PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
The M/V TINTOMARA, an ocean-going tanker, collided with the barge DM-932, in the tow of the M/V MEL OLIVER, splitting the barge in half and spilling its cargo of oil into the Mississippi River. Following the filing of numerous lawsuits, including personal injury claims by the crew members and class actions by fishermen, the primary insurer filed an interpleader action, depositing its policy limits with the court.
We are asked to review allocations of interpleader funds as well as the district court's finding that the maritime insurance policy's liability limit included defense costs. We affirm the district court's decision that defense costs erode policy limits but are persuaded that its orders allocating court-held funds among claimants were tentative and produced no appealable order.
The TINTOMARA was owned and operated by Laurin Maritime (America), Inc., Laurin Maritime AB, Whitefin Shipping Co. Limited, and Anglo-Atlantic Steamship Limited (collectively, "Laurin Maritime"). American Commercial Lines, LLC owned the tug, barge, and fuel oil. D.R.D. Towing, LLC provided the crew for the tug boat pursuant to a bareboat charter.
The towing company was covered by a protection and indemnity policy issued by Indemnity Insurance Company of North America ("IINA"). This policy contained the SP-23 Form, with some modifications,
The barge owner moved to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 12(c), arguing that IINA could not avoid its obligation to defend by depositing its policy limits with the court. The district court denied the motion to dismiss the interpleader action and held that IINA had a duty to reimburse defense costs but no duty to defend.
The towing company and the barge owner then sought release of funds to recover defense costs. IINA responded that defense costs were included within the policy limits—that is, monies paid for defense costs would come from funds capped by the policy limits. The district court agreed and found that defense costs eroded the limit of liability.
The barge owner and Laurin Maritime timely filed notices of interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3), challenging the district court's decision that defense costs eroded the liability limits and allocating interpleader funds. We have jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals from orders that "determin[e] the rights and liabilities of the parties to admiralty cases."
Shortly after filing its notice of appeal, the barge owner sought and obtained a Rule 54(b) certificate covering the same order it had previously appealed. The parties then appealed the 54(b) judgment, which was consolidated with the interlocutory appeals.
IINA questions this court's jurisdiction, arguing in part that the § 1292(a)(3) appeals notice divested the district court of its authority to enter a Rule 54(b) certification. We do as a matter of course examine our own jurisdiction.
The barge owner and Laurin Maritime both appealed the order before the district court entered a Rule 54(b) final judgment. Although the filing of a notice of appeal ordinarily divests the district court of jurisdiction over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal,
Before a district court grants a Rule 54(b) certificate, the court must determine that the judgment is final "in the sense that it is `an ultimate disposition of an individual claim.'"
The barge owner asks this court to confirm its status as a direct claimant under the Louisiana Direct Action Statute, but the district court did not rule on this claim in the appealed order. Therefore, we will not address this issue.
We review a district court's interpretation of an insurance contract de novo.
Turning to Louisiana law, courts interpreting insurance contracts should "seek to determine the parties' common intent, as reflected by the words in the policy."
"A provision in an insurance contract is ambiguous if it is susceptible to two or more reasonable interpretations or if the intent of the parties cannot be ascertained from the language employed."
With regard to P&I policies, we have noted that the general law in Louisiana is "for legal expenses incurred in defending a liability covered by the policy to be treated as part of the overall claim. That claim [inclusive of legal expenses] is limited by the amount insured in the primary policy."
The towing company's insurance contract sets forth three distinct but related coverages: 1) the hull and machinery
The SP-23 Form provides coverage for "[c]osts, charges, and expenses, reasonably incurred and paid by the Assured in defense against any liabilities insured against hereunder in respect of the vessel named herein, subject to the agreed deductibles applicable, and subject further to the conditions and limitations hereinafter provided." Under the conditions subsequently provided, the policy states: "Liability hereunder in respect of any one accident or occurrence is limited to the amount hereby insured." Giving these words their generally prevailing meanings, the policy provides coverage for the insured's defense subject to the conditions of the overall policy, including the liability limit. There is no ambiguity in the SP-23 Form on the erosion of policy limits by payment of defense costs.
The barge owner urges the agreement is ambiguous, in part because of language from the Collision and Towers Liability Clause, which was added as a manuscript provision and is not part of the SP-23 Form. This clause reads:
In addition to these sections, the collision clause excludes coverage if the insured's liability arises from either personal injury claims or oil spills.
The barge owner points to our decision in Exxon Corp. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, where we found that defense costs were not included within the P&I liability limit in a policy with similar language.
The barge owner asserts that because its policy, like the one in Exxon, includes the
This reasoning is flawed. First, Exxon involved a personal injury suit based on inhalation of noxious fumes, not a collision.
The barge owner asserts in its brief that the collision clause "is indisputably triggered in this case because the liability arises out of a collision involving a towed vessel." In a footnote, the barge owner then describes its claims for loss of barge and cargo, for wreck removal, and cleanup expenses, as well as numerous claims for property damage by commercial fishermen. However, all of the claims mentioned would be excluded from the collision clause coverage. The collision coverage refuses to indemnify the insured for damages arising out of "removal or disposal of obstructions, wrecks or their cargoes under statutory powers or otherwise pursuant to law;" "cargo or other property on or the engagements of the Vessel;" "loss of life, personal injury or illness;" and "the discharge, spillage, emission or leakage of oil, petroleum products, chemicals or other substances of any kind or description whatsoever." Further, loss or damages to vessels owned by the insured are also excluded from collision coverage. Therefore, all claims pointed to by the barge owner are excluded from collision coverage, and any recovery must come under the standard P&I section of the policy, not its collision clause.
That the parties added a collision provision to the P&I section does not necessarily indicate the collision coverage is subject to the benefits and requirements of the other P&I coverages.
Even if this policy were ambiguous, the barge owner would not automatically be entitled to a presumption favoring its interpretation, as was the case in Exxon. Again, Louisiana does not apply the presumption in favor of the insured when a broker has negotiated the policy on the insured's behalf. Both the barge owner and IINA are sophisticated parties, and it is undisputed that Marsh, an insurance broker, issued the policy. Although the barge owner now implies that Marsh was acting as an agent for IINA, in the district court, the towing company asserted that
In sum, the barge owner's assertions of ambiguity demand reliance upon the collision clause, which is not only severable but also inapplicable because all of the damages incurred are excluded from that coverage. Returning to the pure P&I coverage, the policy is clear that defense costs were intended to be included within the policy limits. This P&I policy is unambiguously written against the backdrop of traditional principles of maritime law that defense costs erode P&I limits of liability. It is evident that viewed objectively the parties expectations were as we have today held. For want of jurisdiction, we decide nothing more regarding allocation of the court-held funds. AFFIRMED in part; DISMISSED in part.