WILLIAM H. STEELE, Chief Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment (doc. 63). The Motion has been briefed and is now ripe for disposition.
Plaintiffs, Adam Beech, Tenley Warhurst, and Kris Leith, commenced this in rem action on May 29, 2014, to enforce maritime liens against defendant, the fishing vessel F/V WISHBONE, her tackle, furniture, apparel, equipment and appurtenances, etc. (the "Vessel"). The well-pleaded allegations of the Verified Complaint (doc. 1) filed by Beech and Warhurst, as well as the Verified Complaint in Intervention (doc. 9) subsequently filed by Leith, reflect that plaintiff Beech seeks to recover $25,000 that he claims to be owed for services and supplies provided to the Vessel in May 2013; that plaintiff Warhurst seeks to recover $25,000 that she claims to be owed for services and supplies provided to the Vessel in May 2013; and that intervenor-plaintiff Leith seeks to recover $4,000 that he claims to be owed for services and supplies provided to the Vessel in May 2013. The present owner of the Vessel, non-party Skipper's Landing, Inc., is appearing in this matter for the limited purpose of defending on the Vessel's behalf. Skipper's Landing denies that plaintiffs have valid, enforceable maritime liens for these services and supplies, and further interposes various affirmative defenses.
Prior to May 2013, the Vessel was owned by non-party B & D Maritime, Inc., which utilized it in connection with activities in the fishing and boat charter industries in Orange Beach, Alabama. (Doc. 63, Exh. 1.) On May 28, 2013, B & D Maritime entered into a "Lease/Agreement to Purchase" with an entity called Davy Jones Fishing Charters, LLC ("Davy Jones LLC"). (Id.)
For reasons not germane to this lawsuit, the contemplated closing as between B & D Maritime and Davy Jones LLC never took place.
Plaintiff Adam Beech seeks to enforce a maritime lien against the Vessel for work that he characterizes as follows: "We went in and completely renovated the cabin on that boat." (Beech Dep., at 9.) According to Beech, these renovations included removal of seats, walls and ceilings; rebuilding of benches; installation of cabinets, plywood for ceilings, lights, and electrical wiring; and the like. (Id.) Beech was hired to perform this work by Gene Warhurst ("Mr. Warhurst"), a member of Davy Jones LLC. Beech's understanding was that, in exchange for these services, he would not be paid directly, but instead "would have twenty-five thousand dollars interest in the boat," meaning that he would be granted a share interest in the Vessel by virtue of his work and labor. (Id. at 10-11.) Beech elaborated that his efforts were "an investment in the boat, because it was an ongoing business starting up as a charter business, and I would have a stake of interest in that business." (Id. at 11.) The parties did not reduce this agreement to writing because Beech "was going through a divorce at the time" and "didn't want to show me having any ownership in the boat or ownership in anything until I got my divorce settled, because it would just be something else I had to fight over." (Id. at 12.) By the time Beech's divorce proceeding had concluded, in his words, "the boat had vamoosed," so Beech never documented this agreement with Mr. Warhurst. (Id. at 18.)
Beech's expectation was that the services he provided to renovate the Vessel's cabin were simply an "initial investment" in the fishing charter business and that he
Plaintiff Tenley Warhurst ("Warhurst") is the wife of Gene Warhurst, who is both a member of Davy Jones LLC and a practicing attorney. (Warhurst Dep., at 9.) On "numerous, numerous times," Warhurst loaned her own money to Mr. Warhurst's law practice (the "Law Practice") to avoid the need for Mr. Warhurst's firm to draw on a line of credit. (Id. at 20, 26-27.)
Under this system, instead of repaying Warhurst for her loans to the Law Practice, the Law Practice would disburse those funds to Davy Jones LLC as a loan for the latter to use to purchase supplies for the Vessel. (Id. at 20-21, 25.) Because Warhurst personally "handle[s] the books" and is "in charge of the money" for the Law Practice, she pays herself back for her loans to the Law Practice as and when she deems appropriate. (Id. at 29.) Warhurst also testified that many items
According to Warhurst, among the items she provided the Vessel were "a little robot vacuum that we had at home" that the Law Practice had purchased for $349 in December 2012 (id. at 31-33), a fishing reel purchased from Academy Sports for $439.99 on May 21, 2013 (id. at 38-39), a satellite television which was acquired by "an even trade" of Mr. Warhurst's reef permit (id. at 44-45), an Apple TV device purchased for $100 that the Warhursts "just had ... around" to connect to the Vessel's television to stream music and movies (id. at 63-64), a "big Yeti cooler" purchased for $1,018.45 (Id. at 61), another Yeti cooler purchased on June 1, 2013 for $502.14 (id. at 68-69), a Green Egg grill purchased for $624.24 (id. at 81), and two Shimano fishing rods valued at $300 that the Warhursts had previously maintained at their residence (id. at 86-87). Warhurst also identified numerous other line items as payments for Vessel-related supplies or repairs; however, she was unable to specify precisely how those funds were allocated. With respect to the Yeti coolers, the Green Egg grill, the Apple TV and so forth, Warhurst testified that she had "no idea" whether those items remained on the Vessel after Davy Jones LLC relinquished possession in September 2013. (Id. at 82.)
Plaintiff Kris Leith's involvement in this matter dates back to a time when Mr. Warhurst served as his lawyer in a personal injury case. (Leith Dep. at 12.) Upon resolution of that personal injury matter, Leith testified, "I had some money." (Id.) Mr. Warhurst then approached Leith because he "needed some stuff done" on the Vessel. (Id. at 13.) The idea, according to Leith, was that Leith would act as "kind of a silent partner with no money invested other than this." (Id.) Mr. Warhurst convinced Leith to "tie up my money" in the Vessel by telling him that his "interest in it would be protected" because he could bring a maritime lien if anything went wrong, "so you ain't got to worry about it." (Id. at 13-14.) The pitch to Leith was that "[w]e're going to make some money" and were "fixing to go make a million dollars" in this business venture in which Leith was participating. (Id. at 14.) As part and parcel of this arrangement, Leith attended business meetings with Davy Jones LLC members concerning the Vessel, at which time he provided input and suggestions on matters such as names, pictures, and advertising. (Id. at 13.) Leith "knew all of their business" and contrasted his situation with one in which a contractor "had no inside information." (Id. at 23.)
Based on this understanding, Leith purchased and installed seven security cameras on the Vessel. (Id. at 17.) He testified that he has "no idea what date" this work was performed. (Id. at 25.) Be that as it may, Leith testified, he provided these services as "kind of an investment" with the thought of "doubling your money" because he "had an extra two thousand" in cash because of the personal injury settlement. (Id. at 22.) Leith's understanding was that he would recoup his investment
On October 15, 2013, Davy Jones LLC — but not Beech, Warhurst or Leith — filed a lawsuit against B & D Maritime, Randy Boggs (an owner or officer of B & D Maritime) and David Jones (formerly a member of Davy Jones LLC) in the Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama. (Doc. 69, Exh. 1.) Skipper's Landing was not originally named as a defendant in that case. As initially pleaded, the complaint filed in that action (the "Baldwin County Complaint") alleged that B & D Maritime had breached the Lease/Agreement to Purchase, that Jones had breached his duty to Davy Jones LLC by becoming captain of the Vessel for B & D Maritime, that the defendants had wrongfully converted the Vessel and had been unjustly enriched thereby, and that Davy Jones LLC was entitled to an equitable lien on the Vessel for "amounts advanced and paid to [sic] by Plaintiff to Defendant for acquisition, charter and repairs to the vessel." (Doc. 69, Exh. 1, at ¶ XXVII.)
Prior to closing on the Vessel in October 2013, Skipper's Landing received no records, documents, correspondence or other communication reflecting that Beech, Warhurst and Leith had performed any work on, or provided any supplies or services for, the Vessel five months earlier, much less that they were claiming maritime liens for that work. (Britt Dep., at 59-61.) At some time, Skipper's Landing did review an abstract of title, which would have revealed any recorded liens on the Vessel; however, no such items appeared on the document. (Id. at 21; Boggs Dep., at 70.)
Summary judgment should be granted only "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Rule 56(a), Fed.R.Civ.P. The party seeking summary judgment bears "the initial burden to show the district court, by reference to materials on file, that there are no genuine issues of material fact that should be decided at trial." Clark v. Coats & Clark, Inc., 929 F.2d 604, 608 (11th Cir.1991). Once the moving party has satisfied its responsibility, the burden shifts to the non-movant to show the existence of a genuine issue of material fact. Id. "If the nonmoving party fails to make `a sufficient showing on an essential element of her case with respect to which she has the burden of proof,' the moving party is entitled to summary judgment." Id. (quoting Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986)) (footnote omitted). "In reviewing whether the nonmoving party has met its burden, the court must stop short of weighing the evidence and making credibility determinations of the truth of the matter. Instead, the evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor." Tipton v. Bergrohr GMBH-Siegen, 965 F.2d 994, 999 (11th Cir.1992) (internal citations and quotations omitted). "Summary judgment is justified only for those cases devoid of any need for factual determinations." Offshore Aviation v. Transcon Lines, Inc., 831 F.2d 1013, 1016 (11th Cir.1987) (citation omitted).
The Motion for Summary Judgment advances seven separate grounds on which Skipper's Landing maintains that the Complaint should be dismissed. The Court finds it necessary to address only two of these issues, to-wit: (i) movant's contention that plaintiffs are not strangers to the Vessel and therefore lack valid maritime liens; and (ii) movant's argument that plaintiffs' maritime liens (if any) were rendered unenforceable by operation of the equitable doctrine of laches. These two issues are, independently and collectively, dispositive of the pending Rule 56 Motion in its entirety.
Central to plaintiffs' in rem claim against the Vessel is their contention that each of them holds a valid maritime lien. The Maritime Commercial Instruments and Liens Vessel Identification Systems Act of 1988 specifies that "a person providing necessaries to a vessel on the order of the owner or a person authorized by the owner ... has a maritime lien on the vessel." 46 U.S.C. § 31342. An important limitation to this general rule is that it applies only to strangers to the vessel. Indeed, the law is unequivocal that joint venturers are not entitled to, and cannot obtain, maritime liens. See, e.g., Rose v. M/V "GULF STREAM FALCON," 186 F.3d 1345, 1348 (11th Cir.1999) ("It is true that joint venturers generally are not entitled to a lien for `necessaries' provided because they occupy a position akin to an owner.... Conversely, a `stranger' to the vessel is entitled to a maritime lien for
From a policy standpoint, in the maritime lien system, "[t]he overarching goal is keeping the channels of maritime commerce open — by ensuring that people who service vessels have an efficient way of demanding reimbursement for their labor and are thus willing to perform the services necessary to keep vessels in operation." Mullane v. Chambers, 438 F.3d 132, 138 (1st Cir.2006). That objective is simply not promoted by conferring maritime liens upon persons who own or otherwise have the ability to control or influence the affairs of a vessel.
Skipper's Landing's Motion for Summary Judgment takes the position that Beech, Warhurst and Leith were all joint venturers with Davy Jones LLC, and that they therefore are not strangers to the Vessel and are ineligible to hold maritime liens against it. To determine whether a person furnishing necessaries to a vessel is a joint venturer (and, hence, not a stranger to the vessel), binding appellate precedents have examined the following considerations:
Fulcher's Point, 935 F.2d at 211 (citation omitted); see also Sasportes v. M/V Sol de Copacabana, 581 F.2d 1204, 1208 (5th Cir. 1978) (elements for joint venture include
Sasportes, 581 F.2d at 1208-09.
Application of these principles to uncontroverted facts regarding each plaintiff's relationship to the Vessel lends considerable support to the notion that they are joint venturers whose interests were directly aligned with Davy Jones LLC. Plaintiffs are therefore ineligible to hold maritime liens against the Vessel.
Beginning with plaintiff Adam Beech, the summary judgment record leaves no doubt that his arrangement with Mr. Warhurst/Davy Jones LLC was that Beech would perform cabin renovation services in exchange for a $25,000 interest in the Vessel and the expected charter fishing operation for which Davy Jones LLC would employ the Vessel. Beech never submitted invoices for reimbursement for his work on the Vessel because he understood and intended that he was performing said work in exchange for a share of the business. By Beech's own admission, the work he did on the Vessel constituted an "initial investment" that gave him a "stake of interest in that business." His understanding and arrangement was that if the charter fishing business prospered, then he "would begin to draw a percentage of profits out of it." In the vernacular of Sasportes and Fulcher's Point, these facts establish that Beech's position was akin to that of part-owner in the Vessel. He had a proprietary interest in the success of the charter fishing business for which that Vessel was to be used, and expected to receive a stream of profits from that business in exchange for his labor and supplies
With respect to plaintiff Tenley Warhurst, a multitude of considerations favor treating her as a joint venturer, rather than a stranger to the vessel. First, she is married to Gene Warhurst, who was not only a member of Davy Jones LLC (the agreed buyer in possession of the Vessel), but also the individual making arrangements for labor, supplies and services to be done on the Vessel during the relevant time period.
Second, Warhurst's deposition testimony reveals that the expenditures for which she seeks maritime lien status consist to a large degree of commingled (and often hopelessly entangled) resources. Many of the services and supplies for which Warhurst claims a maritime lien were purchased using joint marital credit cards, funds or accounts belonging to both Warhurst and Mr. Warhurst (who, again, was one of two members of the LLC in possession of the Vessel and a person exercising control and dominion over all aspects of the Vessel's restoration, repairs, outfitting and finances during the lease period). Certain of the supplies encompassed within Warhurst's maritime lien claim were marital property maintained in the marital home and subsequently moved onboard the Vessel. The "loans" for which Warhurst seeks compensation in her maritime lien were made to Mr. Warhurst's law practice and were not earmarked for any particular purpose. In lieu of repaying Warhurst directly for those loans, the Law Practice (by and through its bookkeeper, who was none other than Warhurst herself) invested those funds in services and supplies for the Vessel. The tangled, commingled finances of Warhurst's contributions to the Vessel underscore her status as an insider to the Vessel, with direct access to (and influence over) the person and LLC that controlled the Vessel's affairs, and her lack of any reasonable need for an in rem claim against the Vessel to protect her if the parties controlling the
Third, Warhurst's own characterization of her relationship with the contemplated charter business for the Vessel reinforces the conclusion that she is properly classified as a joint venturer, rather than a stranger to the vessel. She testified that her arrangement with Mr. Warhurst/the Law Practice/Davy Jones LLC meant that she "was kind of vested in this boat venture after we got it going." Warhurst explained that her motivation in allowing her loans to the Loan Practice to be repaid via investment in the Vessel rather than disbursements to her was "to get that business up and going as fast as possible to be able to make some money at that business." She also testified to her hope that she would "be able to participate more" and help "run the business" after it went into effect. These sentiments further cement the undersigned's conclusion that, taking the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, Tenley Warhurst was properly classified as a joint venturer, and not a stranger, with respect to the F/V WISHBONE and the contemplated charter fishing business that her husband and his business associates were undertaking to establish. That determination deprives Warhurst of the legal right to hold and enforce a maritime lien against the Vessel.
Intervenor-plaintiff Kris Leith is similarly situated to both Beech and Warhurst with respect to the "stranger to the vessel" issue. Leith's deposition testimony reveals that he had come into some money as a result of a settlement in a personal injury case in which Mr. Warhurst represented him. Because of that windfall and his personal circumstances (an ongoing and apparently contentious divorce proceeding), Leith was looking to invest that money. Mr. Warhurst approached him with the idea of having Leith "tie up [his] money" in the Vessel, offering grand forecasts of how much money they were going to make in the charter fishing venture. Leith provided labor and supplies to the Vessel under these circumstances. His understanding and intention was that he worked on the Vessel as "kind of an investment," and Leith testified to his expectation that he "was going to make some money" in this deal. Leith contemplated that he would recoup his investment "[w]hen the boat started making money." What's more, Leith attended and participated in business meetings concerning the Vessel, offering his own suggestions and input on matters such as advertising plans for the charter fishing business. By his own admission, Leith "knew all of their business," in terms of Davy Jones LLC's plans and activities concerning the Vessel. These circumstances, taken in the aggregate, cast Leith in the light of a joint venturer who possessed joint control (or at least input) as to the Vessel, a joint proprietary interest in the Vessel, and an expectation of sharing in proceeds of the contemplated charter fishing business involving the Vessel. On this record, the Court finds no genuine issues of disputed fact, and concludes that plaintiff Leith is properly deemed a joint venturer, and not
As shown by the foregoing discussion, none of the three plaintiffs in this case were positioned as arm's-length vendors providing labor and supplies to the Vessel. To the contrary, all were insiders, making investments in the Vessel in the hope of reaping a profit once the charter fishing business got up and running. Far from billing Davy Jones LLC for their labor and supplies, plaintiffs never asked to be paid, and instead treated their work as an investment from which they expected to profit once the charter fishing business came to fruition. All of them occupied positions akin to (and fully aligned with) that of the Vessel's agent in possession. Their prospective gains resembled those of Mr. Warhurst and Davy Jones LLC. Whether they considered themselves to be joint venturers or not, all of their actions and all of the details of their arrangements with Mr. Warhurst and Davy Jones LLC created the appearance that they were just that. At some point, those appearances must be accepted as reality. See Fulcher's Point, 935 F.2d at 213 ("Though we do not suggest it as a legal principle, some merit lies with the old saw that what looks, walks and quacks like a duck is probably a duck.").
Furthermore, plaintiffs' prior arrangements with Mr. Warhurst/Davy Jones LLC and their calls for enforcement of maritime liens against said Vessel in this litigation demonstrate a have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too mindset. Each plaintiff contemplated that he or she was investing in a business enterprise. If that enterprise succeeded, then plaintiffs expected to make money. If it failed, however, plaintiffs' testimony reveals that each of them expected to recoup his or her initial investment in the business from the Vessel itself. Stated differently, the three plaintiffs in this case invoke the doctrine of maritime liens not to provide essential protections to them for the goods and services they provided to the Vessel, but to hedge their "investment" in a business that never got off the ground. The doctrine of maritime liens was not created as a means of ensuring that investors in maritime-related activities could enjoy the upside without fear of any potential downside. Our system of maritime liens does not exist to give part owners a safety net or a guarantee of a risk-free investment if a vessel-related business enterprise stumbles out of the gate, or fails altogether. See Sasportes, 581 F.2d at 1209 ("when the seas get rough one who looks, thinks, acts, and profits like an owner cannot retreat to the relatively safe harbor of a maritime lienor"). Yet each plaintiff testified with remarkable candor that this is precisely what he or she sought to achieve.
Maritime liens are not available to insiders, part-owners, and investors in vessels and vessel-related business enterprises. Rather, their function is to protect and incentivize third-party outsiders to supply necessaries to vessels, secure in the knowledge that they may obtain recompense for their labors even if the vessel owners leave them in the lurch. Uncontroverted record evidence establishes that plaintiffs, and each of them, fall squarely in the first category, not the second. Each plaintiff had direct access to, and special relationships with, the agent in control of the Vessel. Each plaintiff's interests were aligned with, and identical to, those of Davy Jones LLC. And each asserted a maritime lien against the Vessel only after their business venture failed, without ever seeking to collect from Mr. Warhurst or Davy Jones LLC, the person/entity that
As a separate, independent ground for the Motion for Summary Judgment, Skipper's Landing maintains that plaintiffs' claims should be dismissed pursuant to the doctrine of laches.
"Laches is a defense sounding in equity that serves to bar suit by a plaintiff whose unexcused delay, if the suit were allowed, would be prejudicial to the defendant." Black Warrior Riverkeeper, Inc. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 781 F.3d 1271, 1283 (11th Cir.2015) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). "It is well settled that a claim asserting a maritime lien can be barred by laches." John W. Stone Oil Distributor, Inc. v. M/V Miss Bern, 663 F.Supp. 773, 778 (S.D.Ala. 1987).
In furtherance of the "unexcused delay" factor, Skipper's Landing points to uncontested facts that plaintiffs provided services and supplies to the Vessel in May 2013, yet they never asserted maritime lien claims arising from those activities until filing their Complaint in this action on May 29, 2014, fully one year later. During the interim, of course, there was a change in ownership, as B & D Maritime sold the Vessel to Skipper's Landing in October 2013. This fact is important to the laches analysis. After all, "[t]he claim will lapse in a much shorter time and the court will undertake a more rigid scrutiny of the circumstances of the delay in cases where the vessel is in the hands of a bona fide purchaser as opposed to cases where there has been no change in ownership." John W. Stone, 663 F.Supp. at 778; see also A/S Dan-Bunkering Ltd. v. M/V Zamet, 945 F.Supp. 1576, 1580 (S.D.Ga.1996) ("innocent owners in the position of a bona fide purchaser who had no notice of a lien incurred against the vessel prior to purchasing it can generally assert the laches defense"). It is undisputed that Skipper's Landing was a bona fide purchaser of the Vessel.
What is challenged on summary judgment is whether Skipper's Landing was on notice of the maritime lien claims of Beech, Warhurst and Leith at the time of the closing. The summary judgment record in the light most favorable to plaintiffs confirms that Beech, Warhurst and Leith never contacted or communicated to Skipper's Landing to alert it to their purported maritime liens prior to the October 17, 2013 purchase agreement for the Vessel. The record likewise reflects that Skipper's Landing was unaware that Beech, Warhurst and Leith had provided services and supplies to the Vessel five months earlier for which they had not received recompense.
In response, plaintiffs insist that "Skipper's Landing Inc. was, in fact, on notice of potential claims against the MV WISHBONE at the time of purchase." (Doc. 69, at 8.) Plaintiffs reason that Skipper's Landing entered into the purchase agreement to buy the Vessel on October 17, 2013, some two days after Davy Jones LLC filed the Baldwin County Complaint against B & D Maritime, its owner (Randy Boggs) and David Jones. This reasoning is unconvincing in multiple respects. First, plaintiffs do not identify any reasonably available mechanism through which Skipper's Landing could or should have ascertained the existence of the Baldwin County Complaint prior to entering into the October 17, 2013 purchase agreement for the Vessel. After all, neither the Vessel nor Skipper's Landing were named as parties in that pleading, and there is no allegation or evidence that Davy Jones LLC undertook to serve the Baldwin County Complaint on Skipper's Landing at that time. Second, uncontroverted record evidence demonstrates that B & D Maritime and Boggs were not served with the Baldwin County Complaint until October 21, 2013, four days after execution of the Skipper's Landing agreement; therefore, Skipper's Landing could not have learned about the particulars of that action by inquiring of the seller, because the seller had not yet been served when Skipper's Landing agreed to purchase the Vessel.
Third, even if Skipper's Landing could have obtained and reviewed the Baldwin County Complaint prior to the October 17 purchase agreement, nothing in that document would have put Skipper's Landing on notice that Beech, Warhurst and Leith were asserting maritime liens. The Baldwin County Complaint does not name those individuals, much less specify that any of them claimed to be owed money for necessaries provided to the Vessel five months earlier. In short, that document would not have afforded Skipper's Landing the requisite notice, even if it had been reasonably possible for Skipper's Landing to locate and review the Baldwin County Complaint during the 48-hour gap between its filing in state court and Skipper's Landing's execution of the purchase agreement. For these reasons, the Court rejects as factually and legally unsupported plaintiffs' contention that Skipper's Landing was on notice of their maritime lien claims when it agreed to purchase the Vessel from B & D Maritime.
The remaining question for purposes of the laches analysis is whether Skipper's Landing was prejudiced by plaintiffs' inexcusable delay and lack of diligence in asserting maritime lien claims against the Vessel. See Garrett Const. Co. v. Knowles, 2006 WL 237070, *5 (S.D.Tex. Jan. 31, 2006) ("Laches requires a factual inquiry into the effect of defendants' delay and the resulting prejudice to plaintiff."). Prejudice may not reasonably be disputed in this case. After all, Skipper's Landing agreed to buy the Vessel from B & D Maritime for $60,000, while being entirely unaware that Beech, Warhurst and Leith were claiming maritime liens against the Vessel in the total amount of an additional $54,000. Not only that, but Skipper's Landing spent approximately $75,000 in parts, materials and labor to repair and refurbish the Vessel after purchasing it (Britt Dep., at 67), all without knowledge or notice that plaintiffs were biding their time to interpose sizeable maritime lien claims against that Vessel. The prejudice to Skipper's Landing from the lack of notice of liens almost equaling the agreed purchase price when Skipper's Landing bought and invested considerable additional funds in the Vessel is both obvious and self-evident, and has not been seriously
In short, the Court concludes that even if Beech, Warhurst and Leith possessed valid maritime lien claims against the F/V WISHBONE (which they do not, by operation of the stranger to the vessel doctrine), those claims would still be properly dismissed by straightforward application of the equitable doctrine of laches. This determination is informed by plaintiffs' delay in asserting such claims, plaintiffs' lack of diligence in pursuing and preserving same, and the resulting prejudice to Skipper's Landing, a bona fide purchaser for value without notice.
For all of the foregoing reasons, defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment (doc. 63) is
There being no other claims presented, the Complaint of plaintiffs Adam Beech and Tenley Warhurst, and the Complaint in Intervention of plaintiff Kris Leith, are dismissed with prejudice. A separate judgment will enter.