Tug Blarney, LLC v. Ridge Contracting, Inc.

14 F. Supp. 3d 1255, 2014 WL 1515620
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 16, 2014
DocketNo. 3:12-cv-00097-SLG
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 3d 1255 (Tug Blarney, LLC v. Ridge Contracting, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tug Blarney, LLC v. Ridge Contracting, Inc., 14 F. Supp. 3d 1255, 2014 WL 1515620 (D. Alaska 2014).

Opinion

ORDER RE MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

SHARON L. GLEASON, District Judge.

This case arises out of circumstances related to the sinking of the tug ARIES in June 2011. The ARIES was owned by Third-Party Defendant C & K Marine LLC (“C & K”) and pulling a barge carrying equipment owned by Ridge Contracting, Inc. and Ridge Equipment, LLC. (Ridge Contracting and Ridge Equipment are together referred to as the “Ridge Defendants.”) After the ARIES sank, the tug BLARNEY and her crew went to its assistance and towed the barge and the Ridge Defendants’ cargo to Nome. Plaintiff Tug Blarney, LLC (“Tug Blarney”) owns the BLARNEY, but had chartered it to C & K. Brian Campbell and Kevin Kennedy own both Tug Blarney and C & K.

On May 4, 2012, Tug Blarney initiated this action for salvage against Ridge Contracting.1 On November 30, 2012, the BLARNEY’S four crewmembers, Douglas Hilty, Ed Lyda, Roger Kenoyer, and Nick Humlick (the “Crew”), were added as Plaintiffs.2 On July 29, 2013, Plaintiffs added Ridge Equipment as a Defendant.3

Ridge Contracting filed a third-party complaint against C & K seeking indemni[1259]*1259fication and alleging breach of contract.4 C & K counterclaimed against Ridge Contracting and Ridge Equipment, requesting that “C & K be allowed to participate with the other Plaintiffs in the salvage award for the successful salvage of’ the Ridge Defendants’ property.5

Tug Blarney and C & K have initiated a separate action against various insurance companies in the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington.6

Before this Court are three motions for summary judgment:

• At Docket 76, Third-Party Defendant C & K moves for summary judgment against Ridge Contracting, seeking the dismissal of Ridge Contracting’s claims for indemnification and the dismissal of the remaining breach of contract claims.7
• At Docket 88, the Ridge Defendants move for partial summary judgment on Ridge Contracting’s breach of contract claims against C & K, and on C & K’s and Tug Blarney’s salvage claims against the Ridge Defendants, as well as the Crew’s salvage claim against Ridge Equipment.8
• At Docket 96, C & K, Tug Blarney, and the Crew (together, the “Salvage Claimants”) move for partial summary judgment on the issue of “pure” salvage.9

These motions raise overlapping issues, which can be grouped into three categories: (1) indemnification; (2) salvage; and (3) breach of contract (other than the indemnification clause). Oral argument was not requested on any of the motions and was not necessary to this Court’s determination of these motions.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

I. The Charter and Freight Agreement between Ridge Contracting and C & K.

Ridge Contracting was engaged to work on construction projects for the summer of 2011 in Alakanuk, Alaska.10 In May 2011, C & K and Ridge Contracting entered into a Charter and Freight Agreement (the “Charter Agreement”).11 Ridge Equip[1260]*1260ment was not a party to the agreement. Under the Charter Agreement, C & K agreed to transport cargo to various locations, including Alakanuk, Alaska, for Ridge Contracting in four phases.12

Prior to entering into the Charter Agreement, C & K had executed with Tug Blarney a five-year “bareboat or demise” charter for the tug BLARNEY.13 But C & K’s performance of the Charter Agreement would require a tug that was capable of transiting rivers, which the BLARNEY could not do. Consequently, C & K purchased the tug ARIES, which could transit rivers.14 Ridge Contracting learned that C & K would purchase the ARIES for this purpose “right about the time [it] was signing [the] contract.”15

11. The Voyage and Sinking of the ARIES; the BLARNEY Recovers the Barge.

In May 2011, C & K bareboat chartered the barge KRS 240-5 (the “Barge”) from Heko Services, Inc.16 In June 2011, the ARIES, with a four person crew, set off from Dutch Harbor, Alaska, towards Nome, Alaska, with the Barge in tow.17 Most of the cargo on the Barge was owned by Ridge Contracting; twelve pieces of cargo were owned by Ridge Equipment, but appear to have been leased to Ridge Contracting.18

On June 26, 2011, at a location about 100 miles from the Pribilof Islands, the ARIES began listing.19 The ARIES crew eventually abandoned ship and boarded the Barge.20 The ARIES then sank, but it was still attached to the Barge.21 The ARIES acted as an anchor for the Barge.22 The ARIES crew did not know at that time, but before sinking, the ARIES had pierced and holed the Barge.23 A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter transported the ARIES crew from the Barge to land.

As noted above, C & K had also bare-boat chartered the BLARNEY.24 On June [1261]*126126, 2011, the BLARNEY was towing a different barge in Bristol Bay.25 Mr. Kennedy of C & K called the BLARNEY’S Captain that day and told him that “the Aries had sunk and [the Crew of the BLARNEY] needed to go get the barge and to leave immediately.”26 Within a few hours, the BLARNEY departed for the site where the ARIES had sunk.27 One of its crewmembers, Mr. Kenoyer, testified that the Crew’s priority was to “rescue [the] lives” of the ARIES crew, and that although this was not necessarily part of his job, he went because he “would expect somebody to do it for [him].”28 At that time, the BLARNEY Crew was unaware that the U.S. Coast Guard had already transported the ARIES crew to land. Once the Crew knew that the ARIES crew was safe, they still “made the best possible speed because [they] didn’t know if [the Barge] was going to break loose [from the ARIES] or not.”29 On June 28, 2011, the BLARNEY arrived at the site where the ARIES had sunk. The Crew delayed efforts to recover the towline to the Barge, waiting for favorable weather conditions.30 Eventually, the Crew separated the Barge from the ARIES, and secured the Barge to the BLARNEY.31 Captain Hilty testified that the Crew made a plan to recover the Barge’s tow line, had safety meetings, and then made two to three passes by the Barge to catch the tow line.32 Captain Hilty further testified the operation was dangerous, but not so much as to risk the lives of the Crew:

I could have got too close to the barge, going by the front of it, had a swell throw me into it. I could have ended up on top of the wire leaning down to the ARIES. I could have got either one [of the tow wires] in our wheel.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Supp. 3d 1255, 2014 WL 1515620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tug-blarney-llc-v-ridge-contracting-inc-akd-2014.