The Continental insurance company brought suit in the Northern District of Illinois under 28 U.S.C. § 1333 (admiralty) against two of its insureds, McDonough Marine Service and Anderson Excavating & Wrecking Company, seeking a declaration that it was not liable to them on their policies. Anderson had been hired by the Army Corps of Engineers to demolish the wall of a concrete lock in the Mississippi Rivеr and remove the debris. It chartered barges from McDonough. The charter agreement required it both to indemnify McDonough for any damage to the barges while they were in Anderson’s custody and to procure an insurance policy from Continental against such damage, which it did. The policy named both McDonough and Anderson as insureds. Sure enough, the barges wеre damaged during the loading of the debris by Anderson. McDonough sued Anderson in the Southern District of Illinois under the indemnification provision, basing federal jurisdiction on 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (federal question) by virtue of the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C. §§ 270a et seq., which governs certain federal contracts (remember that Anderson was working for the Corps of Engineers). Continental’s suit was consolidated with McDonough’s in the Southern District. McDonough and Anderson settled their suit. McDonough then assigned any insurance claim it might have against Continental to Anderson, and the district judge substituted Anderson for McDonough in Continental’s suit. This gave Anderson two roles in that suit: defendant in its own right; defendant in the capacity of McDonough’s assignee. Against Anderson in its second role, Continental seeks a declaration of nonliability as to McDonough, and that claim remains pending in the district court.
After a hearing on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district judge entered a Rule 54(b) judgment in Continental’s favor against Anderson in Anderson’s own capacity (that is, Anderson in its first role). The judgment is not further described in the judgment order except for the statement that the complaint is being dismissed with prejudiсe pursuant to a minute order filed on September 25, 1998. The statement is mysterious. The minute order makes no reference to dismissing the complaint, and there is a stark inconsistency between awarding judgment to a party and dismissing its complaint — especially since the complaint also made an unrelated claim against a different party (McDonough). Wе will not repeat what we said in
Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washing
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ton,
McDonough’s assignment of its claim to Anderson also has potential jurisdictional implications. Anderson sustained no loss different from McDonough. It indemnified McDоnough for that loss in the settlement of McDonough’s suit for indemnification, receiving in return a chance to recoup the amount of the indemnity by enforcing McDonough’s insurance claim against Continental. If the claim is a good one, Anderson will be made whole and will have nothing to gain from winning this appeal. So unless Continental has some defense against McDonough’s insurance claim, Anderson’s appeal is moot. We are told, however, and have no reason to doubt, that Continental may well have good defenses against McDonough, just as, the district court ruled, it has a good defense against Anderson. In that event, if Anderson loses this appeal it will be out the money that it paid McDonough in settlement of the lаtter’s indemnity claim against it.
This shows that Anderson has a probability of gaining a tangible benefit from winning this appeal, and nothing more is necessary to show that the appeal is not moot, that is, that the appellant continues to have a sufficient stake in the litigation to give him standing to pursue it. E.g.,
Murphy v. Hunt,
But before delving further into the mysteries of Rule 54(b), we must consider whether it is applicable to this case. Section 1292(a)(3) of the Judicial Code provides that “interlocutory decrees ... determining the rights and liabilities of the parties to admiralty cases in which appeals from final decrees are allowed” are appeal-able. See, е.g.,
Brotherhood Shipping Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
When an admiralty case is also within federal jurisdiction on another basis, such as diversity, the parties are not entitled to invoke any of the special procedures or remedies of admiralty, including the right of interlocutory appeal under section 1292(a)(3), unless the plaintiff has expressly invoked the admiralty jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(h) so that the parties and the court are clear about what procedures will apply. E.g.,
Wingerter v. Chester Quarry Co., supra,
at 663-66;
Baris v. Sulpicio Lines, Inc.,
For future reference, however, we consider whether, were Rule 54(b) applicable, it would allow us to consider Anderson’s appeal. An initial question would be whether Anderson is two parties or one for purposes of the rule since it is both suing (and defending) in its own right and as McDonough’s assignee and in its second cаpacity remains in the district court. We cannot find any controlling authority, although our
Sandwiches, Inc. v. Wendy’s Int’l, Inc.,
The question would then be whether Anderson’s insurance claim is sufficiently distinct factually from McDonough’s claim (the claim that remains in the district court, with Anderson substituted for McDonough) to be deemed separate under thе separate-claims, as distinct from separate-parties, head of Rule 54(b). We have not been given enough information about McDonough’s claim to be able to determine the degree of overlap between it and Anderson’s, though it is no doubt considerable. But that does not matter because assignment of McDonough’s claim to Anderson, as a result of which Anderson has a claim remaining in the district court, was made
after
the Rule 54(b) judgment was entered, and as a general rale jurisdiction, whether original,
Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain,
There are, it is true, exceptions. A case can become moot at any time, and destroy the court’s jurisdiction. And defects in jurisdiction can be cured by later developments in a case.
Newman-Green
allowed a lack, ordinarily fatal, of complete diversity to be cured by dropping a party at the appellate level. For other examples, see
Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington, supra,
at 707-08;
JTC Petroleum Co. v. Piasa Motor Fuels, Inc., supra,
at 776-77;
General Ceramics Inc. v. Firemen’s Fund Ins. Cos.,
But even though the district court would have had the power to enter a Rule 54(b) order (were this not an admiralty case), power is not duty. The rule says that “the court may direct the entry of a final judgment” upon the satisfaction of the conditions set forth in the rule, not that he must do so. The entry of such an order permits piecemeal appeal, which is disfavored in the federal system.
Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. General Electric Co., supra,
So we have jurisdiction; but from the fact that this is an admiralty case it does not automatically follow that admiralty law, a body of judge-made legal doctrinеs tailored to maritime disputes, should govern the substantive issues. A federal court sitting in admiralty can, by analogy to the practice of the federal courts in regard to federal common law (which is to say nonadmiralty federal judge-made law), borrow the law of a state or a foreign country to resolve a dispute that had come into court under thе admiralty jurisdiction, especially when dealing with a subject traditionally regulated by the states, such as insurance (including marine insurance).
Wilburn Boat Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
This brings us at last to the facts. The debris from the lock wall that was to be loaded onto the barges consisted of large chunks of concrete weighing as much as ten tons. Barges built to carry such heavy objects are called “rock” barges, in contrast to the lighter “deck”- barges. Anderson tried to get rock barges from McDonough, but none was available and it settled for deck barges, which over the course of the seven months of the project sustained heavy damage as a consequence of the pounding they received from the huge chunks of concrete, many of which were dropped on tо the decks of the barges from a height of one or two feet rather than being lowered gently onto them.
The policy contained a clause that is standard in contracts of marine insurance, called an “Inchmaree Clause” after the ship in
Thames & Mersey Marine Ins. Co. v. Hamilton, Fraser & Co.,
12 App. Cas. 484 (H.L.1887); see Francis L. Tetrault, “The Hull Policy: The ‘In-
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chmaree’ Clause,” 41
Tulane L.Rev.
325 (1967). The interpretation of this clause is governed by fedеral admiralty law.
Thanh Long Partnership v. Highlands Ins. Co., supra,
But Continental has an alternative ground for affirmance; actually it has several, but one is clearly sound and so we limit our discussion to it. The exclusion in the Inchmaree Clause for losses caused by “want of due diligence by the ... owners or managers of the vessel” fits this case to a T. The damage to the barges resulted from the choice to use deck barges rather than rock barges, a choice that however innocent was made by Anderson and, the uncontradicted evidence shows, bespoke a conspicuous lack of diligence. Mr. Anderson testified at his deposition that he warned his foreman that “you shouldn’t be using anything other thаn rock barges to haul those big chunks of concrete.” Later he relented and told the foreman to “make sure he had plenty of sand and load them [the deck barges] lighter than you normally would with a rock barge.” Yet he had never tried this mode of protecting a deck barge before. He had used sand to protect rock barges, and he hoped that it would be equally efficacious with deck barges, but he had no solid basis for this hope. To go ahead with the lighter vessel in these circumstances — knowing of the danger, and only taking a precaution that he had no basis for confidently believing would ward off the danger — demonstrated a lack of diligence and so triggered the exclusion in the Inchmaree Clause. So clear is this that no purpose would be served by remanding the case for better findings by the district court.
AFFIRMED.
