Title: Rule B: The New Plan A
1Rule B The New Plan A
- An Overview of the Rule and
- Recent Developments Concerning Maritime
Attachment in New York - Larry Kahn
- Freehill Hogan Mahar
Stephenson Harwood One St. Pauls
Churchyard London EC4M 8SH July 16, 2008
2Outline
- I Maritime Attachment Generally
- II Fighting the Attachment Remedy Can an
attachment be vacated? - III Avoiding Attachment
- IV Counter-security Is the Best Defense a
Strong Offense? - V Q A
3Maritime Attachment
- What is it and where did it come from?
- How do I use Rule B?
- When is an attachment appropriate?
- Why is New York the focus of maritime attachment?
4Origin of the Rule
5Common Problems Affect the Bottom Line
- Unpaid or Partially Paid Freight
- Unpaid or Partially Paid Charter Hire
- Unpaid Damage to Ships or Cargo
- Unpaid Judgments and Awards
- Damages from Bill of Lading Fraud
- Difficulties in collection often result in loss,
- even when the claim is meritorious.
6Needs of Commerce
- For commerce to move, a credit facility was
needed that would encourage loans to visiting
ships - Creditors need security, or at least a means of
obtaining security for claims
7Maritime Arrest and Attachment
- Maritime Arrest and Attachment Answered the Need
by Allowing Creditors to Restrain Mobile Property
to Enforce Maritime Claims
8How is a Creditor to Evaluate Which Claims to
Attempt to Collect?
- Agreement in advance to a contractual dispute
resolution clause that specifies the forum and
law to be applied is helpful, but in the end
provides only part of the answer. - This is because the creditor will be able to take
advice from counsel as to whether its claim is
likely to see a successful result on the law in
the chosen forum, but ordinarily counsel will not
be in a position to predict whether the creditor
will actually be able to collect on a resulting
award or judgment. - When it comes to the bottom line, a successful
award or judgment is not worth the paper it is
printed on if it is uncollectible.
9How is a Creditor to Evaluate Which Claims to
Attempt to Collect?
- Pursuit of claims only against large,
well-established companies can be impractical
often, more is owed (collectively) by smaller
companies - Pursuit of claims only against small companies
can be difficult, because available assets are
sometimes hard to trace, and can be even harder
to collect
10How is a Creditor to Evaluate Which Claims to
Attempt to Collect?
- Ultimately, the best claims to pursue are those
that can be secured (or at least partially
secured) in advance. - Optimally, the method used to obtain security
needs to be quick, inexpensive, and dependable.
11Vessel Arrest
- Vessel arrest permits a creditor to cause an
alleged debtors ship to be restrained in order
to secure a maritime claim that gives rise to a
lien.
12Problems with Vessel Arrest
- The debtor needs to have ownership interest in a
vessel - The vessel needs to be in the district in which
the arrest is sought - The vessel needs to be involved in the claim
sister ship arrests are not permitted in the U.S. - Only certain types of maritime claims give rise
to maritime liens which permit vessel arrest - Vessel arrest requires an advance sum (which
varies from district to district), paid to the
Marshal in order to actually arrest the vessel
13Problems with Vessel Arrest (contd)
- If substitute security is not provided, sale of
the ship at auction may yield unsatisfactory
results - All creditors (including higher-ranking
creditors) must be notified of the sale, and they
will take from the proceeds ahead of the claimant - Auction costs, which include advertising, can be
high, and are deducted from the sale price - A fire sale result not fair market value is
often the best case - Auction and post-auction court proceedings
(confirming the sale) take time and add to
essentially unrecoverable legal costs
14Maritime Attachment Rule B
- Rule B can be used against almost any debtor not
found in the district - The debtor need only have an identifiable
interest in property in the district - The property to be attached need not have any
connection to the claim - Rule B can be used with respect to almost any
maritime claim - Other creditors need not be notified
- The procedure is quick, inexpensive, and reliable
15What Does Rule B Provide?
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
16Analysis of the Rule
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- In an in personam action
- This requirement mandates that the action must be
one that is directly against the person (or
business)
17Analysis of the Rule (contd)
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- If a defendant is not found within the district
- To be found for purposes of Rule B requires a
2-step analysis - Can the defendant be personally served with
process in the district? - Is the defendant doing business within the
district in terms of minimum contacts? - Both answers must yes for the defendant to be
found
18Analysis of the Rule (contd)
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- when a verified complaint praying for attachment
and the affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are
filed - Timing for a determination of when the defendant
may be found is based on the commencement of
the action, not some earlier (or later) point.
19Analysis of the Rule (contd)
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- a verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property - Essentially, all property is restrainable under
this formulation. In the words of the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals, the formulation is like
the Makers Creed all things seen and unseen. - For historic reasons, though, real property is
not restrainable.
20Analysis of the Rule (contd)
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- - up to the amount sued for -
- This explains the quantum that may be sought in
an attachment, which most judges in the Southern
District of New York take literally (though some
judges interpret this phrase as meaning only the
principal claim amount sought without any
interest or costs component).
21Analysis of the Rule (contd)
- Rule B(1)(a) In an in personam action If a
defendant is not found within the district when a
verified complaint praying for attachment and the
affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
verified complaint may contain a prayer for
process to attach the defendants tangible or
intangible personal property up to the amount
sued for in the hands of garnishees named in
the process.
- in the hands of garnishees named in the process.
- For property to be restrained, it must actually
be in the hands of a garnishee who is named in
the process (writ).
22When is an attachment appropriate?
- The remedy may be used in aid of either domestic
or foreign cases (litigation or arbitration), but
may only be used in conjunction with ripe
maritime claims.
23What Types of Claims are Maritime?
- The term is, surprisingly perhaps, not
well-defined. Essentially, the question lies
with the Court as to whether the claim seems
salty enough. This policy has led to some
peculiar results.
24Maritime v. Non-Maritime Claims
- Contract to repair a vessel
- Demurrage claims in charter parties
- Torts occurring at sea and affecting ships in
navigation - A claim that is maritime in the place where the
merits are to be heard, even if not in America
- Contract to build a vessel
- Demurrage claims in (certain) sales contracts
- Torts occurring on land regardless of impact on
ships at sea - A claim that is maritime in America, even if not
in the place where the merits are to be heard
25Possible Effect of Kirby
- The Courts had long held that the boundaries of
maritime tort jurisdiction were well-defined, but
that the boundaries of maritime contract
jurisdiction were less clear. -
- In 2004, however, in Norfolk Southern Ry. v.
James N. Kirby Pty. Ltd., the U.S. Supreme Court
significantly expanded the concept of maritime
jurisdiction. Even though the loss in that case,
under a multimodal b/l was land based and the
carriage involved significant inland rail
carriage in addition to the ocean voyage, the
court nonetheless found maritime jurisdiction to
be present. The key, the Supreme Court found,
was whether the principal objective of the
contract was maritime commerce.
26Kirbys Development
- Following the Supreme Courts lead in Kirby, the
11th Circuit Court of Appeals held that a sexual
assault on land by an off-duty crewmember against
a cruise ship passenger gave rise to admiralty
tort jurisdiction. Doe v. Celebrity Cruises,
Inc. - Legal scholars now agree that courts have
continued to expand admiralty jurisdiction where
changes in the industry merit those expansions
and where broadened definitions will provide
greater recourse to justice for individuals who
participate in the industry.
27Ripeness and Timing
- Only a ripe maritime claim is securable under
Rule B - A claim is ripe if it is direct and in personam
against the defendant. - Contingent indemnity claims are generally found
unripe. - Subject to the Courts discretion, a Contingent
indemnity claim may be ripe enough for an
attachment, however if - The plaintiff itself has already been sued and/or
- The plaintiff itself has already provided
security to another party in the chain
28Timing
- Under the Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. 8), in a
case otherwise justiciable in admiralty, then
notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary,
the party claiming to be aggrieved may begin his
proceeding hereunder by libel and seizure of the
vessel or other property of the other party
according to the usual course of admiralty
proceedings.
29Timing
- No similar provision of the U.S. Code exists to
allow an attachment in aid of a foreign or
domestic litigation, but the Courts have (thus
far) found no reason to give litigants fewer
rights than those who have chosen to arbitrate.
30The time to seek an attachment is at or before
the commencement of proceedings
31Not the time to be sporting!
- In a recent case in which London arbitration
proceedings had already begun, the claimant
became concerned that the respondent would be
unable to pay the award and asked for security. - Over the period of about two months, the parties
negotiated over security, including quantum,
terms and conditions of an escrow, and other
matters.
32In the meanwhile
33Back in New York, the respondent created a bona
fide business presence in New York, thereby
rendering itself found within the district.
34Negotiations thereafter (predictably, perhaps)
broke off without any posting of security.
35By the time New York counsel were asked to seek
security pursuant to Rule B, the defendant was
already found in New York and an attachment was
precluded.
36The Geographical Focus
- Maritime attachment practice in the United States
is pursuant to Supplemental Rule B, which is
applicable in every district court nationwide. - New York, however, is the undeniable epicenter of
maritime attachment practice. Why is this?
37(No Transcript)
38International wire transfers of U.S. dollars pass
through New York
- C Transport Panamax Ltd. v. Pacific Ocean
Resources Ltd., 06 CIV 11413 (RJH) (unreported). - In C Transport, plaintiff commenced a Rule B
action against defendant and a wire transfer was
restrained while en route from a non-partys
Chinese Bank to the defendants Swiss Bank. The
wire instructions specified that the funds were
to be wired through the Swiss Banks US dollar
account in Connecticut.
39C Transport
- In the motion to vacate the attachment on the
basis that the funds were restrained outside of
the district (in Connecticut), the court
undertook an analysis of the banking system,
which included testimony from UBS Bank. -
40C Transport Findings
- The Court found that the subject wire, like all
US dollar wire transfers, passed through CHIPS
(Clearing House Interbank Payment System), which
is physically located at the Federal Reserve Bank
in New York. - While those funds were temporarily at the Fed en
route to Connecticut, they became subject to the
jurisdiction of the New York Court Order
Authorizing the attachment. - Since UBS Bank maintained an office in New York,
and had been served with the writ at its New York
location, it was subject to the New York Court
Order Authorizing the attachment.
41C Transport Conclusion
- As a result, the plaintiffs attachment was
maintained and no court has since questioned the
correctness of the C Transport decision. - And the parties counsel each withdrew the
protective suits they had filed in Connecticut.
42Fighting Attachment - Vacature
43Bases for Opposing an Attachment
- A party whose property has been restrained may
seek a prompt post-attachment hearing pursuant to
Rule E(4)(f) at which the validity of the
attachment may be tested. - Local Rules in New York provide that prompt
means within three court days, unless the court
directs otherwise.
44The E(4)(f) Hearing
- Rule E(4)(f) makes clear that the burden is on
the plaintiff to demonstrate why the attachment
should be maintained, otherwise the attachment is
to be vacated. - There are otherwise no set guidelines concerning
how a Rule E(4)(f) hearing is to be presented,
leaving such issues to the creativity of the
parties in presenting their positions.
45Rule E(4)(f) Hearings
- Decisions on whether to submit documents, hear
witnesses, and even to hold oral argument, are
made on a case-by-case basis pursuant to the
requests of the parties and the discretion of the
district judge.
46Rule E(4)(f) Hearings
- The primary guidance given to judges is not found
in any rule or code section, but rather in the
official commentary to the Rule, which states - Rule E(4)(f) is designed toguarantee a prompt
post-seizure hearing at which the defendant can
attack the complaint, the arrest, the security
demanded, or any other alleged deficiency in the
proceedings.
47Rule E(4)(f) Hearings
- To this we add the bases for vacature set forth
in Aqua Stoli Shipping Ltd. v. Gardner Smith Pty
Ltd., 460 F.3d 434 (2d Cir. 2006) a district
court must vacate an attachment if the plaintiff
fails to sustain his burden of showing that he
has satisfied the requirements of Rules B and
E.a district court may vacate the attachment if
the defendant shows at the Rule E hearing that 1)
the defendant is subject to suit in a convenient
adjacent jurisdiction 2) the plaintiff could
obtain in personam jurisdiction over the
defendant in the district where the plaintiff is
located or 3) the plaintiff has already obtained
sufficient security for the potential judgment,
by attachment or otherwise.
48The only rule may be that there are no rules
- Ultimately, in determining the rules to be
applied to a Rule E(4)(f) hearing, it has been
consistently held that the inherent power to
adapt an admiralty rule to the equities of a
particular situation is entrusted to the sound
discretion of the district judge sitting as an
admiralty judge. - Greenwich Marine Inc. v. S.S. ALEXANDRA, 339 F.2d
901, 905 (2d Cir. 1965).
49Avoiding Attachment How to Dodge a Bullet
50Strategy 1 Avoid restraint of your payment
- One strategy employed by those concerned about a
possible attachment is to attempt to avoid having
a payment caught. - Generally, this involves making and receiving
payments through a paying agent.
51Paying Agents
- There are problems with using paying agents,
though - 1. While you can control how payments are made
by you, you cannot control how payments are made
to you. Sometimes, your debtor will
(deliberately or inadvertently) reference the
Rule B defendants name in the wire instructions,
which will lead to restraint by the banks
interdiction software.
52Paying Agents
- 2. There may be commercial pressure to explain
why all payments are routed through a third
party, or word may get out on the street that
payments to ABC Corp. are routinely routed
through BCD Corp. If word gets out, plaintiffs
counsel will ask the Court to permit restraints
of BCD Corp. funds as funds being transferred
for or on behalf of the defendant.
53Paying Agents
- 3. Ultimately, a companys trading pattern
becomes known and funds of the paying agent will
be captured. The defendant can engage in an
endless circle of creating new paying agencies,
but this inevitably will have commercial impact
as it will become plain that the defendant is
attempting to avoid a creditor.
54Alter egos
- Many companies are part of a group of companies.
To avoid attachment of the debtor group members
property, the organization will act as a unified
whole, disregarding the debtor members
independence and conducting the debtors business
as its own or through other arms of the
organization.
55Alter egos
- Under these circumstances, U.S. law permits
restraint of an alter egos property as property
of the main defendant. The plaintiff need only
make a prima facie showing of either fraud or
domination and control. - Ulisses Shipping Corp. v. FAL Shipping Co. Ltd.,
415 F.Supp.2d 318 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).
56Alter egos
- Ultimately, alter egos become subject to
attachment in the same way as paying agents. The
fact that the alter ego may be a viable separate
entity is generally of no assistance,
particularly when the merits of the underlying
dispute are being addressed in a foreign forum.
57Alter egos
- One theory, though, that remains to be fully
explored is the extent of the application of
foreign law i.e., why should a foreign company
be subject to U.S. federal law on alter ego
liability? What if the foreign entity is
behaving in a manner consistent with its own law
but which would give rise to corporate
veil-piercing in the U.S.? - Under the right circumstances, it may be
possible to vacate an alter ego restraint.
58Strategy 2 Undermine the Rule
- The second strategy typically employed is to
undermine Rule B by disrupting the plaintiffs
ability to apply for an attachment in the first
place. - Clearly, the potential defendant cannot make its
activities giving rise to the claim
non-maritime and cannot prevent the claim from
lying in personam against it.
59Found within the District
- A potential defendant can, however, attempt to
render itself found within the district for
purposes of Rule B. - As seen above, this requires the defendants
presence in terms where it would need to be both
(a) capable of being served in the district and
(b) doing business in the district.
60Found within the District
- Many companies fearing Rule B attachment have
obtained a license to conduct business in New
York, which under well-established New York state
law means that the entity is actually conducting
business throughout the state, regardless of the
level of actual activity. Such companies
typically appoint their New York counsel as
agents for service of process, thereby
theoretically rendering themselves found.
61Found
- In the past two months, there have been six
separate decisions all finding that such
incorporation tactics will successfully preclude
attachment under Rule B. - These decisions find fault with a Magistrate
Judge decision from approximately 18 months ago
which found that a company that had done the same
thing plus had actual business contacts in the
district and was actively seeking office space in
New York was still not sufficiently found,
maintaining the Rule B attachment.
62Sidebar / Related Topic Convenient Adjacent
District
63Are the decisions correct?
- Older case law, which recalls the original
purpose of maritime attachment to allow
restraint of a foreign entitys assets within the
district so as to be able to secure a potential
judgment holds that the appointment of counsel
for the purpose of avoiding attachment is a
nullity. - Under older case law too, the business contacts
with the district must be substantial,
continuous, and likely to continue in the
future. - These requirements are not met by the paper
companies that are now routinely being
established.
64Will New York incorporation / licensure kill Rule
B?
- Likely not. As indicated, it wont be long
before a challenge arises based on the older case
law. If the older case law prevails, then the
current fad of New York incorporation / licensure
will likely fade. - Even if incorporation / licensure does preclude
Rule B attachment, actions can still be brought
in other U.S. jurisdictions where property
(likely debts) of the defendant can be found.
65Counter-security fighting back
66Counter-security
- Rules E(2) and E(7) concern counter-security.
Rule E(2) provides counter-security for certain
statutory costs (under the American Rule,
costs do not include legal fees). More
important for our purposes is Rule E(7).
67Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
68Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action - It is established that the requirement to give
security is not taken to require any degree of
voluntary giving. Restraint of property is
giving security.
69Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
- asserts a counterclaim that arises from the
transaction or occurrence that is the subject of
the original action - The counterclaim must (a) be asserted and (b)
arise from the transaction or occurrence that is
the subject of the original action. - The counterclaim need not be maritime in nature,
however, to earn counter-security. - A counterclaim that seeks damages for wrongful
restraint under Rule B does not arise from the
transaction or occurrence that is the subject of
the original action.
70Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
- a plaintiff for whose benefit the security has
been given must give security for damages
demanded in the counterclaim - Counter-security only secures damages. Whether
damages includes recoverable interest,
disbursements, costs (including fees) is a
divided issue.
71Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
- unless the court for cause shown, directs
otherwise. - Counter-security is nearly automatic and usually
can only be avoided in cases where
counter-security would be inequitable, often
based on the impecuniosity of the plaintiff (such
as an injured seaman). - For a corporation to succeed on this basis, it
must show that the counter-security demanded
would act as a bar to seeking Rule B relief in
the first instance. Though there have been
attempts, no current case has allowed such
avoidance.
72Rule E(7)
- When a person who has given security for damages
in the original action asserts a counterclaim
that arises from the transaction or occurrence
that is the subject of the original action, a
plaintiff for whose benefit the security has been
given must give security for damages demanded in
the counterclaim unless the court for cause
shown, directs otherwise. Proceedings on the
original claim must be stayed until this security
is given unless the court directs otherwise.
- Proceedings on the original claim must be stayed
until this security is given unless the court
directs otherwise. - Courts have held that even where the merits are
being decided in a foreign forum, the Court is
still within its power to enjoin the plaintiff
from proceeding until counter-security is posted.
Advancing the claim under such circumstances is
treated as contempt of court.
73Recent Decisions - Countersecurity
- Chiquita Intl Ltd. v. M/V BOSSE, 518 F.Supp.2d
589 (S.D.N.Y. 2007). - In Chiquita, plaintiff secured a Rule B against
defendant. Defendant, having a counter-claim
related to the same action, but wishing to be
able to secure interest, costs and other damages,
sought its own Rule B against plaintiff.
74Chiquita
- The Chiquita Court held that the defendant was
required to raise its request for
counter-security within the context of the
already filed action and therefore vacated the
defendants Rule B as procedurally invalid,
denying the defendant any counter-security.
75Recent Decisions - Countersecurity
- Naias Marine S.A. v. Trans Pacific Carriers Co.
Ltd., 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2438 (S.D.N.Y. Jan.
10, 2008). - In Naias, the defendant had initially commenced a
Rule B against the plaintiff. That action was
terminated when plaintiff provided full security
to Trans Pacific. Plaintiff then commenced its
own Rule B against defendant to secure a
potential costs judgment (it had no counterclaim
per se).
76Naias
- Trans Pacific successfully vacated Naias
attachment because a costs judgment would not
arise from the same transaction or occurrence
as the original action. - The Court also concluded that Naias time to seek
security for such costs was while Trans Pacifics
case was still active. Naias failure to act at
that time precluded security for such costs
(which might have been awarded had they been
requested) now.
77Recent Decisions - Countersecurity
- Bhatia Shipping and Agencies Pvt. Ltd. v. Alcobex
Metals Ltd., 07 CIV 9346 (BSJ) (S.D.N.Y. July 3,
2008) (not yet reported) - Facts Bhatia agreed to deliver Alcobexs pipes
to England. Bhatia appears to have mistakenly
delivered those pipes without surrender of
original bs/l. Alcobex was not paid and made a
demand against Bhatia. Bhatia admitted the error
and asked its underwriter to pay the claim. No
payment was made and Alcobex did not timely
advance its claim. Bhatia moved the English High
Court for declaratory judgment on time bar.
Months later, Alcobex brought its own action, in
India, for damages. The English Court granted
Bhatias action and awarded costs.
78Bhatia
- Bhatia sought to enforce its judgment via a Rule
B attachment. Funds were secured and Alcobex
moved to vacate on the following grounds - 1) Bhatia's costs judgment was not maritime
under Naias Marine - 2) Bhatia's claim was not maritime in any event
and the court lacked admiralty jurisdiction - 3) Both parties were Indian
- 4) Bhatia's English action was brought in bad
faith since Bhatia was not the injured party and
since India was a more convenient and less
expensive forum - 5) Even if admiralty jurisdiction existed, under
equitable principles, this court should vacate
the attachment and deny recognition of the
English judgment which was rendered by default
79Bhatia
- Alcobex's arguments were all rejected by the
Court. - 1) While a claim merely for costs without more
may not be maritime (Naias), a judgment by a
maritime court for money damages (to either
side), even solely for costs, is maritime. - 2) The enforcement of a foreign admiralty
judgment is an exercise of this court's admiralty
judgment (citing Victrix) - 3) The proper place to challenge jurisdiction is
not in the court where an enforcement action is
taking place (SDNY), but rather in either the
place where the court's jurisdiction is subject
to question (England) or where jurisdiction is
proper and brought in the alternative (India)
80Maritime Attachment Anything but Static
81Q A
- Larry Kahn
- Freehill Hogan Mahar, LLP
- 80 Pine Street
- New York, NY 10005
- (212) 425-1900
- (212) 425-1901
- kahn_at_freehill.com
- www.freehill.com