Rеsolved in the district court on the basis of its admiralty jurisdiction, this case involves a contract dispute over the disposal of a sunken ship. We must decide whether the district court had admiralty jurisdiction over this matter and, if so, whether the district court correctly ruled that the relief sought by the Puerto Rico Ports Authority (“PRPA”) was barred by the doctrine of laches. Because we answer both questions in thе affirmative, we affirm the judgment of the district court. 1
I.
In 1989, the vessel “La Isla Nena” sunk in the navigable waters of San Juan Harbor during Hurricane Hugo. In 1991, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) instructed the PRPA, the owner of La Isla Nena, to remove the vessel because it was obstructing navigation. In January 1992, Defendants Jose Alberto Umpierre Solares, Divers Service Center, Inc., Milton Andrews-Figueroa, and Milton Andrews Crane Service, Inc. (collectively, “Defendants”)
2
submitted a proposal to the PRPA for the removal of the vessel from San Juan Harbor. The proposal presented two alternatives: Defendants could raise and put the vessel on shore for $75,000, or raise and dispose of the vessel for $85,000. In April 1992, the PRPA and Defendants entered into a contract (“Contract”) for “the rеmoval and
II.
On October 31, 2008, the PRPA and its Executive Director, Miguel Soto-LaCourt 3 (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), filed a complaint in Puerto Rico Superior Court seeking specific performance under the Contract to remove and dispose of La Isla Nena. Invoking admiralty jurisdiction, Defendants removed the case to the district court. Defendants subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming that the action was time-barred pursuant to the lach-es doctrine, and that the Contract was a salvage contract subject to a two-year statute of limitations. The PRPA filed its opposition, arguing that laches did not apply, and that the Contract was a contract for professional services, not a salvage contract, and subject to a fifteen-year statute of limitations. On March 1, 2005, the district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment under the laches doctrine, and dismissed Plaintiffs’ complaint with prejudice.
On March 16, 2005, the PRPA, through nеw legal counsel, filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate judgment (“Motion to Alter/Amend”), arguing for the first time that the district court lacked admiralty jurisdiction under the “dead ship” doctrine. On March 30, 2005, the PRPA appealed the district court’s grant of Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. We refused to entertain the appeal pending the outcome of Defendants’ Motion to Alter/Amend, рursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(4)(A). 4 On June 1, 2005, the district court denied the PRPA’s Motion to Alter/Amend because there were issues of fact as to whether La Isla Nena was a “dead ship.” 5 The PRPA subsequently amended its notice of appeal to include the district court’s June 1 decision.
III.
We review grants of summary judgment
de novo. DeNovellis v. Shalala,
IV.
A. Jurisdiction
The PRPA argues that the district court lacked admiralty jurisdiction over the removed action because La Isla Nena was a “dead ship.”
6
Under the dead ship doctrine, a ship loses its .status as a vessel subject to admiralty jurisdiction “when its function is so changed that it has no further navigation function.”
Mullane v. Chambers,
Section 1333(1) of Title 28 U.S.C. provides that federal district courts shall have jurisdiction over “[a]ny civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction.” The Supreme Court has reiterated that “the fundamental interest giving rise to maritime jurisdiction is the protection of maritime commerce.”
Exxon Corp. v. Cent. Gulf Lines, Inc.,
After La Isla Nena sunk in the navigable waters of San Juan Harbor, the Corps issued a “Mark and Removаl Order” to the PRPA to remove the obstruction, pursuant to Section 15 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 (“RHA”), 33 U.S.C. § 409.
8
Section 15 of the RHA, entitled “Obstruction of navigable waters by vessels; floating timber; marking and removal of sunken vessels,” seeks “to maintain and promote the safety of navigation,”
The Bohemian Club v. Moller,
We acknowledge the PRPA’s reliance upon a line of cases holding that contracts involving “dead ships” are not maritime in nature and thus are not subject to admiralty jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Robert E. Blake, Inc. v. Excel Envtl.,
The PRPA’s reliance upon our decision in
Luvi Trucking, Inc. v. Sear-Land Service, Inc.,
merely because the services to be performed under the contract have referencе to a ship, or to its business, or that the ship is the object of such services or that it has reference to navigable waters. In order that such character should attach, there must be present a direct and proximate juridical link between the contract and the operation of the ship, its navigation or its management afloat....
Id. at 373 (quoting 1 Benedict on Admiralty § 182, at 11-5 (6th ed.1974)). The PRPA argues that admiralty jurisdiction does not attach in this case because the Contract is not linked to “the operation, navigation or management of a vessel afloat,” but rather to La Isla Nena, which “is not a vessel, but rather a dead ship.” We decline to adopt the PRPA’s strained reading of the language quoted in Luvi.
In
Luvi,
the jurisdictional inquiry did not turn on whether a ship was “live” or “dead”. Rather, the issue in that case was whether admiralty jurisdiction should attach to a contract for services provided by a trucking company which “never came in contact with a ship,” and which “merely picked up the [cargo containers] at one terminal and drove them to the other.”
Id.
at 373-74. We concluded that these services were too far removed from maritime matters to provide “a basis for characterizing the contract as maritime.”
Id.
at 374;
see also Atl. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Balfour Maclaine Int’l, Ltd.,
B. Laches
Having concluded that the district court had admiralty jurisdiction over this action, we now turn to whether the district court erred in holding that the PRPA’s breaeh-of-contract action was barred by laches. The district court so held because the PRPA waited more than eleven years to file its claim. Specifically, the court held that the PRPA’s commencement of this action in 2003, “when [the PRPA] knew at least since 1992 [that] ‘La Isla Nena’ had not been re-sunk and [ ] was re-floated and navigated to Cataño,” constituted “excessive and unreasonable” delay and economically prejudiced Defendants. The PRPA does not dispute this delay, conceding that “12 years elapsed since the execution of the Contract.” Nevertheless, the PRPA argues that laches does not apply because the Contraсt was for professional services and was therefore subject to a fifteen-year statute of limitations under Article 1864 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico, 31 P.R. Laws Ann. § 5294. 9
While we look to the limitations period contained in the most analogous federal or state statute in order “to establish burdens of proof and presumptions of timeliness and untimeliness,” the focus of our inquiry is “whether the plaintiffs delay in bringing suit was unreasonable and whether defendant was prejudiced by the delay.”
TAG/ICIB Servs., Inc.,
The uncontested facts demonstrate that the PRPA knew at least since 1992 that La Isla Nena had not been re-sunk and was instead moored at a shipyard in Cataño. Nevertheless, as noted by the district court, “the record is devoid of any evidence to show plaintiffs made any extra-judicial or judicial effort during the eleven (11) year-period to request from defendants the specific performance of the contract.” In light of this undisputed evidence of inaction on the part of the PRPA, and the absence of any reasonable explanation for such inaction, we agree with the district court that the PRPA’s eleven-year
It is also undisputed that in 1998, approximately four years after Defendants refloatеd La Isla Nena and moored it at the shipyard in Cataño, the vessel became partially sunk again. Defendants argue that they would be prejudiced if the PRPA were to “obtain a free second refloat of ‘La Isla Nena’ at no cost to the PRPA.” We agree with the district court that Defendants would unquestionably be prejudiced by the cost of a second re-float. We conсlude, therefore, that the district court did not err in applying the laches doctrine to bar the PRPA’s action.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment granting Defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denying the PRPA’s Motion to Alter/Amend, is affirmed. Costs are taxed against the PRPA.
Notes
. All references to the district court herein refer to the magistrate judge exercising her consent authority pursuant to Rule 73(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
. Umpierre Solares is an officer of Divers Service Center, Inc. Milton Andrews-Figueroa is the sole shareholder of Milton Andrews Crane Service Center, Inc.
. Aside from the complaint, the only filings in which Soto-LaCourt’s name appears are Plaintiffs' motion to remand and the joint discovery report. All other filings in opposition to Defendants, including the Notice of Appeal аnd Amended Notice of Appeal, were brought solely by the PRPA.
. Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(4)(A) provides that "[i]f a party timely files in the district court [a motion to alter or amend the judgment under Rule 59, or a motion for relief under Rule 60] the time to file an appeal runs for all parties from the entry of the order disposing of the last such remaining motion.”
.It is unclear frоm the record why the district court denied the PRPA's Motion to Alter/Amend and let stand its prior order granting Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, despite finding that there were “significant controversies of fact to be elucidated” regarding the jurisdictional issue. The logical next step, we think, would have been for the court to grant the PRPA’s Motion to Alter/Amend, vacate the summaiy judgment order, and resolve the jurisdictional issue. Nevertheless, because we affirm the district court's admiralty jurisdiction over this dispute on other grounds, this apparent inconsistency in the district court’s ruling poses no problem on appeal.
. Defendants argue that the PRPA waived this jurisdictional claim by not raising it prior to the district court’s grant of summary judgment in Defendants' favor. This argument is without merit. "[T]he objection to subject mattеr jurisdiction is not waivable and may be raised for the first time on appeal.”
F.A.C., Inc. v. Cooperativa de Seguros de Vida de Puerto Rico,
. Defendants raise several additional — albeit somewhat convoluted — arguments in favor of admiralty jurisdiction, namely, that: the Contract is a "salvage contract” and is therefore subject to admiralty jurisdiction; and La Isla Nena sank "in the navigable waters of San Juan Bay” and, therefore, "admiralty jurisdiction [is] apparent on its face.” Because we agree with Defendants that admiralty jurisdiction extends to this action because the Contract relates to the removal and disposal of an obstruction to navigation, we do not address Defendants' alternative arguments.
. Section 15 of the RHA states, in relevant part, that:
It shall not be lawful to ... sink, or permit or cause to be sunk, vessels or other craft in navigable channels.... And whenever a vessel, raft or other craft is wrecked and sunk in a navigable channel, it shall be the duty of the owner, lessee, or operator of such sunken craft to ... commence the immediate removal of the same, and prosecute such removal diligently....
. Article 1864 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico states, in relevant part, that "[a] personal
. Admiralty's application of the doctrine of laches in lieu of statutes of limitations is traceable to proceedings in equity, in which “[statutes of limitation had no application,” and where "the judicially created doctrine of laches required the court to weigh the reasons for prejudicial delay.” Alan L. Adlestein,
Conflict of the Criminal Statute of Limitations with Lesser Offenses at Trial,
37 Wm. & Maty L.Rev. 199, 257 n. 249 (1995);
see also Cornetta v. United States,
. In their motion for summary judgment, Defendants argued that the two-year statute of limitations applicable to salvage contracts under 46 U.S.C.App. § 730 should apply here. Section 730 states, in relevant part, that "[a] suit for the recovery of remuneration for rendering assistance or salvage services shall not be maintainable if brought later than two years from the date when such assistance or salvage was rendered.”
