This case requires us to return again to the Limited Liability Act. The vessel own
I
Athena Construction is a division of Appellant Hellenic, Inc. Athena has been engaged in marine construction since the late 1970s. It is the only division of Hellenic engaged in maritime work. Athena contracted with Texaco Exploration and Production, Inc. to install pipeline in Texaco’s Rabbit Island Field in Atchafalaya Bay, Louisiana. On February 7, 1997, the Athena 107 — a “spud barge” owned by Athena — was “spudded down” in the field. 1 In the early morning hours of February 8, 1997, wind and sea moved the Athena 107, causing it to strike and rupture a twenty-inch natural gas pipeline owned by Bridge-line Gas Distribution LLC. The parties have stipulated that Bridgeline spent $250,959.90 to repair the line.
Dana Lee, a construction superintendent employed by Athena, made the decision to leave the barge unmanned and anchored by its spuds. Lee had worked on the Rabbit Island Field for approximately fifteen years. He had authority over the operation of all four vessels used by Athena in the project, including the Athena 107. He also supervised two contract divers engaged by Athena to bury pipeline. In addition, he dealt with Texaco’s project inspectors regarding whether Texaco would conduct a survey to determine the existence of other pipelines in the vicinity. He was required to confer with Drake Stansbury, Athena’s president, only if Texaco suggested that work be done which appeared to fall outside the scope of the project.
Lee formed part of Athena’s relatively compact corporate structure. In addition to Stansbury, two other employees exercised management responsibility: Albert Aucoin, Athena’s General Superintendent, and Phillip Thomas, Athena’s Safety Director. Beneath Aucoin and Thomas on the corporate hierarchy were Athena’s four construction supervisors, or field superintendents: Dana Lee, Charles Clinton, Jimmy Aucoin, and Billy Kennerson. Each construction supervisor was in charge of supervising the particular construction project in the field he had been assigned.
For purposes of the Rabbit Field project, Stansbury considered Lee his “eyes and ears on the job.” However, Stansbury also testified that construction supervisors do not make “business decisions” on behalf of Athena. For instance, Lee could not execute binding contracts, set Athena’s prices, or hire and fire Athena employees. 2 Nor did he have any administrative responsibilities with either Athena or Hellenic. It is undisputed, however, that Lee had authority to decide whether and under what circumstances a barge would remain in the field overnight. Both parties agree that Lee was negligent in deciding on February 7,1997 to leave the barge unmanned and that his decision caused the damage to the pipeline.
II
Hellenic challenges only the district court’s denial of limited liability. 4 This Court reviews such a determination for clear error. 5 The Limited Liability Act allows a vessel owner to limit its liability for any loss or injury caused by the vessel to the value of the vessel and its freight. 6 “Under the Act, a party is entitled to limitation only if it is ‘without privity or knowledge’ of the cause of the loss.” 7 If the shipowner is a corporation, “knowledge is judged by what the corporation’s managing agents knew or should have known with respect to the conditions or actions likely to cause the loss.” 8 Once the claimant establishes negligence or unseaworthiness, the burden shifts to the owner of the vessel to prove that negligence was not within the owner’s privity or knowledge. 9
The 1895 Act was originally passed “to ensure that American shipping attracted investment capital that the threat of unlimited exposure might divert to England,” which at that time already granted its ships limited liability. 10 The Act predates both the dominant position of the corporation, which provides limited liability, and the current breadth of insurance protection. 11 This Court has described the Act as “hopelessly anachronistic,” and has implied that courts should accord it a narrow construction. 12
The “privity or knowledge” exception has proven difficult to apply. Congress did not define these terms, leaving to courts the task of filling these “empty
These observations reflect, if unevenly, broader and familiar principles of agency law. A corporate principal is generally considered to know what its agents discover concerning those matters in which the agents have power to bind the principal. 17 An agent’s knowledge is imputed to the corporation where the agent is acting within the scope of his authority and where the knowledge relates to matters within the scope of that authority. 18 While courts generally agree that the knowledge of directors or key officers, such as the president and vice president, is imputed to the corporation, 19 they differ as to the effect of knowledge acquired by other employees. The decision on whether to impute knowledge acquired by such employees tends to be fact-intensive and contingent on the specific legal regimes involved. 20
Some threshold for imputation is required. As this Court has noted in applying the Limited Liability Act, “[bjecause a corporation operates through individuals, the privity and knowledge of individuals at
In restricting the privity and knowledge exception to managing agents, however, the limited liability doctrine is also sensitive to the scope of an owner’s control over his agents. Thus, a master’s navigational errors at sea are generally not attributable to the owner. 22 When the owner is so far removed from the vessel that he can exert no control over the master’s conduct, he should not be held to the master’s negligence. In such cases, the owner may rely on the master’s skill and expertise. 23
This reasoning is consistent with the principle that “[t]he duty to control increases along with the possibility of control.” 24 Indeed, one justification for vicarious liability is that it encourages employers to more effectively supervise employees. 25 Where a corporation grants its agents significant discretion and autonomy, it is reasonable to deny limitation and thereby hold the company liable for the full range of consequences resulting from its decision. Where greater supervision is not possible — e.g., where the master is at sea, far from the owner’s control — limited liability is more desirable. 26 The “managing agent” standard reflects these concerns. 27
The dispositive question in this case is therefore whether Lee’s position in the corporate hierarchy was sufficiently elevated to impute his knowledge to Athena. We have emphasized that it is the “extent of the employee’s responsibility, not his title, [that] determines whether limitation is foreclosed.”
28
Courts are to determine whether the employee is a “managing agent with respect to the field of operations in which the negligence oc
Two Fifth Circuit cases are particularly instructive:
Continental Oil Company v. Bonanza Corporation
39
and
Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.
40
In
Continental Oil,
this Court found that a vessel captain was a managing agent for the owner. Bonanza, which was primarily engaged in land development, had a single maritime venture: operation of the vessel in question, which was chartered to scuba diving groups and other companies. The vessel captain was held to be a managing agent “with respect to the field of operations in which the negligence occurred” given the extent of his duties and “the minimal supervision he received from the corporate officers.”
41
He had “carte blanche” to negotiate and carry out scuba charters, although he needed authorization to conduct other charters.
42
Despite nominal supervision, the captain further decided which purchases and repairs to make. He also hired the crew for each trip without consulting the vessel owner. In addition, he received a commission for each
In Cupit, this Court reversed the district court’s finding that a toolpusher who was in charge of a drilling rig was a managing agent. While the toolpusher had “authority over all phases of operations” on the rig, this Court held that the district court had “overstate^] the scope of [the toolpusher’s] authority.” 44 This Court observed: “[t]he fact that a ship’s master has been given broad and unlimited agency powers over the operation and maintenance of the vessel is insufficient to impute the master’s mistake to the shipowner.” 45 During his shift, the toolpusher had authority over the drilling job as long as the rig was stationary and drilling. However, nine other toolpushers — i.e., one per rig— possessed similar authority for their respective rigs. The Court observed that the toolpusher’s authority “did not extend to the basic business decisions made by the drilling supervisors and the president of the company.” 46
Although Lee’s authority falls somewhere between the authority possessed by the agents in Continental Oil and Cupit, he shares more of the characteristics of the toolpusher in Cupit. On the one hand, Lee had greater authority than the tool-pusher in Cupit, whose responsibility only extended to drilling operations on one among several rigs, and only during his shift. 47 In contrast, Lee supervised four vessels and the entire Rabbit Field project. However, he had no authority, once the job was completed, to decide when and where the next job would take place. Lee was also required to confer with Stansbury if Texaco suggested that work be done which appeared to fall outside the scope of the project. Unlike the captain in Continental Oil, he lacked the authority to enter into contracts and determine pricing. Nor was Lee given the power to hire and fire other employees. Whereas the captain in Continental Oil had authority over the company’s entire maritime field of operations, Lee only exercised authority over one of the company’s four construction projects. Although he may have possessed significant power over the management of an individual job, Lee could not make “basic business decisions” for Athena. Because he lacked this broader authority over business decisions undertaken by the corporation, Lee did not possess managing authority over “the field of operations in which the negligence occurred.” 48 The undisputed facts of this case compel us to hold that the district court’s finding was clearly erroneous. 49 We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. A spud barge is a "flat-decked floating structure that has devices similar to legs, called spuds, which are lowered from underneath the barge and pushed into the waterway floor to anchor the structure in place.”
Hurst v. Pilings & Structures, Inc.,
. Drake Stansbury testified that Albert Au-coin, Athena's general superintendent, had the authority over personnel decisions.
. See 46 App.U.S.C. §§ 183(a), 185 (2001).
. Hellenic concedes the district court’s finding of negligence and damages.
.
See Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.,
. 46 App.U.S.C. § 183(a) provides: “The liability of the owner of any vessel ... for any embezzlement, loss, or destruction by any person of any property, goods, or merchandise shipped or put on board of such vessel, or for any loss, damage, or injury by collision, or for any act, matter, or thing, loss, damage, or forfeiture, done, occasioned, or incurred, without the privity or knowledge of such owner or owners, shall not, except in the cases provided for in subsection (b) of this section, exceed the amount or value of the interest of such owner in such vessel, and her freight then pending.” The exception articulated in subsection (b) is inapplicable to this case.
.
Brunet v. United Gas Pipeline Co.,
. Id.
.
See Brister v. A.W.I., Inc.,
.
Continental Oil Co. v. Bonanza Corp.,
.
See id.
at 1376;
see also Maryland Casualty Co. v. Cushing,
.
Continental Oil Co.,
.
Blister,
.
See Gibboney v, Wright,
.
Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.,
.
Id.
(quoting
Coryell v. Phipps,
.
See American Standard Credit, Inc. v. Nat'l Cement Co.,
.
See Volkswagen of America, Inc. v. Robertson,
.
See City State Bank in Wellington v. U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
.
See Lee v. Mitcham,
.
Continental Oil Co. v. Bonanza Corp.,
. See id. at 1376-77 & n. 15.
.
See id.
at 1377 n. 15; Grant Gilmore & Charles L. Black, Jr.,
The Law of Admiralty
877 (2d ed. 1975);
see also Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc. v. Hicks,
.
Avera v. Florida Towing Corp.,
.
See Ridglea,
. The mere possibility of control, however, does not automatically trigger a denial of limited liability.
See Waterman Steamship Corp.,
. We emphasize that autonomy and discretion may be desirable and necessary for the functioning of a business. The agency principles articulated in the limited liability context merely recognize that, at some level, employee autonomy carries a price. This doctrine attempts, in part, to discourage owners and corporate principals from willfully insulating themselves from knowledge and involvement with the operations of their subordinates merely to secure limited liability.
See Avera,
.
Continental Oil Co. v. Bonanza Corp.,
.
Continental Oil Co.,
.
See id.
at 1375-77;
Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.,
.
See Continental Oil Co.,
.
See Continental Oil Co.,
.
See Continental Oil Co.,
.
See Avera,
.
See Continental Oil Co. v. Bonanza Corp.,
.
See Continental Oil Co.,
.
See Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.,
. Not every factor articulated above will be relevant in a given case. Moreover, we make no a priori judgment as to the relative importance of such factors. The weight given to each factor hinges on the specific facts of a case.
.
.
.
Continental Oil,
. Id. at 1375.
. Id.
.
Cupit,
.
Cupit v. McClanahan Contractors, Inc.,
. Id.
.
Cupit,
.
Continental Oil,
.
See Cupit,
