Vitol, S.A. v. Primerose Shipping Co. , 708 F.3d 527 ( 2013 )


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  •                         PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    VITOL, S.A.,                            
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    PRIMEROSE SHIPPING COMPANY LTD;
    SPARTACUS NAVIGATION
    CORPORATION,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    CAPRI MARINE, LTD; STARLADY
    MARINE LTD; LASSI SHIPPING
    COMPANY LTD; OCEAN CARRIER                 No. 11-1900
    MARITIME CORPORATION; DEEP BLUE
    MARITIME, S.A.; AMARILIS SHIPPING
    COMPANY; AURORA MARITIME;
    GERASSIMOS KALOGERATOS, a/k/a
    Gerrassimos Kalagiratos, a/k/a
    Gerassimos Kalogiratos; IOANNIS "
    JOHN " KALOGERATOS, a/k/a Ioannis
    "John" Kalagiratos, a/k/a Ioannis
    "John" Kalogiratos; MARIA
    VIAGGINI; NIKOLAOS KOUTSOKOSTAS,
    Defendants,
    
    2              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    v.                   
    INCHCAPE SHIPPING SERVICES; JOHN
    S. CONNOR, INCORPORATED,             
    Garnishees.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Marvin J. Garbis, Senior District Judge.
    (1:09-cv-03430-MJG)
    Argued: September 20, 2012
    Decided: February 8, 2013
    Before MOTZ, AGEE, and THACKER, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Agee wrote the opin-
    ion, in which Judge Motz and Judge Thacker joined.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Lawrence Jay Kahn, FREEHILL, HOGAN &
    MAHAR, New York, New York, for Appellant. Patrick F.
    Lennon, LENNON MURPHY CAULFIELD & PHILLIPS,
    LLC, New York, New York, for Appellees. ON BRIEF:
    Alexander M. Giles, SEMMES, BOWEN & SEMMES, Balti-
    more, Maryland, for Appellant. Nancy R. Siegel, LENNON
    MURPHY CAULFIELD & PHILLIPS, LLC, New York,
    New York; Geoffrey S. Tobias, OBER, KALER, GRIMES &
    SHRIVER, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees.
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.              3
    OPINION
    AGEE, Circuit Judge:
    Vitol, S.A. ("Vitol") brought the underlying action in the
    district court against Spartacus Navigation Corp.
    ("Spartacus")     and     Primerose    Shipping     Company
    ("Primerose") (collectively "S&P") seeking to "pierce the cor-
    porate veil" and enforce a judgment against S&P it had previ-
    ously obtained against Capri Marine, Ltd. ("Capri Marine").
    After determining that its exercise of admiralty jurisdiction
    was proper, the district court granted motions to dismiss and
    to vacate attachment filed by S&P. For the reasons stated
    below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I.
    Background and Proceedings Below
    In September 2000, the vessel ALAMBRA was involved in
    a marine pollution incident ("the Oil Spill") while in port in
    the country of Estonia. The ALAMBRA was owned by Capri
    Marine and chartered by Vitol at the time of the Oil Spill.
    Vitol brought suit against Capri Marine in the English High
    Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, Commercial Court,
    alleging that Capri Marine breached certain warrantees of sea-
    worthiness resulting in the Oil Spill and resulting damages.
    Vitol prevailed in the English court, and obtained a judgment
    in 2005 against Capri Marine in the amount of $6.1 million
    plus costs and interest ("the English Judgment"). The English
    Judgment remains unpaid and now totals over $9 million with
    accrued interest. During the English litigation, the ALAM-
    BRA was sold for scrap by Capri Marine to Aurora Maritime
    ("Aurora") for approximately $2 million.
    In 2009, Vitol filed a verified complaint (the "Verified
    Complaint") against S&P in United States District Court for
    the District of Maryland alleging that S&P (as well as other
    4                  VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    named but not joined defendants)1 were alter egos of Capri
    Marine, thereby seeking to enforce the English Judgment
    against S&P. In conjunction with its Verified Complaint,
    Vitol filed a motion, pursuant to Rule B(1)(a) of the Supple-
    mental Rules for Admiralty or Maritime Claims and Asset
    Forfeiture Actions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
    (the "Supplemental Rules"), requesting an ex parte order for
    issuance of process of maritime attachment, and prayed that
    the district court attach the vessel M/V THOR (then docked
    at Baltimore, Maryland), owned by Spartacus.2
    The district court granted the motion and issued an ex parte
    order attaching the THOR. Shortly thereafter S&P entered a
    restricted appearance in the district court, posted a security
    bond, and reached a stipulation for the THOR’s release by
    paying approximately $9 million into the district court as sub-
    stitute collateral for the THOR (the "THOR Substitute Collat-
    eral").3 Subsequently, S&P moved to vacate the attachment,
    pursuant to Supplemental Rule E, and to dismiss the Verified
    Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of
    Civil Procedure.
    By order entered February 23, 2010, the district court
    granted the motions to vacate the attachment and dismiss the
    Verified Complaint (the "2010 Order"). In the 2010 Order, the
    district court addressed its jurisdiction over the action, as S&P
    contended that Vitol failed to state an admiralty claim and
    1
    Capri Marine, Gerassimos Kaligaratos, and other related entities were
    named as defendants in Vitol’s alter ego suit against S&P. These defen-
    dants, however, have not been served, were not parties to the district court
    proceedings, and are not parties to this appeal.
    2
    Vitol sought Supplemental Rule B attachment of the THOR to initiate
    the underlying quasi in rem action against the defendants, S&P, who could
    not be found in the District of Maryland. See Fed. R. Civ. P. Adm. Supp.
    R. B(1)(a).
    3
    Although the THOR is owned by Spartacus, it is managed by
    Primerose as a part of the Primerose fleet.
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                5
    therefore the district court lacked jurisdiction over the pro-
    ceedings.
    The district court determined that the action filed by Vitol
    sounded in admiralty even though the English Judgment was
    issued by the Commercial Court of the English High Court of
    Justice, not the English Admiralty court. The district court
    based its ruling on expert witness declarations stating that the
    underlying English action (relating to the Oil Spill) sounded
    in admiralty under English law, and could have been brought
    either in the Commercial or Admiralty court in England. On
    that basis, the court concluded Vitol’s choice of forum in
    England was not dispositive for purposes of admiralty-based
    jurisdiction.
    Having concluded it possessed competent jurisdiction in
    admiralty over the proceeding, the district court then held that
    Vitol had failed to state a claim upon which relief may be
    granted, and dismissed the Verified Complaint pursuant to
    Rule 12(b)(6). In early 2011, however, the district court
    granted Vitol leave to amend and Vitol filed an amended veri-
    fied complaint (the "Amended Verified Complaint"), and
    stayed release of the THOR’s Substitute Collateral. The
    Amended Verified Complaint contains the allegations rele-
    vant to this appeal.
    Although the Amended Verified Complaint contains some
    thirty pages of detailed allegations related to Vitol’s alter ego
    claim against S&P, the gravamen of that claim can be distilled
    into a short summary: Capri Marine is owned by Starlady
    Marine Ltd. ("Starlady"), an entity that is in turn controlled by
    Gerassimos and Ionnas Kalogiratos. Aurora, the company to
    which the ALAMBRA was sold for scrap, is actually a
    dummy corporation owned and operated as part of the
    Kalogiratos Group—a group of related shipping entities under
    the control of the Kalogiratos family. After the ALAMBRA
    was sold to Aurora, Aurora sold the ALAMBRA to a third
    party (for approximately $3 million), and the proceeds from
    6               VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    the sale were used to pay down one of Capri Marine’s loans,
    but not paid towards the Oil Spill damages. Primerose, which
    is owned by Nicholas Velliades (a non-party), was allegedly
    established with the remaining proceeds of the ALAMBRA
    sale. Velliades, the nominal principle of the Primerose fleet,
    is alleged to be a mere puppet of Gerassimos Kalogiratos
    ("Gerassimos"). Primerose uses the office facilities of Star-
    lady without charge, engages in extensive comingling of
    funds and makes undocumented, uncollateralized, and unre-
    paid loans to Starlady or members of the Starlady fleet. In
    addition, Spartacus, which is also nominally controlled by
    Velliades, also shares office facilities with Primerose and
    Starlady, and put up no funds to secure the release of the
    THOR from attachment. Rather, the THOR Substitute Collat-
    eral was provided by Primerose.
    S&P again moved to vacate the attachment and dismiss the
    Amended Verified Complaint. In an August, 22, 2011 order
    (the "2011 Order"), the district court granted both motions,
    although it did conclude that Vitol had alleged sufficient facts
    to support a reasonable belief that Capri Marine is an alter ego
    of Gerassimos. The court pointed to allegations that Capri
    Marine was substantially undercapitalized at the time of the
    Oil Spill, that Capri Marine did not hold business meetings or
    keep corporate minutes, and that Gerassimos orchestrated the
    sale of the ALAMBRA to Aurora "for less than fair market
    value with the intent to defraud Capri [Marine]’s creditors,
    including [Vitol]." (J.A. 1563).
    The court went on to conclude, however, that Vitol had
    failed to allege with sufficient particularity in the Amended
    Verified Complaint that S&P were alter egos of either Geras-
    simos or Capri Marine. The court discussed allegations made
    by Vitol that Gerassimos, not Velliades, was the "real" owner
    of Primerose (and related entities) and concluded that the alle-
    gations demonstrated only that Velliades’ companies have a
    close relationship with Gerassimos’ companies, but a close
    relationship is not sufficient as a matter of law to prove alter
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                7
    ego status. Further, the court found that dividends paid to the
    Kalogiratos family from their interest in Deep Blue Maritime
    S.A. ("Deep Blue") (another company principally owned by
    Velliades) did not "directly relate to Primerose or Spartacus
    and[ ]therefore [are] not probative as to whether Primerose or
    Spartacus are alter egos of Gerassimos." (J.A. 1569).
    Because the Amended Verified Complaint failed to make
    a plausible allegation with sufficiently particularized facts (in
    accordance with Supplemental Rules B and E) that S&P are
    alter egos of Capri Marine, the district court found no basis
    for the further attachment of the THOR’s Substitute Collateral
    and vacated the attachment. The court also found that the alle-
    gations were insufficient to show a plausible basis for relief
    pursuant to Rules 8 and 12, and granted the motion to dismiss
    the Amended Verified Complaint.
    Vitol noted a timely appeal, posted a supersedeas bond, and
    the district court has stayed the order vacating the attachment
    of the THOR’s Substitute Collateral pending appeal. We have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    On appeal, Vitol claims that the district court erred in
    vacating the attachment of the THOR and dismissing Vitol’s
    Amended Verified Complaint for failure to state a claim. S&P
    respond that the district court was without jurisdiction to
    entertain the complaint in the first instance, and we should
    affirm the judgment in their favor on that ground. Alterna-
    tively, S&P argue that should the jurisdictional ruling be
    affirmed, the district court correctly held that Vitol’s plead-
    ings fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. We
    address the jurisdictional matter first, as we must verify juris-
    diction in order to proceed. See Sucampo Pharms., Inc. v.
    Astellas Pharma, Inc., 
    471 F.3d 544
    , 548 (jurisdiction is a
    "threshold" issue that must be resolved prior to resolving "an
    issue relating to the merits of the dispute, such as failure to
    state a claim").
    8               VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    II.   Jurisdiction
    An issue of the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction is
    a question of law that the Court reviews de novo. See North
    Carolina ex rel. Cooper v. Tenn. Valley Auth., 
    515 F.3d 344
    ,
    347 n.1 (4th Cir. 2008).
    S&P assert that the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction
    over this case was improper for two reasons. First, S&P con-
    tend the English Judgment is not an admiralty decree, and
    thus the district court here, sitting only in admiralty, lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction. Second, even if the district court
    had admiralty jurisdiction, S&P argue that Supplemental Rule
    B is a "pre-judgment" remedy only and could not be used to
    secure the appearance of a party once the English Judgment
    had been entered. We disagree with S&P’s contentions and
    hold the district court did not err in its determination of juris-
    diction.
    A.   Admiralty Jurisdiction
    Congress has vested the district courts with, inter alia, orig-
    inal jurisdiction over "[a]ny civil case of admiralty or mari-
    time jurisdiction." 
    28 U.S.C. § 1333
    . Central to this appeal,
    then, is the question of whether Vitol’s Amended Verified
    Complaint sounds in admiralty so as to invoke the district
    court’s admiralty jurisdiction under § 1333.
    It is well recognized that federal courts in the United States
    possess jurisdiction in admiralty over claims to enforce a for-
    eign admiralty judgment. See, e.g., 1 Benedict on Admiralty
    § 106 ("[A]dmiralty jurisdiction in the United States may be
    broadly stated as extending to . . . any claim to enforce a judg-
    ment of a foreign admiralty court."). Even in the earliest days
    of the Republic, the Supreme Court confirmed that the courts
    of the United States possess jurisdiction to recognize the
    admiralty decrees of foreign admiralty courts. See Penhallow
    v. Doane’s Adm’rs, 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) 53, 97 (1795) (Iredell, J.)
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.              9
    ("It was clearly shown at the bar, that a Court of Admiralty,
    in one nation, can carry into effect the determination of the
    [C]ourt of Admiralty of another.").
    American courts have long and consistently held that admi-
    ralty jurisdiction was well-founded to enforce the judgments
    of foreign admiralty courts. See, e.g., Otis v. The Rio Grande,
    
    18 F. Cas. 902
    , 903 (C.C.D. La. 1872) (No. 10,613), aff’d 
    90 U.S. 458
     (1874) ("This court is in duty bound to carry into
    effect the sentences and decrees, not only of other federal
    courts, but even of the admiralty courts of foreign countries
    . . . ."); The Jerusalem, 
    13 F. Cas. 559
    , 563 (C.C.D. Ma. 1814)
    (No. 7,293) (admiralty court "will enforce a foreign maritime
    judgment between foreigners, where either the property or the
    person is within its jurisdiction"); Int’l Sea Food Ltd. v. M/V
    Campeche, 
    566 F.2d 482
    , 485 (5th Cir. 1978) (citing The
    Centurion, 
    5 F. Cas. 369
    , 370 (No. 2,554) (D. Me. 1839))
    ("[A]n admiralty court has jurisdiction to enforce any judg-
    ment of another admiralty court . . . .").
    While acknowledging this established precedent, S&P
    assert that it is inapplicable here because the English Judg-
    ment is not an "admiralty judgment" so as to be entitled to
    recognition by the admiralty courts of the United States. This
    is so, S&P argue, for two reasons. First, the Commercial
    Court (rather than the Admiralty Court) of the English High
    Court of Justice, Queen’s Bench Division, issued the English
    Judgment. Second, in any event, the English Judgment, hav-
    ing been reduced to a judgment debt, is now merely a mone-
    tary award that itself lacks any maritime character.
    B.   Choice of English Forum
    The thrust of S&P’s first argument is that because Vitol
    elected to pursue legal action against Capri Marine in the
    Commercial Court of the English High Court of Justice, rather
    than the Admiralty Court, the English Judgment was not an
    10              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    admiralty judgment and therefore no admiralty jurisdiction
    can exist in the case at bar. We do not agree.
    Vitol and S&P proffered declarations to the district court
    from their respective experts on English law. Those experts
    agreed that the type of maritime claim brought by Vitol
    against Capri Marine could have been brought in either the
    Commercial Court or the Admiralty Court. Julia Dias, Sparta-
    cus’ own expert, averred that there is a "considerable overlap
    between admiralty claims falling within the Admiralty juris-
    diction of the High Court . . . on the one hand, and commer-
    cial claims on the other." (J.A. 136-37). Dias went on to state
    that "[Vitol] properly and legitimately elected to commence
    proceedings and pursue its claim in the Commercial Court
    rather than the Admiralty Court as it was entitled to do[,]" and
    noted that "it is entirely commonplace in my experience for
    claims such as Vitol’s which involve issues of unseaworthi-
    ness to be brought in and heard by the Commercial Court."
    (J.A. 138). Finally, Dias stated that "[h]ad Vitol elected to
    bring the claim in the Admiralty Court, it would almost cer-
    tainly have proceeded and been handled in much the same
    way as it actually was." (Id.).
    Vitol’s expert on English law, Luke Parsons, offered a sub-
    stantially similar declaration with respect to the structure of
    the English Admiralty and Commercial Courts. Parsons
    agreed with Dias’ assessment that Vitol’s claim against Capri
    Marine could have been brought in either court, and similarly
    described the jurisdictional overlap between the two. Parsons
    concluded "the claim made by Vitol in this case, is an ‘admi-
    ralty claim’ within the meaning of [English Law] and are
    claims which the Admiralty Court and Commercial Court
    both have the jurisdiction and expertise to hear." (J.A. 360).
    The expert declarations are illuminating, particularly to the
    degree the experts of the adverse parties are in agreement con-
    cerning the application of English law. These expert declara-
    tions, considered together, plainly demonstrate that Vitol’s
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.              11
    action against Capri Marine could have been brought in the
    English Admiralty Court, i.e., that it was an admiralty claim
    as that term is understood by the courts of England. S&P,
    however, ask this Court to hold that the choice of forum in
    England, not the subject matter of the underlying claim, is dis-
    positive of whether jurisdiction lies with the district court pur-
    suant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1333
    . In other words, S&P contend that
    Vitol’s choice of forum in the English Commercial Court for
    an otherwise valid admiralty claim there divests any resulting
    judgment of its admiralty character in this country so it can
    no longer be considered as an admiralty matter. We find this
    argument unpersuasive and unsupported.
    The approach advocated by S&P, which looks purely to
    form at the expense of substance, is unsupported by citation
    to any case as authority for its position. Indeed, the dispositive
    question is not whether the English Judgment issued from an
    "admiralty court," but rather, whether the claim itself is mari-
    time in nature. See Victrix S.S. Co., S.A. v. Salen Dry Cargo
    A.B., 
    825 F.2d. 709
    , 713 (2d Cir. 1987) ("[A]n admiralty court
    has jurisdiction of a claim to enforce a foreign judgment that
    is itself based on a maritime claim.") (emphasis added). Inas-
    much as the English Commercial Court exercised jurisdiction
    over a maritime claim, we agree with the district court’s con-
    clusion that "the Commercial Court was an admiralty court
    with respect to the English Judgment." (J.A. 991-92).
    C.     Reduction to Monetary Award
    We also reject S&P’s separate contention on appeal that
    because the English Judgment has been reduced to a monetary
    award it now lacks the maritime character necessary to being
    considered an admiralty judgment which would deprive the
    district court of jurisdiction in this proceeding. The Fifth Cir-
    cuit’s decision in Int’l Sea Food Ltd. v. M/V Campeche, 
    566 F.2d 482
     (5th Cir. 1978) is instructive on this issue.
    In Capmeche, the sole issue before the court was "whether
    a United States district court has subject matter jurisdiction in
    12              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    admiralty to enforce a foreign maritime decree which awarded
    monetary damages to the plaintiff on a claim for collision."
    
    566 F.2d at 483
    . In finding the district court possessed juris-
    diction, the Fifth Circuit looked to The Centurion, 
    5 F. Cas. 369
     (D. Me. 1839) (No. 2,554), which addressed the jurisdic-
    tion of an admiralty court to enforce a monetary award made
    in an arbitration arising out of a salvage dispute. The Centu-
    rion court reasoned that
    [a]lthough the admiralty has a general jurisdiction
    over maritime contracts and quasi contracts, and
    things done on the sea, it does not follow that the
    payment of a debt in every form which it may
    assume can be enforced in the admiralty, simply
    because it originated in a contract . . . which was
    within the jurisdiction of the court[,]
    5 F. Cas. at 370, and concluded that admiralty jurisdiction did
    not lie to enforce the arbitration agreement award. The Centu-
    rion court noted, however, that if the underlying matter "had
    been decided by a regular decree of a court of admiralty by
    which a specific sum were awarded to the libellant, this court
    could have taken cognizance of the case, because a court of
    admiralty has jurisdiction to carry into execution the decree of
    another court of admiralty." Id. Thus, the fact that the debt at
    issue in The Centurion arose from an arbitration award was
    dispositive. Had the debt been established by way of an admi-
    ralty court judgment, then admiralty jurisdiction would be
    present in a subsequent proceeding to enforce that judgment.
    The Campeche court thus read the language of The Centu-
    rion to "suggest[ ] that an admiralty court has jurisdiction to
    enforce any judgment of another admiralty court regardless of
    its lack of maritime flavor." 
    566 F.2d at 485
     (emphasis
    added). The Fifth Circuit accordingly held that the district
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                        13
    court possessed jurisdiction over the money-judgment
    enforcement action in that case.4
    In light of Campeche, we are persuaded that the fact that
    the judgment Vitol ultimately seeks to recognize is now a
    monetary award does not defeat the district court’s admiralty
    jurisdiction because that prior judgment was rendered by a
    competent court sitting in admiralty. Consistent, therefore,
    with a long line of cases confirming American admiralty
    jurisdiction over actions to enforce foreign admiralty judg-
    ments, we reject S&P’s argument that the district court lacked
    admiralty jurisdiction over Vitol’s action.
    D.     Supplemental Rule B
    S&P’s next contention is that Supplemental Rule B could
    not be used to attach the THOR. In S&P’s view, since they
    were not parties to the English Proceeding resulting in the
    English Judgment, the current action is only a post-judgment
    enforcement action against them and not a maritime claim
    subject to Supplemental Rule B. In support of their argument,
    S&P recite language from the Second Circuit’s decision in
    Williamson v. Recovery Ltd. Partnership, 
    542 F.3d 43
    , 48 (2d
    Cir. 2008), which states, inter alia, that attachment pursuant
    to Supplemental Rule B is recognized as a "prejudgment
    mechanism used by parties in admiralty cases to secure juris-
    diction over an absent party and to obtain security for poten-
    tial judgment where the absent party’s assets are transitory."
    4
    S&P urge us to distinguish Campeche on the grounds that the underly-
    ing dispute revolved around the interpretation of a maritime insurance
    contract. Thus, the subsequent trial in that case would involve issues of a
    maritime flavor.
    While S&P correctly recite an additional rationale for the Campeche
    court’s decision, they are incorrect to suggest that the presence of a second
    justification somehow undermines the primary basis of jurisdiction: that
    the money judgment was the decree of an admiralty court. Indeed, the
    Campeche court squarely addressed the identical issue before this Court
    in the case at bar and we find its rationale persuasive.
    14                   VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    We find S&P’s reading a strained construction and contrary
    to a long line of precedent in admiralty cases.
    Supplemental Rule B provides in pertinent part:
    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 veri-
    fied complaint may contain a prayer for process to
    attach the defendant’s tangible or intangible personal
    property—up to the amount sued for—in the hands
    of garnishees named in the process.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. Adm. Supp. R. B(1)(a).5
    Initially, we note that the limitation suggested by S&P, i.e.,
    that Supplemental Rule B must be strictly construed as a pre-
    judgment remedy, does not appear in the text of the rule.
    5
    The Second Circuit has provided a useful history of the maritime
    attachment process that aids in our analysis of S&P’s argument.
    Maritime attachment is a feature of admiralty jurisprudence that
    antedates both the congressional grant of admiralty jurisdiction to
    the federal district courts and the promulgation of the first
    Supreme Court Admiralty Rules in 1844. Aurora Mar. Co. v.
    Abdullah Mohamed Fahem & Co., 
    85 F.3d 44
    , 47 (2d Cir.1996).
    In fact, "[t]he use of the process of attachment in civil causes of
    maritime jurisdiction by courts of admiralty . . . has prevailed
    during a period extending as far back as the authentic history of
    those tribunals can be traced." Atkins v. The Disintegrating Co.,
    85 U.S. (18 Wall.) 272, 303, (1874). The power to grant attach-
    ments in admiralty is an inherent component of the admiralty
    jurisdiction given to the federal courts under Article III of the
    Constitution. U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. The power’s historical pur-
    pose has been two-fold: first, to gain jurisdiction over an absent
    defendant; and second, to assure satisfaction of a judgment. Swift
    & Co. Packers v. Compania Colombiana Del Caribe, S.A., 
    339 U.S. 684
    , 693 (1950).
    Aqua Stoli Shipping Ltd. v. Gardner Smith Pty Ltd., 
    460 F.3d 434
    , 437-38
    (2d Cir. 2006).
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                15
    Rather, the plain wording of the rule itself requires only that
    the defendants not be present in the district wherein the Rule
    B prayer is filed, and that the plaintiff file an affidavit in
    accordance with Supplemental Rule B(1)(B) that the prospec-
    tive defendant’s property is present in the district. In this case,
    Vitol has unquestionably complied with both requirements.
    Indeed, in Aqua Stoli Shipping Ltd. v. Gardner Smith Pty Ltd.,
    the Second Circuit opined that where a plaintiff has satisfied
    the two-part Supplemental Rule B(1)(B) test, a district court
    should only vacate attachment in "limited" circumstances:
    "that [the defendant] would be subject to in personam juris-
    diction in an adjacent district, that [the defendant] was located
    and subject to personal jurisdiction in the same district as [the
    plaintiff], or that [the plaintiff] had already obtained sufficient
    security." 
    460 F.3d 434
    , 447 (2d Cir. 2006). S&P do not
    assert that any of those limited circumstances are present here.
    Therefore, we conclude the language of Supplemental Rule B
    did not on its face bar the THOR’s attachment.
    As the district court recognized, ample precedent reflects
    that Supplemental Rule B has been used to attach admiralty
    defendants’ property in actions to enforce a foreign admiralty
    judgment. See, e.g., Campeche, 
    566 F.2d at 483
     (finding
    admiralty jurisdiction where Supplemental Rule B used to
    garnish judgment debtor’s proceeds in district); Good Chal-
    lenger Navagante S.A. v. Metalexportimport S.A., No. 06-cv-
    1847 (KMK), 
    2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 97920
    , at *1 (S.D.N.Y.
    July 24, 2006) (upholding Supplemental Rule B attachment in
    action to enforce the judgment of English Commercial Court);
    Pink Goose (Cayman) Ltd. v. Sunway Traders LLC, No. 08-
    cv-2351 (HB), 
    2008 WL 4619880
    , at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 17,
    2008) (upholding Supplemental Rule B attachment in action
    to enforce foreign arbitration award).
    S&P, however, emphasize that courts have described Sup-
    plemental Rule B as a "pre-judgment" remedy, e.g., William-
    son, 
    542 F.3d at 48
    , and argue that it should not be used in
    a case such as this, where a judgment has already issued from
    16              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    a foreign admiralty court, and Vitol’s claim is one to collect
    on that judgment. We believe, however, that "pre-judgment,"
    as it is used in the Supplemental Rule B context, must be
    understood to mean prior to the judgment in the particular
    case where a plaintiff seeks to use Supplemental Rule B. It
    makes little, if any, sense to construe Supplemental Rule B
    otherwise when centuries of settled hornbook admiralty law
    establish that "admiralty jurisdiction in the United States may
    be broadly stated as extending to . . . any claim to enforce a
    judgment of a foreign admiralty court." Benedict, supra,
    § 106; see also Penhallow, 3 U.S. at 97 (Iredell, J.) ("It was
    clearly shown at the bar, that a Court of Admiralty, in one
    nation, can carry into effect the determination of the [C]ourt
    of Admiralty of another.").
    Vitol seeks, as an absolutely necessary condition precedent
    to an action to enforce the English Judgment, a prior separate
    and independent judgment against S&P that those entities are
    the alter ego of Capri Marine and/or the Kalogiratos group. "It
    is well established that an admiralty court can review ques-
    tions of . . . alter ego." Ost-West-Handel Bruno Bischoff
    GMBH v. Project Asia Line, Inc., 
    160 F.3d 170
    , 174 (4th Cir.
    1998) (citing Swift & Co. Packers v. Compania Colombiana
    Del Caribe, 
    339 U.S. 684
    , 689 n.4 (1950)). Attachment of the
    THOR under Supplemental Rule B is thus clearly a pre-
    judgment mechanism in the sense which establishes jurisdic-
    tion over S&P for adjudication of the alter ego dispute. This
    seems the logical conclusion here as Vitol’s prayer in the
    Amended Verified Complaint is for judgment against S&P as
    the alter ego of Capri Marine. Only armed with that initial
    judgment can Vitol proceed to enforce the English Judgment.
    Moreover, it would be difficult to understand the long line
    of cases, discussed supra at 8-9, extending the admiralty juris-
    diction of the United States district courts to actions to
    enforce the decrees of foreign admiralty courts, if the limita-
    tion suggested by S&P was correct. We simply do not believe,
    based on the text of Supplemental Rule B and the long line
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                         17
    of admiralty precedent, that a plaintiff seeking to enforce a
    foreign admiralty judgment could avail itself of the courts of
    admiralty in the United States, yet be deprived of the use of
    the district court’s power to attach assets: an "inherent compo-
    nent of the admiralty jurisdiction given to the federal courts."
    Aqua Stoli, 
    460 F.3d at 437
    .6
    In re Stolt-Nielsen Transp. Grp. B.V., No. 06 Civ. 703
    (NRB), 
    2008 WL 650391
     (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 7, 2008), aff’d sub
    nom. Stolt-Nielsen Transp. Grp. v. Lio Yag Sanayi Ve Ticaret
    A.S., 330 F. App’x 207 (2d Cir. 2009) (unpublished), cited by
    S&P in support of their construction of Supplemental Rule B,
    actually lends support to the construction that we adopt. In
    that case, the plaintiff initially brought the complaint against
    the defendant without Supplemental Rule B attachment,
    apparently because the defendant was located within the dis-
    trict. The defendant left the district and a default judgment
    was ultimately entered in favor of the plaintiff. Thereafter, the
    plaintiff attempted to use Supplemental Rule B to attach the
    defendant’s property. The court rejected the plaintiff’s
    attempts, finding that because a default judgment had already
    been entered by the court, "[plaintiff’s] motion is essentially
    a plea for us to allow it to use [Supplemental] Rule B as [a]
    judgment collection device." 
    Id.
     
    2008 WL 650391
    , at *2.
    By contrast, the district court in the case at bar had not
    entered any judgment against S&P at the time the ex parte
    motion for Supplemental Rule B attachment was filed by
    Vitol. What Vitol sought was to establish jurisdiction through
    Supplemental Rule B in the District of Maryland so its under-
    6
    Had Vitol already obtained a judgment in the district court against S&P
    and at a later time then sought to attach their assets to satisfy a previously
    docketed judgment, in that circumstance, Vitol’s attempt to use Supple-
    mental Rule B might be seen as a prohibited post-judgment action. In that
    limited circumstance, Vitol might be required to use other attachment or
    judgment enforcement procedures in lieu of Supplemental Rule B. How-
    ever, that situation is not present in this case and we need not speculate
    here on what decision would be required should those events occur.
    18              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    lying alter ego complaint could be adjudicated; not to enforce
    the English Judgment in the first instance, although we are not
    at all certain that usage is barred by the Rule. In any event,
    Vitol’s use of Supplemental Rule B was entirely consistent
    with the rule’s purpose: "to permit the attachments of assets
    wherever they can be found and not to require the plaintiff to
    scour the globe to find a proper forum for suit or property of
    the defendant sufficient to satisfy a judgment." Transportes
    Navieros y Terrestres S.A. de C.V. v. Fairmount Heavy
    Transp. N.V., 
    572 F.3d 96
    , 103 (2d Cir. 2009).
    Accordingly, we reject S&P’s arguments either that the dis-
    trict court lacked admiralty jurisdiction or that the attachment
    of the THOR was a misuse of Supplemental Rule B.
    III.   The Merits
    Turning to the merits of this appeal, Vitol argues that the
    district court erred in concluding that the Amended Verified
    Complaint failed to adequately plead a claim under Rule 8 of
    the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or Supplemental Rule
    E(2)(a). Under Rule 8(a), a pleading must contain "a short and
    plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is enti-
    tled to relief, in order to give the defendant fair notice of what
    the claim is and the grounds upon which it rests." Bell Atl.
    Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 555 (2007) (internal cita-
    tions, quotation marks, and alterations omitted). A district
    court should dismiss a complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) if,
    accepting all well-pleaded allegations in the complaint as true
    and drawing all reasonable factual inferences in the plaintiff’s
    favor, the complaint does not allege "enough facts to state a
    claim to relief that is plausible on its face." 
    Id. at 570
    . Under
    Rule 12(e), a "party may move for a more definite statement
    of a pleading to which a responsive pleading is allowed but
    which is so vague or ambiguous that the party cannot reason-
    ably prepare a response."
    By contrast, Supplemental Rule E(2)(a), the governing
    pleading standard for Supplemental Rule B proceedings,
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                       19
    states that "the complaint shall state the circumstances from
    which the claim arises with such particularity that the defen-
    dant or claimant will be able, without moving for a more defi-
    nite statement, to commence an investigation of the facts and
    to frame a responsive pleading." (emphasis added).
    The remedy for failure to comply with the pleading stan-
    dards of Supplemental Rule E(2)(a) is set forth in Supplemen-
    tal Rule E(4)(f), which provides that "[w]henever property is
    arrested or attached, any person claiming an interest in it shall
    be entitled to a prompt hearing at which the plaintiff shall be
    required to show why the arrest or attachment should not be
    vacated or other relief granted consistent with these rules."
    Fed. R. Civ. P. Adm. Supp. R. E(4)(f) (emphasis added).
    Thus, the primary remedy afforded for failure to comply with
    Rule E(2)(a) is vacatur of the attachment. Dismissal of the
    complaint is not a Rule E remedy. See Chiquita Int’l Ltd. v.
    MV BOSSE, 
    518 F. Supp. 2d 589
    , 596 (S.D.N.Y. 2007)
    ("Rule E(4)(f) allows a motion for vacatur of attachment, but
    does not provide for dismissal.").
    Counsel for S&P, however, suggested at oral argument that
    dismissal of the complaint automatically flows from vacatur
    of the Supplemental Rule B attachment because, absent Sup-
    plemental Rule B attachment, the court lacks jurisdiction over
    S&P. Oral Argument Audio Recording at 33:30.7 This argu-
    ment fails as a matter of law.
    In Republic National Bank of Miami v. United States, 
    506 U.S. 80
     (1992), the Supreme Court rejected the notion that, in
    an in rem civil forfeiture action, the district court’s continued
    7
    Although it appears that S&P did not previously advance the argument
    that dismissal of the complaint flows automatically from vacatur of the
    attachment, we address the argument because it implicates the subject
    matter jurisdiction of the district court and "[s]ubject matter jurisdiction
    cannot be forfeited or waived." See In re Kirkland, 
    600 F.3d 310
    , 314 (4th
    Cir. 2010).
    20                 VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    control of the res is necessary for the court to retain jurisdic-
    tion over the forfeiture proceedings. See id. at 84. In that case,
    following a civil forfeiture proceeding in which the Govern-
    ment prevailed, the United States Marshal transferred the res
    (the proceeds of a sale of certain assets) from his control to
    the United States Treasury. Id. at 83. Although the claimant
    timely appealed from the judgment against it, the claimant did
    not move to stay execution of the judgment or post a superse-
    deas bond. Once the assets were removed from the court’s
    control, the Government sought to dismiss the claimant’s
    appeal for lack of jurisdiction. The court of appeals granted
    the motion to dismiss the appeal, but the Supreme Court
    reversed.
    After a lengthy discussion of both maritime and forfeiture
    cases, the Supreme Court held that "[s]tasis is not a general
    prerequisite to the maintenance of jurisdiction. Jurisdiction
    over the person survives a change in circumstances." Id. at 88.
    The seizure of the res, the Court concluded, "and the publica-
    tion of the monition or invitation to appear, is regarded as
    equivalent to the particular service of process in the courts of
    law and equity." Id. at 85. In sum, while control over the res
    is a prerequisite to initiation of the in rem action, the court
    does not need to continuously possess the res to maintain
    jurisdiction once established.8
    The in rem principle articulated in Republic National Bank
    has been extended to quasi in rem proceedings, including
    those arising under Supplemental Rule B. See Stevedoring
    8
    The Court acknowledged that "if a defendant ship stealthily absconds
    from port and leaves the plaintiff with no res from which to collect, a
    court might determine that a judgment would be useless." Republic Nat’l
    Bank, 
    506 U.S. at 87
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Nevertheless, the Court reasoned that "the fictions of in rem forfeiture
    were developed primarily to expand the reach of the courts and to furnish
    remedies for aggrieved parties, not to provide a prevailing party with a
    means of defeating its adversary’s claim for redress." 
    Id.
     (internal citations
    omitted).
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                    21
    Servs. of Am. v. Ancora Transp., N.V., 
    59 F.3d 879
    , 882 (9th
    Cir. 1995) ("[The Republic National Bank rationale] applies
    with equal persuasiveness to quasi in rem proceedings insti-
    tuted under [Supplemental] Rule B."). We find the logic of
    Republic National Bank applicable in the case at bar.9 See
    Woodlands Ltd. v. Nationsbank N.A., 
    164 F.3d 628
     (table),
    No. 97-1813, 
    1998 WL 682156
     (4th Cir. Sept. 23, 1998)
    (applying Republic National Bank in a Supplemental Rule B
    maritime attachment case). Thus, even if the attachment of the
    THOR was vacated under Supplemental Rule E, that event
    would not, in and of itself, act to terminate the jurisdiction of
    the district court as to the Amended Verified Complaint.
    As dismissal of the complaint is not a proper remedy under
    Supplemental Rule E, and because dismissal does not auto-
    matically flow from vacatur of Supplemental Rule B attach-
    ment, we must, as the district court endeavored to do, analyze
    Vitol’s claims through the lens of both Supplemental Rule E
    and Rules 8 and 12. As the district court observed, "it is at
    least theoretically possible that a Complaint adequate to with-
    stand a Rule 12(b)(6) motion may, nevertheless, not be ade-
    quate to avoid the vacatur of an attachment." (J.A. 1551). We
    now describe the standards under the two sets of rules and
    then apply those standards to the merits of Vitol’s Amended
    Verified Complaint.
    A.     Supplemental Rule E Standard
    We review the district court’s order vacating the attachment
    of the THOR’s Substitute Collateral for abuse of discretion,
    with legal conclusions underlying the order reviewed de novo.
    See ProShipLine Inc. v. Aspen Infrastructures Ltd., 
    609 F.3d 9
    Moreover, if we were to conclude that dismissal of the complaint auto-
    matically flowed from the grant of a motion to vacate the attachment, Sup-
    plemental Rule E would effectively subsume Rules 8 and 12 in the context
    of admiralty and forfeiture cases. No court has extended the supplemental
    rules in that way and neither do we.
    22                VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    960, 966 (9th Cir. 2010); Shipping Corp. of India Ltd. v.
    Jaldhi Overseas Pte Ltd., 
    585 F.3d 58
    , 66 (2d Cir. 2009).
    After receiving notice of Supplemental Rule B attachment,
    the defendant is entitled to contest the attachment at a prompt
    hearing pursuant to Rule E(4)(f). To avoid vacatur of attach-
    ment, it is the plaintiff’s burden to show that "1) it has a valid
    prima facie admiralty claim against the defendant; 2) the
    defendant cannot be found within the district; 3) the defen-
    dant’s property may be found within the district; and 4) there
    is no statutory or maritime law bar to the attachment." Aqua
    Stoli, 
    460 F.3d at 445
    . "[T]he sole basis for extending this
    claim to [S&P] is the allegation that [S&P are] . . . alter ego[s]
    of [Capri Marine]. Thus, to survive this motion [to vacate],
    the Complaint must allege particular facts supporting [Vitol’s]
    alter ego theory of liability to satisfy Rule E(2)(a)’s height-
    ened pleading standard." Arctic Ocean Int’l Ltd. v. High Seas
    Shipping Ltd., 
    622 F. Supp. 2d 46
    , 53 (S.D.N.Y. 2009).10
    To restate a basic premise, to plead a prima facie admiralty
    case pursuant to Supplemental Rule E, "the complaint shall
    state the circumstances from which the claim arises with such
    particularity that the defendant or claimant will be able, with-
    out moving for a more definite statement, to commence an
    investigation of the facts and to frame a responsive pleading."
    Fed. R. Civ. P. Adm. Supp. R. E(2)(a). The burden to show
    why continued attachment is proper is the plaintiff’s to bear.
    See Equatorial Marine Fuel Mgmt. Servs. Pte Ltd. v. MISC
    Berhad, 
    591 F.3d 1208
    , 1210 (9th Cir. 2010).
    As we have previously explained,
    10
    The parties dispute whether Supplemental Rule E(2)(a)’s pleading
    standard is still "heightened" in light of the Supreme Court’s holdings in
    Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
     (2009). We need not answer
    that question here because we conclude that Vitol has failed to carry its
    pleading burden under either standard.
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                 23
    Rule E(2)(a)’s requirement for pleading specific cir-
    cumstances is one part of the process which guards
    against the improper use of admiralty seizure pro-
    ceedings. Thus, the rule’s heightened particularity in
    pleading requirement is always subject to the general
    standard that the complaint sufficiently notify the
    defendant of the incident in dispute and afford a rea-
    sonable belief that the claim has merit.
    United States v. Mondragon, 
    313 F.3d 862
    , 865 (4th Cir.
    2002) (emphasis added) (internal citations, quotation marks,
    and alterations omitted). While courts to have considered the
    question are in agreement that the Supplemental Rule E(2)(a)
    pleading requirement is "heightened," the precise boundaries
    of such a heightened pleading requirement are not clearly
    defined.
    As one district court explained,
    courts have compared the showing required in a
    "reasonable grounds" analysis to the more familiar
    standard of probable cause. See, e.g., Amstar Corp.
    v. S/S ALEXANDROS T., 
    664 F.2d 904
    , 912 (4th Cir.
    1981) ("A shipowner challenging the validity of an
    arrest is constitutionally entitled to a prompt post-
    arrest hearing in which the plaintiff has the burden
    of showing probable cause for the arrest"). The
    Supreme Court, interpreting the phrase "reasonable
    grounds" as used in a criminal statute, has said that
    "[t]he terms ‘probable cause’ as used in the Fourth
    Amendment and ‘reasonable grounds’ . . . are sub-
    stantial equivalents of the same meaning." Draper v.
    United States, 
    358 U.S. 307
    , 311 (1959). Probable
    cause is less than a preponderance of the evidence;
    in the criminal context, it has been described as a
    "fair probability" that the asserted fact is true. Illi-
    nois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 214 (1983). With this
    standard in mind, courts in Rule E(4)(f) hearings
    24                 VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    have emphasized that their conclusions are "merely
    holding that it is likely" that alleged facts are true.
    See North of England Protecting and Indem. Ass’n,
    
    1999 WL 33116416
    , at *3.
    Wajilam Exps. (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. v. ATL Shipping Ltd.,
    
    475 F. Supp. 2d 275
    , 279-80 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).11
    This Court has only once opined on Supplemental Rule
    E(2)(a)’s pleading requirement. In Mondragon, we expressed
    our agreement with the majority view, that "[Supplemental]
    Rule E(2)(a) requires a complaint to allege sufficient facts to
    support a reasonable belief that the property is subject to for-
    feiture." 
    313 F.3d at 865
     (emphasis added).12 We went on to
    explain, however, that "Rule E(2)(a) needs little interpreta-
    tion. It is plainly written and means precisely what it says."
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Although Vitol asserts on appeal that the district court erred
    by applying a "reasonable belief" standard to S&P’s motion
    to vacate, the court unquestionably applied the proper stan-
    dard in light of Mondragon. The district court discussed the
    "reasonable belief" standard from Mondragon, and, as we will
    discuss in detail below, faithfully applied that requirement.
    11
    Although Wajilam Exports describes a "reasonable grounds" standard,
    rather than the "reasonable belief" standard noted in our discussion of
    Mondragon, courts appear to use the two terms interchangeably to
    describe an identical standard for vacating an attachment. Cf. United
    States v. Diaz, 
    491 F.3d 1074
    , 1077 (9th Cir. 2007) (noting in the criminal
    context that "[t]he phrase ‘reason to believe’ is interchangeable with and
    conceptually identical to the phrases ‘reasonable belief’ and ‘reasonable
    grounds for believing’").
    12
    Mondragon was decided in the context of a civil forfeiture claim.
    However, the Mondragon holding was based in large part on Riverway
    Co. v. Spivey Marine and Harbor Service Co., 
    598 F. Supp. 909
     (S.D. Ill.
    1984), an admiralty in rem case.
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                    25
    B.    Rule 12(b)(6) Standard
    We review de novo the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to
    dismiss for failure to state a claim. McCorkle v. Bank of Am.
    Corp., 
    688 F.3d 164
    , 171 (4th Cir. 2012). To survive a motion
    to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Vitol’s "[f]actual allega-
    tions must be enough to raise a right to relief above the specu-
    lative level," thereby "nudg[ing] [its] claims across the line
    from conceivable to plausible." Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 555,
    570 (2007).
    The plausibility standard requires a plaintiff to dem-
    onstrate more than "a sheer possibility that a defen-
    dant has acted unlawfully." [Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009)]. It requires the plaintiff to
    articulate facts, when accepted as true, that "show"
    that the plaintiff has stated a claim entitling him to
    relief, i.e., the "plausibility of ‘entitlement to relief.’"
    
    Id.
     (quoting Twombly, 
    550 U.S. at 557
    ).
    To emphasize the Federal Rules’ requirements for
    stating claims that are warranted and therefore form
    a plausible basis for relief, the Supreme Court has
    held that a complaint must contain "more than labels
    and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the
    elements of a cause of action will not do." Twombly,
    
    550 U.S. at 555
    . To discount such unadorned conclu-
    sory allegations, "a court considering a motion to
    dismiss can choose to begin by identifying pleadings
    that, because they are no more than conclusions, are
    not entitled to the assumption of truth." Iqbal, [
    556 U.S. at 679
    ]. This approach recognizes that "naked
    assertions" of wrongdoing necessitate some "factual
    enhancement" within the complaint to cross "the line
    between possibility and plausibility of entitlement to
    relief." Twombly, 
    550 U.S. at 557
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    26              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    At bottom, determining whether a complaint states
    on its face a plausible claim for relief and therefore
    can survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion will "be a
    context-specific task that requires the reviewing
    court to draw on its judicial experience and common
    sense. But where the well-pleaded facts do not per-
    mit the court to infer more than the mere possibility
    of misconduct, the complaint has alleged—but it has
    not ‘show[n]’—‘that the pleader is entitled to
    relief,’" as required by Rule 8. Iqbal, 55 U.S. at 679
    (alteration in original) (citation omitted) (quoting
    Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2)).
    Francis v. Giacomelli, 
    588 F.3d 186
    , 193 (4th Cir. 2009).
    C.    The Alter Ego Claim
    Having described the relevant pleading standards, we turn
    to the resolution of the merits of Vitol’s alter ego claim as
    pled in the Amended Verified Complaint. "It is well estab-
    lished that an admiralty court can review questions of . . . alter
    ego." Ost-West-Handel, 
    160 F.3d at
    174 (citing Swift & Co.
    Packers v. Compania Colombiana Del Caribe, 
    339 U.S. 684
    ,
    689 n.4 (1950)). "[A] corporate entity is liable for the acts of
    a separate, related entity only under extraordinary circum-
    stances, commonly referred to as ‘piercing the corporate
    veil.’" Arctic Ocean Int’l, 
    622 F. Supp. 2d at 53
     (quoting
    Dolco Invs., Ltd. v. Moonriver Dev., Ltd., 
    486 F. Supp. 2d 261
    , 271 (S.D.N.Y. 2007)). "Although decisions to pierce a
    corporate veil, exposing those behind the corporation to liabil-
    ity, must be taken reluctantly and cautiously, courts will not
    hesitate to take such action when justice so requires." Keffer
    v. H.K. Porter Co., Inc., 
    872 F.2d 60
    , 64 (4th Cir. 1989) (cit-
    ing In re County Green Ltd. P’ship, 
    604 F.2d 289
    , 292 (4th
    Cir. 1979)). "[I]n extraordinary cases, such as the corporate
    form being used for wrongful purposes, courts will pierce the
    corporate veil and disregard the corporate entity, treating the
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                27
    parent corporation and its subsidiary as a single entity." Cor-
    rigan v. U.S. Steel Corp., 
    478 F.3d 718
    , 724 (6th Cir. 2007).
    In Keffer, as well as DeWitt Truck Brokers, Inc. v. W. Ray
    Flemming Fruit Co., 
    540 F.2d 681
     (4th Cir. 1976), we articu-
    lated several factors that "guide the determination of whether
    one entity constitutes the alter ego of another." Ost-West-
    Handel, 
    160 F.3d at 174
    . These factors include "gross under-
    capitalization, insolvency, siphoning of funds, failure to
    observe corporate formalities and maintain proper corporate
    records, non-functioning of officers, control by a dominant
    stockholder, and injustice or fundamental unfairness." 
    Id.
    Other factors properly considered by the district court in this
    case include intermingling of funds; overlap in ownership,
    officers, directors, and other personnel; common office space;
    the degrees of discretion shown by the allegedly dominated
    corporation; and whether the dealings of the entities are at
    arm’s length. See Arctic Ocean, 
    622 F. Supp. 2d at 53
    .
    At its core, the question of whether to pierce the corporate
    veil is a fact-intensive inquiry, because "the circumstances
    necessarily vary according to the circumstances of each case,
    and every case where the issue is raised is to be regarded as
    sui generis to be decided in accordance with its own underly-
    ing facts." DeWitt Truck Brokers, 
    540 F.2d at 684
     (internal
    quotation marks, footnote, and alterations omitted). "Instead
    of a firm rule, the general principle . . . has been that liability
    is imposed when doing so would achieve an equitable result."
    Williamson, 
    542 F.3d at 53
     (quotation marks omitted). "In
    applying these factors a court must focus on reality and not
    form, [on] how the corporation operated and the individual
    defendant’s relationship to that operation." Ost-West-Handel,
    
    160 F.3d at
    174 (citing DeWitt, 
    540 F.2d at 685
    ) (quotation
    marks omitted).
    Vitol alleged in its Amended Verified Complaint that Capri
    Marine "made no independent business decisions controlling
    its principle asset, the ALAMBRA," and that it lacked a busi-
    28              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    ness address of its own as "it shared Starlady’s address." (J.A.
    1129). Further, Vitol made specific allegations that Capri
    Marine, by its own admission, had no appreciable assets save
    the ALAMBRA, despite owning unencumbered title to the
    ALAMBRA and operating it profitably in the years prior to
    the Oil Spill.
    The most significant allegations, however, concern the sale
    of the ALAMBRA following the Oil Spill in 2001. Vitol spe-
    cifically alleged that Capri Marine paid Vitol $500,000 in
    order to lift an injunction restraining its ability to sell the
    ALAMBRA. Because it lacked other assets, Capri Marine
    obtained the $500,000 through a loan financed by Trade Mari-
    time in the amount of $1.4 million. Trade Maritime is part of
    the Kalogiratos Group. At that time, Capri Marine was essen-
    tially insolvent (save for its interest in the ALAMBRA) and
    facing the prospect of considerable liability arising out of the
    Oil Spill. It thus had little chance of repaying the Trade Mari-
    time loan on its own.
    Capri Marine sold the ALAMBRA (its sole asset) in 2001
    to what appeared to be a third party, Aurora. Instead, Aurora
    was also part of the Kalogiratos Group under the control of
    Gerassimos. The ALAMBRA was later resold at a substan-
    tially higher price to a bona fide third party, and the assets of
    the sale were distributed throughout the Kalogiratos Group
    including repayment of the loan made by Trade Maritime.
    The district court concluded that the foregoing allegations
    were sufficient, for both Supplemental Rule E and Rule
    12(b)(6) purposes, to have pled Capri Marine was the alter
    ego of Gerassimos and his related entities. For purposes of
    our analysis, we may assume, without deciding, that the
    Amended Verified Complaint does adequately plead Capri
    Marine as the alter ego of Gerassimos.
    Even assuming that Capri Marine is an alter ego of Gerassi-
    mos, that status does not resolve the issue in the case at bar
    as to whether alter ego liability can attach to S&P. Rather,
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                29
    Vitol must make independent allegations sufficient to avoid
    dismissal and vacatur that Gerassimos is the alter ego of S&P.
    The district court discussed the relevant alter ego allegations
    as to S&P and Gerassimos in the Amended Verified Com-
    plaint and concluded that "more is necessary to establish the
    degree of actual domination and control essential to prove an
    alter ego claim." (J.A. 1565). We agree with the district
    court’s holdings both for Supplemental Rule E and Rule
    12(b)(6) purposes.
    In reviewing the vacatur of attachment under Supplemental
    Rule E, we look first to the text of that Rule. In doing so, it
    is clear that S&P could not, without moving for a more defi-
    nite statement, "frame a responsive pleading." See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. Supp. Adm. R. E(2)(a). This is so because the facts
    alleged in the Amended Verified Complaint do not give rise
    to a reasonable belief that Primerose and/or Spartacus are
    alter egos of Gerassimos or his related entities.
    Looking first to allegations concerning the degree to which
    the Starlady Fleet (unquestionably controlled by Gerassimos)
    was connected with the Primerose Fleet, we agree with the
    district court that Vitol’s allegations were insufficient to pass
    the reasonable belief test. Vitol alleged that the Primerose
    Fleet, including Spartacus (owner of the THOR) was started
    with funds from the Starlady Fleet, as well as the allegations
    that Starlady vessels have similar coloration to Primerose ves-
    sels, and that Primerose shared offices, phone numbers, and
    other office facilities with Starlady. Vitol argues that those
    allegations should be sufficient to establish the alter ego status
    of S&P, and the district court erred in finding that "more is
    necessary" for Vitol to demonstrate the interconnectedness of
    the two shipping fleets.
    These allegations of fleet interconnectedness, however,
    simply do not rise to the level of creating a reasonable belief
    to support the claim of alter ego. Applying the factors dis-
    cussed above we conclude that, although Vitol has alleged a
    30              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    close business relationship between Kalogiratos-controlled
    entities and S&P, it has not done enough to allege an alter ego
    status. At best, Vitol has made allegations with particularity
    only to support a reasonable belief that the two fleets maintain
    a close business relationship. Vitol’s allegations that the
    Primerose fleet was started with funds from the Starlady fleet
    establish little more than that Starlady has invested in
    Primerose, and not how that event gives Starlady control over
    Primerose’s affairs or establishes any ownership rights. More-
    over, allegations that the fleets share similar coloration are not
    probative of the core question of whether the two entities have
    disregarded corporate formalities. And while sharing office
    space may be an indicium of alter ego, we do not believe that
    shared office space on its own is sufficient to compel a con-
    clusion that Starlady and/or Gerassimos dominated and con-
    trolled Primerose.
    Vitol has also alleged that Velliades (the alleged owner of
    Primerose and Spartacus) extended a line of credit to Gerassi-
    mos following the sale of the ALAMBRA. The mere exten-
    sion of a line of credit from one corporate entity to another,
    however, does not create a reasonable belief of alter ego. Sig-
    nificantly, as the district court noted, the credit line was
    repaid. In short, that Velliades extended credit to Gerassimos
    does not tend to show that Velliades’s business ventures are
    dominated or controlled by Gerassimos.
    Vitol further alleged that Starlady paid $120,000 into an
    account held by Seatrade (a non-party owned and managed by
    Primerose) at Laiki Bank, and on the same day, Seatrade’s
    loan from the same bank was discharged. Again, though,
    while this allegation is evidence of a close corporate relation-
    ship, and perhaps even a failure to adhere to corporate formal-
    ities, it is not evidence that funds were comingled, that
    Gerassimos "dominates" Seatrade (or indeed, any Primerose-
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.                    31
    affiliated entity), or that the corporate form was in any way
    materially disregarded.13
    Vitol also made an allegation that Deep Blue14 transferred
    $360,000 to Starlady at the same time as Primerose trans-
    ferred $10,500 to Starlady. Starlady converted these funds to
    Euros, then back to dollars, and transferred $306,000 back to
    Primerose. Vitol alleges that Velliades agreed to assist Geras-
    simos by transferring the funds temporarily in order to assist
    Starlady in obtaining favorable tax status under Greek law;
    but claims that there is no explanation for why Starlady only
    repaid $306,000 of the $370,500 originally loaned. As the dis-
    trict court explained, however, in light of the fact that Gerassi-
    mos owns a 5% interest in Deep Blue, the funds retained by
    Starlady represent an advance on dividends related to the 5%
    ownership stake. Again, all that Vitol has pled is that a close
    relationship exists between the Kalogiratos entities and those
    controlled by Velliades. But it has effectively alleged nothing
    more than repaid loans and dividend distributions, which do
    not establish the type of dominion and control needed to dem-
    onstrate alter ego status. Indeed, the specific facts alleged by
    Vitol simply establish that the two fleets maintain a close
    business relationship that sometimes results in the disregard
    of formality. But such allegations alone will not suffice to
    give rise to a reasonable belief of alter ego status sufficient to
    invoke the "extraordinary" remedy of piercing the corporate
    veil. See Arctic Ocean, 
    622 F. Supp. 2d at 53
    .
    The same is true of Vitol’s allegation that "Velliades is a
    [p]uppet of Gerassimos Kalogiratos." (J.A. 1145). This state-
    ment, without more, is clearly lacking in the particularity
    required to satisfy the Supplemental Rule E standard. S&P
    could not have responded to this bald, conclusory assertion
    13
    The record does not reflect whether Seatrade repaid to Starlady the
    $120,000 deposited by Starlady into its account at Laiki Bank.
    14
    The Kalogiratos family owns a minority share in Deep Blue, which is
    managed by Primerose.
    32                 VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    without moving for a more definite statement. And once
    again, while Vitol does make certain "factual" allegations, the
    specific facts that Vitol does allege are not sufficient to sup-
    port its legal conclusions. Indeed, many of Vitol’s allegations
    never depart the realm of the purely speculative, including the
    allegation that Velliades cannot be the principal of Primerose
    because he "had no prior experience in ship management."
    (J.A. 1146). These speculative allegations simply do not meet
    the heightened "reasonable belief" standard.15
    In sum, Vitol has failed to "allege particular facts support-
    ing its alter ego theory of liability to satisfy [Supplemental]
    Rule E(2)(a)’s heightened pleading standard." Arctic Ocean,
    
    622 F. Supp. 2d at 53
    . In reaching this conclusion we are
    mindful of the heightened pleading standard of Supplemental
    Rule E, and again note that courts should be "reluctant[ ]" and
    "cautious[ ]" when deciding to pierce the corporate veil. Kef-
    fer, 
    872 F.2d at 64
    .
    Because Vitol has failed to plead with sufficient specificity
    that S&P are alter egos of Capri Marine, it has failed to carry
    its burden to show why the attachment of the THOR Substi-
    tute Collateral should not be vacated as the district court held.
    See Fed. R. Civ. P. Adm. Supp. R. E(4)(f) (placing burden on
    plaintiff "to show why the arrest or attachment should not be
    vacated"). We therefore conclude that the district court did
    not abuse its discretion in granting S&P’s motion to vacate
    the attachment.
    15
    Vitol does allege that Gerassimos was involved with the financing of
    the THOR, signing certain mortgage documents on behalf of Spartacus
    and directing certain loan-related documents to be sent to his attention.
    While we agree with Vitol that this allegation suggests some degree of
    cross-collateralization between the entities, we do not agree that Gerassi-
    mos’ involvement with the THOR’s financing makes plausible the other-
    wise conclusory allegation that he, not Velliades, therefore dominates
    Primerose and its fleet.
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.               33
    We next turn to the application of the Rule 8 pleading
    requirements discussed above to determine if Vitol pled alle-
    gations in the Amended Verified Complaint sufficient to sur-
    vive Rule 12(b)(6) scrutiny. Indeed, while the Supplemental
    Rule E reasonable belief standard is not identical to the plau-
    sibility standard under Rule 12(b)(6), we find much of the
    analysis to overlap. For example, the analysis above of Vitol’s
    allegations pertaining to fleet interconnectedness assists and
    informs our view of the same allegations viewed through the
    lens of Rule 12(b)(6).
    Vitol’s allegations that the Primerose Fleet was started with
    funds from Gerassimos and related entities, and allegations
    concerning fleet coloration and shared office space, are liter-
    ally "factual" allegations entitled to a presumption of truth.
    See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 681
    . We are not, however, required to
    accept Vitol’s legal conclusions, drawn from those facts, as
    true. See Giarratano v. Johnson, 
    521 F.3d 298
    , 302 (4th Cir.
    2008) (courts "need not accept the legal conclusions drawn
    from the facts" stated in the complaint). This is so because,
    even accepting the well-pleaded facts as true, those facts do
    not give rise to a plausible allegation of alter ego.
    As the district court recognized, taking as true Vitol’s alle-
    gations of fleet interconnectness, Vitol has at best made a
    plausible allegation that S&P maintain a close business rela-
    tionship with Gerassimos and his related entities. There is
    nothing in the allegations of interconnectness that plausibly
    suggests the sort of dominion, control, failure to observe cor-
    porate formalities, or fundamental unfairness needed to state
    a claim for alter ego status.
    We find the same to be true with respect to Vitol’s allega-
    tions of comingling of funds. Although Vitol does baldly
    allege that funds from Primerose were comingled with funds
    from Starlady, that allegation is conclusory, and not entitled
    to a presumption of truth. See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 681
    . With
    respect to Vitol’s allegations concerning the degree to which
    34              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    funds were comingled, we once again identify facts in the
    Amended Verified Complaint that were properly pled: that
    Velliades extended a credit line to Gerassimos following the
    sale of the ALAMBRA; that Starlady paid funds to Laki Bank
    in exchange for discharge of certain loans to Seatrade; and
    that Deep Blue loaned considerable funds to Starlady, some
    of which were not repaid.
    Again, however, when we apply the alter ego factors dis-
    cussed supra at 27, to these facts, we find that the allegations
    in the Amended Verified Complaint do not plausibly state an
    alter ego claim. Indeed, the loans allegedly made between
    Gerassimos (and related entities) and Velliades (and related
    entities) were repaid, with the exception of a portion of the
    loan made by Deep Blue. But Vitol’s allegations fail to
    account for the fact that Gerassimos owned a small share of
    the interest in Deep Blue, and as the district court explained,
    the discrepancy between the amount loaned and that repaid
    was properly attributable to a dividend distribution.
    To the extent that these facts show a close business rela-
    tionship, that allegation falls short of establishing alter ego.
    And because the loans were largely repaid, we do not agree
    with Vitol’s bald allegation that these transactions represent
    improper comingling of funds with failure to observe the cor-
    porate form. In short, these allegations, in our view, do not
    contain the "factual enhancement" necessary to cross "the line
    between possibility and plausibility of entitlement to relief."
    Twombly, 
    550 U.S. at 557
     (emphasis added) (quotation marks
    and brackets omitted).
    Similarly, the statement that Velliades is a mere puppet of
    Gerassimos is a bald allegation, couched as fact, that is no
    more than an unsupported legal conclusion for purposes of
    Rule 12(b)(6). See Jordan v. Alt. Res. Corp., 
    458 F.3d 332
    ,
    338 (4th Cir. 2006) ("[W]e need not accept the legal conclu-
    sions drawn from the facts, and [ ] need not accept as true
    unwarranted inferences, unreasonable conclusions, or argu-
    VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.               35
    ments." (internal quotation marks omitted)). As explained
    above, the factual support for this assertion is simply lacking,
    and we need not address it further.
    Finally, we note that the Amended Verified Complaint is
    replete with examples of allegations related to whether
    Primerose is an alter ego of Spartacus and other members of
    the Primerose fleet. Vitol alleges, for example, that Primerose
    had "no commercially justifiable reason" to provide funds to
    secure the release of the THOR in the instant litigation.
    Besides being a further example of the speculation which we
    will not accept as true for either Supplemental Rule E or Rule
    12(b)(6) purposes, these allegations do little to support Vitol’s
    theory of the case: that Primerose (and its fleet member, i.e.,
    Spartacus) is an alter ego of Gerassimos or the Kalogiratos
    Group.
    In sum, we agree with the district court’s holding that the
    allegations in the Amended Verified Complaint fail to state a
    claim upon which relief may be granted, and dismissal was
    therefore warranted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Vitol’s allega-
    tions are conclusory and contain legal conclusions couched as
    factual allegations. To the extent that the Amended Verified
    Complaint does properly allege facts, those facts do not show
    more than "a sheer possibility that a defendant has acted
    unlawfully." See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    . Because "the well-
    pleaded facts do not permit [this] [C]ourt to infer more than
    the mere possibility of misconduct, the complaint has alleged-
    but it has not ‘shown’—‘that the pleader is entitled to relief.’"
    See 
    id. at 679
    . As with the Supplemental Rule E analysis, we
    conclude the district court did not err in granting S&P’s Rule
    12(b)(6) motion to dismiss the Amended Verified Complaint.
    IV.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we agree that the district court
    properly exercised admiralty jurisdiction over Vitol’s claims.
    Our review of the merits of Vitol’s claim against S&P, how-
    36              VITOL v. PRIMEROSE SHIPPING CO.
    ever, lead us to conclude that dismissal was appropriate pur-
    suant to Rule 12(b)(6), and the district court’s ex parte order
    of attachment was properly vacated. We therefore affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    AFFIRMED
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1900

Citation Numbers: 708 F.3d 527

Judges: Agee, Motz, Thacker

Filed Date: 2/8/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

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