Lead Opinion
Container Applications International, Inc. (“CAI”) appeals from a' summary judgment granted by the bankruptcy court, and affirmed by the district court, in favor of Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Inc. (“Lykes”) disallowing maritime liens asserted by CAI against vessels owned by Lykes, pursuant to the Federal Maritime Lien Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 31341 et seq. (the “FMLA”). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are undisputed. CAI leases and sells cargo containers that are used by transportation companies to transport goods, and Lykes is a shipping company providing cargo service throughout the world. In February 1993, CAI and Lykes entered into an agreement whereby CAI would lease cargo containers in bulk to Lykes for use in its shipping business. The lease agreement provided that the leased containers would be used only on vessels owned and/or operated by Lykes and would be used for oceanic transportation of goods and land transport in connection with the oceanic transportation.
From time to time Lykes picked up containers leased from CAI at locations throughout the world. No container was delivered directly to any of Lykes’ vessels, nor did any of the lease documents “earmark” containers to any one vessel or otherwise make reference to any vessel. While the lease required Lykes to maintain tracking reports showing exactly which containers were used on which vessels and for how many days, neither Lykes nor CAI knew at the time of commencement of the lease on which vessels the containers would be used and Lykes, in its complete discretion, determined upon which vessels or vehicles to place the containers.
Lykes filed a petition for bankruptcy in October 1995. At the time of filing, it owed CAI a substantial amount for outstanding rental fees on the leased containers. In the bankruptcy court, CAI asserted maritime liens
. DISCUSSION
CAI asserts its maritime liens pursuant to the FMLA, which provides in relevant part:
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a person providing necessaries to a vessel on the order of the owner or a person authorized by the owner—
(1) has a maritime lien on the vessel;
(2) may bring a civil action in rem to enforce the lien; and
(3) is not required to allege or prove in the action that credit was given to the vessel.
The parties do not dispute that containers are “necessaries”
The seminal Supreme Court case on this question is Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co.,
Four other circuits have subsequently applied Piedmont to the specific situation .before us, that is, to the lease of containers in bulk to a shipping company which decides when, where, and how it will use the containers within its fleet of ships. All four circuits have held that under such circumstances the supplier has not “provided” necessaries to the vessel within the meaning of the FMLA. See Silver Star Enterprises, Inc. v. Saramacca MV,
Moreover, numerous other courts have cited to Piedmont for the proposition that the term “providing necessaries to a vessel” in the FMLA requires that there be a direct connection between the provider of necessaries and a specific vessel. See e.g., Jeffrey v. Henderson Bros., Inc.,
However, two district courts in the Eleventh Circuit have rejected a restrictive reading of the FMLA’s requirements for the creation of a maritime lien.
CAI argues that we should follow Transamerica and disregard the cases from our sister circuits, arguing that these circuits have erroneously interpreted Piedmont to hold that pre-delivery earmarking of supplies for a specific vessel is a prereq
We find that CAI reads Piedmont much too narrowly and that these distinctions are insignificant to the Supreme Court’s rationale and to its holding. The fact that the coal had been co-mingled or that the oil company had obtained sole title to the coal was not a dispositive factor in the court’s decision. Rather, in interpreting the FMLA, the Court focused on whether there was a direct connection between the provider or furnisher of the necessaries and the vessel itself.
The Court expressly noted that “the difficulty here is not in failure to show that the coal was furnished to the vessels but in failure to prove that it was furnished by the libelant.”
As was the Ninth Circuit in Foss Launch, we are persuaded that the universal application of Piedmont to require a narrow construction of the term “providing” is further supportéd by Dampskibs-selskabet Dannebrog v. Signal Oil & Gas Co.,
The difficulty which blocked recovery by the Coal Company [in Piedmont ] was “solely that it did not furnish coal to the vessels”. There “was no understanding when the contract was made, or when the coal was delivered by the libelant, -that any part of it was for any particular vessel or even for the vessels then composing the -fleet. And it was clearly understood that the purchasing corporation would apply part of the coal to a nonmaritime use”. In the instant case, the oil was supplied exclusively for the vessels in question, was delivered directly to the vessels and was so invoiced; and there was nothing in the general contract to the effect that the supplies were to be furnished upon the exclusive credit of [the vessel’s owner] and not also upon the credit of the vessels.
Id. at 276-77,
The Court in Piedmont read the relevant provision in the FMLA narrowly, holding that the coal company had failed to prove that it “furnished” the coal to the ships upon which it seeks a lien. Id. at 4,
CAI argues, however, that our precedent requires that we interpret all provisions of the FMLA liberally, relying on Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores v. M/V Grand Loyalty,
More importantly, Grand Loyalty did not involve an interpretation of the very same provision that the Supreme Court construed narrowly under the doctrine of stricti juris. The court in Grand Loyalty was interpreting the meaning of certain provisions of sections 971 and 972 in light of the new 1971 amendments. Id. at 200 (“We, perforce, must focus on the meaning of ‘any person to whom management of the vessel at the port of supply is intrusted,’ § 972; ‘person authorized by the owner,’ § 971; and ‘other necessaries,’ §§ 971 and 972”). In light of the specific directive of the Supreme Court as it relates to the very same provision at issue here, we reject CATs contention that the rule of stric-ti juris does not govern this provision of the FMLA and that we should liberally construe it to permit CAI’s lien.
Thus, we agree with our sister circuits and hold that, under the dictates of Piedmont, cargo containers leased in bulk to the owner of a group of vessels for unrestricted use on board the vessels in that group, are not “provided” to any particular vessel within the meaning of 46 U.S.C. § 31342(a). In this case, CAI neither physically delivered the containers to the vessels nor did it direct Lykes to distribute the containers to particular vessels. CAI merely made containers available to Lykes for its use, and Lykes had sole discretion to decide whether to place any of the containers on board any particular vessel. Thus, CAI did not “provide” necessaries to the liened vessels within the meaning of the FMLA. For all of the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court, disallowing the maritime liens asserted by CAI against Lykes, is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "A maritime lien is ‘[a] special property right in a ship given to a creditor by law as security for a debt or claim subsisting from the moment the debt arises[.]’ " Galehead, Inc. v. M/V Anglia,
. In 1989, 46 U.S.C. § 31342 superseded 46 U.S.C. § 971 without significant change. Section 971 had used the verb "furnishing” rather than "providing.” Cases discussed herein that arose before 1989 discuss Section 971, but neither the parties nor earlier case law suggests that the word change is significant to the issue in this case.
. The term "necessaries” "has been liberally construed to include ... 'goods or services that are useful to the vessel, keep her out of danger, and enable her to perform her particular function. Necessaries are the things that a prudent owner would provide to enable a ship to perform well the functions for which she has been engaged.’ ” Bradford Marine, Inc. v. M/V Sea Falcon,
.See supra footnote 1 (46 U.S.C. § 31342 superseded 46 U.S.C. § 971 replacing the term "furnishing” with the term "providing”).
. Other courts, including one circuit court, that have been critical of a restrictive reading of the FMLA's requirements for the creation of a maritime lien have been overruled to the extent that those courts suggest that earmarking necessaries is not a prerequisite to creation of a maritime lien. Compare Equilease,
. In Bonner v. Prichard,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the judgment of the court, and I join its opinion. I add a brief word to make a rather simple point.
The court finds that the Supreme Court’s opinion of eighty years ago, in Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co.,
The only real question before this court today is whether the language of Piedmont — which dealt with supplying coal in bulk to a company that used some, but not all, of the coal on its fishing vessels — has valid application to the case at bar, which involves the leasing of cargo containers to a shipping company under an agreement which, as the court aptly summarizes it, “provided that the leased containers would be used only on vessels owned and/or operated by [the shipping company] and would be used for oceanic transportation of goods and land transport in connection with the oceanic transportation.” Leasing cargo containers to a shipping company is not a unique, or even an unusual, transaction. As the court makes clear, essentially the same transaction has been considered, in the context of the FMLA, by four other courts of appeals, and all four were guided by Piedmont to the conclusion that no FMLA maritime lien had attached.
It may reasonably be asked whether the policy reasons that led the Piedmont Court to find, with respect to the somewhat clumsy transaction framed by the particular facts of that case, that there was no maritime lien — a lien- of a sort that the Court deemed “secret” and that “may operate to the prejudice of prior mortgagees or of purchasers without notice,”
Pending congressional review of the pertinent portion of FMLA, the course of judicial prudence is . for this court — acknowledging that at least for the time being Piedmont provides doctrinal guidance — to align itself with the four courts of appeals that have already rejected the claim of a maritime lien in the context of leased cargo containers.
