Larry Doiron, Incorporated v. Spclt Rntl To ( 2018 )


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  •      Case: 16-30217   Document: 00514299129        Page: 1   Date Filed: 01/08/2018
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    January 8, 2018
    No. 16-30217
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    In Re: In the Matter of the Complaint of Larry Doiron, Incorporated as
    Owner and Operator of the Barge Pogo and M/V Billy Joe for Exoneration
    from or Limitation of Liability
    LARRY DOIRON, INCORPORATED,
    Plaintiff – Appellee
    ROBERT JACKSON,
    Intervenor Plaintiff – Appellee
    v.
    SPECIALTY RENTAL TOOLS & SUPPLY, L.L.P.; OIL STATES ENERGY
    SERVICES, L.L.C.; ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendants – Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
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    No. 16-30217
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and JOLLY*, DAVIS**, JONES, SMITH,
    DENNIS, CLEMENT, PRADO, OWEN, ELROD, SOUTHWICK, HAYNES,
    GRAVES, HIGGINSON and COSTA, Circuit Judges.***
    W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge.
    We took this case en banc to consider modifying the criteria set forth in
    Davis & Sons, Inc. v. Gulf Oil Corp. for determining whether a contract for
    performance of specialty services to facilitate the drilling or production of oil
    or gas on navigable waters is maritime. 1 After briefing and argument, the
    Court has decided to adopt a simpler, more straightforward test consistent
    with the Supreme Court’s decision in Norfolk Southern Railway Co. v. Kirby
    for making this determination. 2
    I.     BACKGROUND
    On October 12, 2005, Apache Corporation (“Apache”) entered into a
    blanket master services contract (“MSC”) with Specialty Rental Tools &
    Supply, L.L.P. (“STS”). The MSC included an indemnity provision running in
    favor of Apache and its contractors. 3 In early 2011, Apache issued an oral work
    order directing STS to perform “flow-back” services on a gas well in navigable
    waters in Louisiana in order to remove obstructions hampering the well’s flow.
    A stationary production platform provided the only access to the gas well. The
    work order did not require a vessel, and neither Apache nor STS anticipated
    that a vessel would be necessary to perform the job.
    * Judge Jolly, now a Senior Judge of this court, participated in the consideration of
    this en banc case.
    ** Judge Davis, now a Senior Judge of this court, is participating as a member of the
    original panel.
    ***Judges Willett and Ho, were not on the court when this case was heard en banc.
    1 See 
    919 F.2d 313
    (5th Cir. 1990).
    2 See 
    543 U.S. 14
    (2004).
    3 A more exhaustive factual background can be found in the panel opinion. See In re
    Larry Doiron, Inc., 
    869 F.3d 338
    , 340–41 (5th Cir. 2017).
    2
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    On February 24, 2011, STS dispatched a two-man crew to perform the
    work required by the work order. After an unsuccessful day of work, the STS
    crew determined that some heavy equipment was needed to complete the job
    and that a crane would be required to lift the equipment into place. Because
    the production platform was too small to accommodate a crane, the crew
    suggested to Apache that it engage a barge equipped with a crane to lift the
    equipment. Apache agreed and contracted with Plaintiff Larry Doiron, Inc.
    (“LDI”), to provide a crane barge.
    The next day, the LDI crew proceeded to the job site on the crane barge
    POGO and unloaded the equipment requested by the STS crew. After being
    unsuccessful, however, the STS crew discovered that it needed yet a different
    piece of equipment, so, with the aid of the crane, both crews began removing
    the heavy equipment previously unloaded. During this process, the LDI crane
    operator struck and injured one of the STS crewmembers, Peter Savoie, with
    the equipment.
    Anticipating a claim from Mr. Savoie, LDI filed a limitation of liability
    proceeding as owner of the crane barge POGO. Savoie filed a claim in the
    limitation proceeding. LDI, as Apache’s contractor, then filed a third-party
    complaint against STS, seeking indemnity under the terms of the MSC.
    LDI filed a motion for summary judgment seeking a declaration that it
    was entitled to indemnity from STS under the MSC. STS filed a cross-motion
    for summary judgment seeking a determination that it owed no indemnity.
    The narrow issue presented was whether the MSC was a maritime contract.
    If so, general maritime law permitted enforcement of the indemnity provision.
    If not, Louisiana law controlled, and the Louisiana Oilfield Indemnity Act
    (“LOIA”) precluded indemnity. 4 The district court concluded that maritime
    4   See LA. REV. STAT. § 9:2780(A).
    3
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    law applied and awarded LDI indemnity from STS. Our panel affirmed that
    judgment on appeal. A majority of the active judges then voted to take the case
    en banc.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. 5
    Summary judgment is proper “if the movant shows that there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” 6 A genuine dispute exists if a reasonable jury could find in
    favor of the nonmoving party. 7 All facts and evidence are viewed in the light
    most favorable to the nonmovant. 8           We turn first to the existing law on
    maritime contracts in this circuit.
    B. Current Law
    The issue in this case is whether the Court should apply maritime law
    or Louisiana law to determine the validity of the indemnity provisions in the
    MSC. If Louisiana law applies, the indemnity agreement is void as against
    public policy. 9 If, on the other hand, the contract is maritime and state law
    does not apply, then the indemnity obligation is enforceable. 10
    5  James v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    743 F.3d 65
    , 68 (5th Cir. 2014).
    6  FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a).
    7 Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986).
    8 
    James, 743 F.3d at 68
    .
    9 See LA. REV. STAT. § 9:2780(A).
    10 See Hoda v. Rowan Cos., 
    419 F.3d 379
    , 380 (5th Cir. 2005).
    LDI also argues that the choice-of-law clause in the MSC, which specifies general
    maritime law as the applicable law under which to construe the contract, should be enforced
    even if the contract is nonmaritime in nature.
    Our case law makes clear that, if the contract is nonmaritime, Louisiana law will
    govern its construction even in the face of a choice-of-law clause. This is so because
    enforcement of the choice-of-law clause would violate Louisiana’s public policy and directly
    contravene LOIA. See Verdine v. Ensco Offshore Co., 
    255 F.3d 246
    , 254 (5th Cir. 2001).
    4
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    Our cases in this area have long been confusing and difficult to apply. In
    Thurmond v. Delta Well Surveyors, Judge Garwood stated in his concurring
    opinion that he was “generally in agreement with Judge Wisdom’s persuasive
    opinion, but . . . troubled by the tension, or perhaps outright inconsistency,
    between many of our opinions in this area.” 11 He elaborated that:
    [I]t seems to me that it may be desirable to consider this issue en
    banc, in order that we may take a more consistent approach to the
    question of whether and in what circumstances activities in
    connection with mineral development in state territorial waters
    are maritime (or perhaps “maritime and local[.]”)] 12
    Since 1990, we have followed the multi-factor test set forth in Davis &
    Sons, Inc. v. Gulf Oil Corp. (“Davis & Sons”) to determine whether a contract
    is a maritime contract. 13 Judge Rubin, in attempting to summarize and make
    sense of our case law, set forth numerous guiding principles:
    If . . . the contract consists of two parts, a blanket contract followed
    by later work orders, the two must be interpreted together in
    evaluating whether maritime or land law is applicable to the
    interpretation and enforceability of the contract’s provisions. The
    blanket contract is not of itself complete and calls for no specific
    work. The actual contract between the parties therefore consists
    of the blanket agreement as modified by the later work order. 14
    He stated further:
    A contract may either contain both maritime and non-maritime
    obligations . . . . If separable maritime obligations are
    imposed . . . , these are maritime obligations that can be
    separately enforced in admiralty without prejudice to the rest,
    hence subject to maritime law. 15
    Whether the blanket agreement and work orders, read together,
    do or do not constitute a maritime contract depends, as does the
    11 
    836 F.2d 952
    , 957 (5th Cir. 1988) (Garwood, J., concurring).
    12 See 
    id. (quoting Kossick
    v. United Fruit Co., 
    365 U.S. 731
    , 738 (1961)).
    
    13 919 F.2d at 316
    .
    14 
    Id. at 315.
          15 
    Id. at 315–16
    (internal quotation marks, brackets, and citations omitted).
    5
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    characterization of any other contract, on the nature and character
    of the contract, rather than on its place of execution or
    performance. A contract relating to a ship in its use as such, or to
    commerce or navigation on navigable waters, or to transportation
    by sea or to maritime employment is subject to maritime law.
    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. 16
    He concluded his synopsis by distilling these principles into the six-factor test
    at issue in this appeal:
    Determination of the nature of a contract depends in part on
    historical treatment in the jurisprudence and in part on a fact-
    specific inquiry. We consider six factors in characterizing the
    contract: 1) what does the specific work order in effect at the time
    of injury provide? 2) what work did the crew assigned under the
    work order actually do? 3) was the crew assigned to work aboard
    a vessel in navigable waters? 4) to what extent did the work being
    done relate to the mission of that vessel? 5) what was the principal
    work of the injured worker? and 6) what work was the injured
    worker actually doing at the time of injury? 17
    A number of judges on this Court have since criticized this approach as
    confusing, particularly the six-factor, fact-intensive test. 18 In Hoda v. Rowan
    Cos., Judge Jones began the opinion by stating that:
    This appeal requires us to sort once more through the authorities
    distinguishing maritime and non-maritime contracts in the
    offshore exploration and production industry. As is typical, the
    final result turns on a minute parsing of the facts. Whether this
    is the soundest jurisprudential approach may be doubted,
    inasmuch as it creates uncertainty, spawns litigation, and hinders
    the rational calculation of costs and risks by companies
    16  
    Id. at 316
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    17  
    Id. 18 See,
    e.g., Hodgen v. Forest Oil Corp., 
    87 F.3d 1512
    , 1523 n.8 (5th Cir. 1996),
    (collecting cases expressing frustration with the inconsistent analysis of maritime contracts),
    overruled on other grounds by Grand Isle Shipyard, Inc. v. Seacor Marine, LLC, 
    589 F.3d 778
    ,
    788 (5th Cir. 2009) (en banc); 
    Hoda, 419 F.3d at 380
    .
    6
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    participating in this industry. Nevertheless, we are bound by the
    approach this court has followed for more than two decades. 19
    Professor David W. Robertson has also pointed out some of the difficulties with
    the Davis & Sons test:
    The six factors are too pointillistic: they have led Fifth Circuit
    panels down such odd lines of thought as “whether drilling mud
    services are more akin to wireline work [which has sometimes
    been viewed as quintessentially nonmaritime] or to casing
    services.” 20
    For a variety of reasons, most of the prongs of the Davis & Sons test are
    unnecessary and unduly complicate the determination of whether a contract is
    maritime. Judge Southwick’s complex factual explication of the prongs in the
    panel opinion—which we consider below—demonstrates this point. 21
    The first Davis & Sons’ prong asks: What does the contract provide? 22
    This is clearly an appropriate consideration in any contract case: the language
    of the contract. In this case, the contract consists of both the blanket MSC and
    the oral work order, which must be read together. 23
    The second prong asks: What did the crew actually do? 24 Analyzing this
    prong required the panel to parse the precise facts related to the services
    
    19 419 F.3d at 380
    .
    20   David W. Robertson, The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act’s Provisions on
    Jurisdiction, Remedies, and Choice of Law: Correcting the Fifth Circuit’s Mistakes, 38 J.
    MAR. L. & COM. 487, 545 (2007). For a more detailed criticism of the Davis & Sons test, see
    
    id. at 540–45.
            21 See generally In re Doiron, 
    869 F.3d 22
    Davis & 
    Sons, 919 F.2d at 316
    .
    23 STS argues that the following provision in the MSC contemplates the use of a vessel:
    “IF CONTRACTOR [STS] USES ANY VESSELS IN CONNECTION WITH ITS WORK FOR
    COMPANY OR COMPANY GROUP,” additional vessel-related insurance is required.
    (emphasis added).
    This insurance provision on its face has no application because STS did not provide or
    use a vessel—the vessel and crew were provided by LDI. This provision requiring vessel-
    related insurance applied to contractors such as LDI.
    24 Davis & 
    Sons, 919 F.2d at 316
    .
    7
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    performed under the contract and determine whether those services were
    inherently maritime. Because none of our previous case law had considered
    the flow-back services at issue here and whether they were inherently
    maritime, the panel attempted to analogize flow-back services to other services
    considered in previous opinions. 25 This required the panel to give a detailed
    description of both this case and the analogous cases, comparing flow-back
    services to casing, wireline, and welding services. 26 In doing so, the panel
    added to the many pages dedicated to similar painstaking analyses in the
    Federal Reporter. 27 The fact is, none of these services are inherently maritime.
    As discussed below, the focus should be on whether the contract calls for
    substantial work to be performed from a vessel.
    The third and fourth Davis & Sons prongs ask: Was the crew assigned
    to a vessel in navigable waters, and to what extent was the crew’s work related
    to the mission of the vessel? 28 These facts would be relevant if we were
    required to decide whether the crew members were seamen but not relevant to
    whether the employer of the crewmembers entered into a maritime contract.
    The fifth prong asks: What was the principal work of the injured worker? 29
    25  See In re 
    Doiron, 869 F.3d at 343
    .
    26  See 
    id. at 344–46.
            27 Compare 
    Thurmond, 836 F.2d at 956
    (finding wireline services nonmaritime in
    nature); Domingue v. Ocean Drilling & Expl. Co., 
    923 F.2d 393
    , 398 (5th Cir. 1991) (same),
    with Corbitt v. Diamond M. Drilling Co., 
    654 F.2d 329
    , 332 (5th Cir. Unit A Aug. 1981)
    (finding casing services to be maritime in nature), and Campbell v. Sonat Offshore Drilling,
    Inc., 
    979 F.2d 1115
    , 1124–25 (5th Cir. 1992) (same); see also Kenneth G. Engerrand, Primer
    of Remedies on the Outer Continental Shelf, 4 LOY. MAR. L.J. 19, 61–63 (2005) (noting that
    historically, some service contracts are considered maritime in nature, including drilling and
    workover, casing, catering, repair, and well-site supervision, while other services contracts
    are traditionally nonmaritime in nature, including wireline work, testing and completion
    operations).
    28 Davis & 
    Sons, 919 F.2d at 316
    .
    29 See 
    id. 8 Case:
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    Again, this is not relevant to whether the injured worker’s employer entered
    into a maritime contract.
    The sixth prong asks:          What was the injured worker doing when
    injured? 30 The facts surrounding the accident are relevant to whether the
    worker was injured in a maritime tort, but they are immaterial in determining
    whether the worker’s employer entered into a maritime contract.
    In our panel opinion, after exhaustively analyzing the facts of this case
    in light of the six-prong test, we limited our holding to the facts of this case and
    determined that the contract was maritime primarily because a vessel was
    essential to the completion of the job. 31
    C. Kirby
    Fortunately, the Supreme Court’s opinion in Norfolk Southern Railway
    Co. v. Kirby lights a path to a simpler, more straightforward method for
    determining whether a contract is maritime and avoids most of the
    unnecessary analysis required by Davis & Sons. 32 In Kirby, the Supreme
    Court considered a claim for money damages for cargo damaged in a train
    wreck. 33 Under two coextensive bills of lading, the goods were transported
    from Australia to Huntsville, Alabama:           first by ship from Australia to
    Savannah, Georgia, and then by rail to Huntsville, Alabama. 34 The question
    was whether the suit to recover for cargo damaged on the land leg of the trip
    fell within the Court’s admiralty jurisdiction. 35 The Court answered this in the
    affirmative because both bills of lading were maritime contracts. 36 This was
    30 
    Id. 31 In
    re 
    Doiron, 869 F.3d at 345
    –47.
    32 
    See 543 U.S. at 22
    –27.
    33 See 
    id. at 18.
          34 See 
    id. at 18–21.
          35 See 
    id. at 22–24.
          36 See 
    id. at 24.
    9
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    so, the Court reasoned, because the “primary objective” of these bills was “to
    accomplish the transportation of goods by sea from Australia to the eastern
    coast of the United States.” 37
    In considering whether the bills of lading were maritime contracts, the
    Court broadly defined what characterized a contract as maritime. The Court
    observed that:
    [W]e cannot look to whether a ship or other vessel was involved in
    the dispute, as we would in a putative maritime tort case. . . . Nor
    can we simply look to the place of the contract’s formation or
    performance. Instead, the answer “depends upon . . . the nature
    and character of the contract,” and the true criterion is whether it
    has “reference to maritime service or maritime transactions.” 38
    The Court also emphasized that “the fundamental interest giving rise to
    maritime jurisdiction is the protection of maritime commerce.” 39                          “The
    conceptual approach,” the Court explained, “vindicates that interest by
    focusing our inquiry on whether the principal objective of a contract is
    maritime commerce.” 40 The Kirby opinion clarified that we should use contract
    rather than tort principles in determining whether a contract being sued upon
    is maritime. 41
    37  
    Id. 38 Id.
    (second alteration in original) (quoting N. Pac. S.S. Co. v. Hall Bros. Marine Ry.
    & Shipbuilding Co., 
    249 U.S. 119
    , 125 (1919)); see also Exxon Corp. v. Cent. Gulf Lines, Inc.,
    
    500 U.S. 603
    , 611 (1991) (“[T]he trend in modern admiralty case law . . . is to focus the
    jurisdictional inquiry upon whether the nature of the transaction was maritime.”).
    39 
    Kirby, 543 U.S. at 25
    (emphasis removed) (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted).
    40 
    Id. 41 Id.
    at 24. The Court explained that “[g]eography . . . is useful in a conceptual
    inquiry only in a limited sense: If a bill’s sea components are insubstantial, then the bill is
    not a maritime contract.” 
    Id. at 27.
    10
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    The Court in Kirby rejected the mixed-contract theory applied in some
    circuits and which was one of the underpinnings of the Davis & Sons panel’s
    rationale in formulating its six-prong test. Davis & Sons explained that:
    A contract may either contain both maritime and non-maritime
    obligations or, as in the Gulf-Davis blanket agreement,
    contemplate future detailed contracts having different
    characteristics. If separable maritime obligations are imposed by
    the supplementary contracts, or work orders, these are “maritime
    obligations [that] can be separately enforced [in admiralty]
    without prejudice to the rest,” hence subject to maritime law. 42
    The Kirby court, after disapproving mixed-contract decisions from the
    Second, Fifth, and Federal Circuit Courts of Appeal, 43 added the following:
    Furthermore, to the extent that these lower court decisions fashion
    a rule for identifying maritime contracts that depends solely on
    geography, they are inconsistent with the conceptual approach our
    precedent requires. Conceptually, so long as a bill of lading
    requires substantial carriage of goods by sea, its purpose is to
    effectuate maritime commerce—and thus it is a maritime contract.
    Its character as a maritime contract is not defeated simply because
    it also provides for some land carriage. 44
    Our cases have long held that the drilling and production of oil and gas
    on navigable waters from a vessel is commercial maritime activity.                           For
    example, in Theriot v. Bay Drilling Corp., we considered a contract for
    supplying a submersible drilling barge and concluded that the contract was
    clearly maritime, noting that “[o]il and gas drilling on navigable waters aboard
    a vessel is recognized to be maritime commerce.” 45 We recently affirmed this
    understanding of commercial maritime activity in In re Deepwater Horizon,
    42   See Davis & 
    Sons, 919 F.2d at 315
    –16 (footnote omitted).
    43   See, e.g., Kuehne & Nagel (AG & Co.) v. Geosource, Inc., 
    874 F.2d 283
    , 290 (5th Cir.
    1989).
    44   
    Kirby, 543 U.S. at 27
    (emphasis added) (internal citation omitted).
    45   
    783 F.2d 527
    , 538–39 (5th Cir. 1986).
    11
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    where we concluded that maritime law applied in reference to the oil spill that
    “occurred while the vessel[, Deepwater Horizon,] was engaged in the maritime
    activity of conducting offshore drilling operations.” 46
    III.    CONCLUSION
    Based on the principles laid out in Kirby, we adopt the following two-
    pronged test to determine whether a contract in this context is maritime: First,
    is the contract one to provide services to facilitate the drilling or production of
    oil and gas on navigable waters? The answer to this inquiry will avoid the
    unnecessary question from Davis & Sons as to whether the particular service
    is inherently maritime. Second, if the answer to the above question is “yes,”
    does the contract provide or do the parties expect that a vessel will play a
    substantial role in the completion of the contract? 47 If so, the contract is
    46  
    745 F.3d 157
    , 166 (5th Cir. 2014); see also Boudreaux v. Am. Workover, Inc., 
    664 F.2d 463
    , 466 (5th Cir. Unit A Dec. 1981) (noting that vessel-related oil and gas drilling and
    production “is a major industry with peculiar maritime-related problems,” and, further, that
    because it is “an industry that provides approximately 40,000 jobs, and untold millions of
    dollars in revenues and that takes place primarily upon the navigable waters of the United
    States,” it “bears ‘a significant relationship to . . . commerce on navigable waters’”) (alteration
    in original) (footnote and internal citation omitted); Pippen v. Shell Oil Co., 
    661 F.2d 378
    , 384
    (5th Cir. Unit A Nov. 1981) (“[O]ffshore drilling the discovery, recovery, and sale of oil and
    natural gas from the sea bottom is maritime commerce . . . .”); 
    Corbitt, 654 F.2d at 332
    (finding that a contract requiring the furnishing of a casing crew to a submersible drilling
    barge was a maritime contract); Transcon. Gas Pipe Line Corp. v. Mobile Drilling Barge, 
    424 F.2d 684
    , 688–91 (5th Cir. 1970) (finding that a drilling and re-work contract requiring the
    operation and “survey” of a submersible drilling barge was maritime in nature).
    47 When work is performed in part on a vessel and in part on a platform or on land,
    we should consider not only time spent on the vessel but also the relative importance and
    value of the vessel-based work to completing the contract. In Chandris, Inc. v. Latsis, in
    formulating the test for whether a worker’s connection to a vessel was substantial enough to
    qualify him as a seaman under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 30104, the Supreme Court noted:
    [S]ubstantiality in this context is determined by reference to the period covered
    by the Jones Act plaintiff’s maritime employment, rather than by some
    absolute measure. Generally, the Fifth Circuit seems to have identified an
    appropriate rule of thumb for the ordinary case: A worker who spends less
    than about 30 percent of his time in the service of a vessel in navigation should
    not qualify as a seaman under the Jones Act. This figure of course serves as
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    maritime in nature. 48 We find strong support in Kirby for this test, particularly
    in the following sentence: “Conceptually, so long as a bill of lading requires
    substantial carriage of goods by sea, its purpose is to effectuate maritime
    commerce—and thus it is a maritime contract.” 49 Also, in Kirby, the parties
    obviously expected a vessel to play a major role in transporting the cargo from
    Australia to Alabama. 50
    This test places the focus on the contract and the expectations of the
    parties. This is the proper approach in a contract case and assists the parties
    in evaluating their risks, particularly their liability under indemnification
    clauses in the contract. 51 This test also removes from the calculus those prongs
    of the Davis & Sons test that are irrelevant, such as whether the service work
    no more than a guideline established by years of experience, and departure
    from it will certainly be justified in appropriate cases.
    
    515 U.S. 347
    , 371 (1995). The district courts may develop a similar rule of thumb in
    evaluating substantiality in this context. However, we leave this for further development
    below. The calculus would not include transportation to and from the job site.
    48 See Robertson, supra note 20, at 547–48.
    49 See 
    Kirby, 543 U.S. at 27
    . Six other circuits have applied Kirby to determine
    whether a contract is a maritime one in various circumstances; though none of those decisions
    addressed a factual situation similar to that in this case, the approaches in those decision are
    not inconsistent with this test. See Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Great Am. Ins. Co., 
    822 F.3d 620
    , 631–36 (2d Cir. 2016) (analyzing whether an insurance contract was maritime); N.H.
    Ins. Co. v. Home Sav. & Loan Co., 
    581 F.3d 420
    , 424–27 (6th Cir. 2009) (same); Sentry Select
    Ins. Co. v. Royal Ins. Co., 
    481 F.3d 1208
    , 1218–20 (9th Cir. 2007) (same); Flame S.A. v. Freight
    Bulk Pte. Ltd., 
    762 F.3d 352
    , 361–63 (4th Cir. 2014) (analyzing whether forward freight
    agreements were maritime contracts); Odyssey Marine Expl., Inc. v. Unidentified
    Shipwrecked Vessel, 
    636 F.3d 1338
    , 1340–41 (11th Cir. 2011) (analyzing whether a contract
    to conduct research pertaining to a shipwrecked vessel was maritime); Puerto Rico Ports
    Auth. v. Umpierre-Solares, 
    456 F.3d 220
    , 224–26 (1st Cir. 2006) (analyzing whether a
    contract to remove a sunken ship from navigable waters was maritime); see also ROBERT
    FORCE & MARTIN J. NORRIS, THE LAW OF MARITIME PERSONAL INJURIES § 1:22 (5th ed. 2017)
    (discussing Kirby’s approach to analyzing maritime contracts).
    50 See 
    Kirby, 543 U.S. at 19
    .
    51 We applied a similar analysis in Grand Isle Shipyard, Inc. v. Seacor Marine, LLC,
    where we held that the focus of the contract, rather than the situs of the injury, was the
    relevant consideration for the purposes of evaluating the applicability of an indemnity
    agreement. 
    See 589 F.3d at 786
    –89; see also FORCE & NORRIS, supra note 49, § 13:9
    (discussing cases applying the rule emanating from Grand Isle Shipyard).
    13
    Case: 16-30217        Document: 00514299129          Page: 14      Date Filed: 01/08/2018
    No. 16-30217
    itself is inherently maritime and whether the injury occurred following a
    maritime tort. Courts need not determine whether this service work has a
    more or less salty flavor than other service work when neither type is
    inherently salty.
    This does not mean, however, that some of the Davis & Sons factors are
    never relevant. The scope of the contract may be unclear; the extent to which
    the parties expect vessels to be involved in the work may also be unclear. In
    resolving these issues, courts may permit the parties to produce evidence of
    the work actually performed and the extent of vessel involvement in the job.
    It is also conceivable, for example, that the seamen status of a crew—which is
    implicated in two of the Davis & Sons factors—could be relevant to whether
    the vessel involvement was a substantial part of the overall contract. If the
    contract provided only for work to be done by permanent crewmembers aboard
    a vessel, the substantial vessel involvement issue would ordinarily be
    answered. If part of the contract work involves work by crewmembers aboard
    a vessel and part does not, the work by seamen aboard a vessel would be part
    of the factual mix that the district court could consider in resolving whether
    the overall contract involved substantial involvement of a vessel. 52
    Applying this new test to this case, the oral work order called for STS to
    perform downhole work on a gas well that had access only from a platform.
    After the STS crew began work down hole, the crew encountered an unexpected
    problem that required a vessel and a crane to lift equipment needed to resolve
    this problem. The use of the vessel to lift the equipment was an insubstantial
    part of the job and not work the parties expected to be performed. Therefore,
    52  We deal today only with determining the maritime or nonmaritime nature of
    contracts involving the exploration, drilling, and production of oil and gas. If an activity in a
    non-oil and gas sector involves maritime commerce and work from a vessel, we would expect
    that this test would be helpful in determining whether a contract is maritime.
    14
    Case: 16-30217   Document: 00514299129     Page: 15   Date Filed: 01/08/2018
    No. 16-30217
    the contract is nonmaritime and controlled by Louisiana law. The LOIA bars
    indemnity. Accordingly, we reverse the summary judgment in favor of LDI
    and grant summary judgment in favor of STS, render judgment in favor of STS,
    and dismiss LDI’s third-party complaint against STS.
    REVERSED AND RENDERED.
    15