OPINION & ORDER
This case arises out of a maritime collision between the M/V PINAR KAPTA-NOLGLU and the M/V YELLOW SEA in the Kill Van Kull Channel in Lower New York Harbor on February 15, 2004. The collision forced the YELLOW SEA off its course and into an allision with the stationary M/V SIBONATA, which was moored nearby. An allision is the impact of a moving vessel with a stationary vessel or other stationary object. At the time of the allision, the SIBONATA was under a voyage charter to Westport Petroleum, Inc. (“WPI”), and was preparing to discharge a cargo of fuel oil owned by WPI. As a result of the allision, the SIBONATA was damaged, which in turn forced WPI to incur extra barge demurrage and shifting expenses in discharging its cargo.
WPI, a third-party defendant in this case, has brought cross claims and counterclaims against the PINAR KAPTA-NOLGLU and its owner and operator, Kaptanogludenizcilik Ve Tic. Ltd. and Haci Ismail Kaptanogluship Management and Trading Co., Ltd. (collectively “PK”), and Conti Corso Schiffahrts-GMBH & Co. KG NR. 2 (“Conti Corso”), the owner of the YELLOW SEA. WPI’s cross claims and counterclaims allege negligence and other torts, and WPI seeks recovery of the extra barge demurrage and shifting expenses that it incurred in discharging its cargo as a result of the allision. PK and Conti Corso now move pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 for summary judgment dismissing all of WPI’s cross claims and counterclaims against them. For the reasons stated below, the motion is denied.
I.
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. At approximately *445 3:00 a.m. on the morning of February 15, 2004, the PINAR KAPTANOGLU and the YELLOW SEA collided in the Kill Van Kull Channel in Lower New York Harbor. (PK’s Local Rule 56.1 Stmt. (“PK’s 56.1”), 1; WPI’s Local Rule 56.1 Stmt. (“WPI’s 56.1”), ¶ 1.) Upon colliding with the PI-NAR KAPTANOGLU, the YELLOW SEA then struck the SIBONATA, which was moored nearby. (PK’s 56.1 ¶ 2; WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 2.) The SIBONATA suffered damage to her No. 7 port ballast tank as a result of the allision, but no damage was suffered by its cargo. (PK’s 56.1 ¶ 5; WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 5.)
At the time of the allision, WPI was the voyage charterer of the SIBONATA and had approximately 275,000 barrels of fuel oil in the SIBONATA’s cargo tanks at that time. (PK’s 56.1 ¶¶ 6-7; WPI’s 56.1 ¶¶ 6-7). The Voyage Charter Party agreement between WPI and the owners of the SIBO-NATA contains a “Jason clause” which provides:
In the event of accident, danger, damage or disaster before or after the commencement of the voyage, resulting from any cause whatsoever, whether due to negligence or not, for which, or for the consequence of which, the Owner is not responsible, by statute, contract or otherwise, the cargo shippers, consignees or owners of the cargo shall contribute with the Owner in General Average to the payment of any sacrifices, losses or expenses of a General Average nature that may be made or incurred and shall pay salvage and special charges incurred in respect of the cargo....
(WPI’s 56.1 ¶¶ 18-19; PK’s Counter Local Rule 56.1 Stmt. (“PK’s Counter 56.1”), 18-19.) The Voyage Charter Party agreement also includes a “General Average clause” and a “Lightering clause” that makes WPI responsible for the cost of any lightering operation, even one ordered by “local requirements/governmental approval.” (WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 20; PK’s Counter 56.1 ¶ 20.) “Lightering” refers to the use of barges in loading or unloading ships.
After the allision, the United States Coast Guard ordered, as a precondition to conducting any repairs to the SIBONATA, that a discharge plan be provided for Coast Guard review that included damage/stability calculations to ensure that stresses on the hull would not result in greater damage to the vessel. (WPI’s 56.1 ¶¶ 13, 15; PK’s Counter 56.1 ¶¶ 13, 15; Declaration of Dino Vafiades in Support of WPI’s Opposition to PK’s Motion for Summary Judgment dated June 6, 2005, at Exhibit 1.) Thereafter, WPI discharged some of its cargo into lightering barges. (WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 14; PK’s Counter 56.1 ¶ 14.) WPI claims that it and the owners of the SIBONATA jointly agreed to discharge some of the cargo in this manner, and that the decision was made in response to the Coast Guard’s order. (WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 14.) PK and Conti Corso deny that the exhibit relied upon by WPI shows any joint agreement or the reasons for the discharge. (PK’s Counter 56.1 ¶ 14.) The parties also disagree as to whether the damage caused by the allision placed the SIBONATA and its cargo in jeopardy. (Memorandum in Support of the Summary Judgment Motion of the Pinar Kaptanoglu Defendants & Third Party Plaintiffs, at 7; WPI’s Opposition to Motion for Summary Judgment, at 9.) Both parties agree, however, that WPI incurred the expense of hiring two barges used to receive the cargo that was discharged from the SIBONATA after the allision, and it is the cost of hiring these barges for removal of the oil that WPI seeks to recover in this action. (WPI’s 56.1 ¶ 16; PK’s Counter 56.1 ¶ 16.)
II.
The standard for granting summary judgment is well established. Summary
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judgment may not be granted unless the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In determining whether summary judgment is appropriate, a court must resolve all ambiguities and draw all reasonable inferences against the moving party.
See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
III.
PK and Conti Corso move for summary judgment with respect to all of WPI’s cross claims and counterclaims. They argue that because WPI’s claims for recovery are for purely economic damages and do not allege any physical injury to cargo, they are barred by the maritime doctrine of
Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint,
WPI counters that recovery is permitted in this case based on
Aktieselskabet Cuzco v. The Sucaresco (The Toluma),
There are few cases interpreting the applicability of the common venture exception.
The Toluma
case itself arose out of a collision at sea between the TOLUMA and the SUCARSECO.
Id.
at 398,
As explained in
Nautilus Marine, Inc. v. Niemela,
General average is defined as: Contribution by all parties in sea adventure to make good loss sustained by one of their number on account of sacrifices voluntarily made of part of ship or cargo to save residue, or for extraordinary expenses necessarily incurred by one or more of parties for general benefit of all interested embarked in general enterprise.
Id. at 1234 n. 2 (internal citation omitted).
Although the cargo in The Toluma ultimately suffered some physical damage when it was discharged, it was not for that damage that the cargo owners sought recovery. Rather, the cargo owners sought to recover from the owners of the SUCAR-SECO the general average contributions *448 that the cargo owners had paid to the owners of the TOLUMA. In permitting the cargo interests to recover, the Supreme Court stressed the presence of a “common adventure” relationship between the cargo interests and the vessel owner:
The claim of the cargo owners for their general average contributions is not in any sense a derivative claim. It accrues to the cargo owners in their own right. It accrues because of cargo’s own participation in the common adventure and the action taken on behalf of cargo and by its representative to avert a peril with which that adventure was threatened. Being .cargo’s own share of the expense incurred in the common interest, the amount which is paid properly belongs in the category of damage which the cargo owners have suffered by reason of the collision.
The Toluma,
After finding that the cargo interests and the vessel were engaged in a common venture, the Supreme Court explicitly distinguished its holding from that in
Robins Dry Dock.
Citing
Robins Dry Dock,
the Supreme Court noted “[t]his is not a case of an attempt, by reason of ‘a tort to the property of one man,’ to make the tortfeasor liable to another ‘merely because the injured person,was under a contract with that other, unknown to the doer of the wrong.’”
Id.
at 404,
Here, cargo as well as ship was placed in jeopardy. That jeopardy was due in part to the negligence of the vessel against which the claim is made. The fact that the vessel and the cargo under the “Jason clause” bear their proportionate shares of the expenses gives Sucarseco no ground for a contention that the expenses themselves, or the share that cargo bears, were not occasioned directly by the tort.
The Toluma,
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals relied on
The Toluma
in deciding
Amoco Transpon Co. v. S/S MASON LYKES,
Despite abandoning the voyage, the vessel owner was entitled to keep the full freight charges paid by the cargo interests due to a “freight earned clause” in the bill of lading. A “freight earned clause” provides that full freight charges are completely earned upon shipment of cargo, rather than upon arrival and discharge, and that the vessel may retain the freight charges even if the voyage is interrupted, abandoned, or the cargo is lost. The effect of this provision is to shift the risk and expense of forwarding cargo, following forced abandonment or interruption of the voyage, from the vessel to the cargo owner. Because of this provision, the owners of cargo aboard the MASON LYKES were required to pay a second full freight charge for shipment once their cargo was transferred to a sister ship. The cargo interests subsequently brought suit, claiming that the decision to abandon the voyage was unreasonable, and they sought recovery for the second freight charge from both the MASON LYKES and the AMOCO CREMORA.
*449 The Court of Appeals initially held that the cargo interests could recover the second freight charge from the owners of the MASON LYKES because the decision to abandon the voyage was unreasonable and contrary to the prevailing rules and contract of carriage. Id. at 665. The Court of Appeals then held that the cargo interests could also recover the second freight charge from the owners of the AMOCO CREMORA, the partially negligent non-carrying vessel. The Court of Appeals found that the cargo interests and the MASON LYKES were engaged in a common venture. The Court found that a common venture relationship existed because of the inclusion of the “Jason clause” and “freight earned clause” in the bill of lading, which have the effect of spreading the risks of common adventurers in ocean transportation. The Court of Appeals then held that the case was governed by The Toluma, rather than Robins Dry Dock. Because there was a common venture between the cargo interests and the vessel, and because the carrying vessel was damaged, the cargo interests could recover from the partially negligent non-carrying vessel for their damages arising directly from the collision. Id. at 668. 1
In this case, a common venture relationship, similar to that between the parties in The Toluma and MASON LYKES, exists between WPI and the owners of the SIBO-NATA by virtue of the Voyage Charter Party agreement between them. WPI’s Charter Party contains a “Jason clause” that contains nearly identical language to the one used by the parties in the bills of lading in The Toluma and MASON LYKES. Furthermore, the Charter Party also includes a “General Average clause.” The purpose of these clauses is to spread the risks among the participants of the venture, and thus they are the hallmarks of a common venture relationship.
Like the cargo interests in The Toluma and MASON LYKES, WPI was the owner of cargo on board a damaged vessel. Similarly, like The Toluma, WPI incurred extra expenses due to a requirement that the cargo be discharged before repairs to the vessel could take place. Although the cargo in The Toluma was damaged by excess handling during discharge, while WPI’s cargo suffered no physical damage, it was not for that physical damage that recovery was sought by the cargo interests in The Toluma. Indeed, the Supreme Court did not rely on the existence of that physical damage in finding that recovery was permitted. Similarly, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found in MASON LYKES that physical damage to cargo is not a prerequisite in order to recover under the common venture exception.
PK and Conti Corso argue that this case is not like The Toluma because the cargo owners have not asserted a general average claim for their expenses. They also argue that these expenses are not properly construed as general average expenses.
These arguments are unavailing. In
The Toluma,
the Supreme Court stressed that it was the nature of the damages sought to be recovered that was dispositive, and not whether the cargo owners were seeking to recover amounts that they had contributed to general average. The Supreme Court stated: “[t]he nature of these expenditures and the fact that they are traceable directly to the collision are not changed by the sharing in general average. That merely affects the distribution of the loss, not its cause.”
The Tolu
*450
ma,
Here, WPI and the SIBONATA were engaged in a common venture as evidenced by the inclusion of the “Jason clause” and “General Average clause” in the agreement between them. Further, it is undisputed that there was a “peril” — the parties are in agreement that there was an allision that damaged the SIBONATA to the extent that immediate repairs were required. The parties also agree that the Coast Guard ordered a discharge plan be provided before any repairs could take place. The parties disagree, however, as to whether WPI’s actions in employing the lightering barges in discharging its cargo were taken pursuant to the Coast Guard order, and whether such actions were required to avoid a peril to the common venture. PK and Conti Corso dispute whether the SIBONATA and its cargo were in “jeopardy,” and thus whether the venture was ever “threatened.” WPI contends that the vessel was threatened and that the discharge of the cargo was necessary to raise the vessel. These are genuine issues of material fact that cannot be decided on a summary judgment motion. Because there are genuine issues of material fact to be tried, the motion for summary judgment must be denied.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the motion by PK and Conti Corso for summary judgment is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. As a second rationale for its decision, the Court also noted that recovery was particularly appropriate because the damages claimed arose out of the "freight earned clause” which contractually shifted a risk of loss from the vessel to the cargo owner.
See MASON LYKES,
