World Wide Supply OU v. Quail Cruises Ship Management

802 F.3d 1255, 2015 WL 5719569
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
Docket14-14838
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 802 F.3d 1255 (World Wide Supply OU v. Quail Cruises Ship Management) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
World Wide Supply OU v. Quail Cruises Ship Management, 802 F.3d 1255, 2015 WL 5719569 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

*1257 PER CURIAM:

This appeal concerns an attachment of property made pursuant to Supplemental Admiralty Rule B. The money at issue arose from the legal settlement of a dispute over the purchase of a cruise ship featured on ABC Television Network’s long-running series, The Love Boat. The plaintiff below, and appellant here, has advanced a novel interpretation of Rule B. The district court was unpersuaded, as are we. Accordingly, we affirm the court’s order vacating the attachment.

I. BACKGROUND

This appeal has a complicated background, involving multiple lawsuits in federal district courts, Florida state court, and a Spanish bankruptcy court. The common denominator of these suits is Quail Cruises Ship Management (“Quail”), from which multiple parties, including participants in this appeal, have tried to collect money that they believe Quail owes them.

Plaintiff — Appellant World Wide Supply OÜ (“Plaintiff’) entered into a contract with Quail for Plaintiff to supply provisions for the M/V Gemini, a vessel owned by Jewel Owner Ltd. (“Jewel”). When Quail stopped making payments to Plaintiff for those provisions, Plaintiff sought a prejudgment attachment of Quail’s property to recover the unpaid €123,122.28 balance. Specifically, on January 29, 2014, Plaintiff filed in the district court below an emergency motion for a Rule B attachment of what it contended to be Quail property: a sum of money Quail was to receive from Agencia de Viagens CVC Turlimitada (“Viagens”), pursuant to a settlement agreement between the two. It is that attachment, and its subsequent vacation by the district court below, that gives rise to the present appeal.

Years before, Quail had sued Viagens in the Southern District of Florida “for fraud based on the purchase of what was, at one point, the boat ... that appeared in the show, The Love Boat.” In an unrelated lawsuit, ongoing at the time of the Quail-Viagens suit, Quail and Jewel agreed to a settlement under which any recovery, up to €3,395,519.45, from Quail’s suit against Viagens would be paid to Jewel to settle its unrelated claim. Despite this agreement with Jewel, on November 30, 2011, Quail finalized with Viagens a secret settlement agreement . whereby Viagens would pay $5,000,000 to Quail’s parent corporation, Quail Travel, which was then in bankruptcy proceedings in Spain. Of course, if kept undisclosed, this would mean that Jewel would be cheated out of the approximate €3.4 million to which it was entitled under its own settlement with Quail. But learning of the secret agreement between Quail and Viagens, Jewel filed a motion to intervene in the Quail— Viagens suit and also filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Miami-Dade County against Quail and Viagens to prevent any transfer of the settlement proceeds, asserting theories of constructive trust and equitable lien.

Meanwhile, Hainan Cruise Enterprise, S.A. (“Hainan”), which had prevailed against Quail in yet another lawsuit in the Southern District of Florida, obtained a writ of garnishment against Viagens under Rule B, seeking to recover its own judgment from this same, now not-so-secret, $5,000,000 settlement agreement.

At this point, Quail Travel filed for Chapter 15 bankruptcy in the Southern District of Florida and claimed, as its own property, this same $5,000,000 “secret” settlement fund that Quail had promised to Jewel and that Hainan now claimed. Thus, there were three parties with claims to the settlement funds that Viagens was to pay to Quail: Jewel, Hainan, and Quail Travel. The district court overseeing *1258 Quail Travel’s bankruptcy proceedings determined that Quail and Quail Travel each held an undivided 50% interest in the settlement proceeds. Quail’s $2,500,000 portion, the district court ruled, was subject to Jewel’s constructive trust and Hainan’s Rule B attachment.

In compliance with that order, Quail, Jewel, Hainan, and Viagens verbally agreed to a settlement, under which Via-gens would transfer Quail’s $2,500,000 share of the settlement to a trust fund account held by Quail’s counsel, Holland & Knight. Holland & Knight would, in turn, disburse $1,500,000 to Hainan and $1,000,000 to Jewel. Viagens’ transfer to Holland & Knight was to be made in two equal installments made 30 days apart; Holland & Knight was to distribute each installment to Hainan and Jewel after it had been received.

On January 3, 2014, the first installment was made, with Viagens transferring $1,250,000 to Holland & Knight, after which Holland & Knight distributed $500,000 to Jewel and $750,000 to Hainan. However, just before the second transfer by Viagens, on January 29, 2014, Plaintiff filed the above-referenced emergency motion to attach and garnish the funds that were about to be transferred in the second distribution. Representing Plaintiff in this action was Moore & Company, P.A., which had also represented Viagens in the Quail — Viagens lawsuit and had represented Viagens in the distribution of the settlement funds as recently as one week before filing the emergency motion on behalf of Plaintiff. In Plaintiff’s view, once Holland & Knight received the funds that had been attached in Hainan’s Rule B motion, the funds were no longer protected by the Rule B attachment because, under Rule B(3)(a), the funds had to either remain “in the garnishee’s hands or [be] paid into the registry of the court.” Having left Via-gens’ hands, Plaintiff argued, the funds would become • subject to Plaintiffs own new Rule B attachment.

In opposition to Plaintiff’s motion, Jewel and Hainan (“Appellees”) and Holland & Knight raised various arguments. First, they argued that the funds Plaintiff was attempting to attach were still subject to Hainan’s prior Rule B attachment and Jewel’s constructive trust. Second, they argued that Plaintiffs “emergency” motion represented no emergency at all because Plaintiffs counsel had served as counsel for Viagens during the negotiations leading to the verbal settlement, and therefore was well aware of when and how the funds would be transferred. Plaintiff therefore had been dishonest in its representations to the district court in support of its Rule B attachment. They similarly argued that Plaintiff, because of this knowledge, should have intervened earlier in the proceedings, rather than wait until the eleventh hour to manufacture an emergency. Finally, Ap-pellees argued that Quail’s interest was only in receiving the $2,500,000 owed to it from Viagens, and it had no claim on any funds that had already been transferred to third parties, including the funds being held by Holland & Knight.

After hearing from the parties, a magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation suggesting that Plaintiffs Rule B attachment should be vacated. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, giving three key reasons in support of its decision to vacate Plaintiff’s attachment. First, the court held, Plaintiff was relying on a narrow, unpersuasive reading of Rule B(3)(a), under which an attachment was lost as soon as the res left the hands of the garnishee or the court’s registry. Second, the motion was not an “emergency,” as Plaintiff had characterized it, because Moore & Company had just represented Viagens in the secret settlement negotiations and *1259

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Bluebook (online)
802 F.3d 1255, 2015 WL 5719569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/world-wide-supply-ou-v-quail-cruises-ship-management-ca11-2015.