Colin KOKE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY, Phillips Petroleum Company
Norway, A Wholly Owned Subsidiary of Phillips Petroleum Co.,
Sedco, Inc., and Oceaneering International, Inc., Jointly
and Severally, Defendants-Appellees.
Dermot P. O'SULLIVAN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PHILLIPS PETROLEUM CO., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 82-2388, 82-2389.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
April 5, 1984.
The Jaques Admiralty Law Firm, Leonard C. Jaques, Detroit, Mich., for plaintiffs-appellants.
M. David Frock, Houston, Tex., for Phillips Petroleum Co. and Norway Div.
Vinson & Elkins, Eugene J. Silva, Frank Spagnoletti, Houston, Tex., for Sedco, Inc.
Royston, Rayzor, Vickery & William, James Patrick Cooney, Tobi A. Tabor, W. Robins Brice, Houston, Tex., for Oceaneering Intern.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
Before GEE and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges, and EAST*, District Judge.
GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal from orders of the district court conditionally dismissing two actions, each brought under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. Sec. 688 (1976), and the general maritime law. Because of the similarity of the appellants' claims, they have been consolidated for this appeal. The primary questions for this Court's review are (1) whether the conditional orders are appealable, and (2) whether American law applies to the appellants' claims and, if not, whether the district court abused its discretion in dismissing the case for forum non conveniens. Because we find that the conditional orders in these cases effected in essence a dismissal of the appellants' claims without prejudice, we hold that they are appealable as final orders under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291. We further hold that the district court correctly determined that American law does not apply to the appellants' claims and that the court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing for forum non conveniens. Therefore, we affirm.
I.
FACTS
The appellants in these consolidated cases, Colin Koke and Dermot O'Sullivan, are British subjects who received injuries in October 1978 and October 1979, respectively, while working as divers aboard the Sedco/Phillips SS. At the time of their injuries, the vessel, which flies the American flag, was in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea.
The Sedco/Phillips SS is a large self-contained, semi-submersible vessel that services the Ekofisk oil field facilities in the North Sea. It was constructed in Japan under a contract between Sedco, Inc. (Sedco) and Phillips Petroleum Company Norway (Phillips of Norway), a wholly owned subsidiary of Phillips Petroleum Company. Although the Sedco/Phillips SS can move under its own power, it was towed from Japan to the North Sea in 1977 where it has remained since that date.1 The vessel has never operated in nor traveled through the territorial waters of the United States.
According to the agreement between Sedco and Phillips of Norway, the Sedco/Phillips SS has two primary functions: (1) servicing and repair of offshore production facilities; and (2) support of offshore pipeline inspection and repair. Other functions are fire fighting, support of offshore construction, and pollution control. The vessel performs its work while anchored over a location. Although its usual area of operation is the Norwegian sector of the North Sea, it may also be required to travel into the English and German sectors to repair and service the pipelines that extend into these sectors.
Sedco, an American corporation with its principal place of business in Dallas, Texas, owns the vessel and is responsible for its operation, including the supervision of moving operations and positioning on location. Support services for the day-to-day activities of the vessel are provided by a subcontractor of Sedco, from an office in Stavenger, Norway.
The Sedco/Phillips SS is chartered by Phillips of Norway, a Delaware corporation that has its principal place of business in Norway and operates in the Ekofisk fields under production licenses granted by the Norwegian government. Under agreements related to these licenses, Phillips of Norway is required to have half of its directors residents of Norway, and to refrain from any activities other than in Norway. Phillips of Norway is a wholly owned subsidiary of defendant Phillips Petroleum Company (Phillips), also a Delaware corporation, with its principal place of business in Oklahoma.
Defendant Oceaneering International, Inc. (Oceaneering U.S.), a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Houston, Texas, is the parent company of Oceaneering International A.G. (OIAG), a Swiss corporation and the employer of plaintiff-appellant Colin Koke, and of Oceaneering International Services, Ltd. (OISL), a United Kingdom corporation with a base of operations in Aberdeen, Scotland and the employer of plaintiff-appellant Dermot O'Sullivan. OIAG and OISL provided diving services to the Sedco/Phillips SS under a contract between Phillips of Norway and Oceaneering Norway A/S, a Norwegian corporation which is another wholly (or majority) owned subsidiary of Oceaneering U.S.2
Appellants, Koke and O'Sullivan, brought suit under the Jones Act and the general maritime law of the United States against Phillips, Phillips of Norway, Sedco, and Oceaneering U.S. in the Eastern District of Texas. The defendants moved to dismiss on the basis of forum non conveniens. After a hearing, the district court first determined that American law was not applicable to the suit under the standards established by the Supreme Court in the Lauritzen-Rhoditis-Romero trilogy3 as applied by this Court to cases involving "the context of 'fixed rig' operations" in Chiazor v. Transworld Drilling Co., Ltd.,
II.
APPEALABILITY
Courts of appeal are courts of limited jurisdiction. Generally, they may hear appeals only from judgments that are final under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291.4 The threshold question for this Court, therefore, is whether the conditional orders in this case are appealable as final judgments. In addressing this issue, we note that none of the parties has raised a question regarding this Court's jurisdiction. This Court, however, has the duty to examine the basis of its jurisdiction, and by its own motion if necessary. Save the Bay, Inc. v. United States Army,
Dismissals for forum non conveniens, unlike transfers under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1404(a), have been considered final and appealable by right. Menendez Rodriguez v. Pan American Life Insurance Co.,
This Court has recognized the final judgment rule as the "dominant rule of federal appellate practice." In re 1975-2 Grand Jury Investigation of Associated Milk Producers, Inc.,
Despite the apparent clarity of the general test, however, finality in the context of appealability has proved to be an elusive concept. It is an "abstruse and infinitely uncertain term," Will v. United States,
For this reason, the Supreme Court has developed several doctrinal exceptions to the general finality rule that rest on a "practical rather than a technical construction." Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin,
Appealability of the orders in this case is even clearer than in Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital or Hines. Here, the potential problem with finality is largely in the semantics of the dismissal orders.8 Because they are conditional, the orders may literally appear to have more typically nonfinal characteristics. And, yet, this Court has held that appealability of an order normally depends on its effect, not merely its language as such. Le Compte v. Mr. Chip, Inc.,
We find further support for our determination that the orders in these cases are appealable in cases where the requisite finality has been found lacking. In Newpark Shipbuilding & Repair, Inc. v. Roundtree,
A maritime case involving a stay in a forum non conveniens case is also illustrative. In Anastasiadis v. S.S. Little John,
Finally, we note two cases from other Circuits involving a conditional dismissal. In Navarro v. District Director of U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service,
We find that the orders before us are final under section 1291 for several reasons. First, the orders did not operate as a stay, thus allowing an opportunity for further action by the district court, but are rather essentially analogous to a dismissal without prejudice. The conditions protect the appellants merely in the sense that they may refile their cases in federal district court, without penalty, if the defendant balks in the foreign forum. Second, the orders put the appellants effectively out of federal court, leaving them no option to continue in that forum. Third, to refuse an appeal at this point would probably be to preclude entirely review of the district court's decisions because of the res judicata effects of any foreign judgment. Finally, allowing appeal of such conditional dismissals does not conflict with the "values and purposes of the finality rule," nor present a danger of "piecemeal trial and appellate litigation." We turn, therefore, to a review of the merits of the appellants' claims.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Before dismissing a case for forum non conveniens, a court must first determine whether American or foreign law governs the claim. Bailey v. Dolphin International, Inc.,
IV.
CHOICE OF LAW
Appellants make two contentions regarding the choice of law determination by the district court: (1) that the court erred in not finding that there were substantial American contacts to justify the application of American law; and (2) that the court erred in applying the analysis of Chiazor v. Transworld Drilling Co., Ltd.,
In Lauritzen v. Larsen,
It is undisputed that the vessel in this case flies the American flag. As the appellants assert, this fact alone can be paramount, compelling a finding of American law. Lauritzen,
But the test enunciated in Lauritzen is not intended to be mechanistic. Thus, while these two factors alone, if present, would usually require application of American law, this Court has determined that factors substantial in one context may be of lesser importance in another. Chiazor v. Transworld Drilling Company, Ltd.,
In making the choice of law determination in this case, the district court expressly relied on Chiazor. The appellants question this reliance on two grounds. First, they argue that Chiazor applies only to vessels that maintain a stationary position and thus cannot encompass the Sedco/Phillips SS because it can move under its own power and thus is a more traditional, blue-water type of vessel.12 We agree with the district court's resolution. While the Sedco/Phillips SS certainly has greater mobility than a fixed rig which may remain in place for several years, it was not, and was not designed to function as, a vessel "plying the seas" in the traditional sense. It is a semi-submersible platform that rests on columns attached to flotation chambers. Its movements occur within a specific and limited geographic area. Further, when travel over long distances is required, it is apparently towed to a location. Its functions are also limited in that it works solely as a long-term, on-site service facility for the fixed oil field production and pipeline complex in the North Sea. It was uniquely designed for localized, on-site oil field support service, to be principally performed when stationary, and it in fact functioned in that manner and did so before, at the time of, and after the injuries in question. The vessel in De Oliveira, in which this Court applied the Chiazor analysis, served as a tender vessel for oil drilling facilities. Because of its highly specialized design and limited mobility, the Sedco/Phillips SS is plainly closer to a "fixed" rig than was the tender vessel involved in De Oliveira.
Second, however, the appellants argue that Chiazor can apply only where: (1) the vessel has maintained a stationary position in territorial waters of a single nation; and (2) that single nation in whose water the vessel has remained has all other significant contacts with the transaction other than American ownership or registration. But this argument has been foreclosed by Bailey in which this Court noted: "It is certainly true that where the factors emphasized in Chiazor all coincide in one country, the choice of law determination points strongly to the application of that country's law, but it does not follow that the application of American law is required, as if by default, where these factors are spread among several other foreign countries, and the only contact with the United States remains ultimate American ownership or control of the business ventures...."
We now turn, therefore, to a review of the choice of law factors. The appellants argue that there are substantial contacts between the accidents and the United States and American law should therefore apply. We disagree. The appellants in these consolidated cases are both British citizens who applied for employment in Scotland and were employed in Europe or Africa by Swiss and Scottish based companies; neither has ever lived in or even been present within the United States. Their injuries occurred in the North Sea off the coast of Norway,13 the primary location of the Sedco/Phillips SS since 1977. Thus, unlike a case in which a blue-water vessel is involved, see, e.g., Diaz v. Humboldt,
V.
FORUM NON CONVENIENS
Before dismissing for forum non conveniens in a case involving foreign law the court should consider the various private and public interests involved. Chiazor,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
District Judge of the District of Oregon, sitting by designation
All parties, including both appellants, indicated in their briefs here and to the court below that the vessel was towed. While the appellants asserted during oral argument that the vessel instead traveled to the North Sea under its own power, they did not state any basis for this assertion. Their joint brief in this Court states, "... she was towed to the North Sea, rather than sailing under her own power."
Koke joined the Sedco/Phillips SS by boat from Stavenger, Norway. O'Sullivan, however, apparently joined the vessel at Cape Town, Africa during its journey from Japan
Hellenic Lines, Ltd. v. Rhoditis,
This statute provides: "The courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States ... except where a direct review may be had in the Supreme Court." There are statutory exceptions to section 1291, but none apply in the present case
A review of this issue is timely because this Court has recently expressly encouraged the use of such conditional dismissals in maritime cases. See, e.g., Zekic v. Reading & Bates Drilling Co.,
We note that we do not base our decision in this case on any implicit finding of jurisdiction in these cases. The cases do suggest, however, that the potential problem regarding appealability is at least not obvious.
Both the Supreme Court and this Court have recently restated this rule. Firestone Tire & Rubber Company v. Risjord,
This Court has indicated that the holding of Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Co., --- U.S. ----,
We note a suggestion by this Court in Bailey that such conditional orders are nonfinal: "The conditional order might also provide that it can be made final by appellees ...."
The language of the orders is important, of course, in interpreting their effect. Had the court in this case, for example, stated that it would dismiss the claims after satisfaction of the conditions, a different analysis of the orders would necessarily apply
In the event the conditions are not fulfilled and suit is refiled, the court will have to consider the merits of the case under the foreign law it has previously determined as applicable. Further, the court has no jurisdiction to simply reopen the case on any aspect; it has dismissed the actions
While the appealability question was decided under section 921(c) rather than directly under section 1291, as this Court noted, the "required finality for reviewability of an order of the Board follows, for the same reasons of policy, the contours of the finality-requirement under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291 for appealability of decisions of the district courts." Newpark Shipbuilding & Repair, Inc. v. Roundtree,
The appellants urge this Court to find error based on their perception that the district court categorized the Sedco/Phillips SS as a "fixed rig." It is clear, however, that the district court did not do so. Rather, it determined that the alleged accidents occurred in the "context of 'fixed rig' operations."
Appellants cite Lauritzen v. Larsen,
