Curtis NEHRING, et al., Plaintiffs,
John T. Adams, et al., Intervenors-Plaintiffs,
Seafarers Trust Funds, Seafarers Welfare Plan, Seafarers
Vacation Plan, Harry Lundberg School of Seamanship,
Seafarers Hiring Hall Trust Fund, Transportation Institute,
Intervenors-Plaintiffs, Appellees,
v.
STEAMSHIP M/V POINT VAIL, Defendant,
Point Vail Company, Defendant-Claimant, Appellant.
No. 89-3108.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
May 22, 1990.
Jack C. Rinard, MacFarlane, Ferguson, Allison & Kelly and David F. Pope, Tampa, Fla., for defendant-claimant, appellant.
Frank E. Hamilton, III, Frank Hamilton & Associates, P.A., Tampa, Fla., for intervenors-plaintiffs, appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida.
Before HATCHETT and COX, Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge.
COX, Circuit Judge:
Point Vail Company, defendant below, appeals from a judgment rendered against it in favor of the intervening plaintiffs Seafarers Trust Funds. Point Vail does not contest liability; rather, it contends that the district court erred in holding that the Funds could satisfy their judgment from a bond posted for release of the M/V Point Vail. Point Vail also appeals the denial of a post-trial motion in which it sоught to have the judgment overturned and the case dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
I. BACKGROUND
In January 1984, the cargo vessel M/V Point Vail, owned by the defendant Point Vail Company, arrived in port at Tampa, Florida, at the conclusion of a scheduled one month voyage to American coastal ports. The crew was discharged and informed by the ship's master that there was no money to pay their wages. Shortly thereafter, the licensed crewmembers instituted an action in rem against the vessel, praying that she be arrested, condemned and sold to satisfy their claims for wages. The ship was arrеsted and placed in the custody of the United States Marshal. Subsequently, several parties intervened in the proceeding, including intervening plaintiffs Seafarers Trust Funds.1
The intervening Seafarers Trust Funds were established pursuant to collective bargaining agreements between the Seafarers International Union of North America, Atlantic Gulf Lakes and Inland Waters District, AFL-CIO (together referred to as the Seafarers International Union), and various shipping companies or associations representing shipping companies. Each of the five intervening trust funds is intended to provide a specific benefit for the unlicensed seamen who are represented by the Seafarers International Union. For example, the Seafarers Vacation Plan, funded by the Seafarers Vacation Fund, provides for the payment of Vacation Benefits as described in that plan. See Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 1. The Seafarers Hiring Hall Trust Fund pays for the operation, maintenance, expansion and replacement of union hiring halls and employment centers for the benefit of union seamen. See Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 4. The defendant Point Vail Company employed seamen represented by the Seafarers International Union and is a party either directly or indirectly to the agreemеnts.
The nature of the contributions which Point Vail agreed to make is illustrated in the "Memorandum of Understanding and Agreement," which is Plaintiff's Exhibit No. 9. Although the specific amounts due to certain of the trust funds were modified by later agreements, that document reveals that Point Vail Company agreed to make contributions to the five funds at a fixed rate, calculated on a per man, per day worked basis and included provisions for penalties and interest. Deposition testimony admitted at trial disclosed that at the time the M/V Point Vail concluded its voyage in Tampa in January, 1984, the total contributions due to all plans on the per man, per day worked basis had increased to $52.69. Record on Appeal, vol. 9, p. 48.
The Seafarers Trust Funds presented an intervening complaint. At the time the Funds intervened in this action, the pertinent section of Local Rule 7.09, which applies to Admiralty and Maritime claims in the Middle District of Florida, read as follows:
(a) Whenever a vessel or other property is seized, attached or arrested in a proceeding and said property is in the hands of the Marshal, anyone having a claim against the vessel or property is required to present the same by intervening complaint filed in the case and not by way of original complaint, unless otherwise ordered by the Court. Upon the filing of each such intervening complaint the Clerk shall forthwith deliver a conformed copy thereof to the Marshal who shall thereupon post such copy on the vessel or property, but the Marshal need not re-arrest or re-attach the vessel or property....
The Seafarers Trust Funds contended that their claims, for contributions owed by Point Vail Company on behalf of seamen represented by the Seafarers International Union and employed aboard the M/V Point Vail, presented maritime claims within the court's admiralty and maritime jurisdiction. Neither in their original intervening complaint2 nor in their later intervening complaint3 did the Seafarers Trust Funds allege that the defendant could not be found within the district, as required by Rule B(1) of the Supplemental Rules For Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims. Rather, the Seafarers Trust Funds alleged that the defendant had no assets with which to respond to their claims within the judicial district. In both complaints, the Seafarers Trust Funds alleged that these claims were being brought in personam against the defendant Point Vail Company and in rem against the vessel. The complaints prayed that the arrest of the vessel M/V Point Vail, instituted at the behest of the licensed crewmembers who began the action, be maintained and that the vessel be condemned and sold to satisfy their claims for trust fund contributions.
Point Vail Company answered the initial intervening complaint on May 21, 1984, "as claimant of and on behalf of" the defendant-vessel. Point Vail Company asserted as one of several affirmative defenses in that pleading that "[t]he Court lacks in personam jurisdiction over POINT VAIL COMPANY," with no further explanation provided. In June, Point Vail Company answered the initial intervening complaint in its own behalf, entering a general appearance and not contesting the court's in personam jurisdiction over it. Similarly, on June 26, 1984, defendant Point Vail Company made a general appearance and answеred the later intervening complaint of the Seafarers International Union and the Seafarers Trust Funds, again not contesting in personam jurisdiction. In its answer to the amended complaint of the Seafarers International Union and the Seafarers Trust Funds, filed on June 24, 1985, Point Vail Company specifically admitted that the court had in personam jurisdiction over it.
The defendant vessel M/V Point Vail was released after a bond, in the form ordered by the court, was posted by Point Vail Company to secure payment of certain claims. In its order providing for the release of the vessel under bond, the district court stated:
2. That the form for bond will be conditioned upon payment of any judgment entered against M/V POINT VAIL in rem and/or Point Vail Company, in personam, on a claim or claims of maritime attachment and garnishment and upon condition that this Order be incorporated in and attached to said Bond.
Record on Appeal, vol. 2, tab 78. This order did not bind Point Vail Company to pay any and every in personam judgment rendered against it, but only meritorious in personam maritime claims brought upon properly invoked attachment and garnishment proceedings. In their stipulation and joint motion seeking release of the vessel, the parties agreed:
5. That there is a dispute betwеen the parties as to whether the complaint and intervening complaints, or any of them, constitute maritime attachment and garnishment actions against Point Vail Company, in personam, for which Point Vail Company should be required to post security.
Record on Appeal, vol. 2, tab 77. In light of the parties' stipulation, the court's order providing security as a substitute for the vessel contemplated a properly initiated claim against the vessel in the first instance.4
Following a non-jury trial, the district court entered a judgment in favor of the Seafarers Trust Funds for unpaid employer contributions and ordered that the trust funds could satisfy their judgment out оf the Vessel Release Bond which was posted by Point Vail Company to secure release of the vessel. Point Vail Company has appealed this judgment. First, Point Vail argues that the claims presented by the Seafarers Trust Funds were not within the district court's admiralty and maritime jurisdiction and therefore that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over them. Under this theory, the judgment rendered against Point Vail is a nullity. Alternatively, Point Vail asserts that the Seafarers Trust Funds have only in personam claims against the company and not in rem claims against the vessel. Because the Seafarers Trust Funds did not perfect maritime attachment under thе requirements of Supplemental Rule B of the Supplemental Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims, Point Vail argues, the district court erred when it ordered that the Seafarers Trust Funds could satisfy their judgment from the security posted to release the vessel.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction to Hear the Intervening Claims
Point Vail Company asserted in the court below and argues on appeal that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the intervening claims presented by the Seafarers Trust Funds. Point Vail contends that its agreements to make contributions to the various trust funds are not maritime contracts because the obligations "do[ ] not remotely affect the opеration, navigation or management of a vessel." Brief of Appellant at 14. Therefore, reasons Point Vail, no basis exists to support the court's admiralty jurisdiction, since these contract obligations provided the only jurisdictional basis alleged by the Seafarers Trust Funds. The Seafarers Trust Funds respond that the agreements which created the trusts, and Point Vail's obligation to make contributions, are founded upon and incorporated in the master collective bargaining agreement. This agreement, known as the Standard Tanker Agreement, provides for and governs employment of union seamen. The Funds then argue that since the services of these unlicensed crewmembers are an aid to maritime commerce and navigation, "[t]he contract setting forth the obligation to pay fringe benefit contributions, plainly falls within the maritime jurisdiction." Brief of Appellee at 18. We are presented with the issue of whether this claim properly concerns matters within the district court's admiralty jurisdiction. We conclude that the district court's exercise of jurisdiction was proper.
Article III, Section 2 of the Constitution states that the judicial power of the United States shall extend "to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction." With regard to contracts, determining whether a particular agreement falls within this jurisdictional grant focuses on " 'the nature of the contract, as to whether it has reference to maritime service or maritime transactions.' " E.S. Binnings, Inc. v. M/V Sandi Riyadh,
The test we apply in deciding whether the subject matter of a contract is necessary to the operation, navigation, or management of a ship afloat is a test of reasonableness, not of absolute necessity. 7A Moore's Federal Practice p .230, at 2762. See generally, id. p , at 2781 to 2872, and 1 Benedict on Admiralty Sec. 184, at 12-11 to -22 for specific examples of contracts deemed to be within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.
We have found no cases directly on point holding that agreements such as those upon which the Seаfarers Trust Funds rely in bringing their claims for contribution relate to the operation, navigation or management of a ship and therefore are within the court's admiralty jurisdiction. Point Vail asserts, without citation of authority, that "an obligation to make contributions to union plans does not give rise to any in personam right that is recognizable in a court of admiralty." Appellant's Brief at 13. We disagree. One author has noted that when courts have extended admiralty jurisdiction beyond its traditional parameters, they have done so in two basic ways, of which the first applies here. "[W]here a party has contractually undertaken some activity which, standing alone, would not be an admiralty matter, but has undertaken that activity in conjunction with an indisputable maritime contract, the Courts have included the ordinarily non-maritime activity in admiralty jurisdiction." Bridwell, Admiralty Contract Jurisdiction and Contract Liens under American Law 6, reprinted in 1988 Southeastern Admiralty Law Institute Program Materials. This statement accurately describes our determination that admiralty jurisdiction exists in this case. Standing alone, Point Vail Company's obligation to make trust fund contributions is not an admiralty matter. Taken in conjunction with the employment of the represented crewmembers, however, the obligation becomes subject to аdmiralty jurisdiction.
Several courts have held that claims by maritime union trust funds, such as the Seafarers Trust Funds, for failure to make contributions due based upon work performed by union-represented seamen do not constitute "wages of the crew" for purposes of determining preferred maritime liens. See, e.g., Citibank, N.A. v. Vessel American Maine,
In Ingersoll Milling Machine Co. v. M/V Bodena,
Likewise, in Bergen Shipping Co. Ltd. v. Japan Marine Services, Ltd.,
These cases demonstrate the necessity of a case-by-case approach to the introduction of admiralty jurisdiction to novel or unusual situations. In the case before us, it is not the actual contract to make contributions to the Seafarers Trust Funds that is an "integral" part of the maritime commerce in this case, but rather, the employment of the seamen without whom the voyage would be impossible. Through collective bargaining, union representatives of these seamen have traded higher wages for the right to receive trust fund benefits that are funded by employer contributions. The obligation to make contributions is breached, if at all, only after the crewmembers have provided essential maritime services to their vessel, since contributions are paid after the fact, on a man-days worked basis. The failure to compensate seamen in the manner here at issue will, in our view, support an in personam claim in admiralty.
In West Winds, Inc. v. M.V. Resolute,
B. Satisfaction of Judgment From Vessel Release Bond
Point Vail Company contends that the Seafarer Trust Funds failed to properly invoke Supplemental Rule B attachment, because they failed to state under oath that Point Vail Company could not be found within the district and because they failed to obtain and serve a writ of attachment on the vessel.6 The intervening plaintiffs Seafarers Trust Funds assert in each complaint that their claims are brought pursuant to Local Admiralty Rule 7.09. This rule, captioned "INTERVENTION," states in subsection (a) that anyone having an in rem claim against a vessel or property must present that claim by way of intervening complaint, and that the United Stаtes Marshal need not re-arrest or re-attach a vessel or property already so arrested or attached. Subsection (b) of this rule states simply that any party is permitted to intervene, without leave of court, in any admiralty proceeding in which the Marshal has arrested or attached a vessel or property. It may well be that Local Rule 7.09 means that when a vessel is already in the custody of the Marshal, an intervening party need not obtain a writ of attachment. Because, however, this local rule does not displace the requirement contained in Supplemental Rule B that plaintiffs seeking the benеfits of attachment (which include security for their claims) must state under oath that the defendant "shall not be found within the district," we need not and do not decide whether the local rule is inconsistent with Supplemental Rule B.
The pleadings and various documents filed throughout this action by the Seafarers Trust Funds illustrate that its intent in bringing the action in personam against Point Vail Company and in rem against the M/V Point Vail was to obtain security for their claims. For example, in paragraph 9 of the original intervening complaint, the Seafarers Trust Funds allege that
[s]ince the Defendant POINT VAIL COMPANY is the owner and operator of the vessel POINT VAIL, and upon information and belief has no substantial assets within this judicial district within which to respond to the claims of the Trust Funds, Intervenor SEAFARERS TRUST FUNDS bring this action in personam against Defendant POINT VAIL COMPANY, and in rem against the vessel, and pray that the vessel be attached as surety for payment of the claims against the Defendant POINT VAIL COMPANY.
Nowhere in any of the pertinent pleadings and memoranda do the Seafarers Trust Funds allege that Point Vail Company could not be found within the district. The attempt to use Supplemental Rule B attachment to gain security for an in personam claim independent of its use to compel the appearance of the defendant is contrary to the primary рurpose of the rule.
"[T]here are two reasons for the procedure authorized in Supplemental Rule B: to assure a respondent's appearance, and to assure satisfaction in case the suit is successful." Polar Shipping Ltd. v. Oriental Shipping Corp.,
In Staronset Shipping Ltd. v. North Star Navigation Inc.,
As noted earlier, the Seafarers Trust Funds never alleged in the verified complaints nor in any affidavit that the defendant Point Vail Company could not be found in the district. The claims they present do not constitute maritime liens against the vessel, and the Seafarers Trust Funds have conceded as much. The averments contained in their pleadings that the defendant has no assets within the district--or no substantial assets--do not satisfy the requirement set forth in Supplemental Rule B that attachment will issue only when it is sworn to that "the defendant cannot be found within the district," and they are not the substantial equivalent of that requirement. Fairly stated, the Seafarers Trust Funds sought to use maritime attachment to secure an in personam claim, but failed to insert the key that unlocks that door. After Point Vail Company entered a general appearance, maritime attachment--which exists primarily to secure such appearance--could no longer properly issue, "and the suit [should have proceeded] as any other maritime claim in personam." 7A Moore's Federal Practice p B.08 at B-351.
The Seafarers Trust Funds contend that because of Local Rule 7.09, attachment would not issue once the vessel had been arrested and was in the custody of the Marshal. By its terms, that rule applies to in rem claims; it makes no mention of in personam claims such as those of the Seafarers Trust Funds. Even if applicable to the claims in question, however, Local Rule 7.09 cannot override the requirements of Supplemental Rule B, and we specifically hold that the Seafarers Trust Funds failed to comply with those requirements by failing to state under oath that the dеfendant Point Vail Company could not be found within the district. Because of this failure, the benefit of obtaining security for the claims as an adjunct to obtaining personal jurisdiction over the defendant was lost once Point Vail Company submitted to the court's jurisdiction.
III. CONCLUSION
The order of the district court denying Point Vail's motion to have the judgment overturned and the intervening complaints of the Seafarers Trust Funds dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is AFFIRMED. That portion of the order entitled "Judgment in a Civil Case" entered October 31, 1988, which allows the Seafarers Trust Funds to satisfy their judgment from the vessel release bond posted to release the M/V Point Vail from in rem сlaims, is REVERSED.
Notes
The "Seafarers Trust Funds" is the collective reference to the intervening plaintiffs involved in this appeal; they are THE SEAFARERS WELFARE PLAN, THE SEAFARERS HARRY LUNDBERG SCHOOL OF SEAMANSHIP, THE SEAFARERS VACATION PLAN, THE TRANSPORTATION INSTITUTE, and THE SEAFARERS HIRING HALL TRUST FUND
The original complaint seeks contributions due the Seafarers Trust Funds up to and including January 18, 1984
The later complaint, filed jointly by the Seafarers International Union and Seafarers Trust Funds on June 8, 1984, alleges that the defendants wrongfully employed non-Seafarers International Union personnel to perform work aboard the vessel while it was under arrest and under the custody of the United States Marshal. The Seafarers Trust Funds asserted therein a similar claim for unpaid contributions to the various plans under the collеctive bargaining agreements. This later complaint was then amended on June 12, 1985
Fundamentally, a valid in rem maritime claim carries the right to satisfaction from the vessel, since the claim constitutes a lien. By contrast, an in personam maritime claim carries no such right unless Supplemental Rule B process or other attachment or garnishment procedures have been properly invoked. Therefore, the district court's requirement that the bond stand for in personam claims of maritime attachment and garnishment as well as for in rem maritime claims, implicitly depended on whether such a meritorious claim existed
The facts in thеse cited cases established that the unpaid trust fund contributions had been made up through accruals of interest on the funds and by advancements from the funds' trustees to cover the unpaid contributions. Although these factors were important to the three courts cited in the text of this opinion (where the claims were brought as in rem wage claims), we hold that whether or not the unpaid contributions of Point Vail Company were somehow "covered" by the trustees, such that no seaman's individual account suffered adversely, is irrelevant to a determination of jurisdiction over these in personam claims
The Citibank court noted as well that "the hallmark of a wage lien is that the wage owed to a seaman has accrued by virtue of his service to a particular ship."
Whether a defendant can be "found within the district" involves a two-pronged analysis developed by courts construing former Admiralty Rule 2, which was the rule that Supplemental Rule B replaced. The inquiry asks: " 'first, whether [the respondent] can be found within the district in terms of jurisdiction, and second, if so, whether it can be found for service of process.' " Seawind Compania, S.A. v. Crescent Line, Inc.,
