Revised July 30, 1999
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 98-30309
HERMAN FIELDS,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
POOL OFFSHORE, INC.; ET AL.,
Defendants,
POOL COMPANY, incorrectly sued
as Pool Offshore, Inc.,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana
July 27, 1999
Before GARWOOD, BARKSDALE and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.
GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-appellant Herman Fields (Fields) brought a seaman’s
complaint for damages in state court, alleging negligence under the
Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. App. § 688, and the general maritime law.
Defendants-appellees Pool Company (Pool) and Oryx Energy Company
(Oryx) (collectively defendants) removed the case to federal court.
Fields’ motion to remand was denied, and the district court granted
summary judgment on behalf of Pool (but not Oryx). This partial
summary judgment was then certified under Rule 54(b) and Fields
appealed. We affirm.
Facts and Proceedings Below
A spar is a nautical structure designed to float with the bulk
of the hull below the waves—something akin to a giant buoy. As
United States petroleum resources have dwindled, innovative
production companies have attempted to exploit oil and gas
resources in deeper ocean waters. In an attempt to economically
extract petroleum from one of its deep water fields—located in the
Visosca Knoll area of the outer continental shelf about one hundred
miles off the Alabama coast—Oryx decided to design a production
platform based around a spar. Oryx’s Neptune Spar—which is
apparently the first structure of its kind to be deployed off of
our coast—consists of a cylinder with a diameter of seventy-two
feet, and a length of seven hundred five feet. The section that
pokes above the surface has a production deck attached to it and
contains crew quarters, bilge pumps, life boats, and production
facilities.
The Neptune Spar was installed at its current location in the
Visosca Knoll area in September 1996. The Neptune Spar is anchored
above the field’s seven well heads by six chain wire lines which
connect to six pilings driven one hundred eighty feet into the
2
seabed. In addition, the structure is further fixed in place by
the network of pipes used to extract and transfer the petroleum.
A casing riser extends from each of the seven well-heads to the
spar, and two pipelines transport the spar’s product away from the
location. The Neptune Spar has no organic means of propulsion. By
tightening and slackening the six chains, the spar can be
maneuvered to position it closer to a particular well-head, but
such movement is only possible within a two hundred fifty foot
range. According to affidavits in the record, this is the Neptune
Spar’s initial location and it will remain thus fixed in place
there until the petroleum resources beneath it are exhausted, an
event that is not predicted to occur for at least fifteen years.
Fields was an employee of Pool who worked as a
roughneck/derrickhand on Pool’s platform drilling “rigs.” These
rigs are packages of drilling equipment that are moved from
location to location as needed. Fields was permanently assigned to
rig no. 908, but when that rig was taken out of service he was
assigned to rig no. 10. Oryx contracted for the services of rig
no. 10, and arranged for its transport to the Neptune Spar. On
February 20, 1997, while working on this rig aboard the Neptune
Spar, a section of the rig unexpectedly struck Fields in the head.
This accident allegedly caused “serious and permanent injuries to”
Fields’ “face, central nervous system and brain . . . resulting in
his permanent disability.” Fields is a citizen of Mississippi;
Pool is a Texas corporation with its principal place of business in
3
Texas; Oryx is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of
business in Texas.
On August 27, 1997, Fields filed the instant seaman’s
complaint in Louisiana state court, alleging negligence and
invoking the Jones Act and the general maritime law. On October 8,
1997, the defendants filed a notice of removal on the basis of
diversity of citizenship and, alternatively, under the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), 43 U.S.C. § 1331 et seq. They
alleged that Fields’ Jones Act claim was fraudulently pled to
defeat removal jurisdiction in that Fields was not a Jones Act
seaman and had no substantial connection to any vessel and the
Neptune Spar was a fixed platform, not a vessel. On November 8,
1997, Fields filed a motion to remand, arguing that removal was
precluded by the Jones Act, that Fields was a seaman and that the
Jones Act claim had not been fraudulently pled. See 28 U.S.C. §
1445(a). Defendants filed an opposition to the motion on November
25, 1997, and, in an order dated December 5, 1997, the district
court rejected Fields’ motion to remand, holding that as a matter
of law the Jones Act claim was baseless as Fields was not a seaman
and the Neptune Spar was a fixed platform, not a vessel. On that
same day, Fields filed a motion requesting fifteen days’ leave to
respond to defendants’ response to Fields’ motion to remand. This
motion was dismissed as moot. On December 16, 1997, Pool moved for
summary judgment, arguing that, since Fields was Pool’s employee
4
and was not a Jones Act seaman and the Neptune Spar was a fixed
platform on the outer continental shelf, OCSLA, 43 U.S.C. §
1333(b), limited Fields’ remedies against Pool to compensation
under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act ( LHWCA),
33 U.S.C. § 905. Oryx did not join in the motion. Fields
responded by claiming that material facts were in dispute regarding
the Neptune Spar’s potential vessel status and also moving for a
new trial and/or rehearing of the court’s prior determination that
the Neptune Spar was not a vessel as a matter of law. On February
3, 1998, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of
Pool and denied Fields’ motion for new trial or rehearing. Fields
moved for Rule 54(b) judgment on the grant of summary judgment.
The court granted the Rule 54(b) motion, and this appeal followed.
Discussion
Neither below nor on appeal has Fields questioned the removal
on any basis other than that it is assertedly precluded by the
presence of his Jones Act claim. It appears that the diversity of
citizenship and amount in controversy requirements of 28 U.S.C. §
1332(a) are met, and Fields has never contended otherwise. Hence,
as no defendant is a citizen of the state in which the suit was
filed, removal on the basis of diversity was proper under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1441(a) & (b) if not barred by the Jones Act claim. Moreover, if
the Jones Act did not preclude removal, it is also clear that it
would have been proper because of OCSLA, as the district court
5
held. Tennessee Gas Pipeline v. Houston Casualty Insurance Co., 87
F.3d 150, 154-56 (5th Cir. 1996).1
It is settled that as a general rule Jones Act cases are not
removable. Burchette v. Cargill, 48 F.3d 173, 175 (5th Cir. 1995).
The Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. App. § 688, incorporates general
provisions of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, and the latter
expressly bars removal of suits thereunder. 28 U.S.C. § 1445(a).
However, a fraudulently pleaded Jones Act claim does not bar
removal. Burchette, 48 F.3d at 175 (“‘defendants may pierce the
pleadings to show that the Jones Act claim has been fraudulently
pleaded to prevent removal’”, quoting Lackey v. Atlantic Richfield
Co., 990 F.2d 202, 207 (5th Cir. 1993)). “While we have cautioned
against pretrying a case to determine removal jurisdiction,” the
district court is authorized “to use a summary judgment-like
procedure for disposing of fraudulent pleading claims.” Burchette,
48 F.3d at 176. The court may deny remand where, but only where,
it determines, after resolving “all disputed questions of fact and
any ambiguities in the current controlling substantive law in
1
While Fields’ general maritime law claim, brought in state
court under the savings to suitors clause, 28 U.S.C. § 1331(1), is
not one which “arise[s] under the Constitution, treaties, or laws
of the United States” for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and does
not of itself furnish a basis for removal even though it could have
been filed originally in federal court, nevertheless this does not
preclude removal when there is some basis for original federal
jurisdiction other than admiralty, such as diversity of citizenship
or a statute. See Poirrier v. Nicklos Drilling Co., 648 F.2d 1063,
1066 (5th Cir. 1981); Tennessee Gas Pipeline, 87 F.3d at 153 & nn.
5 & 6.
6
plaintiff’s favor,” that there is “‘no reasonable basis for
predicting that the plaintiff might establish liability’” under the
Jones Act. Id.2
In order to recover under the Jones Act, the plaintiff’s
complained-of injury must have been suffered while he was a seaman
and in the course of his employment. Section 688(a) (authorizing
action by “[a]ny seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the
course of his employment”). In order to be a seaman, an individual
(among other things) “must have a connection to a vessel in
navigation (or to an identifiable group of such vessels) that is
substantial in terms of both its duration and its nature.” Harbor
Tug and Barge Co. v. Papai, 117 S.Ct. 1535, 1540 (1997) (quoting
Chandris, Inc. v. Latsis, 115 S.Ct. 2172, 2179 (1995) (citations
and internal quotation marks omitted)).
Fields does not dispute that he has no possible Jones Act
claim if the Neptune Spar is not a vessel, and he claims no
substantial connection to anything else which he contends is a
vessel or fleet of vessels.3 And Fields has never contended that
2
An additional basis on which to show fraudulent pleading—that
there has been an outright fraud in the pleading of jurisdictional
facts—is not involved or asserted in this case. See Burchette, 48
F.3d at 176 n.1.
3
In his state court pleading, Fields alleged that at the time
of his injury he “was employed as a roughneck/derrickhand as a
member of the crew of Rig 10, in such a manner as to contribute to
the overall intended purpose of said vessel,” refers to “the
vessel, Rig 10,” and then alleges “the aforesaid vessel was in
navigation in the Gulf of Mexico”; the pleading does not allege
7
if the district court correctly determined that the Neptune Spar is
not a vessel, it nevertheless erred in granting Pool’s motion for
summary judgment.
A vessel is “every description of watercraft or other
artificial contrivance used, or capable of being used, as a means
of transportation on water.” 1 U.S.C. § 3. In general, the
“greater the structure’s resemblance to conventional seafaring
craft, the greater the odds of securing vessel status”. Gremillion
v. Gulf Coast Catering Co., 904 F.2d 290, 293 (5th Cir. 1990).
Unusual appearance alone will not suffice to preclude vessel
status, however. We have recognized “a variety of special purpose
structures, far removed from the conventional notions of ships and
seagoing barges, to be vessels.” Manuel v. P.A.W. Drilling & Well
Service, Inc. 135 F.3d 344, 348 (5th Cir. 1998). Fields argues
that the Neptune Spar is such a specialized structure, and thus,
interpreting all facts in his favor, must be viewed as a vessel.
Defendants argue, however, that the Neptune Spar can only be
characterized as a work platform under our precedent, and thus
that the Neptune Spar was a vessel or even mention it. However,
the undisputed evidence establishes that Rig 10 was nothing more
than a collection of several separate items of Pool’s drilling
equipment used by it to provide workover and drilling operations on
offshore platforms, and which had, prior to Fields’ injury, been
transported to and assembled on the Neptune Spar. Fields was
injured while on the Neptune Spar utilizing this assembled
equipment. Rig 10 does not even float and cannot move on its own,
and it is obviously not a vessel. Fields’ only argument on appeal
is that the Neptune Spar is a vessel and furnishes the basis for
his claim of seaman status.
8
escapes vessel classification.
Courts have long recognized a distinction between “work
platforms” that are designed for primarily stationary residence and
true vessels. See Cope v. Vallette Dry-Dock Co., 7 S.Ct. 336
(1887) (floating dry dock is not a vessel). Looking to the
language of the statute, we have consistently defined vessel status
in reference to the importance of transportation as the craft’s
purpose. Manuel, 135 F.3d at 348. In particular, we have focused
on three factors when trying to determine whether a structure is a
work platform beyond the realm of the Jones Act. First, we ask
whether the structure was constructed to serve primarily as a work
platform. Second, we look to whether or not the structure was
moored or otherwise secured at the time of the accident. Lastly,
we attempt to ascertain whether the transportation function of the
structure went beyond theoretical mobility and occasional
incidental movement. See Burchett, 48 F.3d at 176.
In applying the three-factor test of work-platform status to
the Neptune Spar, it becomes apparent that it cannot be a vessel.
As the defendants’ affidavits indicated, there are no plans to even
consider moving the Neptune Spar until the current field is
exhausted. While nothing can ever be certain in the petroleum
industry, the unchallenged prediction of defendants is that the
field will remain productive for the next fifteen years. This
distinguishes the Neptune Spar from the types of specialized mobile
9
drilling craft that we have previously classified as vessels. As
we have taken care to point out, while such drilling craft may stay
on a particular site, they always move on to the next location when
their work is done. See Manuel, 135 F.3d at 346 (noting that
drilling vessel had been deployed at nineteen different sites over
the course of two years); Columb v. Texaco, Inc., 736 F.2d 218, 221
(5th Cir. 1984) (“highly mobile” submersible drilling barge was
“routinely” refloated and moved to the next location). See also
Blanchard v. Engine and Gas Compressor Services, Inc., 575 F.2d
1140, 1143 (5th Cir. 1978) (distinguishing work platform from
drilling barge rigs because there was no intention to move
structures “on a regular basis, as is done with submersible
drilling rigs”). Unlike these vessels, the Neptune Spar is
designed not only to discover and open a field, but also to exploit
it—a goal that requires considerably greater commitment to a
particular location. Given these undisputed facts, it would seem
readily apparent that the primary, indeed only, purpose of the
Neptune Spar is to serve as a work platform in a specific, fixed
location for the foreseeable future.
The work platform status of the Neptune Spar is reinforced by
reference to the second factor. The Neptune Spar was not only
secured to the ocean floor at the time of the accident, it was
secured using an elaborate system that guarantees movement will be
a difficult and expensive undertaking. We are not talking about a
10
case in which a structure merely rests on the bottom or is secured
by a run-of-the-mill anchor. Here, the defendants have at
presumably considerable expense sunk massive (180 foot) pilings
into the ocean floor, and attached the spar to these pilings by
means of similarly impressive chain lines. And like its sibling
conventional fixed production platforms, the Neptune Spar is
further anchored in position by the underwater infrastructure of
extraction and exportation pipes that transport the petroleum from
wellhead to the platform and from the platform to the shore. In
this case, the infrastructure consists of two eight-inch pipelines
and seven nine-and-a-half-inch casing risers. This distinguishes
it from other structures whose commitment to a particular location
is less firmly evidenced by the strength of their physical
attachment. Cf. Hicks v. Ocean Drilling and Exploration Co., 512
F.2d 817, 823-24 (5th Cir. 1975) (evidence sufficient to sustain
jury finding that submersible petroleum storage barge sunk to the
bottom and then connected to nearby platform by pipe and catwalk,
but not in any way affixed into seabed, was a vessel)4 with
4
In Hicks, the structure was sunk by the intake of easily-
dischargeable water ballast and lacked secure purchase on the sea
floor. Its owners were also somewhat vague about their future
plans to possibly move the structure, admitting at one point that
such a move had been considered. Insofar as the first prong of the
work-platform test is concerned, the indeterminacy of the owners’
intentions in Hicks serves to distinguish it from the case before
us. We also note that two cases have explicitly recognized the
narrowing of Hicks. See Johnson v. Odeco Oil and Gas, 864 F.2d 40,
43 (5th Cir. 1989) (“Hicks is no longer the controlling standard”);
Gremillion, 904 F.2d at 294.
11
Blanchard, 575 F.2d at 1143 (5th Cir. 1978) (compressor building
mounted on submersible barge was distinguishable from structure in
Hicks because barge was anchored with steel cables attached to
fixed pilings); Hemba v. Freeport McMoran Energy Partners, Ltd.,
811 F.2d 276, 278 (5th Cir. 1987) (rig attached by pilings driven
two hundred feet into the seabed was not a vessel).
Any lingering doubt would seemingly be eradicated by
examination of the third factor. While the Neptune Spar remains in
its current position, it will have extremely limited and purely
incidental mobility. According to the defendants’ unchallenged
affidavits, the Neptune Spar can be moved by tightening and
slackening the chain lines connected to the pilings. This
procedure is used to place the structure over one of the site’s
seven closely packed wellheads to perform needed work. Because of
the location of the pilings, however, this movement is limited to
250 feet in any direction. This tightly-constrained range of
motion is not inconsistent with work platform status. See
Burchett, 48 F.3d at 177-78 (loading barge was a work platform
despite the fact it was regularly moved to align itself with boat
receiving goods); Cook v. Belden Concrete Products, Inc., 472 F.2d
999, 1002 (5th Cir. 1973) (construction barge that was regularly
towed into open water to launch completed craft was not a vessel).
While there remains some theoretical possibility of more lengthy
movement when the current field is exhausted, the mere possibility
12
of movement so many years hence cannot render irrelevant the
structure’s current and long-term immobility.
Under the three-prong test of work-platform status, then, the
Neptune Spar is clearly not a vessel. While we have also
referenced various other factors that might guide the inquiry into
vessel status,5 we have held that in work platform cases resort to
such an analysis is unnecessary if the three major factors indicate
that the structure is not a vessel. See Burchett, 48 F.3d at 177
(additional factors are secondary and useful only in determining
close cases). As we have noted, fixed offshore oil
platforms—which obviously are not vessels, see Rodrigue v. Aetna
Casualty and Surety Co., 89 S.Ct. 1835, 1840-43 (1968) (“man-made
islands” not subject to admiralty law)—contain some of these
additional factors such as lifeboats and crew quarters. See
Johnson, 864 F.2d at 43 (noting factors could not be determinative
since “they routinely exist on structures, such as production
platforms, that are not vessels”). Application of these factors is
unnecessary in this case.
Faced with the above analysis, Fields largely relies on two
points. The first is the payment of maintenance to Fields by Pool
5
The most comprehensive enunciation of these factors is 1)
intention to move on a regular basis; 2) ability of submerged
structure to be refloated; 3) the length of time the structure has
remained at its current location; 4) the presence of navigational
aids; 5) a raked bow; 6) life-boats and rescue equipment; 7) bilge-
pumps; 8) crew-quarters; 9) registration as a vessel with the Coast
Guard. See Johnson, 864 F.2d at 43.
13
and statements by employees of Pool’s adjusters. Maintenance is a
seaman’s remedy, and in special circumstances the payment of
maintenance may properly be admitted as evidence of seaman status.
See Savoie v. Otto Candies, Inc., 692 F.2d 363, 367-368 (5th Cir.
1982).6 No such circumstances are present here. Moreover, the
payment of maintenance is at most only one factor out of many, see
id., and cannot by itself justify remand given the clarity of the
Neptune Spar’s work platform status. This is especially so since
the decision to pay maintenance was made by Pool, not Oryx. Pool
does not own or run the Neptune Spar, and whatever inference might
theoretically have arisen had the owner Oryx—presumably intimately
familiar with the nature and purpose of its own
structure—designated maintenance as a remedy is greatly weakened
here. The fact that employees of Pool may have implicitly
classified the Neptune Spar as a vessel is of marginal significance
at the very best.
6
In Savoie, the plaintiff had worked as a deckhand on the
defendant employer’s vessel on October 21, 1979, and then worked on
his employer’s duck blinds on shore until some seven days later
when he was injured while so engaged. The issue was whether at the
time of the injury he was still a member of the vessel’s crew. The
defendant asserted he was not as it had “discharged” him from the
vessel. We held that the defendant’s payment of maintenance was
admissible to show that the “discharge” was not “intended to fully
terminate Savoie as a Candies seaman, as opposed to being merely a
routine formality when a seaman was temporarily rotated off the
ship and expected to soon return to his duties there in accordance
with normal practice” and that the maintenance “payments tended to
show that Candies regarded Savoie as being a seaman at the time of
the accident, notwithstanding his prior ‘discharge.’” Id. at 367.
No such special relevance is present here.
14
Fields also complains that the district court denied him an
adequate opportunity to respond to defendants’ arguments prior to
its determination that lack of vessel status precluded remand, and
compounded this error by refusing to reconsider that determination
in light of new evidence he presented in his opposition to summary
judgment. In his initial motion for remand, Fields did not submit
any evidence indicating that the Neptune Spar might be a vessel
other than the payment of maintenance and statements by employees
of Pool’s adjusters. In their response, defendants attached
affidavits from employees of Oryx which clearly establish that the
Neptune Spar is not a vessel. Prior to the previously scheduled
hearing date on the motion to remand, Fields did not either submit
a response to defendants’ arguments or request more time to do so.
On the afternoon of the day the district court denied the motion to
remand, Fields requested an extension, which was denied as moot.
Fields later filed a motion for reconsideration, and also
included as exhibits to his motion in opposition to Pool’s motion
for summary judgment a variety of print outs—not in proper
affidavit form or appropriately authenticated—assertedly taken from
the Internet and from the petroleum industry press in order to
challenge the lower court’s denial of remand. In granting summary
judgment for Pool, the district court refused to reconsider its
prior rejection of vessel status in light of this material. Fields
concedes that these determinations by the district court must be
15
reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. Given the fact
that the only evidence Fields has been able to unearth up to this
point was publicly available and could have been attached to the
initial motion to remand or proffered in the wake of defendants’
response to that motion, we cannot say that the district court
abused its discretion in refusing to consider this tardily and
improperly presented material.7
The district court thus properly determined that, as a matter
of law, the Neptune Spar is not a vessel. The denial of the motion
to remand and the subsequent grant of summary judgment in favor of
Pool was thus proper.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is
7
In any case, the material hardly advances Fields’ cause. It
confirms that the Neptune Spar will remain at its present location
until the field is exhausted (some fifteen or more years)—the chief
factor precluding vessel status. It also indicates that the Neptune
Spar was transported to its current location in two pieces strapped
aboard a heavy lift ship and assembled on site, a strong indication
that long distance movement of the assembled spar is a difficult
undertaking. Fields also makes a perfunctory challenge to the
district court’s denial of his motion (filed some three weeks after
his notice of appeal) to supplement the record with material not
theretofore filed with or otherwise before the district court.
Fields failed to enunciate a specific statement of the reasons that
required supplementation. As the district court noted, he thus
failed to comply with Local Rule 26.5.1(e) of the Eastern District
of Louisiana. The denial of the motion was not an abuse of
discretion.
16
AFFIRMED.
17