Pride Shipping Corp. (“Pride”) filed this action in admiralty against Tafu Lumber *1405 Company (“Tafu”). The action was based upon a claim that Tafu had, among other things, improperly allowed a ship owned by Pride to sustain damage after it was chartered to Tafu. Pride obtained an attachment of the bunkers of another ship chartered by Tafu, which it found within the Western District of Washington. It did so for the purported purpose of obtaining jurisdiction over Tafu in that district. At a post-attachment hearing the district court ordered release of the attachment, because Tafu claimed to be within the district, agreed to accept service, and agreed to make a general appearance. Pride did not obtain a stay of that order, but filed this appeal from it.
We dismiss the appeal on grounds that the issue is now moot, even though we otherwise have jurisdiction.
BACKGROUND FACTS
Pride is a Greek corporation which owns the M/V Oinoussian Pride. It chartered that to Tafu. Tafu is a Hong Kong corporation. It claims that it has operated through TAT USA, Inc. in Everett, Washington since 1983. Tafu is in the business of exporting wood products and lumber from the United States to countries in East Asia. It negotiates charters for vessels, while TAT USA, Inc. negotiates the purchase and sale of cargo.
While the M/V Oinoussian Pride was under charter to Tafu, it encountered Typhoon Agnes and sustained damage. It was repaired, whereupon Pride demanded that Tafu post a $1,000,000 bond to cover the damage to the vessel. Tafu refused and, pursuant to the provisions of the charter, demanded arbitration in London, England. For its part, Pride filed an action in the English High Court of Justice. Arbitration was instituted in London. Pride also filed an action in the Southern District of Alabama and seized the bunkers of another vessel.
Not being content with these actions, Pride learned that Tafu owned bunkers on the M/V Nova Eagle which was at the Port of Olympia, Washington. That is within the territory covered by the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington. Purporting to have exercised due diligence, Pride claimed it could not locate Tafu within that district. It thereupon applied for and obtained a writ of attachment of those bunkers pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Supplemental Rules for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims B(l) (“Rule B(l)”).
The attachment was levied on October 6, 1988, and on October 7, 1988 Tafu moved to vacate that attachment. The district court heard the motion that day, and ordered the vacation. In so doing, the district court found that even if Pride had exercised due diligence (a fact to which Tafu stipulated for the purposes of that hearing only), since Tafu was either located within the district or could be served once counsel and a Tafu representative had agreed to accept service of process, the attachment should be dissolved. Pride then asked if the district court would certify the issue for appeal, and the district court said, among other things, that it would not. The court said, “There are some specific requirements to get a stay that have to be met. I can’t recite them off the top of my head, but they are in the Rules.” The court then declared that its order was effective forthwith.
The M/V Nova Eagle departed two days later, along with its bunkers, which have been used up by now. On October 14, 1988, Pride finally got around to asking for an order granting a stay. That was denied. The court noted that Pride did not even request the setting of a supersedeas bond at that time. In the meantime, Tafu had accepted personal service and had entered its general appearance in the action. That was on October 11, 1988. This appeal was noticed on October 14, 1988.
Tafu claims that Pride has attempted to appeal from a unappealable order, and that this court, therefore, does not have jurisdiction. It also claims that the attachment issue is now moot.
STANDARD OF REVIEW AND CONSIDERATION OF JURISDICTIONAL AND MOOTNESS ISSUES
We review findings of fact made by the district court for clear error.
United
*1406
States v. McConney,
We review questions of law de novo.
United States v. McConney,
Questions of our own jurisdiction on appeal are issues on which we exercise our own independent judgment.
See Stevedoring Servs. of Am. v. Ancora Transport., N.V.,
APPELLATE JURISDICTION 1
In general, we do not have jurisdiction to consider a decision of the district court when no final judgment has been entered and the district court has refused to certify the issue to us. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). See also Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). This salutary rule fosters the principle that piecemeal appeals are inappropriate, since they can add delay and expense to proceedings, while calling upon appeals courts to decide issues that ultimately need not have been decided at all. See generally 15 C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure §§ 3905-3919 (1976).
An exception to this rule is the collateral order doctrine, which was outlined by the Supreme Court in
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
We must determine whether orders vacating Rule B(l) attachments fall within that small class, when personal jurisdiction is later obtained through a general appearance.
2
The Supreme Court went a long way toward answering this question when it decided
Swift & Co. Packers v. Compania Colombiana Del Caribe,
Appellate review of the order dissolving the attachment at a later date would be an empty rite after the vessel had been released and the restoration of the attachment only theoretically possible.... Under these circumstances the provision for appeals only from final decisions in 28 U.S.C. § 1291 should not be construed so as to deny effective review of a claim fairly severable from the context of a larger litigious process....
Swift,
We have taken the same position.
See Stevedoring Servs. of Am. v. Ancora Transp., N.V.,
It is certainly clear enough that both Stevedoring Sens, of Am. and Polar Shipping Ltd. were quasi in rem cases, and it is probable that Swift was also. However, nothing in any of those cases suggests that a different result would have been reached had a general appearance been made. In fact, Tafu’s approach assumes that the only purpose of the attachment is to assure jurisdiction. Accordingly, that argument rests on an improper assumption. As the Supreme Court noted in Swift:
The process of foreign attachment is known of old in admiralty. It has two purposes: to secure a respondent’s appearance and to assure satisfaction in case the suit is successful.... While the process may be utilized only when a respondent is not found within the jurisdiction, an attachment is not dissolved by the subsequent appearance of respondent.
If it were the case that jurisdiction alone was the sole goal, then an appearance would seem to be sufficient to cause a dissolution of the attachment. That is precisely the point of view that the Supreme Court rejected. This explains why the Supreme Court so readily found that orders which involved the vacation of attachments come within the rationale of Cohen. If only jurisdiction were involved, it could be argued that the Cohen factors would not apply once an appearance was made, because no issue would be conclusively determined, the issue would not be independent at that point and the jurisdictional issue could easily be reviewed on direct appeal, if it were raised. That would be true whether the defendant filed an appearance to contest the merits of the claim, or filed a general appearance. However, security is another matter entirely. The order of vacation would conclusively remove the security — witness our case, where the security has sailed out of sight and been burned in the engines of the M/V Nova Eagle. The security issue is separate from the merits. Finally, a later review would not be terribly helpful in restoring that security. While it is true that one may feel more secure if there is personal jurisdiction over the defendant, that is not the same as security in the sense we are using it here. In short, the loss of the security is final, regardless of the outcome of the case, and that favors an early review of the district court’s decision.
Our conclusion is further bolstered by the fact that, when viewed in the light of their dual purpose, Rule B(l) attachments are much like other provisional remedies, and appeals from orders denying those
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remedies are generally permitted.
3
E.g.,
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) (preliminary injunctions);
Beefy King Int’l, Inc. v. Veigle,
Tafu, however, points to
Pacific Hawaiian Lines, Inc. v. Ol-Mar Marine, Inc.,
We, therefore, hold that where a Rule B(l) attachment is vacated, we have jurisdiction to hear an appeal from that collateral order, even if a general appearance has been made by the defendant.
MOOTNESS
Tafu next asserts that the appeal of this issue is moot. We agree.
As we have pointed out, Pride did obtain quasi in rem jurisdiction over Tafu, but Tafu has since made a general appearance. In the interim, the security was released. It is clearly beyond the jurisdiction of this court, and can never return, since it has now become energy and residual products of combustion.
In
American Bank of Wage Claims v. Registry of the Dist. Court of Guam,
This court, with others, has held that in an in rem admiralty proceeding where a vessel is the res and no stay of execution has been applied for, the release or removal of the vessel from the jurisdiction of the court destroys in rem jurisdiction and renders moot any appeal from decisions of the trial court concerning the vessel.
American Bank
did deal with an in rem action, but the principle for which it stands is just as applicable here. What Pride was entitled to, if anything, was an attachment of the bunkers of the M/V Nova Eagle. Once the bunkers were gone, that right to attach left with them. Pride, however, claims that our decisions in
Polar Shipping Ltd.
and
Teyseer Cement Co. v. Halla Maritime Corp.,
We hold that when, as here, a plaintiff (1) asserts no basis for personal jurisdiction over a defendant other than the defendant’s appearance, secured by a Rule B attachment; (2) the district court dismisses the action and releases the security; and (3) the defendant fails to obtain a stay of execution of the judgment or to post a supersedeas bond, the district court has been rendered powerless to impose a judgment in the event of a remand.
Nothing in Teyseer’s holding, or in our discussion in that case, suggested that an appeal of an attachment issue could not be moot if general jurisdiction had been obtained. On the contrary, we merely declared that absent quasi in rem jurisdiction, the whole case was moot and nothing further could be decided. This distinction was clearly recognized in
Trans-Asiatic Oil Ltd., S.A. v. Apex Oil Co.,
Pride next argues that since there is personal jurisdiction, we could order the posting of a bond or other money in lieu of the bunkers themselves. It, however, cites no persuasive authority for that proposition. While it may be true that in some instances we can take further action where the res is released or removed accidentally, fraudulently, or improperly, that exception does not help Pride. As we said in
Farwest Steel Corp. v. Barge Sea-Span 241,
Pride then claims that Rule E(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Supplemental Rules for Admiralty and Maritime Claims, allows us to order the posting of new security because it states that “if the surety shall be or become insufficient, new or additional sureties may be required on motion and hearing.” That rule, however, is designed to require new sureties when existing sureties have, for some reason, become unreliable. It has no application to a case like the one before us, where the res itself has been released, and nothing, whether secured by sureties or not, has been put in its place.
Pride finally asserts that since it sought a stay, the case should not be treated as moot. It cites
Teyseer
for that proposition, but
Teyseer
said no such thing.
Teyseer
merely observed that no stay had been sought.
Therefore, we hold that since the attachment was vacated and neither the res nor any substitute for it is within the district, the issue of whether the vacating order was proper or not is now moot, and this appeal must be dismissed.
CONCLUSION
This court does have jurisdiction over this appeal from a collateral order vacating a Rule B(l) attachment, despite the fact that the defendant has now made a general appearance in the action. However, where, as here, the res that was attached is no longer in the district and the plaintiff neither properly sought nor obtained a stay of the district court’s release order, the issue of the propriety of that release is moot.
APPEAL DISMISSED AS MOOT.
Notes
. There is no question that the district court has jurisdiction over this matter. 28 U.S.C. § 1333(1).
. Rule B(l) reads as follows, in pertinent part: “With respect to any admiralty or maritime claim in personam a verified complaint may contain a prayer for process to attach the defendant’s goods and chattels, or credits and effects in the hands of garnishees to be named in the process to the amount sued for, if the defendant shall not be found within the district."
. The similarity is underscored by the discussion in
Polar Shipping Ltd.
and especially in the dissenting opinion in that case.
