Case: 12-30891 Document: 00512407539 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/15/2013
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
October 15, 2013
No. 12-30891 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
COMMUNITY BANK OF LAFOURCHE,
Plaintiff - Appellee
v.
LORI ANN VIZIER, INCORPORATED, ETC., ET AL,
Defendants
v.
KEVIN GROS OFFSHORE, L.L.C.,
Intervenor - Appellant
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
USDC No. 2:11-CV-630
Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and KING and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:*
Community Bank of Lafourche sued the M/V MARY ANN VIZIER and its
owner, Lori Ann Vizier, Inc., to recover amounts secured by a preferred ship
mortgage against the M/V MARY ANN VIZIER. Kevin Gros Offshore, L.L.C.
*
Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
R. 47.5.4.
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intervened, asserting an in rem claim for Lori Ann Vizier, Inc.’s breach of an
alleged bareboat charter. Kevin Gros Offshore asserted that the breach of the
charter gave rise to a maritime lien that took priority over the lien of
Community Bank of Lafourche’s preferred ship mortgage. After the district
court granted summary judgment dismissing Kevin Gros Offshore’s claim, the
M/V MARY ANN VIZIER was sold at a U.S. Marshal’s sale. Community Bank
of Lafourche purchased it through a credit bid.
Kevin Gros Offshore brings this appeal challenging the district court’s
dismissal of its in rem claim. Community Bank of Lafourche moves to dismiss
the appeal under the “useless judgment” exception to our in rem jurisdiction. We
agree that a judgment in favor of Kevin Gros Offshore would, indeed, be useless,
and we DISMISS this appeal.1
I. BACKGROUND
On February 16, 2007, Kevin Gros Offshore, L.L.C. (“Gros”), and Lori Ann
Vizier, Inc. (“Vizier”) entered into a “Bareboat Charter and Vessel Management
Agreement” (“the Agreement”) for the M/V MARY ANN VIZIER (“the Vessel”).
Under the Agreement, Gros was responsible for: (1) providing the Vessel with a
captain and crew; (2) paying all taxes, fees, and insurance for the crew; (3)
ensuring the Vessel was properly maintained; (4) maintaining a valid U.S. Coast
Guard Certificate of Inspection; (5) securing liability, hull, and pollution
insurance for the Vessel; and (6) directing the Vessel’s daily operations and
navigation. Gros also agreed to pay Vizier any revenue it received from
customers. In exchange, Gros was to be paid a “brokerage fee” and reimbursed
1
Community Bank of Lafourche has moved to file a surreply brief. That motion is
granted.
2
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by Vizier for its expenses. Vizier allegedly breached the Agreement with Gros
by failing to compensate Gros for the Vessel’s operating expenses. On May 28,
2010, Gros filed a Notice of Lien against the Vessel with the U.S. Coast Guard.
On May 8, 2008, Vizier borrowed a $500,000 loan from Community Bank
of Lafourche (“Community Bank”). Vizier executed a promissory note that was
secured by a preferred ship mortgage on the Vessel. The mortgage was recorded
with the U.S. Coast Guard on May 9, 2008, under the Commercial Instruments
and Maritime Liens Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 31301–31343. Vizier and Community
Bank renewed the loan through a July 24, 2009 promissory note secured by the
mortgage on the Vessel. On April 24, 2010, Vizier defaulted on its loan
obligations to Community Bank.
Community Bank filed an in rem action in federal court against the vessel
and an in personam action against its owner, Vizier, for $469,170.73 allegedly
owing on the note, as well as interest and attorney’s fees. Community Bank
alleged that it had a preferred ship mortgage on the Vessel and that Vizier had
defaulted on its payments. The Vessel was arrested by the marshals on July 29,
2011. Notice of the arrest was properly given according to the admiralty rules.
On August 31, 2011, Gros intervened to assert an in rem claim against the
Vessel for Vizier’s breach of the Agreement. Gros alleged that it was owed
$300,772.42. Gros also alleged that the Agreement was a bareboat charter2,
2
A demise or “bareboat” charter is:
the lease of a ship, usually on a long-term contract, often associated with a
special finance or purchase arrangement. In a demise charter, it is up to the
charterer to man and equip the vessel . . . . Although the owner retains legal
title, the charterer is considered the temporary owner, or commonly termed the
owner pro hac vice.
3
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which gave rise to a maritime lien against the vessel, that this lien was
retroactive to the date of execution of the Agreement, and that the lien had
priority over Community Bank’s preferred ship mortgage.
On September 12, 2011, the district court authorized an interlocutory sale
of the Vessel “subject to any final ruling of the Court on priority and amount of
liens and mortgages.” After Vizier failed to defend the suit, the court entered a
default judgment for Community Bank against Vizier and the Vessel.
Community Bank moved for summary judgment on Gros’s claims in
intervention. Community Bank argued that the Agreement between Gros and
Vizier was not a charter agreement that would have given rise to a maritime
lien. According to Community Bank, the Agreement was a boat management
agreement that could not be the basis for a maritime lien. Gros opposed
summary judgment on the ground that the Agreement was a bareboat charter.
In May 2012, the district court granted summary judgment dismissing Gros’s
claims. The district court found that the Agreement included both charter and
management provisions and that, because Gros’s claims arose from the
management provisions, it could not assert a maritime lien against the vessel.
After the district court’s decision, Community Bank advertised a U.S.
Marshal’s sale of the Vessel scheduled for June 7, 2012. The deadlines for Gros
to move for a new trial on the district court’s order and to appeal had not passed
by the sale date. Gros did not make an objection prior to the sale. Community
Bank was the sole bidder, and it purchased the Vessel through a credit bid in the
amount of its $525,000 judgment lien. Gros was not present at the sale and did
not bid.
2 Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Admiralty & Marine Law, § 11–3 (4th ed. 2004).
4
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On June 12, 2012, Gros moved for a new trial under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 59. A week later, Community Bank moved to confirm the sale free of
all liens and claims against it. Gros opposed the motion on the ground that
confirming the sale without requiring Community Bank to post a substitute res
would terminate the court’s jurisdiction over the res and prevent Gros from
appealing the district court’s decision dismissing its claims. Gros stated that the
“Court’s constructive possession over the [Vessel], in rem, is the sole source of
the Court’s jurisdiction over [Gros’s] Claim in Intervention asserting a maritime
lien against the [V]essel.” Gros cautioned that “[i]f this Court grants the Bank’s
instant Motion to Confirm the Sale of the [Vessel], without placing any funds
into the registry of the Court (the funds from the sale) or any other alternative
res (e.g., bond, letter of undertaking, etc.), it would effectively allow the basis of
the Court’s jurisdiction over [Gros]’s claim to ‘sail away.’” Gros did not post a
supersedeas bond, nor did it file a separate motion to stay confirmation of the
sale.
On August 1, 2012, the district court granted Community Bank’s motion
to confirm the sale of the Vessel and ordered the marshals to issue a bill of sale
to Community Bank. The district court also denied Gros’s motion for new trial.
Final judgment was entered the following day. On August 10, 2012, the
marshals issued a bill of sale providing that the Vessel had been sold free and
clear of all preexisting liens and claims.
Gros timely appealed. It contends that the district court erred in deciding
that the Agreement included the elements of both a bareboat charter and a
vessel management agreement, and that Gros could not assert a maritime lien
against the vessel. Community Bank moves to dismiss the appeal for lack of
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jurisdiction. It argues that because the vessel was sold at a marshal’s sale after
the district court granted summary judgment, this court lacks in rem jurisdiction
under the useless judgment doctrine. Community Bank’s motion was carried
with the case.
II. DISCUSSION
Because Community Bank’s motion to dismiss under the useless judgment
doctrine implicates our jurisdiction over this appeal, we must address it before
considering the merits. Seales v. Holder, 354 F. App’x 875, 877 (5th Cir. 2009).
Community Bank contends that the useless judgment doctrine precludes
appellate court jurisdiction of any appeal arising from the dismissal of an in rem
maritime claim after a marshal’s sale of the res, free and clear of all liens, has
occurred in accordance with the federal admiralty rules.
The Supreme Court has provided some guidance on this issue. In Republic
National Bank of Miami v. United States, 506 U.S. 80 (1992), the Court
considered whether jurisdiction remained over an in rem civil forfeiture
proceeding after the res had been removed by the U.S. Marshals from the
judicial district and deposited in the U.S. Treasury. The government initiated
a civil forfeiture proceeding in federal court against a home that had allegedly
been purchased with profits from drug sales. Id. at 82. Republic National Bank
of Miami intervened, asserting that it had a mortgage lien against the home. Id.
The bank and the government agreed to an interlocutory sale of the property,
which the court approved, and the sale proceeds were placed into the custody of
the marshals pending the outcome of the suit. Id. at 82–83. After a trial on the
merits, the court denied the bank’s claim. The bank timely appealed but did not
post a supersedeas bond or seek to stay execution of the judgment, and the
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marshals transferred the sale proceeds to the U.S. Treasury. Id. at 83. On
appeal, the government argued that the removal of the sale proceeds from the
district terminated jurisdiction. The Eleventh Circuit agreed and dismissed the
appeal. Id.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari and reversed the dismissal. Noting
that a civil forfeiture proceeding under 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6) is an in rem action,
“which shall conform as near as may be to proceedings in admiralty,” id. at 84
(quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2461(b)), the Court then looked primarily to nineteenth
century cases addressing jurisdiction over maritime suits. Reviewing those
decisions, the Court found no legal principle requiring a court to possess
continuous control of the res in order to maintain jurisdiction. Id. It found,
instead, that “[t]he fictions of in rem forfeiture were developed primarily to
expand the reach of the courts and to continue to furnish remedies for aggrieved
parties not to provide a prevailing party with a means of defeating its
adversary’s claim for redress.” Id. at 87 (internal citations omitted). The Court
held that, while “it long has been understood that a valid seizure of the res is a
prerequisite to the initiation of an in rem civil forfeiture proceeding,” id. at 84,
a court’s jurisdiction over the res, once established, remains until the
termination of the suit, id. at 88–89.
Nevertheless, the Court identified a narrow “useless judgment” exception
to the general rule that jurisdiction depends exclusively on possession of the res
at the initiation of a suit. Id. at 84. The Court explained that a judgment would
be useless if a plaintiff abandons a seizure or if a “‘defendant ship stealthily
absconds from port and leaves the plaintiff with no res from which to collect.’”
Id. at 87 (quoting United States v. One Lear Jet, Serial No. 35A-280, Registration
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No. YN-BVO, 836 F.2d 1571, 1579 (11th Cir. 1988) (Vance, J., dissenting)).
Although the Court discussed the useless judgment rule only briefly, it noted
that “[t]hese exceptions . . . are closely related to the traditional, theoretical
concerns of jurisdiction: enforcement of judgments and fairness of notice to
parties.” Id. The Court further stated that “this exception ‘will not apply to any
case where the judgment will have any effect whatever.’” Id. at 85 (quoting
United States v. The Little Charles, 26 F. Cas. 979, 982 (C.C. Va. 1818)).
The Court found that the useless judgment rule did not apply under the
circumstances of the case. The government had argued that, under the
Constitution’s Appropriations Clause, U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7, once deposited
into the U.S. Treasury, the sale proceeds could be released only through a
congressional appropriation. According to the government, because no such
appropriation had been made, the government and the Court both lacked the
authority to release the proceeds to the bank, even in the event that the bank
prevailed on appeal in the underlying forfeiture action. Id. at 89. The Court
disagreed, concluding that 28 U.S.C. §§ 2414 and 2465 specifically authorized
the government to pay the proceeds of the sale out of the Treasury. Id. at 95–96.
Since Republic, we have had several occasions to address the useless
judgment exception. In Elliott v. M/V Lois B, 980 F.2d 1001 (5th Cir. 1993), we
considered whether a district court retained jurisdiction over an in rem maritime
suit even if the court no longer had possession of the res or knowledge of its
whereabouts. In that case, in order to escape the reach of creditors, a tugboat
owner fraudulently transferred a vessel. Id. at 1003. After a creditor obtained
a writ of execution in state court, the sheriff of the county in which the boat was
located obtained possession of the vessel. The vessel was then fraudulently
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transferred a second time to the new owner’s mother, Elliott, who filed an in rem
action in federal court. Id. Subsequent to the filing of the federal suit, but
before the U.S. Marshals took possession of the vessel, the vessel was purchased
at a sheriff’s sale by Donald Lancon. Id. Several days later, the marshals seized
the vessel, and Lancon filed an in rem claim to recover it. Shortly afterward, the
marshals exhausted the money that Elliott paid for the costs of seizure. Id. At
the marshal’s request, the magistrate judge released the vessel. Elliott took
custody and sold the vessel without court approval. After several subsequent
transfers, the vessel disappeared, and Elliott voluntarily dismissed her in rem
claim. Id. A trial was held on the merits of Lancon’s claim, and the trial court
awarded him title. Id. at 1004. Elliott appealed arguing, in part, that the
district court lost in rem jurisdiction to determine title once the court and
marshals released the boat. Id.
We found Republic dispositive on the issue of the court’s authority to
continue to exercise its jurisdiction over the suit. We explained that “once
jurisdiction is established by seizure of the res, the court ordinarily maintains
jurisdiction until the litigation ends.” Id. at 1005 (discussing Republic, 506 U.S.
at 84). Acknowledging that Elliot “could make a colorable argument that the
judgment of the court declaring Lancon the owner of the [vessel] was useless
when it was rendered,” we nevertheless declined to dismiss. Id. at 1004. We
explained that we could not “say that the district court’s judgment in this case
will have no effect whatever” because “[r]ecent developments in this case
demonstrate how this judgment could benefit Lancon in a concrete way.” Id. at
1005. After the suit was appealed, an alleged good faith purchaser of the vessel
had moved to intervene. The trial court’s judgment, which established that
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Lancon had superior title to Elliot, was not useless because “the judgment
rendered in favor of Lancon has potential concrete value to Lancon in his likely
litigation with [the alleged good faith purchaser].” Id. at 1005.3
We addressed the useless judgment exception again in Newpark
Shipbuilding & Repair, Inc. v. M/V Trinton Brute, 2 F.3d 572 (5th Cir. 1993)
(per curiam). Newpark was a creditor who brought an in rem action against a
vessel. Id. at 572. The vessel’s owner, McKinney, entered a restricted
appearance to defend against the claim. The district court considered the merits
and entered judgment in Newpark’s favor. It then ordered the vessel sold at a
marshal’s sale, at which Newpark was the successful bidder. Id. McKinney
moved to stay disbursement of the sale proceeds, which the district court denied.
Newpark partially scrapped the vessel, and resold what remained to McKinney.
Id. When McKinney appealed the district court’s judgment in favor of Newpark,
Newpark moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. Id.
We granted Newpark’s motion to dismiss the appeal, concluding that a
judgment in McKinney’s favor “would be effectively unenforceable” because
“there is nothing in Newpark’s possession that could be regarded as the res.” Id.
at 573. We distinguished Republic, noting that “in this case, by contrast, there
never was a substitute res.” Id. We further explained that “the vessel is no
3
See also Alphamate Commodity GMBH v. CHS Europe SA, 627 F.3d 183, 186 (5th Cir.
2010) (declining to dismiss a quasi in rem suit under the useless judgment exception after the
res had been shipped outside this court’s jurisdiction because the claimant posted a bond
covering demurrage and detention charges and “[w]hich party receives the benefit of the
security is an issue that renders the case still a live controversy”); P.R. Ports Auth. v. BARGE
KATY-B, 427 F.3d 93, 102 (1st Cir. 2005) (holding that the useless judgment exception did not
apply because, even though the vessel at issue had left U.S. territorial waters, a judgment
“could serve as a basis either for re-arresting the barge at any American port or for an in
personam action against the barge’s owner”).
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longer the res . . . [because] a marshal’s sale discharges all liens against the ship
and granted the purchaser title free and clear of all liens.” Id. (citing Grant
Gilmore & Charles L. Black, Jr., The Law of Admiralty § 9-85 (1975)). As a
result, “[u]nlike the situation in Republic, we [could not] trace the res or its
proceeds to a particular fund in Newpark’s possession.” Id. Permitting
McKinney to recover, despite the marshal’s sale, effectively would require the
court “to convert the judgment from one in rem to a judgment in personam.” Id.
We declined the invitation to so extend Republic’s holding. Id. We also
distinguished our prior decision in Elliott, noting that in this case there was no
showing that McKinney “could use the judgment in likely litigation with a
subsequent purchaser of the vessel.” Id. at 573 n.1.
In Eurasia International, Ltd. v. Holman Shipping, 411 F.3d 578 (5th Cir.
2005), we dismissed another suit under the useless judgment exception.
Eurasia, a creditor, filed an in rem claim against a vessel to recover its unpaid
expenses under a ship management agreement. Several other creditors
intervened, asserting various claims. Id. at 580. The U.S. Marshals arrested the
vessel and sold it at auction, depositing the sale proceeds into the district court’s
registry. The sale proceeds were insufficient to fully compensate all of the
claimants. Id. After the sale, the vessel’s owner brought an in personam claim
against Eurasia. The district court stayed the in rem action pending arbitration
of the owner’s in personam claim. Eurasia prevailed in the arbitration, and the
district court lifted the stay on the in rem action. Id. The district court granted
summary judgment in favor of the intervenors and denied Eurasia’s claim. Id.
at 581. Eurasia moved the district court for an order staying the disbursement
of the sale proceeds. The court granted the order, giving Eurasia an opportunity
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to post a supersedeas bond. Eurasia, however, failed to timely post the bond,
and the district court ordered the sale proceeds disbursed in accordance with its
summary judgment order. Id. Eurasia appealed the district court’s denial of its
claims. In response, the intervenors argued that Eurasia’s failure to stay
enforcement of the district court’s final judgment, and the clerk’s distribution of
the sale proceeds, rendered any appeal judgment useless. Id.
We found that the case fell within the purview of the useless judgment
rule as explained in Republic and Newpark. We explained that “although the
substitute res, the proceeds from the sale, were distributed to the Intervenors,
we do not know if they still have the substitute res in their possession.” Id. at
584. These facts were distinguishable from those in Republic in at least two
significant ways. First, we noted, “the substitute res here is money, which is
fungible, and unlike in Republic, the proceeds here cannot be traced to a
particular fund in the Intervenors’ possession.” Id. Second, “unlike in Republic,
there is no statute allowing this court to reach the proceeds once paid out.” Id.
As a result, any judgment “would be effectively unenforceable because, like
Newpark, there is nothing in the Intervenors’ possession that could be regarded
as the res.” Id. Furthermore, permitting Eurasia to recover any amount it was
allegedly owed by the intervenors “would effectively be rendering a judgment in
personam,” something we had specifically declined to do in Newpark. Id.
In light of these prior decisions, we find that the useless judgment rule
deprives us of jurisdiction over this appeal. Even if Gros were to prevail in its
claim (which was solely in rem) that it had a maritime lien against the Vessel,
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the marshal’s sale of the Vessel, confirmed by the court,4 was free and clear of
that lien and there is no substitute res from which Gros could recover. As in
Newpark, there is nothing in Community Bank’s possession that could be
regarded as the res.
Although the Supreme Court’s decision in Republic and our decision in
Elliott counsel construing the useless judgment rule narrowly, neither applies
to the facts of this case. Unlike Republic, this case does not involve the simple
disbursement of a substitute res from the registry of the court. Compare Ventura
Packers, Inc. v. F/V Jeanine Kathleen, 424 F.3d 852 (9th Cir. 2005) (holding that
when the parties agreed that the owner would deposit a substitute res in
exchange for release of an arrested vessel, and the substitute res was
subsequently released by court order, the useless judgment exception did not
apply because the court retained legal custody over the security), with United
States v. $493,850.00 in U.S. Currency, 518 F.3d 1159, 1164 (9th Cir. 2008)
(holding under the useless judgment rule that the court lacked jurisdiction to
consider an appeal over forfeiture of a truck allegedly used in drug trafficking
because “the judgment as to the truck has been executed, so the res can neither
be delivered nor restored to [the former owners]”).5 Further, there is no statute
4
See First Nat. Bank of Jefferson Parish v. M/V Lightning Power, 776 F.2d 1258, 1261
(5th Cir. 1985) (“The bid at the marshal’s auction does not consummate a sale. It is the
equivalent of an offer to the court, not accepted until judicially confirmed. Until confirmation,
the auction bid may be rejected.” (footnote omitted)).
5
The Eleventh Circuit reached a similar result in United States v. One Parcel of Real
Estate at 3262 SW 141 Avenue, 33 F.3d 1299 (11th Cir. 1994). In that case, the government
filed an in rem civil forfeiture action against a home that it alleged had been purchased with
drug trafficking proceeds. Id. at 1300. When the home’s owners failed to defend the suit, the
district court entered a final judgment in favor of the government. Id. at 1300–01. One of the
former owners later moved to set aside the default judgment and to stay execution of the
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that permits us to reach the Vessel after confirmation of the marshal’s sale.
Eurasia, 411 F.3d at 584. In Elliott, the appeal was saved from the useless
judgment doctrine only because a judgment may have been valuable in litigation
against a subsequent purchaser of a vessel which had been privately sold
without court approval. Gros fails to point to any “concrete value” to him of a
favorable decision in this appeal given that, even if such a decision issues, he
would be unable to take title to the Vessel.6 See Elliott, 980 F.2d at 1005.
Gros argues that the useless judgment exception does not apply because
our decisions in Inland Credit Corp. v. M/T BOW EGRET, 552 F.2d 1148, 1152
(5th Cir. 1977), reh’g denied, 556 F.2d 756; Treasure Salvors, Inc. v. Unidentified
forfeiture judgment. Id. at 1301. The government responded by seeking an order permitting
an interlocutory sale of the property. The district court granted both motions. Id. After the
district court denied the former owner’s request to set aside the default judgment, it disbursed
the proceeds to several creditors. Because there was a deficiency, the government did not
receive any of the proceeds. Id. at 1302. The former owners appealed the district court’s
orders. The government argued that the appeal should be dismissed because the disbursal of
the sale proceeds deprived the court of jurisdiction. Id. The Eleventh Circuit agreed,
dismissing the appeal under the useless judgment exception. The appeals court noted that “it
is undisputed that the subject real property has been sold and the proceeds disbursed
completely to the priority claimants . . . ,” with the government receiving nothing. Id. at 1303.
As a result, the court concluded, the owners could “neither have their home restored to them
nor acquire any proceeds from that sale should they obtain a judgment in their favor.” Id.
6
Our decision in Bargecarib Inc. v. Offshore Supply Ships Inc., 168 F.3d 227 (5th Cir.
1999), another case that Gros cites, is also distinguishable. In Bargecarib, a charterer sued
a vessel in rem and its owner in personam for breaching the parties’ time-charter agreement.
Id. at 229. The U.S. Marshals arrested the vessel. The owner moved to vacate the arrest and
dismiss the charterer’s complaint. Id. After a hearing, the trial court ordered the vessel
released. The charterer appealed. Id. On appeal, we found that judgment for the charterer
would not be useless because it could “use this judgment as a basis for re-seizing the [vessel]
should it return to an American port, and as a basis for pursuing [the owner] personally.” Id.
at 231. Unlike Bargecarib, in this case, the res was not merely released to its original owner;
it was sold free and clear of all liens, precluding the possibility of rearrest. Further, Gros lacks
any colorable personal claims against Community Bank that might justify our exercise of
jurisdiction.
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Wrecked and Abandoned Sailing Vessel, 569 F.2d 330, 333–36 (5th Cir. 1978);
and United States v. An Article of Drug Consisting of 4,680 Pails, 725 F.2d 976,
982–84 (5th Cir. 1984), permit us to exercise in personam jurisdiction over its
appeal. We disagree.
Whether a court can continue to exercise jurisdiction following the release
of the res and whether that court, nonetheless, can afford concrete and valuable
relief to a successful appellant are related, yet separate, inquiries.7 In this case,
the answer to the first inquiry is, undoubtedly, yes. As noted above, in Republic,
the Supreme Court clarified that a court’s in rem jurisdiction depends on its
custody of the res when a suit begins, and is not ordinarily destroyed if the res
is subsequently released. Here, after Community Bank filed suit, the marshals
arrested the Vessel. This was sufficient to establish in rem jurisdiction. The
release of the res from the district court’s custody did not necessarily divest
jurisdiction. Inland and Treasure Salvors were decided before Republic and
under the assumption that continuous custody of the res was essential to in rem
jurisdiction. Because Republic showed this assumption to be incorrect, we need
not consider whether we may exercise in personam jurisdiction in this appeal to
reform the district court’s in rem judgment.
But this does not end the jurisdictional inquiry under Republic because,
as explained above, an exception to our jurisdiction exists when loss of the res
would render any judgment “useless.” In Inland and Treasure Salvors, we were
silent on whether the useless judgment exception applied. In Inland, we did not
7
Cf. First Nat’l Bank of Jefferson Parish v. M/V Lightning Power, 851 F. 2d 1543,
1545–46 (5th Cir. 1988) (finding that we did not lose jurisdiction over a suit where the res had
been released and sold to a third party because the party taking the res had agreed to be
personally liable to the claimant if the claimant succeeded on appeal).
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address whether release of the res posed an insurmountable barrier to affording
the parties practical relief on appeal.8 And, in Treasure Salvors, our ability to
afford relief was not at issue.9 Even after the district court’s decision in that
case, the bulk of the res (a sunken ship and its treasure) continued to be “buried
under tons of sand in international waters.” 569 F.2d at 335.
The third case Gros cites, 4,680 Pails, demonstrates the distinction
between the initial jurisdictional inquiry and our ability to afford the parties
relief notwithstanding the release of the res. 4,680 Pails involved an in rem
8
In Inland, we declined to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction an appeal brought by two
parties who had intervened to bring in rem claims against a vessel despite the fact that the
district court had distributed the substitute res. In the underlying suit, a creditor had sued
a vessel in rem and its owner in personam to recover money owed on a preferred ship
mortgage. 552 F.2d at 1150. The vessel was sold in an interlocutory sale, and the proceeds
were deposited into the court registry. Id. After the district court decided the merits of the
remaining creditors’ claims, the proceeds were distributed, and the two intervenors were
denied a share of the res. Id. at 1150–51. As Gros points out, we noted on appeal that the
original creditor had filed suit both in rem and in personam and had also invoked our appellate
jurisdiction by filing a cross-appeal to recapture from another claimant “a part of her in
personam recovery out of [a] bonded operating fund.” Id. at 1152. As a result, we found that
it was “proper for us to exercise our jurisdiction in personam to correct any errors in the lower
court’s in rem adjudication.” Id. Although the res was paid out to Inland after the district
court’s decision, id. at 1150–51, there was no suggestion that the funds were unrecoverable
in the event of a reversal on appeal.
9
In Treasure Salvors, we found that the district court had in personam jurisdiction
over the plaintiffs’ claims because “[t]he government, by intervening . . . and by stipulating to
the court’s admiralty jurisdiction, waived the usual requirement that the res be present within
the territorial jurisdiction of the court . . . .” 569 F.2d at 335 (internal citation omitted). In
that case, the plaintiffs had sued for possession of and to confirm title to a long-ago wrecked
vessel and its valuable cargo, part of which was situated beyond the court’s territorial
jurisdiction. Id. at 333. The United States intervened as a defendant, asserted its own claims,
and challenged the trial court’s jurisdiction over the portion of the res that was located outside
of U.S. waters. Id. We found, on appeal, that the government’s counterclaims under the
Antiquities Act, 16 U.S.C. § 431, and the Abandoned Property Act, 40 U.S.C. § 1309 (formerly
codified as 40 U.S.C. § 310), provided the district court and us with an independent basis of
jurisdiction. Id. at 335.
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forfeiture suit filed by the United States to seize a drug used to treat animals
raised for human consumption.10 Id. at 981. Pfizer, which had manufactured
and shipped the drug, intervened to defend its legality. Id. A jury found in
Pfizer’s favor, and the U.S. Marshals released the drug. But the court granted
a motion by the government for a new trial and entered judgment for the
government. Id. at 981–82. On appeal, we reviewed our decisions in Inland and
Treasure Salvors and found that we were “presented with a similar interface of
in rem and in personam jurisdiction,” id. at 983, because Pfizer had entered a
general appearance in the district court and had “invoked the jurisdiction of the
district court” by voluntarily appearing before it, even after the release of the res.
Id. at 984. But we also analyzed separately Pfizer’s argument that, even if we
continued to possess jurisdiction, release of the res mooted the government’s
request for forfeiture and destruction of the drug. We found that the appeal
remained justiciable only because it concerned a legal question (the legality of
Pfizer’s manufacture and sale of a drug), the resolution of which would have a
preclusive effect in potential future suits. Id. at 983–84.11
10
Although 4,680 Pails was not an admiralty case, we noted that “[w]e look to
admiralty law because section 304(b) of the Act provides, in part, that ‘the procedure in cases
under this section shall conform as nearly as may be, to the procedure in admiralty.”’ Id. at
982 n.18 (quoting 21 U.S.C. § 334(b)).
11
In 4,680 Pails, we framed the justiciability issue in “mootness” terms and did not
specifically reference the useless judgment rule. See id. at 984 (“Both the controversy and the
parties being before the court, the action is not moot and need not be dismissed.”); see also
Jefferson Bank & Trust Co. v. Van Niman, 722 F.2d 251, 252–53 (5th Cir. 1984) (per curiam)
(remanding a maritime suit to the district court to consider whether confirmation of a
marshal’s sale of a vessel rendered the case “moot”); Canal Steel Works v. One Drag Line
Dredge, 48 F.2d 212, 213 (5th Cir. 1931) (holding that a suit in which the res was released was
moot). The Supreme Court’s discussion in Republic suggests that mootness and the useless
judgment doctrine are analyzed similarly. See 506 U.S. at 89 (“The Government contends . . .
that this res no longer can be reached, because, having been deposited in the United States
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Here, however, the sole relief that Gros seeks is an in rem judgment
permitting him to recover the Vessel. Gros does not suggest that a judgment in
this suit would benefit him in future litigation. Because the Vessel is no longer
recoverable, and Gros has not pointed to any concrete benefit to it of a judgment
in its favor, the useless judgment exception to our jurisdiction applies.
Gros makes additional arguments concerning the district court’s order
confirming the marshal’s sale of the Vessel. Gros contends that it advised the
district court that confirming the sale to Community Bank without taking
custody of the proceeds or another substitute res would jeopardize jurisdiction
over a potential future appeal. Gros argues the district court erred in confirming
the sale without ordering Community Bank to post a substitute res.12 To the
extent that Gros’s objections were to the sale itself, those objections were
untimely. Under Local Admiralty Rule 64.6(b), the sale was automatically
confirmed after Gros failed to object within three days. Although Gros contends
that it was not aware of the sale, it does not dispute that Community Bank
advertised the sale in accordance with the law or that, on the day of the sale, the
U.S. Marshals filed the return into the district court record. Gros’s failure to
make a timely objection is fatal to its challenge to the propriety of the sale. See
Golden v. Oil Screw Frank T. Shearman, 455 F.2d 133, 135 (4th Cir. 1972) (per
curiam) (refusing to set aside a marshal’s sale despite a grossly inadequate sales
price because the seamen with a lien on the vessel failed to attend the sale and
Treasury, it may be released only by congressional appropriation. If so, the case is moot, or,
viewed another way, it falls into the ‘useless judgment’ exception noted above, to appellate in
rem jurisdiction.”).
12
We also note that, “[a]bsent fraud or collusion, a judicial sale should not ordinarily
be set aside.” Jefferson Bank & Trust, 722 F.2d at 252.
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offer a protective bid, and did not file a motion to set aside the sale within the
two-day period set by the local admiralty rules).
Gros argues that in confirming the sale without requiring the posting of
a substitute res, the district court disregarded its prior order authorizing the
interlocutory sale of the Vessel. That order provided that a sale would be
“subject to any final ruling of the Court on priority and amount of liens and
mortgages.” Gros acknowledges that “[u]nder this order, the Bank was not
required to deposit cash or post security at the time of the sale, so long as all
other competing liens had reached a final resolution.” Gros contends, however,
that the district court’s summary judgment ruling was not a “final ruling,” as
described in the district court’s interlocutory sale order. Gros had the
opportunity to raise the argument before the district court and failed to do so.
Gros’s argument that the sale was premature is, therefore, waived. Fruge v.
Amerisure Mut. Ins. Co., 663 F.3d 743, 747 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam).
III. CONCLUSION
Community Bank’s pending motions, including a motion to dismiss this
appeal, are GRANTED. This appeal is DISMISSED. Gros shall bear the costs
of this appeal.
19