$73M Judgment in Maritime Case Upheld by SCOTUS

March 30, 2020

Types : Alerts

The Supreme Court of the United States issued a decision yesterday, March 30, 2020, on a major issue of importance to ship owners and charterers – the meaning of the “safe berth” clause found in most charter party forms. The Court ruled that the traditional language in which the charterer promises to send the ship to a safe berth, which shall be procured by the charter, is a warranty that the berth will, in fact, be safe and is not merely a promise that the charterer will exercise due diligence in selecting a safe port.

The decision arose out of the ATHOS I oil spill on the Delaware River in 2004. The ship, which was on a voyage charter (using the ASBATANKVOY form) to a CITGO-owned asphalt refinery in Paulsboro, New Jersey, allided with an uncharted abandoned ship anchor on the riverbed. Because the oil spilled from the ship, under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, its owners were deemed to be the “responsible party” for paying for the clean-up costs (about $134 million) even though the ship was entirely seaworthy and the Captain and crew were not in any way negligent in navigating her. The Owners paid for the cleanup and were reimbursed approximately $88 million from the US Government’s “Oil Pollution Liability Trust Fund.” The Owners brought suit against CITGO claiming that it had breached the safe berth warranty in the charter. The US Government joined in the lawsuit. CITGO raised several defenses, including an argument that the language in the Charter only obligated it to exercise due diligence in selecting a safe berth. CITGO relied upon a Fifth Circuit decision that was contrary to a long line of cases decided by the Second Circuit, which held that the very same language was a warranty.

After two trials, and two trips to the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, the Supreme Court took up the case to resolve the split in the circuits on how the language should be read. Montgomery McCracken attorneys, Alfred J. Kuffler, John Levy, and Eugene J. O’Connor, were assisted by a team of lawyers in navigating the case through the trials for the vessel owners. English solicitor Simon Blows and Master Mariner Paul Davies, both with HFW in London, played key roles in the litigation. Attorney Jack Greenbaum masterfully wrote and argued the first appeal to the Third Circuit. Supreme Court specialists, Tom Goldstein and Sarah Harrington, handled the case before the highest court. The Court affirmed the Third Circuit decision and left in place a judgment with interest for the Owners against CITGO for about  $73 million. The Oil Pollution Liability Trust Fund’s judgment against CITGO for about $88 million was also affirmed.

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