This blog is for fun. There is NO legal opinion offered and NO attorney/client relationship is formed under any circumstances. The comments relayed herein may or may not be accurate. There's no warranty as to accuracy, no warranty as to whether you'll find any of it interesting, no warranty as to anything. If you have a legal issue, contact an attorney and DO NOT RELY on anything stated herein. Again, I'm blogging here, NOT lawyering.
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The Salty Barrister
Experienced admiralty attorney John Fulweiler shares some insights into the "Law of the Sea". Capt. Fulweiler grew up as a RI Boater, and spent several of his collegiate summers as a Safe/Sea Captain.
Lecturing the Law
John Fulweiler - Thursday, December 17, 2009
My sister is a professor at a university here in the Northeast. She lets me come around once a semester and talk to her oceanography students about maritime law-like things. It's hard to condense maritime law into a fifty-minute or so period; so, what I end up doing is the ol' shotgun approach.
We hit topics that I think might keep a college-aged brain interested. I talk about salvage (peril, voluntariness and success), chatter on about the differences between the territorial sea and the exclusive economic zone (one's your backyard and the other's kind of like the neighborhood), meander around some causes of action available to an injured crewmember (Jones Act and Unseaworthiness), and usually close by addressing whether a captain can actually perform a marriage aboard a vessel (mixed law; statute says no go, but some case law suggests otherwise).
When you're lawyering, a lot of what you say is measured in favor of the advocacy of your position. What I get to do once a semester before a bunch of college kids is a refreshing change. Think of it as the difference between an employer's Christmas party, and having a drink with friends.
Alright, we'll get a couple of more posts in before the Holidays. Speaking of holidays, take a look at Captain Doug's recent blog post on The Daily Breeze? That's the way to do it, friends. Christmas in Staniel Cay, Bahamas. One of these days I plan to do the very same thing, snow and sleighs be damned!
So last night, I hosted Captain Skip Strong at our Newport, RI office. There's not many folks who can hold an audience for nearly an hour and half, but he did so with ease. I suspect it's a good sea story delivered by a great storyteller that did the trick. Many thanks to those that joined us and for those that didn't or couldn't, keep a look out for my announcement of the Spring speaker who brings an equally compelling narrative of high seas adventure.
So Skip's tale is about the salvage of NASA's $50 Million dollar liquid fuel cell back in the mid-nineties. He was the captain of a single-skin tanker that came to the aid of a tug towing a barge on which the fuel cell was loaded. Navigating in shallow water off the Atlantic coast of Florida, Skip and his crew managed to hook up and tow the tug and barge. Parted lines, twenty-foot seas and the unavailability of outside assistance makes it pretty easy to envision the harrowing scenario. At any rate, he wrote a book about the event called "In Peril" and it's the kind of read that'll keep you up far past your bedtime.
I'll get back to scribbling some more entries shortly, but Skip and his book were worth a mention.
In addition the legal cse is facinating. To read a copy go to
http://www.safesea.com/salvage/other/other_cases.html
Tweet the Fleet
John Fulweiler - Friday, November 20, 2009
I'm not sure what a Tweet is all about. Don't get the wrong idea, I'm LinkedIn, I e-mail up a storm, and my web "presence" is decent. It's just that the idea of a steady stream of observations seems fatuous somehow. I guess thinking others want to know your randomness presumes something I don't like. For the now, I'll leave the Tweeting to the Hollywood crowd and bumble along, but in case things change I've had a go at a practice Tweet below. (For those non-Tweeters, it's short because you're only allowed 140 characters in each Tweet.)
Thx 4 cmg abrd.Jst rd nw law in NY.Ownr/optr plsr bts <21' incldg rwbts kyks canus only allow bt op if all abrd wearing PFD b/t 11/1 - 5/1.
Boy, the English language is going to die under this program, huh?
I don’t know where time goes these days. If life was an old hull hanging in the Travelift straps, time would be pouring out of the seams and smattering all over the ground. Point being, with time passing by so fast, you try and grab those little moments to store away another good memory.
One of those little moments might be a boat charter while on holiday. You know the deal. Fourth day into a vacation and you're just beginning to realize there's a life outside of the daily grind. Tiring of the beach, you grab a family member or two and rent a boat to poke around the shoreline. So here's where this blog spots an issue for you. Those boat rental contracts with the age-old presentation on yellow paper can have some pretty scary terms and conditions. I'd say a prudent boater probably scoots the children outside and takes a moment to read that fine print. I'd say a prudent boater probably takes a few photographs of the boat before getting underway and maybe even checks the inventory aboard to make sure the boat's carrying what it's supposed to carry. All and all, taking the time to understand what's expected of you before you get underway makes good sense.
I keep parroting this, but there's no legal advice being given here. You do what you want, but at least be aware of the issue being spotted. Because, you know, for all time's fleet footedness, it sure can drag when you're dealing with something crappy like a claim for damage to a rental boat you're damn sure you didn't cause.
What happens when you write a cliff-hanger? You get comments likening your efforts to a soap opera. Well, sir, I challenge you to try and wring something interesting from this salt-cured subject that is the maritime law! Tough stuff. Enough though, let's look at what the Second Circuit just did . . .
Like any good soap opera, the plot requires a background story and, in this case, the New York financial world and something called an Electronic Funds Transfer fit the bill. Apparently, a very large percentage of the world's EFT's flow through New York so, say, you want to move money by wire transfer from somewhere foreign to somewhere even more foreign, that EFT's voyage may take it through New York.
Now, in the Supplemental Rules for Admiralty and Maritime Procedure, there is the infamous Rule B which allows for the pre-judgment (meaning before there is an outcome in the case) attachment and seizure of assets provided that the owner of the asset you intend to attach does not have a presence in the district where the asset is located. So let's say there's an arbitration in London against a charterer and let's say there's concern that a potential judgment against the charterer will be uncollectible because the charterer will simply fold up shop. What to do?
Voila, please welcome on stage, Rule B! You see, London counsel calls over to New York counsel and says: "Look here, chap. What we need is for you to seize a charterer's asset with that splendid Rule B thing you boys get to use." So, New York counsel gets an Order of Attachment from the Court, and trots it over to various banks for which charterer is know to use and . . .
Son of a gun, charterer unknowingly sends an EFT to its vendor in, say, Singapore and while en route it passes through New York and -- bingo -- the order of attachment grabs the EFT, bank rings New York counsel and says they're holding funds and charterer is scratching its head wondering what the hell just happened.
This was an increasingly popular legal avenue. Imagine in your mind's eye, the soap opera town with everybody merrily filing Rule B actions under blue skies and with plastic smiles. The camera angle changes to an interior view, doorbell chimes, and a smartly dressed maritime attorney, swings open his law firm's door. And who barges in? The Second Circuit, shoving the attorney aside and shouting: "We got it all wrong. You can't file these Rule B attachments. They're clogging up commerce. They're devaluing the dollar. No more, man! No more."
What you have here gives you the flavor of what the Second Circuit did. You can find the decision online (which is very readable and fairly interesting) if you search for its case name being Shipping Corp. of India v. Jaldhi, et al. More after the commercial break . . .
Things change, right? Steel rusts, wood rots, and opinions weaken. (I think the Germans call it “altersmilder”, meaning the kindness that comes with age.) The point is you can’t disagree with the maxim that the only static thing is change itself.
Some of you might be inclined to reason that legal opinions are unchanging. That seems sort of mechanically acceptable in the sense that once a court rules that, say, a vessel aground on rocks is in peril, it follows that it’ll continue to reach that conclusion in future cases with the same or similar facts. In fact, that concept of precedent is sort of the premise of our entire legal system. We attorneys spend a lot of time rooting out prior legal decisions in an attempt to find an analogous situation so that we can argue in favor of our client because the court ruled in favor of a similarly situated party in the past.
So, I’m leading up to the “denoument” (as the French might say) and that is – and son of a gun – the Second Circuit Court of Appeals changed its mind this Friday afternoon! And it was on a maritime issue. I think the issue is fairly described as a blue-water issue because it typically involves large vessels. But let me tell you, maritime tongues are clucking from New York to London and onto Bahrain and into the setting sun. Depending on where you stand on the issue, there’ll be some smiles, some narrowed eyes of concern and a fair grouping of pursed lips as the change of law is tumbled around upstairs and the newly conceived risks and benefits of the decision are weighed. If you’re wondering what a large contingent of the world’s traders, vessel owners, charterers, vendors and maritime attorneys are thinking about this Friday evening, don’t be ‘cause I’m telling you it’s this decision.
What’s that? Oh, I know, I never got into what it was that they changed their mind about! Sorry if this post feels like that spousal spat where you forget what the hell the dispute was, but the reality is that it’s Friday night . . . . don’t worry, check back and I’ll tell you in the next post.
What is this ---- a "Soap opera"?
or a "Soupy Sales" gig?
The Supreme Court Gets Salty
John Fulweiler - Sunday, October 11, 2009
Alright, hunker down, we're going to talk about punitive damages. I know this topic gets the blood running hot among some of you, but take a couple of breaths and let me unravel things.
The setup is this: a crew member injures his arm and shoulder while aboard a tugboat. The tugboat owner allegedly refuses to pay maintenance and cure, the crew member brings suit seeking punitive damages and the whole thing ends up in the Supreme Court. For the landlubbers among us, maintenance and cure is a vessel owner's general obligation to provide food, lodging ("maintenance") and medical services ("cure") to a crew member injured while serving a vessel.
The issue before the nine justices was whether a refusal to pay maintenance and cure gave rise to a claim for punitive damages. There's a lot of analysis to the ruling, but boiling things down, the Supreme Court first cleared up a split between the circuit courts of appeal and held that punitive damages could be awarded for the willful and wanton disregard of a maintenance and cure obligation. That is, under the right circumstances, a refusal to pay maintenance and cure might allow a crew member to recover punitive damages against a vessel owner.
Not every alleged failure to pay maintenance and cure will trigger an award of punitive damages. Still, our country is enveloped in a health care debate, and maintenance and cure may be the only backstop a maritime worker has when an injury arises making this decision particularly important.
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