Underwriters at Interest on Cover Note JHB92M10582079 v. Nautronix, Ltd.

79 F.3d 480, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1039, 1996 A.M.C. 1566, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6991, 1996 WL 135044
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1996
Docket95-20153
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 79 F.3d 480 (Underwriters at Interest on Cover Note JHB92M10582079 v. Nautronix, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underwriters at Interest on Cover Note JHB92M10582079 v. Nautronix, Ltd., 79 F.3d 480, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1039, 1996 A.M.C. 1566, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6991, 1996 WL 135044 (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

ROBERT M. PARKER, Circuit Judge:

FACTS

Schahin Cury, a Brazilian company, owned the drill ship S.C. Lancer, which was chartered by another Brazilian company to conduct off-shore oil and gas well drilling. As part of the charter agreement, Schahin Cury was required to update the S.C. Lancer with a new dual computer dynamic positioning system (“DPS”). DPS is a complex device that holds the vessel in one place while the vessel does its drilling. Schahin Cury selected Nautronix, Ltd., an Australian corporation, to supply and install the DPS. Nautro- *482 nix, Ltd. was to install the DPS, calibrate it, and train the officers and crew of the S.C. Lancer in the operation of the new system before starting drilling operations. Nautro-nix, Ltd. subcontracted portions of the DPS upgrade work to its wholly owned California subsidiary, Nautronix Inc. 1 , which in turn operated a sales office in Houston.

The chartering contract required Schahin Cury to have the S.C. Lancer fully operational at a specific date, but because of several delays, Schahin Cury ran up against the time-limit required by its chartering contract. Nautronix contends that Schahin Cury cut short necessary tests and sea trials of the new DPS, did not allow complete calibration of the system, and did not make its officers or crew available for training prior to commencing the contracted-for drilling operations. As a result, Nautronix contends that it was required to maintain its technicians on board to complete installation and adjustments to the DPS during the initial weeks of those drilling operations. Exactly what happened next on a dark and stormy night in June, 1993, is in contention.

During a drilling operation, Nautronix contends that the ship’s captain panicked when the DPS indicators falsely showed that the vessel was drifting. It is Nautronix’s contention that the ship’s captain disregarded warnings by the Nautronix technician and warnings from his own DPS operator and chose to disengage the DPS and place the vessel in manual control. Schahin Cury argues that the DPS was not working properly, and that the eaptain pulled the ship about because a gale was causing it to roll dangerously, and that had he not done so, lives would have been in peril. In any case, as a result of the ship’s movement, some 1,100 meters of well casing that had been suspended beneath the ship sheared off, fell to the ocean floor, and had to be salvaged.

Schahin Cury and Rudgil, a wholly owned Panamanian subsidiary of Schahin Cury, made a claim of loss against its insurance policy, underwritten by Underwriters. According to Nautronix, Schahin Cury showed its loss to total $10,815,161.17. After the $100,000 deductible, Schahin Cury allegedly settled its claim for a total payment of $9,300,000, leaving it about $1,500,000 un-reimbursed. Schahin Cury and Rudgil then brought suit against Nautronix for “the amount of its actual damages”, alleging negligence, breach of various warranties, and negligent misrepresentation in connection with the manufacture, sale, and installation of the S.C. Lancer’s DPS. The complaint was submitted by “attorneys for plaintiffs Schahin Cury Engenharia E Comércio, Ltda. and Rudgil, Inc.”

Nautronix answered, denying Schahin Cury’s claims and asserting defenses and counterclaims against Schahin Cury and Rudgil. In its counterclaims, Nautronix claimed that Schahin Cury had made various statements to the chartering company and to others in the offshore drilling industry, including both competitors of Nautronix and customers or potential customers of Nautro-nix. Nautronix contends that Schahin Cury’s alleged statements defamed and disparaged Nautronix and the quality and reliability of its DPS system. Nautronix alleged that Schahin Cury made statements attributing the loss of the drillstring and attendant delay in drilling operations solely to defects in the Nautronix DPS and not the result of either Schahin Cury’s or its captain’s errors. Specifically, Nautronix claimed commercial disparagement, damage to prospective economic advantage, slander, malicious prosecution, and abuse of process.

PROCEEDINGS BELOW

Schahin Cury filed a Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss Nautronix’s counterclaims, stating that this lawsuit was “filed in the name of Schahin Cuiy without its authorization or consent and at the instance of attorneys acting solely on behalf of certain insurance underwriters.” Schahin Cury claimed that it was not the real party in interest, that the District Court had no jurisdiction over it, and that service of Nautronix’s counterclaims was insufficient. After a first amended complaint adding an additional defendant, a second motion to amend was filed by Underwriters on Friday, September 12,1994. In their motion *483 to amend, Underwriters stated that this is a subrogation suit, and that while Underwriters had the right to bring the suit in the name of Schahin Cury and Rudgil, the “continued exercise of that right would only serve to confuse the Court ... [s]ince Underwriters are the true parties in interest, Underwriters now seek to substitute their name for that of Schahin Cury and Rudgil.” On the following Monday, September 19, 1994, the District Court approved and signed the order requested by Underwriters allowing the substitution of the name of Underwriters for Schahin Cury and Rudgil.

Nautronix filed a motion for reconsideration pointing out that by allowing the opposed second amendment to the complaint, the District Court had disregarded local rules allowing 20 days for a party to respond to a motion, and that the amendment had de facto dismissed Nautronix’s counterclaims without allowing Nautronix to be heard on the issue. That motion was denied and Nau-tronix then filed a motion to allow those claims as a third-party complaint. The court denied, in part, Nautronix’s motion, noting that the still pending 12(b) motion by Schah-in Cury to dismiss Nautronix’s counterclaims was “moot” by reason of the earlier substitution of parties. The court sua sponte transferred this case to the Houston Division, where Nautronix’s emergency motion for reconsideration of the ruling against its third-party motion was denied. Nautronix then filed this interlocutory appeal.

JURISDICTION

This court has jurisdiction over appeals from “[ijnterlocutory decrees of such District Courts or the judges thereof determining the rights and liabilities of the parties to admiralty cases in which appeals from final decrees are allowed.” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3). In an admiralty case, it is not necessary for the order appealed from to have determined all the rights and liabilities of all the parties before such an order is appealable under § 1292(a)(3). O’Donnell v. Latham, 525 F.2d 650, 652 (5th Cir.1976). However, Underwriters argues that we are without jurisdiction because the interlocutory order appealed from does not effectively determine any “rights or liabilities” of Nautronix. We disagree.

After having claims asserted against it by Schahin Cury and Rudgil, Nautronix was required to assert its claims, in the form of counterclaims, against the opposing parties.

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79 F.3d 480, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1039, 1996 A.M.C. 1566, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 6991, 1996 WL 135044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwriters-at-interest-on-cover-note-jhb92m10582079-v-nautronix-ltd-ca5-1996.