of a contract-based warranty of workmanlike performance in all maritime service contracts, and a warranty arising out of a "special relationship" that brings with it a right to indemnity, this Court rejects CMA's efforts to extend Ryan indemnity to a property damage case outside the stevedoring/ship repair/dead-ship towage context in which the party from whom indemnity is sought did not have a "special relationship" with the party seeking indemnity. Such "special relationships" appear to occur when a maritime contractor exercises control over a vessel, or a portion of a vessel, with the implied promise of performing loading/unloading services, repairs, or towage services of a dead ship in a safe and competent manner. Outside these scenarios involving a "special relationship" between the shipowner and the maritime contractor, a duty of workmanlike performance is still owed, but a violation of such duty is subject to resolution through traditional contract-law remedies rather than implied indemnity, particularly in property damage cases. Cf. Parks v. United States,
Declining to further extend Ryan indemnity beyond cases involving the "special relationship" between a shipowner and a stevedore, ship-repair contractor, or tug pilot towing a "dead ship," is both sensible and equitable. See In re Columbia Leasing L.L.C.,
*547Chisholm,
In contrast, when a land-based container company agrees to "pre-trip" a cargo container to ensure that its refrigeration system is operating, and agrees to later verify, through simple visual inspection, that such container's refrigeration system is both set to the proper temperature and maintaining such temperature while stored at a terminal awaiting transfer to the stevedore, the facts do not implicate any special duties or any "special relationship" involving a vessel.19 Rather, *548the essence of the contract at issue in this case was simply for MRS to ensure that reefer containers stay cold while awaiting transfer to the carrier/stevedore-a task unrelated to seaworthiness, vessel safety, safety to other vessels or the public, or safety to crewmembers or anyone else onboard a vessel. Cf. Calmar S.S. Corp. v. Nacirema Operating Co.,
Although the Fourth Circuit has, on multiple occasions, described Ryan indemnity as grounded in the effort to shift liability to the party in the best place to avoid the injury/damage, such cases necessarily involve "special relationships" that justify the total shift in liability. See Int'l Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Marsh & McLennan, Inc.,
*549(indicating that a "special relationship" was recognized in Ryan"since the stevedoring company had agreed to perform all the shipowner's stevedoring operations" yet the shipowner retained a non-delegable duty to provide a seaworthy vessel). In the absence of such a special relationship, complete liability cannot be shifted merely because one entity is in a better position to avoid a contractual breach; notably, the breaching party in any contractual relationship, inside or outside of maritime law, is the party in the best position to avoid its own breach.
For these reasons, this Court is unwilling to expand the list of defined "special relationships" that give rise to an implied right of complete indemnification far enough to reach the facts of the instant case.
C. No Duty to Monitor Attached in this Case because Control/Supervision was not Relinquished to MRS
Alternatively, even if Fourth Circuit law permits a carrier to invoke Ryan to secure complete indemnity from a shore-based container company that contributes to cargo damage in its possession while awaiting transfer to a stevedore, the Court finds that CMA is not entitled to indemnity in this case. Importantly, CMA's evidence failed to demonstrate that CMA turned the "[Container] over to the control of [MRS] and relie[d] on the latter's expertise in conducting safe [monitoring] operations." Tebbs,
Although it is clear that the Container was briefly encountered by MRS at the *550VIG terminal for the limited purpose of genset removal, such removal function was properly performed, and the Container was then taken to an area of the VIG terminal that was not accessible to MRS. The trial evidence establishes that no duty to monitor the Container arose unless there was: (1) an actual transfer of custody to MRS, or at a minimum, a transfer of the Container to the "reefer rows" or physically accessible powered reefer stacks at VIG; (2) proper notice to the MRS personnel responsible for monitoring CMA's containers that a "live" reefer with a temperature requirement had arrived at VIG (i.e., notification through "SPARCS"); or (3) proof of an established course of dealing requiring MRS to use its genset mount/dismount area at VIG to double as an "intake verification" area such that MRS was obligated to ensure that CMA/VIT had not mis-booked and misclassified a live reefer. At trial, CMA failed to demonstrate that any of such triggers occurred in this case, and thus, MRS's duty to monitor was never triggered.23
CMA's 30(b) (6) representative, who did not testify at trial, but instead appeared through deposition, indicated under oath that he believed that MRS was responsible for performing the initial temperature verification during the intake process at VIG. CMA later stipulated that it was actually VIT personnel who perform such duties at VIG; however, CMA's earlier-in-time mistaken understanding of MRS's role/responsibilities at VIG illustrates the absence of a "meeting of the minds" regarding the scope of MRS's monitoring services. More specifically, the Court finds that there was not a meeting of the minds, or otherwise an "implied" obligation for MRS to: (1) track a CMA reefer from the time it leaves the MRS depot in Chesapeake until the time it is transferred to the stevedore for loading on a vessel at VIG; (2) track, verify, or inspect, every CMA reefer container that entered VIG, irrespective of whether the VIG SPARCS booking information for such container included a temperature requirement; and (3) utilize its genset removal lane to verify that two separate business entities with their own respective roles and responsibilities (CMA and VIT), including roles performed solely to ensure the safekeeping of refrigerated cargo, properly completed their booking, intake, and storage assignment duties.
Such finding is not tantamount to a finding that MRS had no duty to "troubleshoot" known or suspected incidents at VIG and/or that it had no duty to act as CMA's "eyes and ears" at the terminal. Although VIT was the entity responsible for both verifying the arrival temperature of live export reefers and plugging such containers into shore power, it would be improper to conclude that MRS's monitoring obligation was never "triggered" unless a reefer was properly booked and/or that it was not triggered until a reefer was plugged in by VIT. Rather, MRS's obligation typically began when a container was in-gated with a temperature requirement in its electronic booking and allowed to remain at the VIG terminal-had a truck *551driver parked such container in the wrong place, and/or had VIT failed to plug such container in, MRS would still be on notice from the SPARCS data that it was on the premises and would have an obligation to locate it and ensure that it continued to operate properly. Similarly, even if a proper booking did not exist, if a CMA reefer with the MRS "sticker" on its exterior was parked in the reefer rows, or the powered reefer stacks, yet did not appear on the SPARCS list, MRS would have been obligated to investigate the situation in order to protect CMA's cargo. However, neither of such factual scenarios occurred in this case, and CMA failed to demonstrate that the abnormality that did occur "should have" been identified by MRS on these facts.
Consideration of which entity was "best situated" to avoid the loss, a factor referenced in multiple Ryan indemnity cases from this Circuit, further supports such analysis. VIT's server error caused the initial proper booking to be ineffective for several days, an error that VIT was "the party best situated" to control for and/or avoid. Tebbs,
After the above errors were committed, a MRS employee performed his genset removal responsibilities as required under a course of dealing between CMA and MRS that was separate and distinct from monitoring services. MRS disconnected all gensets for all carriers at VIG irrespective of whether MRS had an independent agreement to perform monitoring for such carrier. MRS also billed its genset install/removal separately from its monitoring services.26
After disconnecting the genset in a manner fully consistent with MRS's established course of dealing, and fully consistent with the "real-time" instructions the MRS mechanic received from VIT through *552the VIG gate ticket, the MRS mechanic reasonably assumed, within the scope of his responsibilities and within the scope of MRS's course of dealing with CMA, that VIT performed its obligations to assign the Container to a proper location and plug it in to shore power. MRS's genset mechanic surely "could" have discovered the booking/stack assignment errors had he been more knowledgeable about the layout of the VIG "stacks," and MRS likewise "could" have discovered the error had its foreman reviewed the records prepared by the genset mechanic. However, in the absence of evidence suggesting that MRS was hired by CMA to perform "screening" at the genset removal lane in order to advance the efficacy of their monitoring services, its mechanic's physical proximity to the "live" reefer at VIG is insufficient to convince the Court that MRS was "in the best position" to avoid the damage in this case. Stated differently, even if MRS was in the best location to avoid the damage (because its employees were physically at the terminal), CMA fails to demonstrate that the parties' course of dealing contemplated that MRS would perform the "cross-check" monitoring that CMA now asserts was deficiently omitted. Because the Container was never parked in the VIG reefer rows or powered reefer stacks, and because it was not otherwise handed over to MRS for monitoring (it was handed over to MRS for the limited purpose of removing the genset before it was immediately released back into the custody of the truck driver), the warranty of workmanlike performance never "attached." See U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. S/S Jebel Ali,
D. Implied Warranty was not Breached
Alternatively to the above, even if MRS had sufficient "control" over the Container for the warranty of workmanlike performance to "attach" when the Container was brought to the genset removal area, CMA fails to demonstrate that MRS failed to provide skillful performance, and thus, neither indemnity, nor recovery under traditional contract principles, are appropriate in this case.28
As a provider of maritime services, MRS was not "an insurer against accidents," rather, the extent of the warranty of workmanlike performance "depends on the circumstances of (the) case relating to control, supervision, and expertise." Tebbs,
*553Dann Marine Towing, LC v. Gen. Ship Repair Corp., No. CV MJG-12-1610,
1. Reefer Mechanic
The "expertise" of the MRS mechanic that removed the genset involved: (1) installation and removal of gensets; and (2) mechanical repair to the refrigeration units on reefers. His expertise reasonably did not involve the proper storage locations for reefers in "the stacks" at a terminal operated by another entity. Moreover, even though storing a live export reefer in the stacks at VIG was "unusual," the best interpretation of the factual record is that the MRS mechanic had no duty to stop performing his assigned function and question the VIT routing ticket in the busy genset install/removal lane where hundreds of reefers may be processed on a given day. Rather, the mechanic confirmed from the VIG ticket that genset removal was necessary in "the lane," he removed the genset (presumably in a workmanlike manner), he documented his actions in written logs that can be used to verify the specific genset that was installed or removed and the specific inbound or outbound reefer container, and he reasonably presumed that VIT had performed, and would continue to perform, its roles in a workmanlike manner regarding the proper intake and handling of such Container (to include plugging it into shore power).
As evidenced by the trial testimony, the reefer mechanic's primary responsibility at VIG is to keep "the line" of trucks moving by installing a genset on every outbound truck departing with a live reefer, and removing a genset from any inbound truck with a VIG ticket indicating that such reefer was assigned to "the stacks." While it is stipulated that the MRS mechanic both recognized that the Container was "live," and powered down such reefer (as was necessary to remove the genset), he did so with the reasonable expectation that it would be powered back up by VIT shortly after it was taken to the stacks. Based on the evidence documenting the parties' course of dealing at this terminal, and MRS's limited control/supervision over reefers at VIG during the intake process, CMA fails to demonstrate that the scope of the services undertaken by MRS was sufficiently broad such that the warranty of workmanlike performance was breached by the MRS mechanic that removed the genset.
2. MRS Foreman
The MRS foreman was responsible for tracking, and performing twice daily monitoring, of live CMA reefers at VIG to ensure that such reefers continued to function properly and maintain the required temperature. While a closer call than the evaluation of the reefer mechanic's performance, the Court finds that CMA has not demonstrated that the MRS foreman failed to perform with the requisite level of diligence by failing to review logs associated with a separate business function (mounting/dismounting) in order to verify that VIT employees, and/or CMA employees, did not commit errors when performing their distinct obligations (booking, in-gate inspection, initial temperature check, plugging in live reefers). Rather, the better interpretation of the trial record is that MRS was hired to verify that: (1)
*554every CMA reefer that arrived (and remained) at VIG with a temperature requirement in its booking maintained the required temperature during storage; and (2) every CMA reefer parked in the reefer rows or powered reefer stack was accounted for and monitored.
The fact that the MRS foreman was physically present at VIG does not establish that MRS failed to perform in a workmanlike manner because it did not cross-check records from one business function with records from the other. Notably, driven by CMA's booking error, VIT essentially "reported" to the MRS foreman through the SPARCS system that the Container at issue did not need to be monitored. As acknowledged by CMA, the applicable legal standard does not permit recovery if CMA's actions "prevented or seriously handicapped [MRS] from performing its duties," Heyman, 1992 A.M.C. at 2657, and based on the scope of MRS's duties as established through course of dealing, CMA appears to have seriously handicapped MRS by causing the Container to be "hidden" in the unpowered stacks, an act that directly interfered with MRS's monitoring activities. Furthermore, CMA never told MRS about the need for the manual booking on October 27, 2016, and at least some individuals at CMA knew about the EDI server issues by the early afternoon on October 28, 2016; communication with MRS on that date could still have avoided the cargo loss. In sum, because MRS was not hired to perform "intake" functions beyond the manual process of removing gensets, MRS, through its foreman, performed with "reasonable care, skill, and diligence" based on the scope of the services MRS agreed to undertake. Matter of Robbins Maritime,
The fact that MRS acted as CMA's "eyes and ears" at VIG and previously took steps to respond to unusual situations that it noticed also does not establish that MRS acted without reasonable diligence based on its failure to "catch" the CMA/VIT errors that caused the damages at issue in this case. In a comparable scenario, the First Circuit addressed, and rejected, a claim that the scope of the defendant's inspection/repairs during a prior ship "commissioning" rendered it duty-bound to perform broad inspections during the vessel commissioning at issue in that case. Northern Insurance,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated in detail herein, the Court finds that CMA fails to demonstrate that it is entitled to complete indemnity from MRS because: (1) the parties did not have a contractual relationship, or course of dealing, that expressly or impliedly provided for indemnity; (2) the implied " Ryan indemnity" remedy available in a case where a maritime contractor violates the warranty of workmanlike performance is not applicable in the absence of a "special relationship" between the maritime contractor and a vessel or vessel owner; and (3) even if complete indemnity is an appropriate legal remedy when a shore-based container company violates the warranty of workmanlike performance, CMA fails to demonstrate that the warranty attached in this case, or that any such attached warranty was breached by MRS based on the case-specific evidence presented at trial.
Accordingly, the Clerk is INSTRUCTED to enter judgment in favor of MRS. The Clerk is further requested to send a copy of this Opinion and Order to all counsel of record.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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