PATRICK J. HANNA, UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE.
Currently pending are the cross-motions for summary judgment that were filed on behalf of Arena Energy, LP and Alliance Offshore, LLC with regard to Alliance's cross-claim against Arena for defense and indemnity. (Rec. Docs. 134 and 140). Considering the evidence, the law, and the arguments of the parties, and for the reasons fully explained below, Arena's motion is DENIED, and Alliance's motion is GRANTED.
In October 2013, the plaintiff, Donald Batiste, was employed by Quality Construction and Production, LLC as a rigger. He and his crew were working on a construction project on an offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico that was owned and operated by Arena Energy, LP. Helmerich & Payne International Drilling Company ("H & P") was conducting drilling operations on the platform pursuant to a contract with Arena. The plaintiff claims that he was injured on October 26, 2013 while standing on the deck of a vessel engaged in the task of backloading material baskets to the vessel from the platform. It is undisputed that the vessel was the M/V NICHOLAS C, which was owned by Alliance Offshore, LLC and time-chartered to Arena through an agreement brokered by Kilgore Marine Services, LLC.
The plaintiff contends that he gave an "all stop" signal that was ignored by the H & P crane operator and that the crane operator proceeded to set a material basket down on a pipe that was laying on the vessel's deck. In his complaint, the plaintiff alleged that he was injured when the basket's contact with the pipe caused him to be flung into the side of the basket and also caused the pipe to rise up into the air and strike him in the head.
The plaintiff asserted negligence claims against several defendants, including Arena and Kilgore. Kilgore never answered the complaint, and the plaintiff amended his complaint to substitute Alliance for Kilgore. (Rec. Doc. 60). Arena filed a motion for summary judgment, which was granted, and the plaintiff's claims against it were dismissed with prejudice. (Rec. Docs. 126, 127). Similarly, Alliance filed a motion for summary judgment, which was granted,
The instant motions both address Alliance's cross-claim against Arena for defense and indemnity. (Rec. Doc. 75). Alliance argued that the provisions of the time charter agreement entitle it to defense and indemnity from Arena, while Arena argued that Alliance is not entitled to contractual defense or indemnity.
Under Rule 56(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A fact is material if proof of its existence or nonexistence might affect the outcome of the lawsuit under the applicable governing law.
The party seeking summary judgment has the initial responsibility of informing the court of the basis for its motion and identifying those parts of the record that demonstrate the absence of genuine issues of material fact.
If the dispositive issue is one on which the nonmoving party will bear the burden of proof at trial, the moving party may satisfy its burden by pointing out that there is insufficient proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party's claim.
As explained in previous rulings, subject-matter jurisdiction in this case is premised on the jurisdictional provision of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act ("OCSLA"). But a finding that the court has OCSLA jurisdiction does not determine the law that must be applied by the court in resolving the parties' disputes. Here, the parties agree that general maritime law applies to the contract at issue. An agreement to transport people and supplies in a vessel to and from an offshore drilling rig is a maritime contract,
Charter party agreements, such as the master time charter agreement in this case, are contracts subject to the general rules of contract law.
Alliance seeks defense and indemnity from Arena under the terms and provisions of the master time charter agreement, dated January 12, 2005, which was "entered into ... between Kilgore Offshore, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as "OWNER"), and ARENA OFFSHORE, LLC., its subsidiaries and affiliates (hereinafter collectively referred to as `CHARTERER.')." (Rec. Doc. 134-2 at 1). After the agreement was confected, a short form charter agreement was executed between Arena and Kilgore on October 11, 2013, in which the M/V NICHOLAS C
The contract provision that both Alliance and Arena rely upon reads as follows, in pertinent part:
It is undisputed that the plaintiff was an employee of Quality Construction, which was one of Arena's subcontractors. Therefore, his claim is a claim for injury to an employee of one of the Charterer's other contractors that falls within the parameters of the indemnity provision.
Arena argued that the quoted contract provision should be interpreted in the same way that the Fifth Circuit interpreted a time charter agreement in Channette v. Neches Gulf Marine, Inc.
Alliance argued, however, that Channette is substantially different from this case because the master time charter agreement before the court in this case creates a class of entities to whom indemnity is owed — including the vessel's "owners, operators, master, and crew," while there is no evidence that the indemnity provision interpreted in the Channette case contained a provision requiring that the "CHARTERER" indemnify a class of
Alliance argued that the indemnity provision in the contract between Arena and Alliance is broader than the one at issue in Channette, requiring a different interpretation. More particularly, Alliance argued that the words used in the contract's indemnity provision created a class of entities to whom defense and indemnity was owed by Arena. Alliance cited several cases in which courts found that indemnity was owed to entities who were not signatories to contracts creating indemnity obligations but were members of a class identified in the contracts.
The indemnity provision in the master time charter agreement between Kilgore and Arena states that "CHARTERER shall defend, indemnify, and hold harmless OWNER, its officers, directors, employees, the vessel, its owners, operators, master, and crew...." Unlike the indemnity provision construed in Channette, the indemnity provision in this case does not require the charterer to indemnify only the entity designated in the contract as "OWNER." Instead, the indemnity provision clearly and unambiguously requires Arena to indemnify Kilgore because it is designated as the "OWNER" in the contract and to indemnify Alliance because it was the "owner" and "operator" of the vessel at relevant times.
The language used in the indemnity provision clearly obligates Arena to indemnify the members of two different groups. Arena must indemnify "OWNER [Kilgore], its officers, directors, [and] employees," and it must also indemnify "the vessel,
Any other interpretation of indemnity provision would require the words "the vessel,
Another rule of contract interpretation is potentially implicated. That rule requires that a word used in one sense in one
However, even if the terms "OWNER" and "owners" did not have different meanings, the result would be the same. The indemnity provision requires that Arena indemnify not just the vessel's owners but also its operators. It is undisputed that Alliance was operating the vessel at relevant times. Therefore, irrespective of any potential confusion in the contract's use of both the term "owners" and the term "OWNER," indemnity would have to be extended to Alliance because it was the vessel's operator even if it were not the vessel's owner.
Accordingly, this Court concludes that Arena is obligated to defend and indemnify Alliance under the plain and unambiguous language of the master time charter agreement.
Having found that the relevant indemnity provision in the master time charter agreement between Kilgore and Arena requires Arena to defend and indemnify Alliance with regard to the plaintiff's claimed injury,
IT IS ORDERED that Arena's motion for summary judgment with regard to Alliance's cross-claim against Arena for defense and indemnity (Rec. Doc. 134) is DENIED, and Alliance's motion for summary judgment with regard to its cross-claim against Arena for defense and indemnity (Rec. Doc. 140) is GRANTED.