STEELMET, INC., Plaintiffs-Appellants, Cross-Appellees,
Jarrell R. Jackson, Intervening Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
CARIBE TOWING CORP., Mаrine Exploration Co., Inc., Defendant
Third Party Plaintiff-Appellants,
Alabama-Puerto Rico Barge Line, Inc., Defendant,
and
Frank J. Hall & Company, Third-Party-Defendant-Appellee,
American Marine Underwriters, Calvert Fire Insurance Co.,
Third-Party-Defendants-Appellees, Cross-Appellants.
No. 82-6142.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Jan. 13, 1986.
Donovan, Maloof, Culp & Kennedy, New York City, for Steelmet, Inc.
John B. Culp, Jr., G.J. Rod Sullivan, Jr., Jacksonville, Fla., for Steelmet, Inc.
Carl R. Nelson, Fowler, White, Gillen, Boggs, Villareal and Banker, P.A., Tampa, Fla., for United Kingdom Mut. S.S. Assur. Ass'n, et al.
Edward F. Gerace, Tampa, Fla., for Caribe and Marine Exploration Co.
Richard R. McCormack, Miami, Fla., for American Marine Underwriters and Calvert Fire Ins. Co.
John D. Kallen, Hayden & Milliken, Wm. E. Cassidy, Miami, Fla., for Jarrell R. Jackson.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
(Opinion Nov. 29, 1984, 11 Cir.,
Before GODBOLD, Chief Judge, JOHNSON and CLARK, Circuit Judges.
GODBOLD, Chief Judge:
The major issue raised in the petition for rehearing filed by Calvert Fire and American Marine Underwriters concerns whether, in a maritime action in federal court in Florida, there can be maintained a direct action against an insurer brought pursuant to Florida law. We addressed this matter in our decision at
Steelmet sought to file an amended complaint stating a direct action against Calvert Fire and AMU.1 The district court did not rule on whether the amendment could be filed but rather said it would allow Steelmet to participate in proceedings as if it had a direct action. On appeal Steelmet urged that it had been improperly denied the right to a direct action; Calvert and AMU asserted Steelmet had no right to maintain such an action and, in any event, was permitted to participate at thе trial as though it did have the right. The legal consequences of all this were so uncertain that we addressed the direct action issue and ruled on it in an effort to be helpful to the parties on remand. We thought that we were netting a minnow and found ourselves embraced by an octopus. Petition for rehearing and response have elevated what appeared to be a side issue of minor interest into a major controversy. Amici from the marine insurance industry have joined in, and decisions in several other maritime cases out of Florida are being withheld pending our acting on the petition.
We concluded,
The parties and amici have briefed legislative developments in Florida since Shingleton and Quinones were decided and subsequent caselaw as well. For reasons that follow we conclude that Shingleton and Quinones are a part of a correct analysis but, by themselves, do not give us an answer. Rather, we are required to examine the interplay between federal admiralty law and state law concerning the right to maintain a direct action against an insurer.
Federal admiralty law confers no general right to sue an insurance company directly, Continеntal Oil Company v. Bonanza Corp.,
Wilburn Boat Co. v. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co.,
In Maryland Casualty the Limitation Act had been applied so as to avoid any conflict with the state statute. In Wilburn Boat the Court specifically held there was no conflict. Next, in Kossick v. United Fruit Co.,
In Olympic Towing Corp. v. Nebel Towing Co.,
With regard to the first matter, although four members of the Court would have voided the direct action statute because of conflict between the proceedings, five members, including Justice Clark, tоok a contrary position. Moreover, the right to proceed with a direct action after a limitation proceeding has been completed is an implicit holding that the policy underlying the concursus is not so strong or pervasive as to abrogate rights under the direct action statute. We hold that any conflict between the direct action statute and the federal provision for a concursus of clаims in admiralty is so minimal as to be insignificant.
Id. at 235. In short, after examining the policy underlying the admiralty provision for concursus of claims, the court held that any conflict between that admiralty provision and the state statute was insignificant.
Summarizing this body of law: One must identify the state law involved and determine whether there is an admiralty principle with which the state law conflicts, and, if there is no such admiralty principle, consideration must be given tо whether such an admiralty rule should be fashioned. If none is to be fashioned, the state rule should be followed. Wilburn Boat. If there is an admiralty-state law conflict, the comparative interests must be considered--they may be such that admiralty shall prevail, as in Kossick, or if the policy underlying the admiralty rule is not strong and the effect on admiralty is minimal, the state law may be given effect, as in Olympic Towing.
Our first step is to determine what the state law is, and the parties are sharply divided on this point. We must thread our way through the maze of whether Florida law permitted a direct action against the insurer at the time Steelmet's cause of action arose in December 1976 and when it filed its proposed amendment in 1981. In 1969 Shingleton stated a prevailing Florida public policy that a third party beneficiary under a motor vehicle liability policy could maintain a direct action against the insurer. The next year in Beta Eta House Corp., Inc. of Tallahassee v. Gregory,
In 1976 the Florida legislature attempted to overrule Shingleton by аdoption of Fla.Stat.Ann. Sec. 627.7262, effective October 1, 1976 and applicable to all claims arising out of accidents occurring on or after that date. Three years later, in Markert v. Johnston,
The clear result of this body of Florida law is that Steelmet's right to bring a direct action is controlled by the common law rule of Florida described in Shingleton. The Florida legislature's first effort to overrule Shingleton aborted, and its second and successful effort came after Steelmet's cause of action had accrued. It makes no difference that the legislature in 1982 made a controlling determination of Florida public policy. Until the legislature acted the viable Florida public policy was that expressed by its Supreme Court in Shingleton. As the Supreme Court put it in Van Bibber:
The regulation and supervision of insurance is a field in which the legislature has historically been deeply involved. See chs. 624-632, Fla.Stat. While this Court may determine public policy in the absence of a legislative pronouncement, such a policy decision must yield to a valid, contrary legislative pronouncement. In Shingleton we found that public policy authorized an action against an insurance company by a third-party beneficiary prior to judgment. The legislature has now determined otherwise. Our public policy reason for allowing the simultaneous joinder of liability carrier espoused in Shingleton, therefore, can no longer prevail. Finding that the statute is substantive and that it operates in an area of legitimate legislative concern precludes our finding it unconstitutional.
Having determined that the Florida rule permitted Steelmet to file a direct action, we turn to consideration of whether there is an admirаlty principle with which this state law conflicts, and, if there is none, whether an admiralty rule should be fashioned that covers the matter in issue. As we have noted, admiralty law neither permits nor expressly forbids direct action against a maritime insurer, so there is no conflict and, under Wilburn Boat, we must decide whether to fashion an admiralty rule that will control. This we decline to do.
Wilburn Boat was based upon state interest in regulation of insuranсe. Olympic Towing applied Wilburn Boat and, on the basis of Louisiana's public policy concerning insurance, vindicated that interest as against an admiralty principle because, it found, the conflict between the two was so limited as to be insignificant. Wilburn Boat has been sharply criticized as inconsistent with the concept of admiralty as a body of uniform national law. See, e.g., G. Gilmore & C. Black, The Law of Admiralty 49 (2d ed. 1975).2 True, Wilburn Boat is anti-uniformity. It is an advised choice by the Supreme Court in favor of state regulation of insurance, including maritime policies, so long as no overriding admiralty rule exists or is formulated.
In addition to the national interests in state regulation of insurance described in Wilburn Boat, Florida has interests that it has described in the Shingleton decision. The Florida Supreme Court spoke of the rights of claimants who are members of a protеcted class (injured third parties who are third party beneficiaries) to pursue a speedy, realistic and adequate recovery action. The court considered that deferring the injured person's access to the courts was inconsistent with the provisions of the Florida constitution providing that courts shall be open so that persons injured shall have remedy by due course of law without denial or delay.
There is not a strong concern for uniformity in this case. It reaches only one class of possible parties, insurers. Unless the system fails, the insurer's obligation to pay or not will be determined correctly whatever the forum and the timing of the case. Rather the insurer's interest is in having its obligation determined after a judgment has been obtained against the insured and by a separate suit rather than concurrently with the liability suit. These interests are concerns of insurers in general. No reason is suggested to us why a maritime insurer has different concerns.3
Perhaps the clearest statement of the absence of any strong admiralty interest affected by a direct action statutе is that of the Fifth Circuit in Cushing v. Maryland Casualty,
While [the direct action statute] confers upon an injured party a substantive right which becomes vested at the moment of the injury, it is not a right essentially maritime in character, nor one peculiar to admiralty or maritime jurisdiction, but is one which applies alike to all contracts of public liability insurance, regardless of whether the injury occurs ashore or afloat. Thеre is nothing in it which undertakes to change the substantive admiralty law, nor does it undertake to deal with a remedy in courts of admiralty. The statute provides only an additional and cumulative remedy at law in the enforcement of obligations of indemnity voluntarily and lawfully assumed by the insurer. Thus the statute does not conflict with any feature of substantive admiralty law, nor with any remedy peculiar to admiralty jurisdiction. These suits are at law, not in admiralty.
Id. аt 539 (footnote omitted). This holding was not affected by the Supreme Court's reversal. Nor does it seem to us to matter that the suits were at law and not in admiralty, since the court actually engaged in the balancing of state law and admiralty law interests.
Petitioners urge that Florida's common law rule set out in Shingleton and followed in its successors does not embrace a direct action but only permits joinder. But Shingleton itself spoke еxclusively in terms of a direct cause of action. Quinones did speak of Shingleton and successor cases as "insurance joinder cases."
In other cases pending before this court and awaiting this decision, the contention is made that the new version of Sec. 627.7262 does not embrace maritime insurance in view of Fla.Stat.Ann. Sec. 627.021(2)4, producing a result that maritime insurers are still subject to the Shingleton common law rule and may be the subject of direct actions while other kinds of insurers have the protection of the Sec. 627.7262 bar against direct actions. This issue is not before us and we do not address it.
The first two paragraphs of part IV of our opinion, appearing at
A second issue raised by the petition for rehearing objects to that part of our opinion, at
With respect to the barge, Caribe asserts that it was chartered to Caribe and subchartered to Steelmet, that the legal title remained in another company,5 and that we erroneously held legal title passed to MEC. This too has no merit; we made no holding with respect to legal title to the barge.
We adhere to our conclusion that the district court--though it may not have used words of art--considеred MEC the "beneficial owner" of the barge; the charter was assigned to MEC, and MEC added barge [and tug] to its insurance policy. With respect to the barge, the objection has no merit.
Other points raised in the petition require no discussion and are DENIED.
The petition is GRANTED in part, DENIED in part.
Notes
In their rehearing petition Calvert and AMU assert that AMU is not an insurer but rather a managing agent for Calvert. Steelmet's proposed amendment named both. The status of AMU can be detеrmined on remand, and, to the extent our decision might be viewed as an adjudication of AMU's status, the petition for rehearing is GRANTED. For simplicity, and without substantive consequences, we refer to the insurer in the singular
Even these authorities recognize that state regulatory power exists over a maritime insurance policy as to interstitial matters but view the effect of an express warranty in a maritime policy, such as was involved in Wilburn Bоat, as a "prime issue of [maritime] insurance law" and not interstitial. Id
We do not know whether even the critics of Wilburn Boat would view a state-created right to direct action on a maritime policy as valid because merely "interstitial." See n. 2, supra
(2) This chapter does not apply to:
(c) Insurance of vessels or craft, their cargoes, marine builders' risks, marine protection and indemnity, or other risks commonly insured under marine, as distinguished from inland marine, insurance policies.
Alabama Puerto Rico Barge Lines, Inc
