Jakarta Grogan v. Triton Diving Services, L.L.C. ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 15-30369       Document: 00513358539   Page: 1   Date Filed: 01/27/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 15-30369                  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    JAKARTA GROGAN,                                                   January 27, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Plaintiff,                                                 Clerk
    v.
    W & T OFFSHORE, INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Appellant
    v.
    TRITON DIVING SERVICES, L.L.C.,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, OWEN, and ELROD, Circuit Judges.
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
    W&T Offshore hired Triton Diving Services to provide a vessel, staff, and
    equipment for W&T’s offshore pipeline project. W&T also hired a safety
    contractor, Tiger Safety, to provide safety monitoring and training. Tiger
    personnel came aboard Triton’s vessel to furnish these services, and one of
    them, a technician named Jakarta Grogan, was injured while on board. W&T
    and Triton now dispute which party must pay for Grogan’s injuries. The court
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    No. 15-30369
    below interpreted the parties’ Master Service Contract to place this burden on
    W&T alone. We affirm.
    I
    W&T Offshore (“W&T”) is a pipeline and platform operator in the Gulf
    of Mexico. In October 2011, it hired Triton Diving Services (“Triton”) to
    participate in an offshore pipeline recommissioning project. The project
    required flushing the pipeline of impurities, which Triton accomplished by
    pumping fluids flushed from the pipeline to the TRITON ACHIEVER, a dive
    support vessel (DSV) that Triton captained, crewed, and operated. W&T
    provided detailed instructions for the filtering operation in a work order that
    Triton was obliged to follow pursuant to the Master Service Contract (“MSC”)
    between Triton and W&T.
    While Triton was performing this service, it detected potentially unsafe
    levels of hydrogen sulfide (“H2S”) being filtered out of the pipeline fluids and
    suspended its operations in accordance with its safety manual. Triton then
    consulted with a W&T facilities engineer, Alan Greig, who recommended that
    Triton hire Tiger Safety (“Tiger”) to help resolve the H2S problem. A Triton
    representative made some of the arrangements with Tiger, and Greig also
    contacted Tiger to discuss the services it would provide, approve the equipment
    it would use, and confirm how much the services would cost W&T. Because
    Triton’s work order with W&T would require W&T to pay “cost plus 10%” to
    Triton for any charges for third-party services not addressed in the work order,
    W&T opted to pay for Tiger’s services directly. The contract and job tickets
    Tiger prepared for its work on the project listed W&T as “Customer” and were
    signed by W&T representatives.
    Tiger   personnel,   including   Jakarta   Grogan,    came    aboard    the
    ACHIEVER to provide H2S monitoring and safety training. Grogan testified
    that his job was to take samples when instructed to do so by W&T’s
    2
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    representative and to provide measurements to that representative. 1 The H2S
    problem was eventually resolved, and W&T decided to discharge Grogan and
    Tiger.
    Shortly thereafter, Grogan fell on the deck of the ACHIEVER while
    attempting to board a personnel basket. He sued Triton and W&T in federal
    district court over the resulting injuries. W&T and Triton answered and filed
    cross-claims against each other for indemnity and defense of Grogan’s claims.
    Under the MSC, W&T had agreed to indemnify Triton for personal injury
    claims brought by members of the “W&T Group,” and Triton had agreed to
    indemnify W&T from personal injury claims brought by members of the
    “Contractor Group.” The MSC defines these groups as follows:
    1.1.2 “Contractor Group” shall mean: Contractor, its parent,
    subsidiary and affiliated companies, and their respective parents,
    subsidiary and affiliated companies, and all of their respective
    officers, directors, representatives, employees and invitees on the
    Work sites and insurers of all of the foregoing.
    1.1.3 “W&T Group” shall mean: W&T, its parent, subsidiary and
    affiliated or related companies, its and their working interest
    owners, co-lessees, co-owners, partners, farmors, farmees, joint
    operators, and joint venturers, if any, and all of their respective
    officers, directors, representatives, employees and invitees on the
    Work sites and insurers of all of the foregoing. 2
    Each side claimed a right to indemnification under these provisions. 3
    W&T claimed that Grogan was Triton’s invitee or, in the alternative, that he
    More generally, although a W&T representative on the ACHIEVER monitored
    1
    Tiger’s activities, Tiger personnel were directed by Triton personnel with respect to where
    they were allowed to go on board the vessel and where they were allowed to set up equipment.
    2 Emphases added.
    3 Each side also seeks its defense costs from the other.
    3
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    was an invitee of both Triton and W&T. 4 Triton argued that Grogan was W&T’s
    invitee alone. The parties agreed to a bench trial on this issue. 5
    The district court sided with Triton. It rejected W&T’s argument that a
    “dual invitee” situation existed. Rather, it found, ““[b]ased on the facts of [the]
    case,” that Grogan was W&T’s invitee, and “decline[d] the invitation to find
    Triton a ‘co-invitor.’” In turn, it concluded that W&T owed Triton indemnity.
    W&T appealed.
    II
    “Interpretation of the terms of a contract, including an indemnity clause,
    is a matter of law, reviewable de novo on appeal.” 6 However, “[a] district court’s
    factual findings, including those on which the court based its legal conclusions,
    are reviewed for clear error.” 7 “A finding is clearly erroneous when, although
    there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court based on all of the evidence
    is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed.” 8
    We use the six-factor framework set forth in Davis & Sons, Inc. v. Gulf
    Oil Corp. to determine whether federal maritime law, rather than state law,
    4  Pursuant to stipulations between the two parties, if both W&T and Triton were found
    to have invited Grogan, then liability would be allocated 63% to Triton and 37% to W&T.
    Because each party funded half of the settlement with Grogan, such a finding would obligate
    Triton to reimburse W&T for the amount it overpaid.
    5 With the consent of both parties, the district court used only the briefs and summary
    judgment record in the case to reach its ruling.
    6 Offshore Marine Contractors, Inc. v. Palm Energy Offshore, L.L.C., 
    779 F.3d 345
    , 348
    (5th Cir. 2015) (quoting Duval v. N. Assur. Co. of Am., 
    722 F.3d 300
    , 303 (5th Cir. 2013)); see
    Luhr Bros., Inc. v. Crystal Shipowning, PTE. Ltd. (In re Luhr Bros., Inc.), 
    325 F.3d 681
    , 684
    (5th Cir. 2003) (specifically addressing bench trials in admiralty actions).
    7 Superior MRI Servs., Inc. v. Alliance Healthcare Servs., Inc., 
    778 F.3d 502
    , 504 (5th
    Cir. 2015) (quoting St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Labuzan, 
    579 F.3d 533
    , 538 (5th Cir.
    2009)); see Luhr 
    Bros., 325 F.3d at 684
    .
    8 Luhr 
    Bros., 325 F.3d at 684
    (quoting Walker v. Braus, 
    995 F.2d 77
    , 80 (5th Cir.
    1993)).
    4
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    applies to the interpretation and application of a contract. 9 Here, the district
    court correctly ruled that the MSC is a maritime contract under that
    framework, a conclusion the parties do not dispute.
    “A maritime contract containing an indemnity agreement . . . should be
    read as a whole and its words given their plain meaning unless the provision
    is ambiguous.” 10 In this case, the district court’s interpretation of the MSC
    turned on the definition of the word “invitee.” The MSC itself does not define
    this term. When a maritime contract uses but does not define “invitee,” courts
    in this circuit apply the definition articulated in Blanks v. Murco Drilling
    Corp. 11 In that case, drawing on Louisiana law, we defined “invitee” as “a
    person who goes onto premises with the expressed or implied invitation of the
    occupant, on business of the occupant or for their mutual advantage.” 12 The
    court below used the Blanks definition without objection from either party.
    III
    We first consider the district court’s determination that Grogan was
    W&T’s invitee. The court found that “W&T satisfies all of the elements
    necessary to be Tiger’s [and therefore Grogan’s] invitor.” On appeal, W&T
    disputes only the finding, made as part of the court’s Blanks analysis, that
    W&T was an occupant of the ACHIEVER. W&T objects that it did not “charter,
    9  
    919 F.2d 313
    , 316 (5th Cir. 1990); see generally 
    id. (“What constitutes
    maritime
    character is not determinable by rubric. The Supreme Court has resorted to the observation
    that a contract is maritime if it has a ‘genuinely salty flavor.’”) (quoting Kossick v. United
    Fruit Co., 
    365 U.S. 731
    , 742 (1961)).
    10 Hardy v. Gulf Oil Corp., 
    949 F.2d 826
    , 834 (5th Cir. 1992) (quoting Weathersby v.
    Conoco Oil Co., 
    752 F.2d 953
    , 955 (5th Cir. 1984)).
    11 See, e.g., Brown v. Sea Mar Mgmt., LLC, 288 F. App’x 922, 924 (5th Cir. 2008)
    (unpublished); Alex v. Wild Well Control, Inc., No. 07-9183, 
    2009 WL 2599782
    , at *9 (E.D. La.
    Aug. 18, 2009) (“When a contract does not specifically define ‘invitee,’ courts adopt the Blanks
    definition.”); Clayton Williams Energy, Inc. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of La., No. 03-2980,
    
    2004 WL 2452780
    , at *5 (E.D. La. Nov. 1 2004), aff’d, 161 F. App’x 378 (5th Cir. 2006);
    Reynaud v. Rowan Companies, Inc., No. 98-1326, 
    1999 WL 65022
    , at *3 (E.D. La. Feb. 5,
    1999).
    12 
    766 F.2d 891
    , 894 (5th Cir. 1985).
    5
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    man, or operate the vessel” and that Triton was an “independent contractor”
    according to the MSC.
    These objections, whether right or wrong, are not dispositive. The MSC
    does not define the term “occupant” for purposes of determining invitee status,
    nor does Blanks or any other published case from our court. However, in an
    unpublished case, we applied “the customary meaning of ‘occupant,’” namely,
    “‘[o]ne who has possessory rights in, or control over, certain property or
    premises.’” 13 The district court found that W&T occupied the ACHIEVER
    because “[w]hile [Triton’s] crew . . . retained control over decisions related to
    the safe operation of the vessel . . . the direction, command, and control of the
    vessel as it pertained to the work on the pipeline recommissioning project itself
    came from W&T or its company representative.”
    W&T claims this finding lacks support in the record. We disagree. The
    record indicates that Triton did what W&T paid it to do pursuant to the MSC
    and an ensuing work order. The work order incorporated documents that
    provided   detailed   instructions    for       every   step      of    Triton’s   work    on
    recommissioning the pipeline and specified when and where Triton’s vessel
    was to be “mobilize[d],” “relocate[d],” and “demobilized.” Under the MSC,
    Triton warranted that “all Work provided by [Triton] hereunder will conform,
    in all particulars, to the specifications set forth in the relevant Order,” and it
    agreed that “in the event [Triton’s] Work fails to conform to said specifications,
    W&T may . . . direct [Triton] to repair, replace or re-accomplish (as applicable)
    the non-conforming Work.” Moreover, although the ACHIEVER’s crew mostly
    consisted of Triton employees and invitees, a W&T consultant was on board for
    much of the time that Triton’s was performing work for W&T.
    13 Brown v. Sea Mar Mgmt., LLC, 
    288 F. App'x 922
    , 925 (5th Cir. 2008) (quoting
    BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1108 (8th ed. 2004)).
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    Given this evidence, we cannot conclude that the district court clearly
    erred in determining that W&T occupied the ACHIEVER. W&T does not claim
    that the district court otherwise erred in applying Blanks to it, and we find no
    other error. The district court correctly determined that Grogan was W&T’s
    invitee.
    IV
    We next consider the district court’s determination that Grogan was not
    Triton’s invitee. W&T argues that this determination arose purely from a
    misreading of the MSC. According to W&T, the district court erroneously held
    that a “dual invitee” situation could not exist under the MSC. Accordingly, once
    the district court determined W&T invited Grogan, it concluded that Grogan
    could not have been Triton’s invitee by simple operation of the contract. In
    W&T’s telling, then, the district court’s finding as to Triton was not factual in
    nature and is entitled to no deference. Triton disputes W&T’s reading of the
    opinion below. We find W&T’s reading plausible, 14 but see no need to resolve
    this debate. Nor need we determine whether the MSC admits the possibility of
    a “dual invitee” situation. Even if the district court believed it could not deem
    Triton an invitor because it had already deemed W&T an invitor, and even if
    14   The district court repeatedly suggested that it could not deem Triton an invitor
    because it had already deemed W&T an invitor: “Having found that W&T satisfies all of the
    elements necessary to be Tiger's invitor, this Court declines the invitation to find Triton a
    “co-invitor.” . . . The Court finds that it would be absurd to conclude that . . . there are two
    invitors since this would eviscerate the indemnity provisions of a contract like the one in this
    case . . . . Accordingly, the Court concludes that Grogan was not the invitee of both Triton
    and W&T. . . . Based on the facts of this case, the Court concludes that Tiger was W&T's
    invitee, and therefore, that Grogan, Tiger's employee, was a member of the W&T Group.
    Having reached this conclusion, it is the ruling of this Court that W&T owes Triton indemnity
    for its defense costs and the amounts paid in settlement of Grogan's claims.” (Emphases
    added.) On the other hand, the court observed that “the facts in [another Fifth Circuit case]
    are analogous to the facts found by this Court to conclude that a ‘dual invitor’ situation simply
    did not exist” and that “most cases that have analyzed the concept of invitee status have facts
    in common with the facts of this case, which when taken together, militate in favor of finding
    W&T to be the invitor.”
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    this belief resulted from a misinterpretation of the MSC, the district court still
    found facts sufficient to sustain its holding that Grogan was not Triton’s
    invitee. 15
    The district court found that Triton did not induce Tiger’s and Grogan’s
    participation in W&T’s project. Rather, although Triton “coordinate[d]
    logistics” with Tiger and “impliedly consented to Tiger working from the
    [ACHIEVER],” “it was W&T . . . that directly contracted with Tiger for a
    specific scope of work, funded and directed all of Tiger’s work, and was the
    entity that explicitly invited Tiger to work on the ‘overall’ pipeline
    recommissioning project.” The conduct of the parties over the course of the
    project further demonstrated that W&T was ultimately responsible for Tiger’s
    presence and that of its employees. “Tiger’s operations manager, David
    Lacombe, considered his customer to be W&T, and he corresponded directly
    with [W&T’s project manager Alan] Greig when changes were made to the
    number of Tiger personnel or regarding the return of equipment.” Tiger and
    Grogan were subject to the “oversight and project management of . . . Greig . .
    . and his on-site representatives”; W&T representatives “gave Grogan his day-
    to-day instructions,” approved his work tickets, and decided when he would be
    sent back to shore.
    Under the Blanks standard, these facts justify the district court’s
    conclusion that Grogan was not Triton’s invitee. Blanks presented closely
    15 See Bickford v. Int'l Speedway Corp., 
    654 F.2d 1028
    , 1031 (5th Cir. Unit B 1981)
    (“[R]eversal is inappropriate if the ruling of the district court can be affirmed on any grounds,
    regardless of whether those grounds were used by the district court.”). To be clear: we do not
    reach the issue of whether W&T accurately characterizes the district court’s reasoning, nor
    do we determine whether the MSC allows a “dual invitee” situation. We note, however, that
    even if the district court had erroneously rejected the possibility of a “dual invitee,” this may
    not have affected its result. In Blanks, the contract at issue explicitly contemplated and
    allocated liability in case of a “dual invitee” situation; nevertheless, we held, on similar facts,
    that only the party analogous to W&T could be considered an 
    invitor. 766 F.2d at 893-94
    .
    8
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    analogous facts, and in that case, we declined to extend invitor status to the
    party in Triton’s position. In Blanks, a well operator, ANR, hired a service
    company, Murco. ANR and Murco each indemnified the other for claims
    brought by the other’s invitees. ANR also hired a subcontractor, Consolidated,
    to work on the same project. Consolidated’s employee, Blanks, was injured
    while assisting a Murco employee on Murco’s rig. We held that Blanks was
    ANR’s invitee alone, and emphasized that he “was invited onto the drilling site
    by ANR through his employee status with Consolidated and was there
    performing services for ANR's benefit.” 16 Our analysis in Blanks thus focused
    on the party ultimately responsible for the invitee’s presence. 17 In this case,
    that party was W&T, not Triton.
    In disputing the district court’s Blanks analysis as to Triton, W&T
    focuses solely on the court’s observation that “the presence of H2S did not
    preclude the operation of Triton’s vessel . . . . The vessel could have been
    reassigned to another job where there was no H2S threat.” In the district court’s
    view, this showed that “W&T was the party that stood to benefit from Tiger’s
    H2S services.” W&T argues that the record is devoid of evidence of “another
    job” available to Triton and that the court’s invitee determination as to Triton
    was therefore clearly erroneous.
    Again, we disagree. The district court’s “another job” hypothetical merely
    illustrates the undeniable nature of the parties’ relationship: W&T’s project
    was the ultimate reason for Triton and Tiger’s presence on the work site, and
    16   
    Blanks, 766 F.2d at 894
    . We also pointed out that “[a]lthough there was no written
    contract between ANR and Consolidated, Consolidated was clearly working directly for ANR
    . . . . Weekly reports and service tickets for Consolidated's services were signed by an on-site
    representative of ANR. Consolidated's invoices were presented to ANR for payment.” 
    Id. at 893.
             17 See also 
    id. (“[I]nvitee status
    is determined by who invites the injured party onto
    the premises.”).
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    any benefit to Triton from Tiger’s presence was indirect. Under our case law, a
    contractor may incidentally benefit from the presence of a subcontractor
    without having invited the subcontractor onto the project for purposes of
    liability. 18 Such was the case here. As the district court explained, although
    Tiger’s presence may have indirectly benefited Triton, it was crucial for W&T:
    “The [ACHIEVER] could have been reassigned to another job where there was
    no H2S threat, but W&T’s project could not move forward at all until the H2S
    situation was addressed.” The district court did not err in reasoning that this
    fact, alongside others, was consistent with a finding that Grogan and Tiger
    were not Triton’s invitees.
    V
    The district court properly determined that Grogan was W&T’s invitee.
    Moreover, its valid factual findings compel the conclusion that Grogan was not
    Triton’s invitee. The district court was therefore correct to hold W&T liable
    under the MSC for Triton’s settlement and defense costs related to Grogan’s
    claims. We AFFIRM the ruling of the district court.
    18  In Blanks, the injured party, Blanks, was found to be ANR’s invitee, and not
    Murco’s, even though he was assisting Murco’s employee on Murco’s rig at the time he was
    injured. 
    See 766 F.2d at 893-95
    .
    10