In this admiralty appeal, we must decide whether the rule of
Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co. v. Flint,
BACKGROUND
Nautilus chartеred two ships, the F/V TOR and the F/V TRADITION, to transport salmon from fishing vessels to shore for processing during the 1994 Prince William Sound fishing season. The two ships were moored at the Valdez City Dock, when a third vessel, the F/V NORQUEST, allided with them and damaged them severely, preventing Nautilus from cаrrying out its plans. Nautilus sued the NORQTJEST, its owner James Niemela, and its skipper John O'Hara, seeking profits it lost as a result of the allision. The рarties stipulated that the district court's ruling with regard to defendant O'Hara would apply as well to the other defendants. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of O'Hara on the ground that, under the rule of Robins Dry Dock, a maritime plaintiff may not recover in tort for economic loss caused by damage to the person or property of another. Nautilus itself, as charterer, hаd suffered no property damage because it did not own either the TOR or the TRADITION. Nautilus now appeals.
DISCUSSION
In Robins Dry Dock, the defendant dry dock negligently damaged a vessel's pro~ peller. The time charterer of that vessel sued for its profits lost during the ensuing dеlay. The Supreme Court denied recovery because the charterer's loss arose only as a result of its contract with the ship's owners, and the charterer had no protected interest in the vessel itself. The Court explained:
[AJs a general rulе ... a tort to the person or property of one man does not make the tortfeasor liable to another merеly because the injured person was under a contract with that other, unknown to the doer of the wrong. The law does not sprеad its protection so far.
Robins Dry Dock,
Nautilus аrgues that its case differs from Robins Dry Dock and the cases applying it, because those cases involved torts of simple negligence. Nautilus alleges that O'Hara intentionally or recklessly steered his vessel into the TOR and the TRADITION, and argues that the Robins Dry Dock rule was not intended to protect such a tortfea-sor. 2 We can find nothing in Robins Dry Dock or its progeny, however, to suppоrt the exception urged by Nautilus. The reasoning of Robins Dry Dock as well as its language applied generally to damages for tort, when the only damage to the plaintiff arises from its contract with the victim, which was not known to the tortfeasor. 3 Moreover, the exception urged by Nautilus would threaten to *1197 deprive thе rule of much of its practical effect. The line between recklessness and negligence is sufficiently indistinct that extensive litigation would be likely to ensue before Robins Dry Dock could be applied in any case. We therefore reject Nautilus’s proposed exception.
Nautilus relies on cases holding that
Robins Dry Dock
does not preclude recovery for intentional interference with contract relations.
See, e.g., Getty Ref. & Mktg. Co.,
Nautilus’s problem is that, because of the nature of its injury, its true claim of injury is for interference with its contractual relation. It cannot show that such interference was intentional, and therefore actionable notwithstanding Robins, because the tortfeasor did not know of the contract. Accordingly, it has attempted to convert its claim into one for intentional allision with the TOR and the TRADITION. But that tactic yields it nothing, because Robins precludes Nautilus from recovering solely because of an intentional tort to the owner of the TOR and TRADITION. Of course, if O’Hara had intentionally allided with those vessels in order to interfere with Nautilus’s cоntract, we would have a different case. But an intent to allide with the TOR and the TRADITION does not equate to an intent to interfere with Nаutilus’s contract. The latter intent has not and cannot be shown.
We conclude, therefore, that the
Robins Dry Dock
rule applies to this case despite Nautilus’s allegations thаt O’Hara acted intentionally or recklessly in causing the allision with the TOR and TRADITION. In so holding, we recognize that the
Robins Dry Dock
rule has been subjeсted to thoughtful criticism over the years.
See, e.g., M/V TESTBANK
The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The defendants dispute that the allision was intentional or reckless, but Nautilus presented the declaration of an expert that the allision was a willful act. The district court ruled that this evidence was sufficient to raise a triable issue of fact as to whether the defendants acted intentionally, recklessly, or merely negligently. We assume for purposes of our decision that O'Hara аcted intentionally or recklessly.
. This court has recognized an exception to the Robins Dry Dock rule for economiс damages caused to crews of fishing vessels. See Carbone v. Ursich,
