The Louisiana Crawfish Producers Association-West and some of its members, commercial fishermen operating in the Atchafalaya Basin in Louisiana, sued a number of oil and gas companies- and their insurers, claiming aspects of the companies’ pipeline activities impeded water flows and commercial navigation, causing economic damages. The plaintiffs appeal a, dismissal for failure to state a claim in favor of two defendants, Dow Intrastate Gas Company (“DIGC”) and Willbros RPI, Inc. (“Willbros”). We affirm.
I.
The plaintiffs sued in Louisiana state court under state law and general maritime law. After dismissal of the state-law claims, one of the defendants removed to federal court. That court denied a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss maritime tort claims against the defendants alleged to have engaged in dredging. It dismissed maritime tort claims against the defendants alleged to have engaged in oil and gas exploration but not dredging, which included DIGC and Willbros. The court declined to dismiss successor-in-interest claims against most of the defendants alleged to be successors of entities that had engaged in dredging. Inconsistently with its treatment of some other defendants, however, the court did not discuss successor-in-interest claims against DIGC even though the complaint claimed that DlGG is the successor to Dow Chemical Company (“Dow”), a defendant alleged to have engaged in dredging. Nevertheless, having dismissed the maritime tort claims against DIGC, the court dismissed DIGC as a defendant.
The plaintiffs appealed. While the appeal was pending, most of the dismissed defendants settled. The only defendants that remain parties to the appeal are DIGC and Willbros.
The specific allegations against DIGC and Willbros fall into two categories. First, the plaintiffs claim DIGC and Will-bros engaged in activities that constitute maritime torts. They allege DIGC placed cement mats on exposed sections of an existing pipeline, impeding water flows and commercial navigation. They claim Will-bros built a pipeline on an existing spoil bank that it had leveled using bulldozers, obstructing gaps in the spoil bank and thereby impeding water flows and commercial navigation. In the plaintiffs’ view, both defendants’ activities violated the applicable Army Corps of Engineers (“Army Corps”) permits. The plaintiffs do not contend DIGC or Willbros used vessels in any of these projects.
Second, the plaintiffs claim that Dow is the “predecessor” to DIGC and that DIGC operated under an Army Corps permit originally issued to Dow. Plaintiffs provide no further information about the relationship between DIGC and Dow, but the defendants acknowledge in their brief that Dow and DIGC have á corporate parent-subsidiary relationship.
II.
We review de novo a dismissal for failure to state a claim, “accepting all well-pleaded facts as true and viewing those facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Stokes v. Gann,
III.
To state a claim for a maritime tort, the plaintiff must allege facts sufficient to satisfy the “location test” and “connection test.”
The location test is easily satisfied: The plaintiffs allege.the defendants’ activities impeded water flows and commercial navigation, meaning the harm “took effect” on navigable waters. See Egorov,
The plaintiffs have not alleged facts sufficient to satisfy the second prong of the connection test, however. The key issue is the appropriate level of generality at which to describe “the general charac
The latter description is the better one. The plaintiffs’ characterization conflicts with Sisson’s instruction,
The only remaining issue is whether “pipeline construction and repair” shows “a substantial relationship to traditional maritime activity.”
IV.
The general rule of corporate-successor liability is that a corporation that purchases another corporation “is not responsible for the seller’s debts or liabilities, except where (1) the purchaser expressly or impliedly agrees to assume the obligations; (2) the purchaser is merely a continuation of the selling corporation; or (3) the transaction is entered into to escape liability.” Golden State Bottling Co. v. NLRB,
The plaintiffs’ allegations that Dow is the “predecessor” to DIGC and that DIGC operated under an Army Corps permit originally issued to Dow do not show that an exception to Golden State’s default rule of nonliability plausibly applies. Without more, they have failed to state a claim for successor liability against DIGC.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
. Cf. Exec. Jet Aviation, Inc. v. City of Cleveland, Ohio,
. Grubart,
. The only case the plaintiffs cite in support, Apache Corp. v. GlobalSantaFe Drilling Co.,
. Grubart,
. See Herb’s Welding, Inc. v. Gray,
. The plaintiffs' reliance on Sperry Rand Corp. v. Radio Corp. of Am.,
. See Lyons v. Rienzi & Sons, Inc.,
