Philip THORMAN, and the class of similarly situated persons who worked aboard the factory trawlers managed by the in personam defendants, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN SEAFOODS COMPANY; American Seafoods Company LLC, In Personam; Ocean Rover F/T; American Triumph F/T; Northern Eagle F/T; Northern Hawk F/T; Northern Jaeger F/T; American Dynasty F/T; American Express F/T; Victoria Ann F/V; Christina Ann F/T; Katie Ann F/T; Pacific Scout F/V, and other vessels managed by the in personam defendants, their engines, tackle, equipment, appurtenances, freights, and cargo, In Rem, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 03-36012.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 7, 2005.
Filed September 1, 2005.
Bradley H. Bagshaw, Helsell Fetterman LLP, Seattle, WA, for the plaintiff-appellant.
Jay H. Zulauf, Hall Zanzig Zulauf Clafin McEachern, Seattle, WA; J. David Stahl, Christopher S. McNulty, and Christopher T. Wion, Mundt MacGregor LLP, Seattle, WA, for the defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington; Thomas S. Zilly, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-01-01684-TSZ.
Before: FERGUSON, BEEZER, and McKEOWN, Circuit Judges.
McKEOWN, Circuit Judge:
Philip Thorman, on behalf of a class of similarly situated crew members, appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of American Seafoods Company and American Seafoods Company LLC (in personam defendants) as well as various vessels owned by these compаnies (in rem defendants) (the defendants collectively, "American Seafoods"). The district court concluded that Thorman's claims were time-barred because the contractual six-month limit on disputes had expired. We agree and affirm the district court's summary judgment order.
Crucial to our decision is that the merits of Thorman's claims are not before us. Instead, we are faced with the threshold issue of whether Thorman has overcome the six-month time-bar to his claims. To surmount this preliminary hurdle, he must establish either fraudulent concealment, which requires proof of "affirmative сonduct upon the part of [American Seafoods] which would, under the circumstances of the case, lead a reasonable person to believe that he did not have a claim for relief," Volk v. D.A. Davidson & Co.,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Thorman worked as an on-board fish processor for American Seafoods for several seasons between 1996 and 2000.1 Under the crew member agreements executed for each trip, American Seafoods agreed to calculate Thorman's wages based on the quantity and value of the catch, a common compensation method in the fishing industry. See, e.g., TCW Special Credits v. Chloe Z Fishing Co.,
Thorman's claims hinge on the way in which American Seafoods estimated the value of the catch. Under the contracts, wages were based on American Seafoods' preseason estimate of the sale prices rather than the post-season prices that the catch actually fetched. American Seafoods multiplied this predetermined estimate — termed in the contracts as the "posted sales price" or "posted price" of fish products — by each crew member's share to determine individual compensation for the trip. Thorman argues that American Seafoods did not implement the contracts in good faith because it underestimated the gross prices it expected to receive from selling the fish and reduced thosе estimates by excessive deductions for sale costs.
American Seafoods used two slightly different, but substantially similar, compensation clauses during the period at issue: The form used prior to the 1999 pollock B season ("Old Contract") and the form used commencing with the 1999 pollock B season ("New Contract").
The Old Contract provides, in part, as follows:
[American Seafoods] shall pay Crew Member a production share. The total production share earned by Crew Member shall be calculated by multiplying the production share of [____2] by the posted sales price of fish product(s) processed abоard the vessel.... Crew Member understands that the posted prices upon which compensation is based, is set at the sole discretion of the Company. Actual final sales prices may be greater or less than stated in the posted price but will not alter or affect Crew Member's settlement for the trip at any time.
The basic compensation scheme did not change under the New Contract, but American Seafoods revised the compensation clause to read as follows:
4.1 ... Crew Member shall be paid ____ share(s) for each trip completed....
4.2 Thе value of one share is calculated by totaling the number of assigned shares of all the Crew Members working at the start of the trip and dividing that sum into the crewshare pool. The total number of assigned shares will be posted prior to the start of each trip.... The posted price for products produced on the vessels will be communicated to all vessels prior to the start of each trip. The prices posted are the company's good faith estimate of the market price of products produced aboard the vessels with deductions taken for costs of product shipment, packaging supplies, additives and costs of fish purchases if applicable.
4.3 Posted Prices are set at [American Seafoods'] sole discretion. Actual sales prices may be greater or less than the posted prices.
Significantly, each contract included a "Time for Claims" clause that limited claims arising out of the contract or the employment relationship in general to six months after the contract was completed or terminated. Although the final contract at issue was completed in October 1999, Thorman did not commence this lawsuit until October 2001 — well past the six-month limit set forth both in the contracts and by statute for in rem wage claims brought by crew members aboard fishing vessels. See 46 U.S.C. § 10602(a).
Nonetheless, Thorman argues that the suit is timely because it was brought within six months after American Seafoods produced a Confidential Offering Memorandum in another lawsuit, which he contends finally brought his claims to light. The Offering Memorandum provides:
[The compensation structure] pays crew employees based on the total production value of the vessel. In an effort to provide crew members with more certainty of income, the value of the vessel is computed using expected market prices that the Company [i.e., American Seafoods Group LLC] posts on the vessels prior to their departures. These prices are typically slightly lower than expectations since the Company ultimately assumes the burden of changing market conditions with respect to the effect of prices on crew compensation.
In his complaint, Thorman claims, "Until April 20, 2001, [the date on which the Offering Memorandum was produced,] defendants fraudulently cоncealed from plaintiffs their policy of low-balling crew prices, thereby preventing plaintiffs from discovering the causes of action asserted here."
The district court granted American Seafoods' motion for summary judgment and dismissed Thorman's claim as time-barred. The court concluded that Thorman failed to establish fraudulent concealment as a matter of law as to all claims. Alternatively, the district court determined that Thorman's action under the New Contract was barred because he had actual knowledge of the facts underlying his New Contract claims prior to the release of the Offering Memorandum. The court further held that American Seafoods did not owe Thorman a fiduciary duty to disclose the methodology for setting estimated prices.
ANALYSIS
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo, "determin[ing] whether the evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party, presents any genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court correctly applied the law." Seattle-First Nat'l Bank v. Conaway,
I. NO FRAUDULENT CONCEALMENT
Like other forms of equitable relief, fraudulent concealment applies to suits in admiralty. Cf. Vaughan v. Atkinson,
Thorman primarily relies on the settlement sheets for evidence of active concealment within the six-mоnth limit,4 claiming that use of the word "value" on the sheets falsely represented that the company used market value to pay the crew. The evidence does not support this reading. In fact, American Seafoods disclosed to Thorman the terms under which he was to be paid: Thorman's contracts were clear on their face that actual final sales prices may be higher or lower than the prices posted on the ship and that the "posted prices" were determined by American Seafoods in its "sole discretion." Thorman agreed in his depоsition that he understood American Seafoods was committed to calculating wages based on the prices posted on the vessel during the voyage, and American Seafoods used these prices. Further, Thorman offers no evidence that American Seafoods made any representations to him that the amounts under the "value" column reflected the actual market value at the time of sale. Thorman's notion that a precise fair market value, rather than an estimated value, is the bellwether for the contracts finds no support in the record.
Nor does testimony given in prior litigation constitute "affirmative conduct upon the part of [American Seafoods] which would, under the circumstances of the case, lead a reasonable person to believe that he did not have a claim for relief." Rutledge v. Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co.,
Thorman's reliance on the testimony of William R. Stokes, president of an affiliate of American Seafoods, is similarly misplaced. Taken in March 1998, the testimony has the potential to toll only claims arising out of Thorman's last trip in 1997. Fatal to his claim, Thorman has not identified any statements made in the deposition that are tantamount to conceаlment of his claims. Like McReynolds, Stokes simply confirmed what was clear in the contract. More problematic for Thorman is the requirement to "establish that [his] failure to have notice of [his] claim was the result of affirmative conduct by the defendant." Conmar,
Finally, Thorman's contention that American Seafoods made no effort to describe how it set posted prices and kept secret its actual sales prices and costs does not rescue his fraudulent concealment claim because the defendants' "silence or passive conduct does not constitute fraudulent concealment." Volk,
Indeed, Thorman's fraudulent concealment claim is all the more curious because he acknowledged that he understood his compensation wаs not determined by the catch's market value. And, when asked at his deposition whether anyone at American Seafoods made any representations to him that it used its best estimates of the fair market value in setting posted prices, Thorman replied, "No." Cf. Volk,
We therefore agree with the district court that the settlement sheets and testimony given in prior litigation do not constitute "affirmative conduct upon the part of[American Seafoods] which would, under the circumstances of the case, lead a reasonable person to believe that he did not have a claim for relief." Id. at 1415 (quoting Gibson,
II. NO FIDUCIARY DUTY
The principle that passive concealment is insufficient for a court to grant equitable tolling under the doctrine of fraudulent concealment bears one caveat — "unless the defendant had a fiduciary duty to disclose information to the plaintiff." Id. at 505; see also Rutledge,
Despite a "long line of cases that describe seamen as `wards of the court' needing special protections from potentially overreaching ship owners," Fuller v. Golden Age Fisheries,
Notably, we reserve our highest scrutiny for agreements under which a seaman releases the vessel owner of liability because of the understandable concern that such releases may leave the seamen devoid of legal redress. As the Supreme Court explained in a case involving a seaman's release, "The analogy ... between seamen's contracts and those of fiduciaries and beneficiaries remains, under the prevailing rule treating seamen as wards of admiralty, a close one." Garrett v. Moore-McCormack Co.,
Courts have also recognized the perils of working aboard ships: "The physical conditions under which the seaman labors are extremely hazardous. He works on an unstable and often slippery surface, subject to extreme sea and weather conditions." Cal. Home Brands, Inc. v. Ferreira,
Here, we are not faced with a release or other claim arising from a physical injury or the perils of the sea, but rather an employment contract with econоmic terms that Thorman was free to accept or reject. Thorman argues that "[t]here is no basis for retreating from the Garrett court's holding that seamen are owed a fiduciary-like duty by their employers." Quite the opposite of "retreating," Thorman asks us to expand Garrett not only to encompass a full-blown fiduciary relationship — as opposed to "fiduciary-like" — but also to envelop aspects of the seaman-vessel owner relationship far beyond the release context. Under Thorman's theory, vessel owners would be required to open their finanсial records to the seamen and offer up a market and accounting analysis that would amount to a mini-Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
We do not read the "wards of the vessel" doctrine as extending to detailed financial disclosure under the employment contract, particularly where, as here, the "posted price" is disclosed, it is acknowledged that the "posted price" may be higher or lower than the contract price, and the employer undertakes a contractual obligation to make a "good faith estimate" of mаrket value. Put simply, no precedent supports Thorman's effort to expand a seaman's rights in a release or injury case to a fiduciary relationship that imposes an affirmative burden on maritime employers to explain their precise compensation methodology or to disclose their financial calculations of "posted prices" versus market value of the catch.
Nor does precedent from the greater employment law context support Thorman's argument, although we certainly recognize that seamen are no ordinary employees. Cf. 19 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 54.18 (4th ed.2003) (explaining that employers owe employees "two basic duties": (1) compensation in accordance with their agreement and indemnification for certain losses and (2) a safe workplace). Instead, fiduciary duties in the employer-employee relationship are limited to discrete, well-defined obligations. We have held, for example, that an employer acts in a fiduciary capacity when so required by federal law. See, e.g., Bins v. Exxon Co., U.S.A.,
Given the centuries of admiralty cases — including numerous cases involving seamen's wage claims, see, e.g., Oliver v. Alexander,
Finally, we view as significant the fact that both the courts and Congress have recognized time limits on seamen's wage claims and that Congress has set up a statutory scheme to protect seamen through written contracts. See Fuller,
Considering these bounds placed on the solicitude owed by courts to seamen, we decline to impose an unprecedented fiduciary duty on vessel owners to disclose their internal pricing/accounting methodologies. Nothing in our precedent or the legislative scheme protecting seamen supports such an extension. Although we reject the imposition of a fiduciary duty in this context, we underscorе that vessel owners remain bound by the general duty "to act in good faith and to deal fairly in performing and enforcing the contract[s]." Flores,
AFFIRMED. The seals on all briefs and excerpts of record are REMOVED and RELEASED.
Notes:
Notes
Claims arising out of Thorman's last season were decided inFlores v. American Seafoods Co.,
American Seafoods filled in this blank in the form contract with the production share assigned to the contracting crew member for the trip
Courts vary in their descriptions of the contours of this equitable doctrine and how it blends together with other forms of equitable reliefSee, e.g., Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
Although Thorman focuses on the contractual six-month bar, the doctrine of fraudulent concealment equally applies to the statutory six-month bar under 46 U.S.C. § 10602 because thе doctrine "is read into every federal statute of limitation."See Fed. Election Comm'n v. Williams,
FERGUSON, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree that Thorman's claims are time-barred. He has neither proven fraudulent concealment nor established a fiduciary duty on the part of American Seafoods. The result may have been different if Thorman had adequately demonstrated that American Seafoods overstated its sales expenses in bad faith when it calculated the value of the fish the seamen caught. While ship owners such as American Seafoods may not owe a fiduciary duty to their seamen to disclose their internal pricing methodologies, they certainly owe a duty "to act in good faith and to deal fairly in performing and enforcing contract[s]." Flores v. American Seafoods Co.,
