Claimant-appellant Way Wiser Navigation Corporation (Way Wiser) appeals from the district court’s order granting $9,794 in attorneys’ fees to plaintiff-appellee B.P. North America Trading, Inc. (B.P.) in a maritime attachment action. We reverse.
FACTS
On August 29, 1984, B.P. filed a complaint against the vessel PANAMAX NOVA and its owner, Way Wiser, to enforce a maritime lien for fuel oil and services provided to the vessel. On September 7, the United States Marshal arrested the PANAMAX NOVA shortly after its entry into San Francisco Bay.
At the time of the arrest, the ship was carrying a cargo of highly volatile soft coal. Its crew had not received pay for approximately nine months and was experiencing severe morale problems. The crew was also running out of food and water. In order to safeguard the welfare of the ship, its cargo and its crew, the U.S. Marshal supplied food, wages, medical services and immigration assistance to the crew and took steps to prevent the volatile cargo from spontaneously combusting. B.P.’s attorneys assisted and supplemented the Marshal’s efforts.
On September 26, the PANAMAX NOVA was released when Way Wiser agreed to pay the fuel bills at issue and to reimburse the U.S. Marshal for his costs in caring for the ship and crew during the period of its arrest. Way Wiser also deposited $10,000 with the clerk of the court as security against the court’s decision whether to allow B.P. to recover attorneys’ fees in the case.
On November 9, 1984, the district court awarded B.P. $9,794 in attorneys’ fees. It held that under the special circumstances of the case, B.P.’s “extraordinary services rendered for the protection of the crew and the vessel, as well as the vessel’s owner” entitled B.P. to recover the portion of its attorneys’ fees it incurred in administrative activities. Way Wiser timely appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court’s award of attorneys’ fees will be reversed only for abuse of discretion.
Lewis v. Anderson,
9 Cir., 1982,
DISCUSSION
The prevailing party in an admiralty case is generally not entitled to an award of attorney’s fees,, absent statutory authorization.
Delta Steamship Lines v. Avondale Shipyards,
5 Cir., 1984,
These exceptions have a common purpose: to permit a plaintiff to recover a proportionate share of his costs from others who benefit from his efforts without contributing to them.
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
1970,
To justify an award of fees under either of these exceptions, the target of the award must, at minimum, stand “in such a relationship to the benefited class that the award will ‘operate to spread the costs proportionately’ and ‘with some exactitude’ among identifiable beneficiaries of the fee-seeker’s success.”
United States v. Imperial Irrigation District,
9 Cir., 1979,
Because this case is not within one of the established equitable exceptions to the general admiralty rule, “the litigant [B.P.] alone must bear the cost of the enrichment which may flow to others.”
Southeast Legal Defense Group v. Adams,
9 Cir., 1981,
The order appealed from is reversed and the case is remanded to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
