The Limitation of Shipowners’ Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 183-189, limits, with irrelevant exceptions, the liability of a shipowner sued in tort to his investment in the ship and its freight, and establishes a procedure for obtaining and enforcing the limitation. 46 U.S.C. §§ 183(a), 185. This limitаtion of liability, the purpose of which is to subsidize the U.S. merchant marine, Grant Gilmore & Charles L. Black, Jr.,
The Law of Admiralty,
§ 10-2, pp. 818-19 (1975), is not to be confused with the more common limited liability of corporate shareholders, which would prevent a maritime tort victim from going against the personal assets of a corporate shipowner’s shareholders (though by separately incorporating each ship the owner could probably achieve the same protection that the Limitation Act gives him; cf.
Walkovszky v. Carlton,
Holly Marine owns a barge that it chartered to a construction company, BH&H, to perform work on a bridge over the Chicagо Sanitary and Ship Canal, a navigable waterway of the United States. Two employees of the construction company, Gindl and Staal, were operating a crane that JLG Industries had manufacturеd and sold to the construction company when the crane pitched over the side of the barge into the canal, killing Gindl and injuring Staal. Gindl (actually his estate, but we’ll call it “Gindl” for the sake of simplicity) and Stаal brought suit against all three companies in a state court in Illinois. They could do this, even though the accident occurred on a navigable waterway and was thus subject to adjudication in the federal district court under the admiralty jurisdiction, because of the “saving to suitors” clause in the statute that gives the federal courts exclusive jurisdiction over admiralty cases. The clause allows persons who, were it not for that exclusive federal jurisdiction, would have rights under “territorial” (federal or state) law, to enforce those rights outside the admiralty jurisdiction, whether in federal or state court. 28 U.S.C. § 1333(1);
Lewis v. Lewis & Clark Marine, Inc.,
As authorized by the Limitation Act, Holly petitioned thе district court for limitation of liability, depositing with the court an amount of money ($10,900) that Holly represented to be its stake in the barge and so the limit of its liability. 46 U.S.C. § 185. This section provides that upon compliance with its requirements, “all claims and proceedings against the owner with respect to the matter in question shall
Holly followed this procedure and obtained the injunction, which was followed by the submission of claims by Gindl, Staal, and JLG but, for unexplained reasons, not by BH&H. JLG’s claim was for contribution from Holly as a joint tortfea-sor should Gindl and Staal obtain a judgment against JLG for its role in the accident. Joint Tortfeasor Contribution Act, 740 ILCS 100/2;
Truszewski v. Outboard Motor Marine Corp.,
Orders modifying or dissolving injunctions are appealable without regard to finality. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1);
Hispanics United v. Village of Addison,
The basis of the partial dissolution, which allows the plaintiffs to press their suit in state court but not to enforce any judgment they obtain therе until Holly’s right to limitation is determined, was a stipulation they submitted to the district court in support of their motion to dissolve the injunction. (The term “stipulation,” though customary in Limitation Act proceedings, is a bit of a misnomer, since these stipulations are unilateral promises rather than agreements.) They stipulated that they would neither ask the state court to resolve any issue concerning the limitation of Holly’s liability nor seek to enforce any judgment they obtain in state court against JLG to the extent that such enforcement would expose Holly to liability in excess of its stake in the barge by reason of JLG’s seeking cоntribution from Holly. By granting the motion to dissolve, on the basis of this stipulation, so much of the injunction as barred Gindl and Staal from proceeding in state court until Holly’s right to limitation is determined, the district judge thought he was protecting Holly at the same time that he was allowing Gindl and Staal to proceed with their tort claims, as they wanted to do, in state court in accordance with the savings to suitors clause.
Holly argues that the stipulation has a huge loophole. Since it was not signed by JLG, the possibility exists that if Gindl and Staal obtain a judgment, which might be quite large, in state court, JLG will seek contribution from Holly in an amount greatly in excess of Holly’s stake in the barge. Gindl and Staal emphasize the district court’s ruling that the injunction that Holly originally obtained “remains in effect ... as a stay against entry and enforcement of Staal’s and Gindl’s state court cases pending determination by this Court of Holly’s complaint for limitation of liability.” In other words, if Gindl and Staal do obtain a large judgment against JLG, collection of it will be stayed while the parties repair to thе federal district court to limit
Granted, the danger of JLG’s seeking contribution may well be small if Holly’s stake is indeed only $10,900, since the district court has retained jurisdiction to limit Holly’s liability, and, as all the courts to have addressed the question hold (ours has not till today,
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. City of
Chicago,
The Eighth Circuit reached the same conclusion, though by a different route (but one that has implications for the proper disposition of this case, as we’ll see shortly) and in an obscurely worded opinion,
Universal Towing Co. v. Barrale,
But the fact that a contribution claim is a claim subject to limitation is not in itself enough to protect Holly’s statutory right to limitation fully. For in a suit for contribution JLG might try to show that Holly’s stake exceeded $10,900 and if it obtained a ruling to that effect it might try to plead that ruling as res judicata in the postponed limitation proceeding. Gindl and Staal go further, acknowledging in their brief that Holly may well end up paying more than its limitation: “If Gindl or Staal prevail against JLG, Holly may be at risk only to the extent that its proportional share of any judgment exceeds the value of the barge аnd its contents.” “Only”? But suppose Gindl and Staal obtained a judgment against JLG for $2 million and Holly’s proportionate share was adjudged in a suit for contribution by JLG to be 50 percent. Then Holly would be $1 million in the hole evеn if the value of its investment in the barge was, as it claims, only one one-hundredth of that amount. That result would be contrary to the Limitation Act, but the fact that Gindl and Staal think it’s possible augurs a long litigation road ahеad for Holly.
Apart from these obscure and perhaps chimerical dangers to Holly posed by the partial dissolution of the injunction, the Limitation Act entitles the shipowner to obtain limitation upоn the filing of his petition for limitation in federal district court and his satisfying the requirements of the
In these circumstances, the partial dissolution of the injunction deprived Holly of its statutory rights and was therefore unreasonable, or equivalently,
Marsh v. Oregon Natural Resources Council,
