POOLER, Circuit Judge:
We decide here whether Easy Street Ltd., a Cypriot fuel supply company, has a valid maritime lien against a vessel, the M/V Densa Leopard (the "Vessel"). A maritime lien is "[a] lien on a vessel," given for one of several purposes, including "to secure the claim of a creditor who provided maritime services to the vessel." Black's Law Dictionary 1065 (10th ed. 2014). In this case, the Vessel's owner, Leopard Marine & Trading, Ltd., a Maltese company, sued for a declaratory judgment that Easy
We determine that the federal courts have jurisdiction to declare a maritime lien unenforceable; that abstention on the basis of international comity is not required in this case; and that the district court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that laches extinguished the lien. We thus AFFIRM the district court's judgment.
BACKGROUND
I. Factual Background
This case arises from an ocean vessel's unpaid fuel bill. In 2011, the Vessel's owner, Leopard Marine, chartered
On August 23, 2011, Allied bought fuel for the Vessel from Easy Street in Mejillones, Chile, at a price of $848,847.60. Allied agreed to pay Easy Street for the fuel by September 26, 2011. By purchasing the fuel, a maritime lien arose on the Vessel in Easy Street's favor, which would allow Easy Street to seize the Vessel pursuant to the lien if the fuel bill went unpaid. See Itel Containers Int'l Corp. v. Atlanttrafik Exp. Serv. Ltd. ,
Allied returned the Vessel to Leopard Marine on November 4, 2011, with significant fuel left in it. On December 2, 2011, Leopard Marine provided Allied a payment credit of $409,853.10 for the fuel's value, and Allied made the final payment for use of the Vessel, which was set off in part by the fuel credit.
Allied did not pay Easy Street-the fuel provider-when the fuel invoice was due, and Easy Street undertook efforts to recover the amount owed under the invoice. Demitrios Chasampalis, the only full-time employee of Easy Street in 2011, stated that he sent electronic notices and attended "about 100 meetings," "in person ... [i]n Allied offices," between when the invoice was issued in 2011 and sometime in 2012. App'x at 240, 246-47. During the meetings, which occurred "almost every two [or] three days," he "demanded payment of the invoice," among other outstanding issues between the two companies. App'x at 249-50. He testified that he did not seek "a settlement" of the money that was owed, but instead demanded payment of the invoice in full. App'x at 249-50. On March 16, 2012 and April 20, 2012, evidently after scores of in-person meetings had already been held, Allied sent two written notices to Easy Street, each promising to pay within a month. App'x at 321-24. But Allied did not honor either of the
On April 15, 2012, Allied entered into involuntary bankruptcy proceedings following a motion by third-party creditors. On November 6, 2012, a Greek court declared Allied bankrupt, and ruled that Allied was "considered (retrospectively) to have stopped payments to its creditors since [January 1, 2012]." App'x at 325. The parties agree that seeking recovery from the bankruptcy estate would be futile.
Easy Street never considered suing Allied before its bankruptcy, at least in part because of the companies' strong ties to each other. Chasampalis stated that the relationship between Allied and Easy Street was "such that they had me like their son," and that he "believed in them." App'x at 254.
It was also not until at least September of 2012, after Allied entered into involuntary bankruptcy proceedings, that Easy Street considered pursuing remedies against Leopard Marine, and began tracking the Vessel for arrest. Although there is some dispute as to when Easy Street first informed Leopard Marine that Allied's bill was unpaid, the earliest Easy Street claims to have done so was in October of 2013. In any event, Easy Street sent Leopard Marine an email on March 30, 2015, demanding payment of $1,394,807.76-the amount of the unpaid fuel bill plus interest and legal fees.
During 2011 and 2012, the Vessel passed through a number of ports where Easy Street could have arrested it and exercised the maritime lien. Easy Street conceded in the district court that the Vessel was in the Port of Vancouver, Canada, from March 17, 2012 until March 22, 2012, in Panama from April 4, 2012 to April 5, 2012, and in Brazil from June 5, 2012 to June 12, 2012. The district court noted, and Easy Street does not dispute, that exercise of its maritime lien would have been legally possible-even if costly and protracted-in each of those ports.
On April 19, 2015, Easy Street arrested the Vessel in Panama, exercising its maritime lien for the unpaid fuel in an in rem action there.
II. Proceedings Below
This appeal reviews two orders entered by the district court. The first denied Easy Street's motion to dismiss, brought under two theories: international comity and lack of personal jurisdiction. Leopard Marine & Trading, Ltd. v. Easy St., Ltd. , No. 15-cv-3064,
Easy Street appealed the district court's decisions not to abstain on grounds of international comity, and to bar exercise of the lien on grounds of laches.
DISCUSSION
I. Federal Jurisdiction
While the parties did not raise any jurisdictional challenges in the district court, "[w]e have an independent obligation to consider the presence or absence of subject matter jurisdiction sua sponte. " In re Quigley Co., Inc. ,
The Declaratory Judgment Act provides that "[i]n a case of actual controversy within its jurisdiction ... any court of the United States ... may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declaration."
To decide whether federal jurisdiction exists to entertain a claim for declaratory relief, courts follow Skelly Oil 's approach to "conceptually realign the declaratory judgment parties and claims and analyze them as they would appear in a coercive suit." Garanti Finansal Kiralama A.S. v. Aqua Marine & Trading Inc. ,
Although the Skelly Oil "conceptual realign[ment]" heuristic originated in federal question jurisdiction, this Court recently applied it in assessing admiralty suits.
In the present case, Leopard Marine, owner of the Vessel, sues seeking a declaration that Easy Street may not enforce its maritime lien. The precedents of Skelly Oil and Garanti Finansal teach that we must ask, to assure ourselves of jurisdiction, whether Easy Street could have brought a coercive suit in federal court to enforce its lien, i.e., to become owner of the vessel.
Authorities concur that a maritime lien may be enforced only through an action in rem-that is, by proceeding against the vessel itself. See , e.g. , 8-VII Joshua S. Force & Steven F. Friedell, Benedict on Admiralty § 7.01 (2017) ("Maritime liens do not exist apart from their ability to be enforced in rem in admiralty."); The Rock Island Bridge ,
Courts often speak as though physical presence of the res within the territorial jurisdiction of the district court, along with the attachment of the res, is a hard-and-fast jurisdictional prerequisite for an action in rem, particularly in admiralty. See, e.g., In re Millenium Seacarriers, Inc. ,
In Hapag-Lloyd , this court considered a complex interpleader suit, part of which resolved the validity of a number of maritime liens.
[The] argument-that both parties' consent is necessary in cases where the party initiating suit is the owner of theres that the lienholder seeks to arrest-relies on cases holding that where a lienholder brings a claim, both parties' consent is "sufficient" for a court to exercise in rem jurisdiction without seizure of the res. That is not inconsistent, however, with other cases indicating that only the owner's consent is necessary. In rem jurisdiction is "a customary elliptical way of referring to jurisdiction over the interests of persons in a thing." Shaffer v. Heitner , , 207 [ 433 U.S. 186 , 97 S.Ct. 2569 ] (1977). To obtain jurisdiction over that interest, a court must either seize the res or obtain the consent of the owner or other person asserting a right of possession. This principle is demonstrated by the many cases in which in rem jurisdiction has been held waived without seizure when the owner appears without contesting jurisdiction. See, e.g., United States v. Republic Marine, Inc. , 53 L.Ed.2d 683 , 1402 (7th Cir. 1987) ; Cactus Pipe & Supply Co. v. M/V Montmartre , 829 F.2d 1399 , 1107-08 (5th Cir. 1985) ; cf. Continental Grain Co. v. The FBL-585 , 756 F.2d 1103 , 22-27 [ 364 U.S. 19 , 80 S.Ct. 1470 ] (1960). By initiating an interpleader concerning certain in rem claims and posting adequate security for those claims, [the plaintiff] consented to the District Court's jurisdiction over its interests, which is sufficient to confer jurisdiction. 4 L.Ed.2d 1540
There is admittedly some question as to whether the rule of Hapag-Lloyd applies here. That opinion largely discussed the interpleader statute-which created some of the controversy over jurisdiction in rem
To begin, although Hapag-Lloyd dealt heavily with interpleader issues, it stated specifically that it considered, for reasons other than just the interpleader requirements, whether in rem jurisdiction existed:
[The appellee] argues that [the appellant] conflates subject matter and in rem jurisdiction, which are distinct. While it is true that some elements of the arguments overlap, [the appellant] makes two arguments: first, the amount of the bond is insufficient under § 1335 [,the interpleader statute,] to confer subject matter jurisdiction ... and second, even if it is sufficient under § 1335, it is insufficient to constitute a substitute res for the vessels themselves ....
The reasoning of Hapag-Lloyd also demonstrates why its rule should apply in this suit. The rule in Hapag-Lloyd draws on two lines of doctrine. The first acknowledges that an action in rem, while ostensibly a suit against property itself, is in reality a convenient means of targeting the owner's interest in the property. See Continental Grain ,
In Continental Grain , the Court permitted transfer of an in rem action from one district to another under 28 U.S.C. 1404(a), which states that "a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district ... where it might have been brought."
The second line of precedent undergirding Hapag-Lloyd is one that explains vessel attachment rules governing in rem actions as rules for service of process rather than independent jurisdictional requirements. See , e.g. , The St. Lawrence ,
We are cognizant of the unusual position that actions in rem occupy within admiralty jurisdiction. Pursuant to the Judiciary Act of 1789, the federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction over in rem actions within admiralty jurisdiction. See Charles J. Black, Jr., Admiralty Jurisdiction: Critique and Suggestions,
Since in rem jurisdiction is necessary, in this case, for subject matter jurisdiction in admiralty, our dissenting colleague argues that our ruling impermissibly gives parties permission to waive challenges to subject matter jurisdiction. That is not so. We reiterate the reasoning above. If the requirement that a vessel be arrested is a mere matter of service of process, and a practical means of getting at the owner's property, then there is no reason that it could not be waived under appropriate circumstances. That is not the same as allowing the parties
Other, less direct, considerations support our conclusion that jurisdiction exists over this case. One is a realization that, absent a rule permitting the vessel's owner to waive its arrest to confer jurisdiction in declaratory judgment actions, the Declaratory Judgment Act would seem not to apply to most maritime lien disputes. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permit seizure of a vessel for actions in rem. See Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. Adm. R. C(3)(a)(i) ("If the conditions for an in rem action appear to exist, the court must issue an order directing the clerk to issue a warrant for the arrest of the vessel or other property that is the subject of the action."). But they apparently lack a procedure for the situation here: an in personam action where the court's jurisdiction is not in rem, but derivative of theoretically-possible jurisdiction in rem. If any substitute exists, it would be some lesser requirement-perhaps that a vessel appear in the district, or that the owner produce property of equivalent value-but without court process ensuring the vessel's continued presence. But if so, then the vessel, and the court's jurisdiction, would remain only at the owner's pleasure. One can imagine the impracticality of requiring a federal judge to scan the harbor for the physical basis of the court's jurisdiction before issuing any order. And, of course, upon the whiff of an impending adverse judgment, both the vessel and the court's jurisdiction would likely set sail. Cf. Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, Fla. ,
Finally, we note that the rule we today endorse has been applied by our district courts in declaratory actions in past years. See Kristensons-Petroleum, Inc. v. Sealock Tanker Co., Ltd. ,
The dispute considered here is one seeking a declaration that a maritime lien is not enforceable. We have no occasion to discuss what, if any, authority the Declaratory Judgment Act provides courts to issue other declarations regarding maritime liens. But we are satisfied that the federal courts possess jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute before us.
II. Abstention Pursuant to International Comity
Easy Street contends that the district court erred in denying its motion to dismiss or stay the case in deference to the Panamanian proceedings on grounds of international comity. "We review a district court's decision to extend or deny comity to a foreign proceeding for abuse of discretion." Finanz AG Zurich v. Banco Economico S.A. ,
"International comity has been described by the Supreme Court as 'the recognition which one nation allows within its territory to the legislative, executive or judicial acts of another nation, having due regard both to international duty and convenience, and to the rights of its own citizens or of other persons who are under the protection of its laws.' " JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Altos Hornos de Mex., S.A. de C.V. ,
"While the doctrine can be stated clearly in the abstract, in practice we have described its boundaries as 'amorphous' and 'fuzzy.' " Royal & Sun All. Ins.Co. of Can. v. Century Int'l Arms, Inc. ,
In order for a court to decline jurisdiction on grounds of international comity, it must find "exceptional circumstances exist that justify the surrender of that jurisdiction." Id. at 93. "The exceptional circumstances that would support such a surrender must, of course, raise considerations which are not generally present as a result of parallel litigation, otherwise the routine would be considered exceptional, and a district court's unflagging obligation to exercise its jurisdiction would become merely a polite request." Id. "We have recognized one discrete category of foreign litigation that generally requires the dismissal of parallel district court actions-foreign bankruptcy proceedings"-because "[a] foreign nation's interest in the equitable and orderly distribution of a debtor's property is an interest deserving of particular respect and deference." Id. at 93-94 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Easy Street makes two arguments as to why the district court should have relinquished jurisdiction in favor of either dismissal or a stay of the case while the Panamanian in rem proceeding was ongoing. First, Easy Street claims that this case satisfies a list of factors articulated in Royal & Sun , factors that guide the analysis of whether international comity militates against exercising jurisdiction. The Royal & Sun opinion articulated those factors as follows:
In the context of parallel proceedings in a foreign court, a district court should be guided by the principles upon which international comity is based: the proper respect for litigation in and the courts of a sovereign nation, fairness to litigants, and judicial efficiency. Proper consideration of these principles will no doubt require an evaluation of various factors, such as [1] the similarity of the parties, [2] the similarity of the issues, [3] the order in which the actions were filed, [4] the adequacy of the alternate forum, [5] the potential prejudice to either party, [6] the convenience of the parties, [7] the connection between the litigation and the United States, and [8] the connection between the litigation and the foreign jurisdiction. This list is not exhaustive, and a district court should examine the "totality of the circumstances" to determine whether the specific facts before it are sufficiently exceptional to justify abstention.
Royal & Sun ,
Easy Street argues that, in addition to satisfying the above-enumerated factors, this case presents "exceptional circumstances" favoring abstention, as required by Royal & Sun , because the Panamanian courts have exercised in rem jurisdiction over the Vessel. In support of the proposition that a foreign court's exercise of in rem jurisdiction is an "exceptional circumstance," Easy Street cites a number of cases suggesting that, in at least some circumstances, exercise of in rem jurisdiction "disables other courts of coordinate jurisdiction from exercising a like power." Farmers' Loan & Tr. Co. v. Lake St. Elevated R.R. Co. ,
We have some doubt as to whether all eight factors from Royal & Sun unproblematically weigh in favor of deferring to the Panamanian proceedings. In particular, the district court concluded-and Easy Street does not dispute-that American law governs the case, which creates some connection between the United States and this suit. We have noted that "public interest" weighs in favor of having "a case heard in a forum at home with the law that must govern the case." Blanco v. Banco Indus. de Venez., S.A. ,
We have even greater doubt that the fact of a foreign proceeding in rem is, without more, enough of an "exceptional circumstance" to merit abstention in an American in personam action on grounds of international comity.
The general rule is that "concurrent proceedings" regarding the same question are "tolerat[ed]." China Trade & Dev. Corp. v. M.V. Choong Yong ,
But the prior exclusive jurisdiction doctrine does not generally apply to situations where one action is in rem and the other in personam. The adjudication of rights in personam simply does not impede the possession or control of the property required for maintenance of an in rem action. The Supreme Court explained as much in a conflict between state and federal courts in United States v. Klein ,
While a federal court which has taken possession of property in the exercise of the judicial power conferred upon it by the Constitution and laws of the United States is said to acquire exclusive jurisdiction, the jurisdiction is exclusive only in so far as restriction of the power of other courts is necessary for the federal court's appropriate control and disposition of the property. Other courts having jurisdiction to adjudicate rights in the property do not, because the property is possessed by a federal court, lose power to render any judgment not in conflict with that court's authority to decide questions within its jurisdiction and to make effective such decisions by its control of the property. Similarly a federal court may make a like adjudication with respect to property in the possession of a state court.
Courts of appeals invariably reach the same conclusion, stating more broadly the principle that one court's exercise of jurisdiction in rem does not prevent other courts from declaring rights in the res within an in personam action. The First Circuit, although recognizing that "a court cannot exercise jurisdiction over a res that is already subject to the in rem jurisdiction of another court," has stated that "if only one of the actions is in rem , and the other is in personam , the cases may proceed simultaneously." United States v. One 1986 Chevrolet Van ,
The same principle governs this case. The Panamanian proceeding is one in rem, but the present case, an action in personam, merely adjudicates rights in the res. Our declaration of rights in the res does not impair the Panamanian court's possession of the res or its authority over it. The prior exclusive jurisdiction doctrine does not apply, and thus does not create an exceptional circumstance that would permit abstention.
This case is admittedly unusual. Plaintiff comes to court seeking a declaration in personam. But the suit, if filed as a non-declaratory action by defendant, would likely be brought in rem, and, had it been brought in rem, the prior exclusive jurisdiction doctrine might well counsel in favor of abstention. We have, moreover, not required an absolute jurisdictional bar for a case's circumstances to be sufficiently "exceptional" that they merit abstention. One could thus argue that the close kinship of this case to a proceeding in rem gives reason enough for us to abstain as though it were a second proceeding adjudicating the same res. But the doctrine of prior exclusive jurisdiction-and the exceptional circumstances it might present justifying abstention-derive from the practicalities of in rem proceedings, not from the character of rights those proceedings adjudicate. Despite its similarity to an in rem proceeding, this case does not require us to keep custody over any property, either in actuality or constructively. We thus pose no challenge to the foreign court's possession of the res. For comity purposes, this suit is no different from an ordinary proceeding in personam running parallel to an in rem adjudication. And that situation, without more, is not "exceptional."
Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to abstain in deference to the Panamanian proceedings.
III. Laches
Easy Street next contends that the district court incorrectly determined that laches barred execution of its maritime lien. "Laches .... is an equitable defense that bars a plaintiff's equitable claim where he is guilty of unreasonable and inexcusable delay that has resulted in prejudice to the defendant." Ikelionwu v. United States ,
A. Standard of Review
"The existence of laches is a factual question that requires the court to
Easy Street notes that our opinion in Ivani Contracting Corp. v. City of N.Y. appeared to say that summary judgment granted based on laches should be reviewed de novo.
B. Laches Defense to Easy Street's Lien
We next consider whether the district court correctly held that laches extinguished Easy Street's maritime lien.
"There is no fixed period of time that must elapse for a suit to be barred by the doctrine of laches." 8-VII Benedict on Admiralty § 7.01 (7th ed. 2017). The ultimate test for laches is whether there has been (1) inexcusable delay in exercising a lien and (2) prejudice to the party against whom the lien would be enforced. Czaplicki ,
"[I]n deciding whether maritime claims are barred by laches, courts of admiralty will use local limitation statutes as a rule-of-thumb." Larios ,
The district court held-and the parties do not dispute-that the relevant local statute of limitations is Section 83 of the New York Lien Law. That statute states as follows:
Every lien for a debt shall cease if the vessel navigates the western or northwestern lakes, or either of them, or the Saint Lawrence river, at the expiration of six months after the first of January next succeeding the time when the debt was contracted, and in case of any other vessel, at the expiration of twelve months after the debt was contracted . If, upon the expiration of the time herein limited in either of such cases, such vessel shall be absent from the port at which the debt was contracted, the lien shall continue until the expiration of thirty days after the return of such vessel to such port . If proceedings are instituted for the enforcement of the lien within the time herein limited, such lien shall continue until the termination of such proceedings.
The district court noted that Allied purchased fuel from Easy Street in Mejillones, Chile and never returned there. Under the New York statute, when the "vessel [is] absent from the port at which the debt was contracted" one year after the debt was contracted, "the lien shall continue until the expiration of thirty days after the return of such vessel to such port."
Laches decisions are largely limited to the facts of each case. But a few principles emerge from past decisions. A key consideration in deciding whether delay is excusable is whether the lienor failed to "exercise[ ] reasonable diligence in arresting" the vessel. Barwil ASCA v. M/V SAVA ,
A laches defense may be justifiable where delay diminishes a party's ability to absorb a loss. See Uisdean R. Vass & Xia Chen, The Admiralty Doctrine of Laches ,
The district court considered also the principle that if a lienholder, "instead of proceeding with reasonable diligence to arrest the vessel, preferred to collect in personam, such delay, occasioned by such choice, cannot be overlooked if ... libelant now seeks to proceed in rem." The Mendotta II ,
Applying those principles to the facts of this case, we determine that the district court did not abuse its discretion. Allied's fuel bill was initially due September 26, 2011, a bit more than one month after the fuel was contracted for. Easy Street does not dispute the district court's determination that Easy Street failed to inform Leopard Marine until at least the latter half of 2013 that Allied had never paid the bill. Consequently, when Allied delivered the Vessel to Leopard Marine in November of 2011, Leopard Marine was unaware of Allied's failure to pay its outstanding fuel bill. Thus, Leopard Marine credited Allied with $409,853.10 for the value of fuel on board the Vessel.
Easy Street's failure even to inform Leopard Marine of Allied's nonpayment of the fuel bill within the first few months prejudiced Leopard Marine, as reflected in several of the laches principles articulated above. First, had Leopard Marine known in late 2011 that Allied had failed to pay Easy Street, Leopard Marine could have declined to give Allied a credit for the value of the fuel left in the Vessel when it returned. Second, Leopard Marine also could have exercised its lien over Allied's cargo, pursuant to the chartering agreement, at the time of the Vessel's redelivery. In other words, Easy Street's lack of notice eliminated two of Leopard Marine's possible remedies against Allied, and thus diminished Leopard Marine's ability to absorb any loss. Although Easy Street's failure to inform Leopard Marine of the nonpayment does not relate strictly to delay in
After that point, Easy Street's conduct with respect to Allied bespoke an odd mixture of extreme alarm and lack of pursuit of any meaningful remedy. As noted above, Demitrios Chasampalis, Easy Street's only full-time employee in 2011, went to roughly one hundred in-person meetings at Allied's offices, beginning around the invoice's issuance in 2011 and ending sometime in 2012. He demanded full payment of the invoice instead of any settlement of the debt, but never received any payment at all. Easy Street also received two written assurances of payment, neither of which was honored. Yet Easy Street did not think to sue Allied, instead trusting the close relationship between the companies and, evidently, between the persons running them. Only after Allied entered involuntary bankruptcy proceedings did Easy Street begin tracking the Vessel, and it was not until long after Allied's bankruptcy that Easy Street requested payment from Leopard Marine. Moreover, as the district court noted, and as Easy Street does not successfully dispute, there were several opportunities before Allied's bankruptcy to seize the Vessel in a port that would have honored the lien.
The facts of this case implicate the principle the district court applied: where a lienor chooses to take time to proceed in personam or informally, trusting that the indebted party-here, the charterer-is good for its commitments, the vessel's owner should not bear the costs of that choice. See The Mendotta II ,
Moreover, Easy Street failed to respect our guidance in S.S. Lucie Schulte , that "a person asserting a maritime lien on a chartered vessel is obliged to move promptly, so that the owner may effectively pursue his rights of indemnification against the charterer."
Easy Street emphasizes that the Greek court administering Allied's bankruptcy proceedings stated that "all payments to any creditors of Allied ... ceased retrospectively as of January 1, 2012," Appellant's Br. at 7, and suggests that, because of this "retrospective" ruling, Leopard Marine could not have recovered anything from Allied after that date, Appellant's Br. at 37. But Easy Street provides no explanation of what a "retrospective" stoppage of payments means, or how it affected the likelihood of recovery. Although Easy Street cites a legal opinion from a Greek lawyer, the opinion simply restates what Easy Street's brief claims: that the bankruptcy court "considered [Allied] (retrospectively) to have stopped payments to its creditors since [January 1, 2012]." App'x at 325. The legal opinion then concludes only that, "[a]ssuming that Leopard Marine ... was not made aware of East Street['s] ...
Leopard Marine responds to Easy Street's argument with expert testimony that, before the November 6, 2012 bankruptcy order issued, there was no prohibition on suit against Allied, at least in certain forums, and that Leopard Marine might also have exercised liens against Allied's cargo during the period. App'x at 557-558. Easy Street does not dispute these assertions in any direct way. In the district court, Easy Street agreed that Leopard Marine could have brought claims against Allied at any time before November 6, 2012, but did so "subject to the reservation that Allied['s] ... bankruptcy declaration was deemed retroactive to January 1, 2012." See App'x at 569 ¶ 38; App'x at 351 ¶ 38. The record establishes that Easy Street's delay deprived Leopard Marine of remedies it could have availed itself of, including causes of action against Allied in certain forums and the right to exercise liens on Allied's cargo, until the Greek bankruptcy court issued its order on November 6, 2012, which purportedly extinguished, nunc pro tunc, the payments Allied still needed to make to its creditors from January 1, 2012. Easy Street has not called into question the viability or value of these causes of action. The elimination of viable causes of action that would permit a party to absorb a loss weighs heavily in determining that prejudice exists. See S.S. Lucie Shulte ,
We do not think the district court committed clear error in discerning that Leopard Marine suffered additional prejudice because it lost the opportunity to assert causes of action against Allied. The record clearly demonstrates that Easy Street's delay deprived Leopard Marine of causes of action that it otherwise could have used until November of 2012. Easy Street has not included any factual material raising a genuine question as to the viability or value of those causes of action. And, as noted earlier, foreclosure of causes of action that would permit a party to absorb a loss has widely been weighed in determining whether prejudice exists. See S. S. Lucie Schulte ,
Because of the significant prejudice caused by Easy Street's delay in exercising the lien, the district court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that laches extinguished the lien.
CONCLUSION
We have reviewed Easy Street's other arguments and have determined that they are meritless. The district court's judgment is AFFIRMED.
Debra Ann Livingston, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
"[P]arties may not confer subject matter jurisdiction on [an Article III] court by consent." Cable Television Ass'n of N.Y., Inc. v. Finneran ,
In so doing, the majority forgets that we are "courts of limited jurisdiction whose power is limited strictly," especially in the maritime context. See Garanti Finansal Kiralama A.S. v. Aqua Marine & Trading Inc. ,
A
I agree with the majority's declaratory judgment analysis, see Maj. Op. at 181-82, and so do not belabor this point. Briefly, "the Declaratory Judgment Act does not by itself confer subject matter jurisdiction on the federal courts." Correspondent Servs. Corp. v. First Equities Corp. ,
B
A maritime lien is a "lien on a vessel, given to secure the claim of a creditor who provided maritime services to the vessel or who suffered an injury from the vessel's use." Maritime Lien , Black's Law Dictionary 1065 (10th ed. 2014). Unlike a standard lien, which is a device to secure a creditor's interests against a debtor, the distinct legal fiction created by the maritime lien is that the vessel itself is the obligor. See
As a result, as the majority acknowledges, see Maj. Op. at 182, the maritime lien itself (as distinct from any related contractual obligation) may be enforced only in a federal in rem proceeding against the vessel. See, e.g. , Am. Dredging Co. v. Miller ,
Here, we have admiralty jurisdiction to hear Leopard Marine's declaratory judgment action only if Easy Street could have brought an affirmative suit in the district court to enforce its maritime lien. The inquiry is straightforward: because a maritime lien is enforced in rem , absent federal court jurisdiction over the res , Easy Street could not have proceeded against the Densa Leopard in rem . See, e.g. ,
The majority seeks to avoid this simple conclusion by reconceptualizing admiralty in rem jurisdiction as "a mere matter of service of process, and a practical means of getting at the owner's property." Maj. Op. at 187. But that view conflates the in rem jurisdiction that is necessary here for subject matter jurisdiction with the in rem jurisdiction that is often necessary for personal jurisdiction. Admittedly, the distinction between these two concepts can be thin-as evidenced by the cases cited by the majority that discuss in rem jurisdiction solely in the context of personal jurisdiction. See, e.g. , Shaffer v. Heitner ,
Our case law makes clear that in an in rem admiralty action where our jurisdiction comes from
By holding to the contrary, the majority broadly expands our admiralty jurisdiction. According to the majority, there is no requirement for a ship ever to have been remotely near the United States before it can be subject to a federal court's in rem subject matter jurisdiction. As a result, whenever a foreign owner of a foreign ship in a foreign country believes that a maritime lien proceeding brought by a foreign party in a foreign court is going poorly, the shipowner can simply come to our shores and acquire a declaratory judgment. Cf. Richard H. Fallon, Jr. et al., Hart and Wechsler's The Federal Courts and the Federal System 872-73 (7th ed. 2015) (noting that the purpose of federal admiralty jurisdiction is to further international cooperation). Similarly, given federal courts' general obligation to hear cases within their jurisdiction, when two foreign parties locked in a dispute over a maritime lien asserted against a foreign ship agree that it should be heard in New York-regardless of the ship's location-a federal court here now must presumably arbitrate that dispute and expend judicial resources to do so. See, e.g. , Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus , --- U.S. ----,
C
The closest jurisdictional argument-and the crux of the majority's analysis-turns on our decision in Hapag-Lloyd Aktiengesellschaft v. U.S. Oil Trading LLC ,
In resolving the matter, we first recognized that only minimal diversity of the parties is necessary to an interpleader action,
Although we upheld jurisdiction in Hapag-Lloyd , that case did not modify our admiralty jurisdiction precedents, and instead depended on the flexibility of the interpleader mechanism. Critically, unlike here, in Hapag-Lloyd we did have in personam jurisdiction to review the merits of O.W. Denmark's contract claims against Hapag-Lloyd.
Furthermore, the factors which were present in Hapag-Lloyd and supported our jurisdiction over the res there despite the general rule demanding in rem jurisdiction are not present in this appeal. In particular, Leopard Marine does not appear to have (1) submitted to the jurisdiction of the federal courts other than for purposes of determining the viability of Easy Street's claims against the Densa Leopard (as Leopard Marine does not suggest that an action could be maintained against it as party to the original bunker fuel supply contract); or (2) posted bond to serve as a substitute res in place of the Densa Leopard.
To be sure, the majority seizes on certain language in Hapag-Lloyd to support its different view. Relying in part on Hapag-Lloyd 's language that "[i ]n rem jurisdiction is a customary elliptical way of referring to jurisdiction over the interests of persons in a thing," Maj. Op. at 184 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted), the majority surmises that Leopard Marine can manufacture admiralty jurisdiction simply by consenting to a judicial determination as to whether Easy Street's efforts to attach Leopard Marine's interest in the Densa Leopard are barred by laches.
However, the cases cited in Hapag-Lloyd and by the majority are largely beside the point in assessing our subject matter jurisdiction and leave me unpersuaded. For instance, as noted above, Shaffer involved due process constraints on personal jurisdiction and not the issue here: subject matter jurisdiction in admiralty.
Nothing in the supposedly "[v]oluminous authority" cited by the majority (none of
In sum, Hapag-Lloyd provides no authority for the step the majority takes today. Here we ask if we would have admiralty jurisdiction under
* * *
The majority concedes that: (1) "subject matter jurisdiction obviously cannot be waived," Maj. Op. at 188; (2) "in rem jurisdiction is necessary, in this case, for [our] subject matter jurisdiction in admiralty,"
Notes
To "charter," in this context, refers to "[t]he leasing or hiring of ... [a] ship[ ] or other vessel." Black's Law Dictionary 284 (10th ed. 2014).
Leopard Marine was required to post a bond worth more than two million dollars in Panama to serve as security for the release of the Vessel.
We note that Congress provided, in the provisions pertaining to maritime liens within the Commercial Instruments and Maritime Liens Act ("CIMLA"), see
In this context, the "exercise" or "enforcement" of a maritime lien refers to a lienholder's action to become the owner of the vessel. It does not refer, for example, to a declaration of rights in a lien, such as that sought in the present case.
In applying the Skelly Oil test, courts typically ask whether an action could lie if brought by the defendant in the declaratory action against the plaintiff in the declaratory action. Garanti Finansal ,
The district court's opinion noted that the parties raised two separate arguments based on in rem jurisdiction. The first argument related to whether "the Court could ... adjudicate the in rem claims against the Vessels ... because, in many cases, the Vessels were never arrested or present in this jurisdiction and the Objecting Claimants did not consent to substitute the amounts on deposit for the res that are the subjects of their maritime liens." UPT Pool Ltd. v. Dynamic Oil Trading (Singapore) PTE. Ltd. , No. 14-CV-9262,
This is to say nothing of the origin of the personification of vessels. Evidently, this legal fiction was an application of more widespread rules assigning responsibility to inanimate objects for their own harmful acts. See Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law 24-30 (Dover ed. 1991) (1881). But it is of course not unusual that the later understanding and employment of a rule differs significantly from the rule's initial purpose.
Although the Seventh Circuit spoke in Republic Marine of the vessel's "appearance," we do not take this statement as referring to an actual, physical appearance, but instead as the common legal term of art that refers to participation in the litigation of an action whether or not one is physically present. See Republic Marine ,
In Ventura Packers, Inc. v. F/V Jeanine Kathleen ,
The provenance of this rule is the "saving to suitors" clause of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which, much like its modern successor in
Easy Street also relies on Hermes Int'l v. Lederer de Paris Fifth Ave., Inc. , where we stated that a de novo standard of review applied to summary judgment based on laches.
Leopard Marine suggests that the New York statute should be understood as providing a limitations period of twelve months, and a tolling period that extends until thirty days after the vessel returns to the port where the transaction occurred. Leopard Marine then suggests that we should not apply state-law tolling rules, but should instead look to tolling rules from federal maritime statutes to supplement state statutes of limitations.
Although this Court has suggested that both the 12-month period and the additional period (that operates until the vessel returns to port) are considered part of the New York limitations period in laches decisions based on Section 83 of the New York lien law, see The Owyhee ,
We note that, "where the lien is to be enforced to the detriment of a [bona fide] purchaser for value, without notice of the lien, the defence [of laches] will be held valid under shorter time, and a more rigid scrutiny of the circumstances of the delay, than when the claimant is the owner at the time the lien accrued." The Key City ,
Numerous well-established authorities confirm this rule. See, e.g. , 8-VII Joshua S. Force & Steven F. Friedell, Benedict on Admiralty § 7.01[A] (2017) ("Maritime liens do not exist apart from their ability to be enforced in rem in admiralty."); 1 Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Maritime Law § 9-1 (5th ed. 2011 & Supp. 2017) (noting that a maritime lien "adheres to the maritime property even through changes of ownership until it is either executed through the in rem legal process available in admiralty or is somehow extinguished by operation of law"); see also Griffith Price, The Law of Maritime Liens 1 (1940) (noting that a maritime lien is "enforced by means of an action in rem"); Grant Gilmore & Charles L. Black, Jr., The Law of Admiralty § 9-2 at 588 (2d ed. 1975) (explaining that maritime liens "can be 'executed' (which is the admiralty terminology for 'foreclosed') only by an admiralty court acting in rem [ ]"); id. at 622.
The majority cites
Leopard Marine does not (and could not) argue that the bunker fuel supply contract (to which it was not a party) permits in personam jurisdiction over it in this case, nor does it ask for a judicial declaration of what Easy Street's contractual rights-as distinct from its maritime lien -might be.
The absence of these two factors here easily distinguishes Continental Grain Co. v. The FBL-585 ,
Having determined that we lack jurisdiction, I proceed no further and express no view on the majority's discussion of international comity abstention and laches, see Maj. Op. at 189-99.
