2010

New admiralty case from the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.  Maritime attachment has certainly been in the news these days.  Well, in the admiralty news world anyway.  This case sets out the standard for vacating attachment, in an interesting (slow news day) case involving oil pipelines, unpaid divers, and Mexican District Attorneys.  The case is 

I am on the redeye to Los Angeles tonight, but wanted to get this news release posted.  Apparently, there has been some concerns about starting and finishing canoe regattas in the various harbors and the Coast Guard and State of Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources are crafting policy to address the issue.

The

New Longshore case from the First Circuit Court of Appeals.  The case is Bath Iron Works Corp. v. Fields  and can be found here.

This case turns on the employer’s burden of proof to rebut the work connection to an injury:

Section 20(a) of the LHWCA provides that certain disabilities are presumed to be work-related “in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary.” 33 U.S.C. § 920(a). Relying on that provision, the Benefits Review Board affirmed an award of disability benefits for respondent Clair Maynard Fields.

Fields’s employer Bath Iron Works (“BIW”), a ship manufacturing facility based in Bath, Maine, now petitions for review of the Board’s decision, arguing that it produced “substantial evidence” to rebut the statutory presumption and, alternatively, that the Board exceeded the scope of its authority in vacating an earlier decision of the ALJ that rejected Fields’s claim for benefits. We disagree on both points and therefore deny the petition.

The opinion is fact heavy, but it does show that the presumption is a potent tool in claimant’s arsenal.

New admiralty case from the First Circuit Court of Appeals on fishing wage agreements.  The opinion in the case of Borkowski v. F/V Madison Kate, can be found here.

From the Court’s introduction:

The appellants in this maritime matter are three commercial fishermen who served aboard the F/V Madison Kate on a fishing voyage from Stonington, Connecticut in March 2006. Contrary to the requirements of federal maritime law, there was no written agreement memorializing the terms of appellants’ employment. Upon return to port, each of the fishermen and the other crew members was paid a portion of the boat’s net proceeds, consisting of the value of the trip’s catch, less various expenses and the owner’s share. Their payments were made pursuant to what the fishing industry is known in the fishing industry as the “lay-share system,” under which the net proceeds are divided up into “shares” that are then awarded, in whole or part, to crew members depending on, among other things, their experience and performance. Appellants Wood and Borkowski each received a full share; appellant Ayres received a three-quarter share. The fishermen sued, claiming violations of federal maritime law and state wage laws. After an abbreviated bench trial, the district court awarded Ayres an additional quarter-share; Wood and Borkowski received no damage award. The fishermen claim on appeal that the district court committed legal error in limiting their damages. Such written agreements must contain the period of their effectiveness, the terms of any wage, share or other compensation arrangement, and any other agreed terms. Although we employ somewhat different reasoning than did the district court, we affirm the judgment.

At issue in this case was what damages are available for violations of the fishing wage agreement statute, 46 U.S.C. 10601.  Rather than address the crewmens’ arguments regarding the availability of compensatory damages for violations of that statute, the appeals court highlighted their lack of evidence (apart from counsel’s “say-so”) of damage or the details of the deductions taken from the fishing vessel’s gross revenue from the trip.  Such a lack of evidence was fatal to the claim.

The Advertiser ran a story this morning on a bill pending in the Legislature regarding the definition of the boundary between oceanfront landowners and the public.  Article here.

I pulled the bill and it is reprinted below:

RELATING TO COASTAL AREAS.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

SECTION 1. Section 205A-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of “shoreline” to read as follows:

“Shoreline” means the upper reaches of the wash of the waves, other than storm and seismic waves, at high tide during the season of the year in which the highest wash of the waves occurs, usually evidenced by the edge of natural vegetation growth, or the upper limit of debris left by the wash of the waves[-], whichever is further most mauka, but never lower than the upper limit of debris left by the wash of the waves.”

SECTION 2. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.

SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.

You can download here.  It is pretty sparse and appears to be a placeholder for further legislative action. 

Stay tuned.

This month, the Supreme Court is hearing a case that deals with the interplay between maritime contracts dealing with cargo shipments and the rules governing disputes for cargo transported on railways.  It is a thorny mix of federal law, international conventions and contract principles. My earlier post here.

The Question Presented is:

Whether the Carmack Amendment to the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, which governs certain rail and motor transportation by common carriers within the United States, 49 U.S.C. §§ 11706 (rail carriers) & 14706 (motor carriers), applies to the inland rail leg of an intermodal shipment from overseas where the shipment was made under a "through" bill of lading issued by an ocean carrier that extended the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, 46 U.S.C. § 30701 Note, to the inland leg, there was no domestic bill of lading for rail transportation, and the ocean carrier privately subcontracted for rail transportation. 

Merits Briefs (Courtesy of the ABA):

Brief for Petitioner Union Pacific Railroad Co.

Brief for Petition Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.

Brief for Respondent Regal-Beliot Corp.

Amicus Briefs (Courtesy of the ABA):

Brief for the USA in Support of Petitioners

Association of American Railroads brief in Support of Petitioners

Brief for the International Group of Protection and Indemnity (P&I) Clubs, et al., in Support of Petitioners

Brief for the World Shipping Council in Support of Petitioners

Brief for the Transportation and Logistics Council and the American Institute of Marine Underwriters in Support of Respondent

We will keep you posted.

A Petition for Writ of Certiorari has been filed with the Supreme Court seeking review of Shipping Corp. of India, Ltd. v. Jaldhi Overseas Pte, Ltd. 

At the risk of grossly simplifying, this case deals with the ability to attach electronic funds transfers as they pass through banks in New York.  The federal rules governing admiralty disputes allow for attachment or prejudgment seizure of “property” to provide for funds to satisfy the claims in dispute.  What is “property” is defined by state law. In international banking, if dollars are denominated as the currency for the transaction, foreign banks use an intermediary bank to convert the current to dollars.  While those funds are present in the Clearing House bank (in New York City), can they be subject to attachment?  Even if the dispute is between two non-American parties?

My earlier post on this case, with briefs and analysis, is here.

The Petition has the following Questions Presented:

1. Whether attachments under Rule B of the Supplemental Rules for Admiralty or Maritime Claims and Asset Forfeiture Actions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure of electronic funds transfers (“EFTs”) are precluded by New York State law, specifically §§ 4-A-502(4) & 503 of the New York Uniform Commercial Code?

2. Whether in order to maintain uniform rules relating to maritime matters, which was the fundamental purpose of certain provisions in the Constitution, conflicting provisions of State law and that work material prejudice to the attachment remedy are invalid to that extent?

3. Whether no State, through its enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code, can purport to restrict or define “intangible” property subject to maritime attachment?

The Supreme Court docket can be viewed here.  It denotes that the prevailing party in the Court of Appeals did not file a response. 

There were two amicus briefs filed, one by the Maritime Law Association of the United States and one by the Clearinghouse Association.  Thanks to counsel for providing copies of their pleadings.

MLA filed an Amicus Brief in Support of Petitioner. 

The Clearing House Association filed an Amicus Brief in Opposition.