F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
MAY 3 2004
PUBLISH
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
MAGNOLIA MARINE TRANSPORT COMPANY,
as owner of the Robert Y. Love, its Engines,
Tackle, etc., in a cause of exoneration from or
limitation of liability,
Petitioner-Appellee,
No. 03-7023
_____________________________
STATE OF OKLAHOMA,
Movant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Oklahoma
(D.C. No. 02-CV-615-P)
Greg S. Eldridge, Assistant Attorney General (E. Clyde Kirk, Assistant Attorney
General, with him on the briefs), Litigation Section, State of Oklahoma, for
Movant-Appellant.
Michael Burrage of Burrage Law Firm, Durant, Oklahoma (Sean Burrage of
Taylor, Burrage, Foster, Mallett, Downs & Ramsey, Claremore, Oklahoma, with
him on the brief), for Petitioner-Appellee.
Before SEYMOUR, McKAY, and O’BRIEN, Circuit Judges.
SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.
This appeal arises out of a tragic accident in which a tugboat owned by
Magnolia Marine Transport Company (Magnolia) collided with the Interstate 40
bridge over the Arkansas River near Webbers Falls, Oklahoma. Magnolia filed a
petition in district court in Mississippi for limitation of liability under admiralty
law. Meanwhile, the State of Oklahoma filed a suit for damages against Magnolia
in Oklahoma state court, which Magnolia removed to federal district court.
Thereafter, the Mississippi district court transferred Magnolia’s limitation petition
to the federal court in Oklahoma. The State filed a motion to dismiss the
limitation petition on Eleventh Amendment grounds, which the district court
denied. An order denying a motion to dismiss on the basis of state sovereign
immunity is immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine. P.R.
Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 506 U.S. 139, 146-47 (1993);
Innes v. Kan. State Univ. (In re Innes), 184 F.3d 1275, 1277 (10th Cir. 1999).
The State appeals, and we affirm.
I.
On May 26, 2002, the “M/V ROBERT Y. LOVE,” a tugboat owned and
operated by Magnolia and piloted by Captain William Joe Dedmon, was pushing
two empty barges up the Arkansas River in Oklahoma. As the tugboat neared the
Interstate 40 bridge, Captain Dedmon suffered a form of cardiac arrhythmia that
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caused him to lose consciousness for several minutes. While Captain Dedmon
was unconscious, the tugboat pushed the barges into the bridge, causing the
bridge to collapse into the river. Several vehicles plunged off the damaged
overpass. Fourteen people died and five suffered injuries. The subsequent search
and rescue, repair, loss of use, and clean-up costs required the State of Oklahoma
to expend more than fifty-eight million dollars.
One week after the accident, Magnolia filed a petition in federal district
court in Mississippi invoking the procedures of the Limitation of Shipowners’
Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 181-189. The next day, the State filed suit for
damages in Oklahoma State court. After removal of the State’s suit and transfer
of Magnolia’s limitation petition, the parties’ legal actions were consolidated in
federal district court in Oklahoma. Positing “that under the United States
Constitution, the State of Oklahoma cannot be prohibited from pursing [sic] its
claim against Magnolia in the courts of Oklahoma, nor can the State be forced,
without its consent, to pursue its claims in federal court,” the State claimed it was
“entitled to sovereign immunity from this limitation proceeding and from the
Limitation Act.” Aplt. App. at 77. We now consider the State’s appeal from the
district court’s denial of the its motion to dismiss on immunity grounds.
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II.
The Limitation of Shipowners’ Liability Act is at the heart of this appeal.
Because issues pertaining to it are somewhat unfamiliar in our landlocked circuit,
we begin with an explication of the Act’s central features and the procedures
employed to implement them.
“Limitation of liability is an important theme of admiralty law.” 2 T HOMAS
J. S CHOENBAUM , A DMIRALTY & M ARITIME L AW § 15-1, p. 136 (2d ed. 1994). A
feature of continental European sea codes since medieval times, it came to
English admiralty law in the eighteenth century and to this country in 1851 as the
Limitation of Shipowners’ Liability Act. Id. at § 15-1, p. 136-37. The Act
provides for the enjoining of pending suits against shipowners and their
consolidation in a single federal court “so that liability may be determined and
limited to the value of the shipowner’s vessel and freight pending.” Id. at § 15-1,
p. 137. The apparent purpose of the Act was to encourage shipbuilding in this
country and to place the U.S. shipping industry on equal footing with foreign
competitors who enjoyed such limitation procedures at home. Id.
Because the Act was “badly drafted even by the standards of the time,” the
Supreme Court codified a procedure for its implementation in Rule F of the
Admiralty Rules. Id. at § 15-1, p. 137; § 15-4, p. 144. Rule F provides a single
forum for the determination of “(1) whether the vessel and its owner are liable at
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all; (2) whether the owner may in fact limit liability to the value of the vessel and
pending freight; (3) the amount of just claims; and (4) how the fund should be
distributed to the claimants.” Id. at § 15-5, p. 144. While a shipowner may only
file a petition for limitation in admiralty jurisdiction in federal district court, he
or she may plead limitation as a defense to an action seeking damages in federal
or state court. Id. at § 15-5, p. 144-45 & n.6.
As a condition of limitation, the shipowner
shall deposit with the court, for the benefit of claimants, a sum equal
to the amount or value of the owner’s interest in the vessel and
pending freight, or approved security therefor, and in addition such
sums, or approved security therefor, as the court from time to time
may fix as necessary . . . .
F ED . R. C IV . P. Supp. Rule F(1). In addition, the security posting must include six
percent yearly interest. 2 S CHOENBAUM , § 15-5, p. 147. Once a shipowner
deposits this sum, the court will stay all other proceedings against the shipowner
relating to the incident at issue and compel claimants to file for recovery in the
limitation court under penalty of default. Id. at § 15-5, p. 147-49.
The burden of proof in a limitation proceeding parallels that in a standard
suit for damages. Claimants against the shipowner must prove the vessel’s
negligence or unseaworthiness caused their losses. If they so prove, the burden
shifts to the shipowner to prove there was no “design, neglect, privity or
knowledge” on his or her part. Id. at § 15-5, p. 150. “If the shipowner is not
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exonerated,” but the court finds he or she is entitled to limitation of liability,
“payment to claimants is made on a pro-rata basis,” generally out of the “security
deposited with the court.” Id. at § 15-7, p. 155.
III.
The State of Oklahoma insists its constitutional sovereign immunity from
suit prevents Magnolia from invoking the procedures of the Limitation of
Shipowners’ Liability Act as to the State’s claim for damages. The logical
starting point for our analysis of this proposition is the text of the Eleventh
Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The Eleventh Amendment mandates that “[t]he Judicial power of the United
States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or
prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by
Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. C ONST . amend. XI. The question
we must first answer, therefore, is whether Magnolia’s limitation petition
constitutes a suit “commenced or prosecuted against” the State of Oklahoma. For
reasons we explore below, the answer to that question is no.
The State advocates a different starting point for our analysis. Oklahoma
would have us begin with “the two-prong test enunciated by the United States
Supreme Court” in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary
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Education Expense Board, 527 U.S. 666 (1999). Aplt. Br. at 2. In that case, the
Court “recognized only two circumstances in which an individual may sue a
State”: (1) where Congress has authorized the suit pursuant to its enforcement
power under the Fourteenth Amendment, and (2) where the State has waived its
sovereign immunity. Florida Prepaid, 527 U.S. at 670. In urging these two
exceptions to sovereign immunity as this court’s analytical starting point, the
State misses a crucial distinction between Florida Prepaid and the case before us.
In Florida Prepaid, College Savings Bank sued Florida Prepaid Postsecondary
Education Expense Board, an arm of the State of Florida, for violations of the
Lanham Act. Id. at 671. Clearly, the Bank’s suit was a “suit against a state,”
which the Court presupposed in recognizing “only two circumstances in which an
individual may sue a State.” Id. at 670 (emphasis added).
Here, to the contrary, the State of Oklahoma has sued Magnolia for
damages. Magnolia neither named the State as a defendant in its limitation
proceeding nor served process upon the State. The limitation proceeding merely
provides a forum for establishing a shipowner’s right to limitation of liability and
managing disbursement of a limitation fund to claimants who prove Magnolia is
liable to them. The limitation proceeding thus lacks the traditional characteristics
of a suit against the State.
The State argues that whether Magnolia’s limitation proceeding is a suit
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against a state is irrelevant to Eleventh Amendment analysis. According to the
State, the Supreme Court “has repeatedly held that even though a state is not
named a party to an action, the suit may nonetheless be barred by the Eleventh
Amendment.” Aplt. Rep. Br. at 2. In support of this argument, the State cites
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651 (1974), and Ford Motor Co. v. Department of
Treasury, 323 U.S. 459 (1945). The State is correct that plaintiffs in neither case
named a state as a party. Edelman and Ford Motor, however, were both suits
against state officers. See Edelman, 415 U.S. at 653; Ford Motor Co., 323 U.S. at
460. Any language in either case implying that a state need not be a party in
order for its sovereign immunity to bar the suit served only to explain that the
legal fiction of the “officer suit” under Ex parte Young 1 would not be allowed to
circumvent sovereign immunity when the monetary relief ordered by the court
required payment from the public treasury. See Edelman, 415 U.S. at 664 (officer
suit “does not extend so far as to permit a suit which seeks the award of an
accrued monetary liability which must be met from the general revenues of a
State”); Ford Motor Co., 323 U.S. at 462 (“Where relief is sought under general
law from wrongful acts of state officials, the sovereign’s immunity under the
Eleventh Amendment does not extend to wrongful individual action . . . . Where,
however, an action is authorized by statute against a state officer in his official
1
Ex Parte Young, 209 U.S. 123 (1908).
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capacity . . . the Eleventh Amendment operates to bar suit.”). These cases are
inapposite to a case such as this one where neither the state, nor its agency, nor its
officer is a defendant.
The State derides as mere “semantics” any emphasis on the Eleventh
Amendment’s application only to suits “commenced or prosecuted against” a
state, and insists the Supreme Court has carried state sovereign immunity beyond
the “literal wording of the Eleventh Amendment.” Aplt. Rep. Br. at 7-8. The
Supreme Court has undeniably extended the protections of state sovereign
immunity beyond the text of the Eleventh Amendment. See Alden v. Maine, 527
U.S. 706, 713 (1999) (holding that “the sovereign immunity of the States . . . is
[not] limited by[] the terms of the Eleventh Amendment”). The State cites eight
cases in which the Supreme Court has arguably broadened the Eleventh
Amendment’s reach and urges us to broaden it yet again in the case before us.
The cases the State cites are unhelpful, however. Although the cases involved
new parties or fora beyond the literal language of the Eleventh Amendment, 2 each
case is unquestionably a suit against a state. See Fed. Mar. Comm’n v. S.C. State
Ports Auth., 535 U.S. 743, 747-48 (2002) (cruise ship company sued state agency
2
See Fed. Mar. Comm’n v. S.C. State Ports Auth., 535 U.S. 743, 754 (2002)
(citing the cases the State relies on as holding Eleventh Amendment immunity
applies to suits by Indian Tribes, foreign nations, and federal corporations, as well
as to suits by private parties in state court, in admiralty proceedings, and by a
state’s own citizens under federal question jurisdiction).
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for violation of the Shipping Act); Alden, 527 U.S. at 711 (probation officers sued
state for violation of overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act);
Blatchford v. Native Village of Noatak, 501 U.S. 775, 778 (1991) (village brought
equal protection challenge to state commission’s denial of funds allegedly due
and sought payment of those funds); Ford Motor Co., 323 U.S. at 460
(manufacturing corporation sued state officer for tax refund); Monaco v.
Mississippi, 292 U.S. 313, 317 (1934) (Monaco sued Mississippi to recover on
bonds issued by the state); In re State of New York, 256 U.S. 490, 495 (1921)
(canal boat owners sued state officer for damages caused by vessels chartered by
the state); Smith v. Reeves, 178 U.S. 436, 437 (1900) (railroad company sued state
treasurer to recover overpaid taxes); Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U.S. 1, 1 (1890)
(citizen sued state to recover on bonds issued by State). Oklahoma points to no
case in which the Supreme Court has extended Eleventh Amendment immunity
beyond suits against a state, and we decline to do so in this case.
We return, therefore, to the question of whether Magnolia’s limitation
petition constitutes a suit against the State of Oklahoma. We agree with every
court that has addressed this issue: the limitation proceeding is not a suit against
the state. See Bouchard Transp. Co., Inc. v. Updegraff, 147 F.3d 1344, 1349
(11th Cir. 1998); In re Abaco Treasure Ltd., 1993 A.M.C. 1976, 1977 (S.D. Fla.
1993); In re Sand Bar I, Inc., 1992 WL 84277, at *1 (E.D. La. 1992). The
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Limitation of Shipowners’ Liability Act creates a defense which, as noted above,
may be pled in a limitation petition invoking the procedures established in Rule F
or in a shipowner’s answer to a suit brought in state or federal court. 2
S CHOENBAUM , § 15-5, p. 144-45. If a shipowner chooses to file a petition for
limitation under the federal court’s admiralty jurisdiction, any claimant (including
a state) must file its claim against the shipowner in the same court or risk taking
none of the limitation fund as damages. Id. at § 15-5, p. 147-49. But this federal
proceeding for administering a limited fund does not transform the shipowner’s
defensive position under the Act into an offensive one.
Citing the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Bouchard Transport Co., the
district court in this case analogized the limitation proceeding to an “in rem
admiralty action where the state does not have possession of the res.” Aplt. App.
at 256-57. As in such an in rem proceeding, no specific entity is named as a
defendant or formally served with process. Id. at 257. In addition, the court
administering the limitation proceeding controls the res at issue–the limitation
fund–and the vessel remains under the control of the shipowner. Id. In
California v. Deep Sea Research, 523 U.S. 491, 507-08 (1998), the Supreme
Court held, “[b]ased on longstanding precedent respecting the federal courts’
assumption of in rem admiralty jurisdiction over vessels that are not in the
possession of a sovereign, . . . the Eleventh Amendment” poses no bar to a federal
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court’s in rem jurisdiction where the res is not in the possession of the State. The
district court found the similarities between the action in Deep Sea Research and
this case militated against dismissal on sovereign immunity grounds. Aplt. App.
at 257-58.
The State maintains the better analogy is between the limitation proceeding
and a federal interpleader action naming state defendants, held barred by the
Supreme Court in Cory v. White, 457 U.S. 85, 90-91 (1982). But in Cory, the
Controller of the State of California and the Attorney General of the State of
Texas were the named parties. Id. at 85. And as noted by the court in Sand Bar I,
“[u]nlike interpleader . . . cases, this limitation proceeding is not an attempt to
resolve competing claims to a res. It is a statutory procedure to determine the
amount of recovery potentially to be split among claimants.” Sand Bar I, 1992
WL 84277, at *2 (emphasis in original). In contrast to an interpleader action,
“recovery [in a limitation proceeding] is only possible if those claimants succeed
in proving the Petitioner’s liability . . . .” Id. (emphasis in original).
In our judgment, neither Deep Sea Research nor Cory provides the closest
analogy to limitation proceedings. Rather, decisions examining the role of
sovereign immunity in bankruptcy are more on point and instruct us to affirm the
district court’s refusal to dismiss this limitation proceeding on sovereign
immunity grounds.
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As explained by the Fifth Circuit,
[i]n a bankruptcy case, in its simplest terms, a debtor turns over his
assets, which constitute the estate, for liquidation by a trustee for the
benefit of creditors according to their statutory priorities.
Bankruptcy law modifies the state’s collection rights with respect to
its claims against the debtor, but it also affords the state an
opportunity to share in the collective recovery.
Texas v. Walker, 142 F.3d 813, 822 (5th Cir. 1998). Just as the court assumes
jurisdiction over the estate in bankruptcy, a shipowner in a limitation proceeding
turns over to the court a sum equal to his or her interest in a vessel and pending
freight. F ED . R. C IV . P. Supp. Rule F(1). The court administering a limitation
proceeding stays other suits seeking collection from the shipowner, 2
S CHOENBAUM , § 15-5, p. 147-49, much as a bankruptcy petition acts as a stay of
further actions against the debtor pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362. While a creditor’s
ability to collect upon a debt and a claimant’s ability to collect against a
shipowner are altered by these administrative schemes, their consolidation of
claims is meant to ensure equitable distribution and prevent premature extinction
of a limited estate or fund.
In Walker, the Fifth Circuit addressed an objection to bankruptcy
proceedings styled much like Oklahoma’s objection to Magnolia’s limitation
action. See Walker, 142 F.3d at 820. Recognizing that the state’s contentions
regarding immunity were “not specious,” id., the court characterized the immunity
argument as follows:
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The argument for an Eleventh Amendment bar would assert that
although the State was not a named defendant in Walker’s
bankruptcy case, it was an indirect party because its legal rights were
adjudicated and altered . . . when the bankruptcy court discharged
Walker’s debt . . . .
. . . [D]ischarging the debt owed to the state either restrains the
state from acting by enjoining it from collecting the debt, or compels
the state to act by forcing it to file a proof of claim in bankruptcy
court to collect the debt. The state is thus presented with a Hobson’s
choice: either subject yourself to federal court jurisdiction or take
nothing . . . . If the state does nothing, it is permanently barred from
collecting its debt and receiving a pro rata share of the debtor’s
estate.
Id. at 821-22 (footnotes omitted). The court, nevertheless, rejected the state’s
Eleventh Amendment argument, noting the state’s “key assumption is the equation
of a bankruptcy case with a suit against the state, but this assumption is flawed.”
Id. at 822 (emphasis in original). While that same court had previously held that
Congress’s abrogation of sovereign immunity as to adversary actions brought
against a state under the Bankruptcy Code was unconstitutional in light of the
Supreme Court’s recent sovereign immunity jurisprudence, In re Fernandez, 123
F.3d 241, 244 (5th Cir. 1997), in nonadversary bankruptcy suits such as those in
Walker, the court held the Eleventh Amendment presented no bar. Walker, 142
F.3d at 820, 822.
We believe the similarities between bankruptcy and limitation proceedings
illustrate the inapplicability of the Eleventh Amendment to Magnolia’s petition in
the district court. As the Supreme Court noted in the bankruptcy case of Gardner
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v. New Jersey, 329 U.S. 565, 573-74 (1947), “[i]f the claimant is a State, the
procedure of proof and allowance is not transmitted into a suit against the State
because the court entertains objections to the claim. The State is seeking
something from the debtor. No judgment is sought against the State.” 3 The same
is true in a limitation proceeding under admiralty law.
IV.
In sum, the State’s invocation of sovereign immunity stands the relationship
between the parties on its head: it is the State that seeks recovery from Magnolia
in this case. Because Magnolia’s limitation proceeding does not implicate the
State’s immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment, the district court
properly denied the State’s motion to dismiss. We AFFIRM.
3
We recognized the continuing vitality of this principle in Straight v. Wyo.
Dep’t of Transp., 143 F.3d 1387, 1392 (10th Cir. 1998).
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