Deloach Marine Services L.L.C. v. Marquette Transp ( 2020 )


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  • Case: 19-30311      Document: 00515561379          Page: 1     Date Filed: 09/11/2020
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                                 United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    September 11, 2020
    No. 19-30311
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Deloach Marine Services, L.L.C.,
    Plaintiff—Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
    versus
    Marquette Transportation Company, L.L.C., in personam,
    Defendant—Appellant/Cross-Appellee.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:17-CV-2970
    Before Smith, Willett, and Duncan, Circuit Judges.
    Stuart Kyle Duncan, Circuit Judge:
    Two barge towboats collided on the Mississippi River. After a bench
    trial, the district court found the captains of both vessels negligent to varying
    degrees. Both parties appeal. Finding no clear error, we affirm the district
    court’s apportionment of fault. We remand to consider prejudgment interest.
    I.
    A.
    On January 26, 2016, the M/V JUSTIN PAUL ECKSTEIN
    (“JUSTIN”) and M/V VANPORT (“VANPORT”) collided near mile
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    No. 19-30311
    marker 131 on the Mississippi River. Both vessels are barge towboats, and
    each had several barges attached to it. Before the collision, the JUSTIN sat
    idle on the west bank of the river, south of a barge-storage area called a
    fleeting facility. The JUSTIN was facing north (“upriver”) and needed to
    enter the channel to move south (“downriver”). In order to turn around, the
    JUSTIN’s captain, Billy Jackson, hoped to “top around” the JUSTIN, a
    maneuver through which her bow (or, more precisely, the bows of her barges)
    would be extended out of the river’s “slack” water and into its navigational
    channel, where the current would turn her bow to face south. At 12:49 pm,
    Jackson made a radio call to announce to vessels in the area that he intended
    to top around into the channel.
    Ten minutes before Jackson’s call, the VANPORT was a few miles
    upstream of the JUSTIN, traveling downriver. The VANPORT had made a
    “passing agreement” with a larger ship, the BEATRICE, whereby the
    BEATRICE would pass the VANPORT to the VANPORT’s port (left). In
    reaching this agreement, the BEATRICE asked the VANPORT to stay as far
    to the right (i.e., as close to the west bank) as she could, because the
    BEATRICE—an oceangoing vessel with a deep hull—needed to stay in the
    deepest part of the river channel. The VANPORT’s captain, Matthew
    Vidrine, put the vessel in idle and moved out of the navigational channel. The
    BEATRICE began to overtake the VANPORT as agreed.
    At 12:54 pm, as the BEATRICE was overtaking the VANPORT,
    Jackson called the VANPORT. The following exchange took place:
    JUSTIN: I straightened her up there with all the traffic coming.
    I think you’re down far enough now that I can go ahead and start
    letting her spin.
    VANPORT: Yeah, you sure can. I’m just slowed down to get this
    ship by me . . . .
    JUSTIN: Yeah, seeing as how I’m going to be about abreast here
    2
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    and I got her crossways, I didn’t want to have my head stuck out
    there in nobody’s way.
    VANPORT: I appreciate it. I saw that, but I had confidence.
    The two captains interpreted this exchange differently. Vidrine
    thought the JUSTIN planned to execute the top-around maneuver after the
    VANPORT passed by. Vidrine therefore believed the JUSTIN would remain
    outside the navigational channel until the VANPORT passed. When Vidrine
    agreed to allow the JUSTIN to “start letting her spin,” he thought Jackson
    planned to “spin in behind the VANPORT and fall in behind it.” For his
    part, however, Jackson believed Vidrine had agreed to keep the VANPORT
    clear of the JUSTIN while she topped around ahead of the VANPORT.
    Jackson also believed he had enough time to execute the maneuver before the
    VANPORT passed, in part because Vidrine told him he had “slowed down.”
    Jackson therefore began to top around immediately after the radio exchange,
    pushing the JUSTIN’s bow into the navigational channel.
    Computerized navigational data (called “Rose Point data” 1) shows
    that immediately after the captains’ radio exchange, the VANPORT
    continued on a straight course, on the edge of the navigational channel,
    “hugging” the fleeting facility along the west bank. Just as the JUSTIN began
    pulling out from the bank to top around, the BEATRICE reached the
    VANPORT’s port and began its passing maneuver. At 12:58 pm, the
    BEATRICE cleared the VANPORT, and Vidrine realized the JUSTIN was
    turning directly into the VANPORT’s path. As the VANPORT immediately
    1
    According to the district court, “Rose Point is a marine navigation software
    program that allows vessel captains to see their vessel’s trajectory as well as the position of
    other vessels near them.” Courts have recognized Rose Point as “the industry standard,”
    which “automatically and objectively record[s] vessel location and movement on a proven
    industry standard electronic chart.” Marquette Transp. Co., LLC v. M/V Century Dream,
    No. CV 16-522, 
    2017 WL 677814
    , at *2 (E.D. La. Feb. 21, 2017).
    3
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    turned to port to avoid the JUSTIN, Vidrine radioed the JUSTIN, “I hope
    you’re backing down,” to which Jackson responded, “Roger, roger, I’m
    backing away from you.”
    Too late. Not a minute after, the barges the JUSTIN was towing
    struck the VANPORT’s lead barge. After the collision, Jackson told Vidrine:
    “[T]hat’s why I asked you whether you thought it would be all right for me
    to go ahead and start turning . . . . I ain’t but six foot off the bank.” The
    collision caused about $1.2 million in damage to the VANPORT’s cargo.
    Insurers of the VANPORT reimbursed the cargo owner for the full amount,
    and Deloach, the VANPORT’s owner, took an assignment of any claim
    against the JUSTIN’s owner, Marquette.
    Litigation ensued.
    B.
    Deloach first sued Marquette, alleging Jackson’s negligence caused
    the collision. Marquette counterclaimed, alleging Vidrine was contributorily
    negligent. The district court held a two-day bench trial, hearing testimony
    from both captains as well as two expert witnesses. The court found both
    captains at fault, apportioning 70% to Jackson and 30% to Vidrine. Its findings
    were based on ordinary negligence, the Pennsylvania Rule, 2 and negligence
    by violating an industry custom.
    As to ordinary negligence, the court “determine[d] that both captains
    failed to adhere to a standard of reasonable care under the circumstances, but
    that defendant [the JUSTIN] was more at fault than plaintiff [the
    2
    Under the so-called Pennsylvania Rule, a ship that violates a statute designed to
    prevent collisions is liable unless it can prove its violation “could not have been a cause of
    the collision.” Pennzoil Producing Co. v. Offshore Exp., Inc., 
    943 F.2d 1465
    , 1472 (5th Cir.
    1991) (citing inter alia The Pennsylvania, 
    86 U.S. 125
    , 136 (1873)).
    4
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    VANPORT].” This was primarily because “the JUSTIN’s decision to
    perform the top around maneuver in front of oncoming traffic created the
    unsafe circumstances that led to the collision.” As the downriver vessel, the
    VANPORT had the right of way, and Jackson knew the BEATRICE was
    passing the VANPORT. Therefore, “the JUSTIN should have waited until
    the channel was clear before topping around.” The JUSTIN was also
    negligent “in failing to clearly communicate its intent to turn in front of,
    rather than behind or to the side of, the VANPORT.” Jackson’s ambiguous
    communications “did not adequately convey [his] intent to reverse the
    typical right-of-way pattern.”
    On the other hand, the district court found the VANPORT negligent
    in agreeing “that the JUSTIN could begin the top around maneuver before
    the VANPORT had safely passed the JUSTIN.” Vidrine should have
    realized from Rose Point data that “it was too early for the JUSTIN to begin
    its turn.” Accordingly, the VANPORT should have instructed the JUSTIN
    to wait to begin its turn until the VANPORT was clear.
    The court also concluded both captains violated several of the Inland
    Navigational Rules and that their violations caused the collision. See generally
    Marine Transp. Lines, Inc. v. M/V Tako Invader, 
    37 F.3d 1138
    , 1144 (5th Cir.
    1994) (discussing enactment of Inland Navigational Rules in 1980 “to unify
    the rules governing navigation in the inland waters of the United States”).
    According to the court, both captains violated Rule 2, which obliges captains
    to keep “the ordinary practice of seamen,” 33 C.F.R. § 83.02, for the same
    reasons that both were negligent. 3 The court next found the JUSTIN violated
    3
    Rule 2 (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.02(a)) relevantly provides:
    (a) Nothing in these Rules shall exonerate any vessel, or the owner, master, or crew
    thereof, from the consequences of any neglect to comply with these Rules or of the
    5
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    Rule 14(d), which gives downbound vessels the right-of-way over upbound
    vessels when two vessels are proceeding head-on.
    Id. § 83.14. 4
    The
    VANPORT had right-of-way as the downriver vessel, and the JUSTIN
    violated Rule 14(d) “when it performed the top around maneuver in front of
    the VANPORT.” The district court rejected Marquette’s argument that the
    VANPORT violated Rule 14(d) by failing to “propose the manner of
    passage” as the rule requires.
    Id. The VANPORT had
    no notice “that the
    JUSTIN was planning to move in front of it,” and “it was reasonable for the
    VANPORT to understand that the JUSTIN would turn behind it.”
    Finally, the district court also found that “neither captain violated
    Rule 5,” which requires captains to maintain a “proper look-out,”
    id. § 83.05; 5
    that the VANPORT did not violate Rule 6, which requires vessels
    to “proceed at a safe speed,”
    id. § 83.06; 6
    and that “both captains violated
    neglect of any precaution which may be required by the ordinary practice of
    seamen, or by the special circumstances of the case.
    4
    Rule 14(d) (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.14(d)) provides:
    (d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this Rule, a power-driven vessel operating on
    the Great Lakes, Western Rivers, or waters specified by the Secretary, and
    proceeding downbound with a following current shall have the right-of-way over
    an upbound vessel, shall propose the manner of passage, and shall initiate the
    maneuvering signals prescribed by Rule 34(a)(i) (§ 83.34(a)(i)), as appropriate.
    5
    Rule 5 (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.05) provides:
    Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight and hearing as
    well as by all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and
    conditions so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision.
    6
    Rule 6 (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.06) relevantly provides:
    Every vessel shall at all times proceed at a safe speed so that she can take proper
    and effective action to avoid collision and be stopped within a distance appropriate
    to the prevailing circumstances and conditions.
    See also
    id. § 83.06(a), (b)
    (enumerating various factors for “determining a safe speed”).
    6
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    Rules 7 and 8,” which require captains to use “all available means” to assess
    risk of collision
    , id. § 83.07(a), 7
    and to take appropriate action to avoid
    collision
    , id. § 83.08. 8
    But the court’s findings regarding these rules “[did]
    not change the Court’s conclusions about the nature of the parties’
    negligence.” 9
    The district court allocated 70% of the liability for the collision to
    Marquette as owner of the JUSTIN and the remaining 30% to Deloach as
    owner of the VANPORT, finding that the JUSTIN played a larger role in the
    collision by “mov[ing] into the channel in front of downstream traffic
    without taking due care.” The VANPORT shared fault because it gave “the
    JUSTIN permission to begin topping around.”
    Both parties timely appeal, contesting the district court’s allocation of
    fault. Marquette’s argument hinges principally on its contention that,
    contrary to the district court’s ruling, Rule 14(d) required the VANPORT to
    propose the manner of passage and that the VANPORT’s failure to do so led
    to the collision. Marquette further argues that the district court’s
    7
    Rule 7 (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.07(a)) relevantly provides:
    (a) Every vessel shall use all available means appropriate to the prevailing
    circumstances and conditions to determine if risk of collision exists. If there is any
    doubt such risk shall be deemed to exist.
    8
    Rule 8 (see 33 C.F.R. § 83.08(a)) relevantly provides:
    (a) Any action taken to avoid collision shall be taken in accordance with the Rules
    of this subpart (Rules 4–19) (§§ 83.04 through 83.19) and shall, if the
    circumstances of the case admit, be positive, made in ample time and with due
    regard to the observance of good seamanship.
    See also
    id. § 83.08(b)–(f) (specifying
    avoidance measures in specific circumstances).
    9
    The district court also rejected Marquette’s argument that pursuant to industry
    custom, the vessels had “established a top around agreement” and that the VANPORT
    violated that agreement. Marquette does not contest this conclusion.
    7
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    misinterpretation of Rule 14(d) led to errors in its holdings regarding Rules
    5, 6, 7, and 8. Deloach claims the district court erred in apportioning 30%
    liability to the VANPORT and in omitting prejudgment interest from
    Deloach’s damage award.
    II.
    “The standard of review for a bench trial is well established: findings
    of fact are reviewed for clear error and legal issues are reviewed de novo.”
    Luwisch v. Am. Marine Corp., 
    956 F.3d 320
    , 326 (5th Cir. 2020) (quoting Barto
    v. Shore Constr., LLC, 
    801 F.3d 465
    , 471 (5th Cir. 2015)). “[W]e will upset
    the district court’s findings of fact only if we are ‘left with the definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’”
    Id. (citation omitted). “[F]indings
    of fact include determinations of negligence, apportionment of
    fault, and calculation of damages.”
    Id. (citing DePerrodil v.
    Bozovic Marine,
    Inc., 
    842 F.3d 352
    , 356, 358, 361 (5th Cir. 2016)). We grant “even ‘greater
    deference to the trial court’s findings when they are based on determinations
    of credibility.’”
    Id. (quoting Guzman v.
    Hacienda Records & Recording Studio,
    Inc., 
    808 F.3d 1031
    , 1036 (5th Cir. 2015)). And we employ “a strong
    presumption that the court’s findings must be sustained even though this
    court might have weighed the evidence differently.”
    Id. (quoting Johnson v.
       Cenac Towing, Inc., 
    544 F.3d 296
    , 303 (5th Cir. 2008)).
    III.
    A.
    We first address Marquette’s argument that the district court
    misinterpreted Rule 14(d) when it held that the VANPORT was under no
    duty to “propose the manner of passage.” We disagree.
    The Inland Navigational Rules contain eight rules governing vessels’
    rights-of-way. See 33 C.F.R. §§ 83.11–83.18. Rule 14, which the parties agree
    8
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    applies to the collision, covers “[h]ead-on situation[s].”
    Id. § 83.14. It
       provides in relevant part:
    [A] power-driven vessel operating on the Great Lakes,
    Western Rivers, or waters specified by the Secretary, and
    proceeding downbound with a following current shall have the
    right-of-way over an upbound vessel, shall propose the manner
    of passage, and shall initiate . . . maneuvering signals . . . as
    appropriate.
    Id. § 83.14(d). Marquette
    argues that the district court ignored Rule 14(d)’s
    requirement that the downriver vessel “propose the manner of passage” and
    initiate appropriate maneuvering signals. According to Marquette, “the
    VANPORT . . . instructed the JUSTIN she could begin her downriver turn.”
    Marquette argues the district court “defiantly . . . ignored the overarching
    purpose of Rule 14”—namely, that the downbound vessel “with the right of
    way, must use its right of way appropriately and communicate with the
    JUSTIN.” It claims “[t]hat ‘right of way’ does not mean that the JUSTIN
    must ‘yield,’ only that the right of way vessel like VANPORT gets to dictate
    how the two vessels meet.” According to Marquette, the district court erred
    in finding the VANPORT lacked notice of the situation to trigger its
    obligation to propose passage, as the VANPORT “knew that she was heading
    downriver in the direction of the JUSTIN.”
    We disagree for two reasons. First, while Marquette paints its appeal
    as a de novo attack on the district court’s legal reasoning, its Rule 14(d)
    argument turns on whether the court was correct that the VANPORT lacked
    notice that the two vessels were on a collision course. That is a fact finding
    we review only for clear error. See 
    Luwisch, 956 F.3d at 326
    . Marquette insists
    that Vidrine knew the VANPORT was heading towards the JUSTIN and that
    the district court’s ruling therefore “sidestep[ped] the VANPORT’s
    9
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    obligation to propose a safe manner of passage.” But this argument
    contradicts the district court’s findings that the VANPORT lacked notice
    “that the JUSTIN was planning to move in front of it” and that “it was
    reasonable for the VANPORT to understand that the JUSTIN would turn
    behind it.” If Marquette wishes to challenge those findings, it must show they
    were not only incorrect but clearly erroneous. Marquette does not try to meet
    this standard, and our review of the record detects no clear error.
    Second, even applying de novo review, we reject Marquette’s
    interpretation of Rule 14(d). At the outset, we disagree with Marquette’s
    unfounded claim that the VANPORT’s right-of-way “does not mean that
    the JUSTIN must ‘yield.’” The term “right-of-way” means precisely that:
    it is “[t]he right to take precedence in traffic.” Right-of-way, Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). As the district court noted, we have
    previously recognized the “failure to yield the right-of-way” as an act of
    negligence. Union Oil Co. of Cal. v. Tug Mary Malloy, 
    414 F.2d 669
    , 673 (5th
    Cir. 1969). Marquette tries to distinguish Mary Malloy merely because it was
    not a head-on case involving Rule 14(d), but instead involved a collision
    between two ships traveling in the same direction. See
    id. at 671.
    That is
    immaterial. The decision is still premised on the commonsense notion that
    the corollary of one vessel’s right-of-way is the other’s duty to yield. 10 Here,
    the district court found that the upbound JUSTIN’s failure to yield to the
    downbound VANPORT violated the VANPORT’s right-of-way. And, as
    10
    See, e.g.
    , id. at 672
    (stating the “primary issue” was whether the record
    “sustain[ed] the trial court’s finding that the MARY MAL[L]OY’s failure to yield the right-
    of-way to the PURE OIL was the proximate cause of the collision” (emphasis added));
    id. at 672
    n.3 (rejecting appellant’s “halfhearted[]” attack on district court’s negligence
    finding based on the argument that “the MARY MALLOY was under no duty to yield the
    right-of-way to the PURE OIL” (emphasis added)).
    10
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    explained, Marquette has failed to show any clear error in the district court’s
    findings concerning the circumstances of the collision.
    We similarly reject Marquette’s reading of Rule 14(d) to impose a
    “mandatory duty to propose safe passage,” notwithstanding the
    VANPORT’s lack of notice of the JUSTIN’s planned maneuver. To begin
    with, Marquette misreads Rule 14(d)’s text, which states that the
    downbound vessel “shall propose the manner of passage,” but only “as
    appropriate.” 33 C.F.R. § 83.14(d). 11 Marquette also cites Marine Transport
    Lines, Inc., v. M/V Tako 
    Invader, 37 F.3d at 1145
    , but that decision does not
    help its argument. There, we held that a downbound vessel “may force a
    departure from” the usual rule that head-on vessels pass on their port sides,
    see 33 C.F.R. § 83.14(a), “provided” the downbound vessel “propose[s] the
    manner of passage” in compliance with Rule 14(d). Marine Transport Lines
    does not hold or even suggest that a downbound vessel has an affirmative
    duty, notwithstanding its right-of-way, to propose the manner of passage.
    Rather, it treats the “manner of passage” language in Rule 14(d) as a means
    for the downbound vessel to bypass the ordinary port-to-port passage
    standard in Rule 14(a). See
    id. 12
    Neither party argues that such a situation was
    presented here. Marine Transport Lines is therefore irrelevant.
    11
    Under the series-qualifier canon, “as appropriate” modifies the “shall propose”
    obligation, because the phrase is separated by a comma from a list of three parallel “shall”
    verbs. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
    Interpretation of Legal Texts 147–51 (2012).
    12
    Moreover, Marine Transport Lines also involved the “Narrow Channel Rule” in
    Rule 9.
    Id. at 1142–44;
    see 33 C.F.R. § 83.09. That rule for “[a] vessel proceeding along the
    course of a narrow channel or fairway,”
    id. § 83.09(a)(i), has
    no application to this case.
    11
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    B.
    Marquette next argues that the district court misinterpreted Rules 5,
    6, 7, and 8. It contends the district court’s misreading of Rule 14(d) and its
    holding that the VANPORT had the right-of-way infected its analyses under
    these other rules.
    We reject this argument for three reasons. First, as discussed above,
    Marquette has not shown the district court misinterpreted Rule 14(d) or that
    the VANPORT’s right-of-way was ineffective. Because its arguments
    regarding Rules 5 through 8 flow from the district court’s putative
    misreading of Rule 14(d), we reject these arguments too. Second, the district
    court’s holdings regarding Rules 5 through 8 were made alternatively to its
    determinations on ordinary negligence. The court found “that these rules
    [did] not change [its] conclusions about the nature of the parties’
    negligence.” Marquette acknowledges this but fails to develop any argument
    that the district court erred in its findings regarding ordinary negligence.
    Accordingly, even if we agreed with Marquette’s positions regarding these
    rules (something we do not decide), the district court’s other findings would
    remain unaffected. Finally, as with Rule 14(d), Marquette’s challenges under
    Rules 5 through 8 repeatedly contest the district court’s fact findings without
    showing clear error. For example, Marquette argues the court erred in
    finding the VANPORT “maintained a safe speed,” claiming that the
    VANPORT’s pre-collision speed increase “could not have been due to ‘a
    fast river current.’” But Marquette fails to develop an argument that this
    conclusion was clearly erroneous.
    C.
    We turn to Deloach’s cross-appeal. Deloach contends the district
    court erred in assigning the VANPORT 30% of the liability for the collision.
    We disagree.
    12
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    We review “a trial court’s finding on apportionment of relative fault
    in a maritime collision” only for clear error. In re Settoon Towing, L.L.C., 
    859 F.3d 340
    , 344 (5th Cir. 2017) (citing Tokio Marine & Fire Ins. Co. v. FLORA
    MV, 
    235 F.3d 963
    , 970 (5th Cir. 2001)). Our review is “deferential,” and we
    will not second-guess the district court’s weighing of the facts.
    Id. at 353.
       “Even if we might have given different weight to different pieces of evidence
    than did the district court, this is not a reason to disturb that court’s findings
    of relative responsibility, absent a showing of clear error.”
    Id. (alteration omitted) (quoting
    Tokio 
    Marine, 235 F.3d at 971
    ). Our deference “is
    particularly important in a bench trial where the district court’s opportunity
    to judge the witnesses’ credibility weighs strongly.”
    Id. (citing Canal Barge
       Co. v. Torco Oil Co., 
    220 F.3d 370
    , 375 (5th Cir. 2000)). Even if the district
    court fails to “provide a detailed explanation for its apportionment of fault,”
    we presume that “it made the requisite allocation of fault based on the facts
    before it.”
    Id. at 353.
              Deloach fails to identify clear error. Deloach first argues Vidrine was
    “the essentially innocent party,” claiming the court’s allocation of fault to
    Deloach “was based solely on Vidrine’s verbal assent . . . to Jackson’s dual
    message that he would begin topping-around but knew he had to stay out [sic]
    VANPORT’s way.” This ignores the court’s findings that Vidrine could
    have seen the JUSTIN on the VANPORT’s Rose Point display and that he
    “should have known that it was too early for the JUSTIN to begin its turn.”
    Moreover, Deloach’s argument does not touch the court’s finding that
    Vidrine should have clarified his understanding of the JUSTIN’s position
    and intentions and that this failure was partially responsible for the collision.
    For the same reason, we reject Deloach’s argument that Vidrine “was
    not negligent in giving his assent” to the JUSTIN to top around. According
    to Deloach, Vidrine’s understanding that the JUSTIN intended to stay in the
    slack water under the fleet instead of swinging out into the channel was
    13
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    objectively reasonable, such that Vidrine cannot be faulted for approving that
    plan. But this argument founders on the district court’s fact finding that
    Vidrine should have clarified his understanding and that his failure to do so
    led to the collision. 13 Here, again, we see no clear error.
    Relatedly, Deloach argues Vidrine did not give the JUSTIN
    permission to top around in the navigational channel. It claims that had the
    JUSTIN stayed in the slack water as Vidrine had understood, the accident
    would not have taken place, and that “Vidrine had no choice but to rely on
    Jackson to perform his maneuver competently.” This argument again fails to
    grapple with the district court’s finding that Vidrine could have prevented
    the incident by making clearer his understanding of the JUSTIN’s location
    and intentions.
    In sum, Deloach fails to pinpoint any clear error in the district court’s
    allocation of 30% liability to the VANPORT.
    D.
    Finally, we address Deloach’s argument that it was owed prejudgment
    interest as a prevailing maritime party. We remand the matter to consider
    whether prejudgment interest is appropriate.
    “Under maritime law, the awarding of prejudgment interest is the rule
    rather than the exception, and, in practice, is well-nigh automatic.” Reeled
    Tubing, Inc. v. M/V Chad G, 
    794 F.2d 1026
    , 1028 (5th Cir. 1986) (citing
    Inland Oil & Transp. Co. v. Ark-White Towing Co., 
    696 F.2d 321
    , 327 (5th Cir.
    1983)). The district court’s decision to award or withhold prejudgment
    13
    For similar reasons, we also reject Deloach’s argument that Vidrine’s failure to
    “remind Jackson” to stay clear of the VANPORT was not negligent. Vidrine’s
    understanding about how the JUSTIN intended to maneuver, even if reasonable, did not
    alleviate the need for Vidrine to communicate clearly with Jackson to avoid a collision.
    14
    Case: 19-30311     Document: 00515561379              Page: 15   Date Filed: 09/11/2020
    No. 19-30311
    interest is reviewed for abuse of discretion, but “[a] trial court has the
    discretion to deny prejudgment interest only where peculiar circumstances
    would make such an award inequitable.”
    Id. (citing Inland Oil,
    696 F.2d at
    327).
    Here, neither the district court’s order nor its judgment awards or
    denies prejudgment interest. Unable to locate any findings about the
    propriety of prejudgment interest, we are unable to review Deloach’s
    argument. We therefore remand for the limited purpose of considering
    prejudgment interest. Cf. Whitfield v. Lindemann, 
    853 F.2d 1298
    , 1306 (5th
    Cir. 1988) (remanding to determine propriety of prejudgment interest and
    noting lack of analysis “makes it difficult to weigh the propriety of the district
    court’s exercise of discretion”).
    ***
    We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment apportioning fault
    between the parties. We REMAND solely to determine whether
    prejudgment interest is proper and, if so, in what amount.
    15