Skandinaviska-Enskilda Banken v. C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd. (In Re SeaEscape Cruises, Ltd.)

172 B.R. 1002, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14429, 1994 WL 550358
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 30, 1994
Docket94-0110-CIV, 94-0288-CIV, 94-0412-CIV and 91-11121-BKC-PGH
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 B.R. 1002 (Skandinaviska-Enskilda Banken v. C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd. (In Re SeaEscape Cruises, Ltd.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skandinaviska-Enskilda Banken v. C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd. (In Re SeaEscape Cruises, Ltd.), 172 B.R. 1002, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14429, 1994 WL 550358 (S.D. Fla. 1994).

Opinion

ORDER AFFIRMING DECISIONS OF THE BANKRUPTCY COURT GRANTING MARITIME LIEN CLAIMS IN FAVOR OF C.L.C. MARINE SERVICES, INC. AND C.L.C. MARINE SERVICES, LTD.

ARONOVITZ, District Judge.

This matter concerns three separate appeals in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy case of SeaEseape Cruises, Ltd. In the appeal designated as Case No. 94-OllO-CIV-ARONO-VITZ, Skandinaviska-Enskilda Banken (“SE Banken”) appeals from the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on Objections to Maritime Lien Claim of C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd., entered on November 12,1993 by Judge Paul G. Hyman, Jr. of the United *1005 States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida. In the appeal designated as Case No. 94-0412-CIV-ARONOVITZ, SE Banken appeals from the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on Objections to Maritime Lien Claim of C.L.C. Marine Services, Inc., entered on December 14, 1993 by Judge Hyman. In the appeal designated as Case No. 94-0288-CIV-ARONOVITZ, C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd. appeals from the Order Denying C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd.’s Motion for Attorney’s Fees, entered on January 13, 1994 by Judge Hyman.

The aforementioned appeals were consolidated for appellate review, and on September 9, 1994, the Court heard oral argument thereon. 1 The Court has considered the briefs on appeal, oral argument of counsel, the decisions of the bankruptcy court, the applicable law and the pertinent portions of the record, and is otherwise fully advised in the premises. For the reasons stated herein, this Court hereby AFFIRMS the decision of the bankruptcy court in each of the three above-captioned appeals.

Factual and Procedural Background

This appeal stems from a dispute over the validity of the maritime lien claims of C.L.C. Marine Services, Inc. (“CLC Inc.”), a Florida corporation with an office in Miami, Florida, and C.L.C. Marine Services, Ltd. (“CLC Ltd.”), an English corporation with an office in Southampton, England, against the M/V Scandinavian Song (the “M/V Song” or the “Vessel”).

Renovations to the M/V Song

The Debtor, SeaEscape Cruises, Ltd. (“SeaEscape”) was a Bahamian corporation that offered one-day cruises from Miami, Florida. Its fleet included the M/V Song, a vessel which it leased from the owner, Ferry Charter Limited of Florida, pursuant to a charter agreement between the parties. Paragraph 14 of the charter agreement contained a no lien clause that barred SeaEs-cape from permitting any liens to attach to the Vessel.

Shortly after SeaEscape retained possession of the M/V Song in 1990, it hired CLC Inc. to perform renovation and repair work on the Vessel. The preliminary terms of the deal were first memorialized in a Letter of Intent dated September 29, 1990. Paragraph 9 of the Letter of Intent contained the following waiver clause;

Owner shall always retain full possession of the Vessel and materials, and CLC waives any right to prevent the Vessel from sailing, and waives any claim of hen against the Vessel.

The Letter of Intent further stated that “[a] formal contract incorporating these terms will be signed by October 5, 1990.” It was signed by John Chilhngworth, the Vice President of Technical and Marine Operations of SeaEscape and by Kenneth Engstrom, Director and General Manager of CLC Inc.

On October 4, 1990, CLC Inc. and SeaEs-cape entered into the “Refit Contract,” the formal contract anticipated in the Letter of Intent. Article 28 of the Refit Contract provides in its entirety the following:

Contractor waives any right it has or may have under this Contract or the law, or otherwise, in rem against Vessel for any *1006 claim arising under or in connection with this contract for purposes of obtaining security or jurisdiction with respect to any such claims; provided that should Contractor obtain a judgment against Owner and should that judgment remain unsatisfied or enforcement remain unstayed for thirty-one (31) days, Contractor shall have the right to arrest or attach Vessel so far as permitted by applicable law, for the purpose of enforcing the judgment.

The Refit Contract was signed by the President of SeaEscape and the President of CLC Inc. It identified SeaEscape as the “owner” of the M/V Song.

CLC Inc. subcontracted all or substantially all of the renovation and repair work to CLC Ltd., 2 which CLC Ltd. performed and completed in Tampa, Florida between October 3, 1990 and November 20, 1990. A bill in the amount of $620,253.54 was submitted to SeaEscape for the value of the goods and services rendered to the MTV Song. SeaEs-cape declined payment.

CLC Inc.’s and CLC Ltd.’s Claim to a Man-time Lien

When SeaEscape failed to pay for the services rendered, CLC Inc. filed an action in Florida state court on March 8,1991, seeking an in personam judgment against SeaEscape for the repair and renovation work performed to the M/V Song. 3 Ten days later on March 18, 1991, SeaEscape filed a petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida, which stayed the state court action pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362. CLC Inc. then filed two proofs of claim of a maritime lien in the bankruptcy case in the amount of $96,798.85 (claim #1174) and $536,072.20 (claim #1226). CLC Ltd. also filed a proof of claim of a maritime lien in the amount of $517,972.54 (claim # 1087).

At all relevant times, SE Banken (the Appellant herein) held a mortgage on the M/V Song. When the Vessel was transferred from SeaEscape during the course of the reorganization, SE Banken posted a letter of guaranty in favor of any holders of valid maritime liens which had priority over its mortgage on the M/V Song. Pursuant to a prior bankruptcy court order, SE Banken was given the right to contest maritime liens and to assert all claims and defenses of the Debtor SeaEscape. SE Banken filed objections to CLC Inc.’s and CLC Ltd.’s respective claims, contending that no privity existed between CLC Inc. and CLC Ltd., that CLC Inc. and CLC Ltd. failed to file documents adequate to preserve a maritime lien, and that CLC Inc. and CLC Ltd. failed to provide sufficient documentation to show that the services were actually performed. Subsequent thereto, SE Banken argued that CLC Inc. and CLC Ltd. had contractually waived their right to a maritime lien.

A trial on SE Banken’s objections to CLC Inc.’s and CLC Ltd.’s proofs of claim was held before Judge Hyman in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida on November 1, 1993, primarily on the question of whether CLC Inc. and/or CLC Ltd. had waived their right to a maritime lien under Article 28 of the Refit Contract.

The Bankruptcy Court’s Decision

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172 B.R. 1002, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14429, 1994 WL 550358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skandinaviska-enskilda-banken-v-clc-marine-services-ltd-in-re-flsd-1994.