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CHARTERERS’ DEFAULT: Security and Discovery in the U.S. By Charlotte Valentin.

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Presentation on theme: "CHARTERERS’ DEFAULT: Security and Discovery in the U.S. By Charlotte Valentin."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHARTERERS’ DEFAULT: Security and Discovery in the U.S. By Charlotte Valentin

2 Rule C Arrest Rule B Attachments Discovery

3 Rule C Arrest In Rem – arrest of the vessel itself

4 RULE B ATTACHMENTS

5 RULE B is not dead! Rule B still exists Attachment is no longer possible for Electronic Funds Transfers (“EFT’s”)

6 Supplemental Rule B for Certain Admiralty and Maritime Claims (“Rule B”) provides “If a defendant is not found within the district…, a verified complaint may contain a prayer for process to attach the defendant’s tangible or intangible personal property – up to the amount sued for – in the hands of garnishees named in the process. Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. Rule B(1).

7 Purpose of Rule B Without it, “defendants, their ships, and their funds easily could evade the enforcement of substantive rights of admiralty law.” Obtaining jurisdiction over a foreign defendant and ensuring satisfaction (security) of a favorable judgment.

8 The Three Elements Needed For a Rule B Attachment A valid maritime claim against the defendant Defendant cannot be found within the district Defendant’s property may be found within the district.

9 Element 1: A Maritime Claim Maritime Claims Charter party disputes, regardless of when arbitration or litigation is to occur Ship repair contracts Cargo claims Maritime indemnity claims Separable maritime portions of non- maritime contracts such as commodities purchase & sale contracts Personal injury claims Marine insurance contracts Arbitration awards or foreign judgments on maritime claims. Non Maritime Claims Purchase and sales contracts FFA breach claims Contracts for brokerage services Inseparable commodities purchase & sale contracts Contracts to build a ship

10 Element 2: “Presence” In The District “Presence” is determined by a two pronged inquiry FIRST, whether (the defendant) can be found within the district in terms of jurisdiction, and SECOND, if so, whether it can be found for service of process.

11 Whether to register to do business Generally, registering to do business in a state and having a registered agent for service of process is enough to qualify as being present For EFT’s – New York Pro: No Rule B attachment in that jurisdiction Con: Subjects the company to jurisdiction in the jurisdiction for any claim

12 Element 3: “Property” Within The District RULE B PROVIDES AN EXPANSIVE DEFINITION OF PROPERTY - Any tangible or intangible personal property - vessels - bunkers - funds (but not EFT’s) - debts - real estate THE DEFENDANT’S INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY MUST BE CLEAR

13 Bunkers – difficulties Legal difficulties: Who owns the bunkers? Practical difficulties: Removing bunkers −Attaching party must arrange −Can be difficult −Risk of pollution −Arrange for storage

14 Alter Ego And Rule B ALTER EGO DEFENDANTS MAY ONLY BE NAMED WHERE THE PLAINTIFF CAN SHOW REASONABLE GROUNDS THAT: the primary defendant uses its alter ego to perpetrate a fraud or where the primary defendant so dominates and disregards its alter ego’s corporate form that the alter ego was actually carrying on the controlling corporation’s business instead of its own. Under that standard, … actual domination, rather than the opportunityto exercise control, must be shown.” Must provide the court with evidence/documents supporting allegations of corporate relationships – the court may allow discovery on this issue.

15 Challenging The Attachment – Motion To Vacate/Reduce PLAINTIFF MUST PROVE It has a valid prima facie admiralty claim against the defendant The defendant cannot be found within the district The defendant‘s property may be found within the district There is no statutory or maritime bar to the attachment BASES FOR VACATING The defendant is subject to suit in a convenient adjacent jurisdiction The plaintiff could obtain in personal jurisdiction over the defendant in the district where the plaintiff is located The plaintiff has already obtained sufficient security for the potential judgment, by attachment or otherwise BASES FOR REDUCTION The plaintiff’s claim is overstated and cannot be justified based reasonable calculation of damages and evidence.

16 Charterers’ options when attachment has been granted: Challenge the attachment (motion to vacate) Post security (LOU, L/C, bond – the plaintiff can only be forced to accept a bond or cash) Negotiate settlement of claim or security (escrow account, etc.) File a counterclaim (counterclaim must arise from same transaction and cannot be solely for costs and fees) Counter security is usually limited to the security amount Discretion of judge If attachment fully secured, counterclaim security often allowed for full amount of counterclaim

17 Wrongful Attachment A plaintiff in a maritime case can be liable in damages for wrongful attachment. However, the defendant must prove that the plaintiff acted with: bad faith malice, or gross negligence Most U.S. courts do not allow wrongful attachment to be asserted as a counterclaim in the same suit that was initiated by such attachment.

18 DISCOVERY

19 Discovery in aid of foreign proceedings: The court may order person or party to provide testimony or statement or to produce a document or other thing for use in a proceeding in a foreign or international tribunal Foreign lawsuit Foreign arbitration (including London arbitration)

20 Available when the court has Subject matter jurisdiction – underlying proceedings / arbitration is brought under a maritime contract Personal jurisdiction over Person Company Vessel

21 THANK YOU


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