This dispute arises out of the collision of the M/V MALLARD, a twenty-six foot recreational crew boat, and the M/V GEERD TIDE, a one-hundred foot crew boat, in Louisiana territorial waters. When the vessels collided, the M/V MALLARD capsized and six of her passengers drowned. One passenger was seriously injured but survived. None of the twenty-nine people aboard the M/V GEERD TIDE died or suffered serious injury.
Following the collision, Tidewater, Inc., Tidewater Marine, Inc. n/k/a Tidewater Marine L.L.C., and Twenty Grand Offshore, Inc. (collectively referred to as “Tidewater”), owners and owners pro hac vice of the M/V GEERD TIDE, filed a Complaint for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability in federal district court pursuant to Chapter 8 of Title 46 of the United States Code (“the Limitation Act”), which limits a vessel owner’s liability to the value of the vessel and its pending freight. Vermillion Corp., owner of the M/V MALLARD, filed a separate limitation proceeding in the same court. Later, the federal district court consolidated the Tidewater and Vermillion limitation proceedings, and entered an order enjoining the commencement or prosecution of any and all suits against Tidewater or Vermillion arising out of the collision.
Representatives of the six decedents, the worker’s compensation carrier of three hunting camp employees aboard the M/V MALLARD, the owners of the M/V MALLARD, the owners’ insurer, and the Captain of the M/V GEERD TIDE filed claims in the Tidewater limitation proceedings. The claimants in the Tidewater proceeding moved the district court to lift the stay and allow them to proceed against Tidewater in Louisiana state court. The claimants stipulated that they would not enforce a state court judgment beyond the alleged
The district court denied the claimants’ motion to lift the stay. The district court reasoned that this Court requires all claimants and all potential claimants to join in the stipulations and that the passengers and crew of the M/V GEERD TIDE constitute a “readily discernible group of potential claimants” who had not joined in the stipulations. These claims were settled while this appeal was pending, leaving Tina A. Stelly, individually and on behalf of her unborn child, the only remaining claimant in the Tidewater limitation proceeding. Stelly appeals this decision. Tidewater filed a cross-appeal “out of an abundance of caution” to urge the following additional support for the district court’s ruling: (1) a stipulation regarding appellees’ right to exoneration is necessary, (2) appellants’ stipulation regarding priority of claims is inadequate, and (3) since appellee-Tidewater is a claimant in the Vermillion limitation proceeding, its failure to join in the stipulation precludes lifting of the stay.
I.
Whether a stipulation adequately protects a party’s rights under the Limitation Act is a question of law that this Court reviews
de novo. See Odeco Oil and Gas Co. v. Bonnette,
II.
The first issue for our discussion is whether the district court erred by denying the claimants’ motion to lift the stay of state court proceedings on the ground that potential claimants had not joined in the requisite stipulations. This issue involves “a recurring and inherent conflict” between the exclusive jurisdiction-the Limitation Act vests in admiralty courts and the common law remedies embodied in the saving to suitors clause of 28 U.S.C. § 1333.
Texaco, Inc. v. Williams,
In
Texaco v. Williams,
this court stated that “if the stipulations cover all potential claimants ... then the stay should be lifted.”
Id.
A careful reading of
Texaco
reveals that this Court was concerned with three specific types of potential claims: (1) direct action claims against the shipowners’ underwriters, (2) derivative claims, and (3) timely filed environmental claims.
Id. Texaco
did not address whether per
However, in
In re M/V MISS ROBBIE,
the shipowner “raised the specter” of potential claims by yet unnamed claimants in an attempt to defeat the claimant’s motion to lift the stay.
Here, as in MISS ROBBIE, there are no claims pending in any state or federal court and the only “potential claimants” proffered by appellee have failed to file any claim for nearly three years. Furthermore, the “potential claimants” from the M/V GEERD TIDE have different employers, different workmen’s compensation benefits, and different insurance coverage applicable to any injuries they might assert. So, these “potential claimants” have a status much different from those who have already filed claims. In sum, while the shipowner here argued that the two dozen passengers aboard the M/V GEERD TIDE could have seen the accident and could have been injured, the shipowner did not argue that any of those passengers were actually put in a position where a cause of action accrued to them, which they have merely not yet brought in a court. We think that delaying recovery to the claimants who did file suits in state court and are parties to the limitation proceedings on the mere speculation that others exist to whom a cause of action has accrued is clearly stretching Texaco’s “potential claimant” language too far. Therefore, the district court erred when it concluded that the stay could not be lifted because “potential claimants” had not joined in the stipulations.
III.
We now turn to the issue of whether the claimants’ stipulations are otherwise adequate to support lifting of the stay. Tidewater argues that the stipulations are inadequate to protect its rights under the Limitation Act in three other respects. First, the stipulations fail to protect its right to exoneration. Second, the stipulation that the claims would be paid on a pro rata basis does not adequately prioritize the claims so as to preserve the Limitation Act’s liability cap. Third, since it is a claimant in the Vermillion limitation proceeding, Tidewater claims that it must make certain stipulations in that proceeding before the stay in the Tidewater proceeding can be lifted.
A.
An exoneration stipulation is not needed. On two occasions, this Court has reserved ruling on the issue of whether an exoneration stipulation is required before a stay may be lifted.
See Odeco Oil & Gas Co. v. Bonnette,
The Limitation Act itself does not expressly provide the shipowner with a right to exoneration.
See In re Falcon Inland, Inc.,
B.
The claimants’ stipulation to payment of claims on a pro rata basis adequately prioritizes the claims. Tidewater argues that this stipulation is inadequate because it does not protect its rights under the Limitation Act. However, this Court has noted that the purpose of limitation proceedings is to provide a “ ‘distribution pro rata of an inadequate fund among claimants.’ ”
See Texaco v. Williams,
C.
Tidewater’s failure to join in the stipulations does not prevent lifting of the stay. Tidewater is a claimant in the Vermillion limitation proceedings and, as such, contends that it must make certain stipulations in that proceeding before the stay in the Tidewater proceeding can be lifted. In support of its position, Tidewater cites this Court’s decision in
In re Port Arthur Towing Co.,
CONCLUSION
All “potential claimants” have joined in stipulations which adequately protect Tidewater’s rights under the Limitation Act. For this reason, the district court’s denial of the claimants’ motion to lift the stay is reversed and the stay is lifted to allow claimants to prosecute common law claims in state court pursuant to the saving to suitors clause of 28 U.S.C. § 1333.
