Disasters

[ Disasters ] [ Main Menu ]


  


11683


Date: June 24, 2021 at 17:58:18
From: Captainj, [DNS_Address]
Subject: The ‘Ever Given’ Will Ruin More Than Just a Muddy Canal

URL: Link


No one sets sail expecting to be involved in a marine
accident, but even the most experienced mariners will
find themselves in need of a lifeline if a casualty
occurs.

Within days of the March 23, 2021 grounding of the M/V
Ever Given, which halted traffic in the Suez Canal for
a week, headlines were already focusing on the ship’s
officers and pilots.

The negative press started with a Washington Post
story, “Suez Canal Pilots Come Under Scrutiny After
Grounding of Ship.” The Wall Street Journal followed
with aim at the vessel’s skipper in an article titled
“Egyptian Officials Accuse Ever Given’s Captain of
Losing Control of Ship in Suez Canal.” This finger
pointing occurred despite reports of powerful
sandstorms and high winds at the time of the accident,
which affected not only visibility on the bridge, but
also steerage of the ship as the thousands of
containers stacked high above deck presented a huge
sail area for the gusting winds. But, no official
agency, cargo interest, or Canal authority was going to
simply blame Mother Nature as she is not equipped with
insurance or the wherewithal to pay claims.

Shortly after the giant ship was refloated to cheers of
celebration, it hit another major roadblock. The Ever
Given did not even make it to the end of the Suez Canal
before it was arrested under maritime law by Egyptian
authorities, who demanded more than $900 million in
security to let the vessel sail on. In maritime law, a
ship can be arrested to obtain security for future
claims, but there can also be an agreement that the
shipowner will come back to a specified jurisdiction to
defend against all claims. It is like bail money
guaranteeing the owner will not flee the jurisdiction
(never to be found again), but also that the owner has
the funds in place to pay proven claims.

Needless to say, the six days aground will not soon, if
ever, be forgotten by Ever Given’s captain, mates, or
pilots as the investigations, claims, inquiries,
depositions, and litigation ensues and ensnarls them.
The casualty investigation will examine the acts or
omissions of the two Egyptian canal pilots, their
interaction with the ship’s captain prior to getting
underway, and then every step of the way during the
voyage. Issues to be explored will include:

The master-pilot exchange;
The conditions at the time of the grounding, and who
made the decision to get underway despite the
prevailing winds and weather;
The pilots’ experience;
The captain’s experience, not only on the Ever Given,
but also in the Suez Canal, along with his experience
in tight quarters of a ship of that length, beam and
draft with a ridiculous number of containers (18,300)
on board and stacked tremendously high.
The investigation will also scrutinize what transpired
when the vessel became in extremis. Were the pilots
relieved by the captain at any time? Who was giving the
commands in the fateful last turns? Where were the
tugboats? Who was steering the ship, and how did that
helmsman perform? What engine and helm orders were
given throughout the maneuvering? Was there too much
speed in close quarters? What was the effect of bank
cushion? Was a voyage data recorder (black box)
activated and capturing all communications? And, this
is just the tip of the iceberg.

Unfortunately, the two pilots, captain and mate will be
pawns not only in the major marine casualty
investigations, but in the admiralty litigations to
follow. In the United States, typically it is the U.S.
Coast Guard and/or National Transportation Safety Board
that investigates marine casualties. Quite often, the
Coast Guard will initiate a license suspension or
revocation proceeding against the licensed officer.
These proceedings may not necessarily be covered by the
vessel owner’s insurance policy, as it is personal to
the licensed officer and not an action against the
shipowner.

The Ever Given case will be talked about and reviewed
for many years to come. (A superb “Minute-by-Minute
Breakdown of the Ever Given’s Crash” appeared in
Popular Mechanics, and includes commentary by United
New York/New Jersey Sandy Hook Pilot Association
President Captain John DeCruz and Metropolitan Pilot
Association President Captain Robert Flannery.)

And, undoubtedly, the colossal container ship that
captured the world’s attention for six days will be
“ever giving” to the maritime lawyers and marine
experts who will handle this mega casualty far into the
future, perhaps a decade or more.

Sinking Feeling – Actions Against Captains and Pilots

Of course, one might think that “a decade or more” is a
bit far-fetched, but don’t tell that to the Exxon
Valdez interests or the captain of that oil tanker. The
Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef in 1989 spilling millions
of gallons of oil, and the matter was litigated right
up until 2018, nearly 30 years after the incident. The
captain was charged by the U.S. Coast Guard in a
license suspension & revocation (S&R) proceeding, named
in the civil lawsuits, and was charged criminally.
Sadly, he had no insurance to cover any of this. It
took years, but the captain—one of Exxon’s finest—was
acquitted at all stages of the criminal trial and in
the S&R proceedings, and did not lose his Coast Guard
license. A maritime classmate of the captain and
admiralty lawyer took the conn to defend the skipper
and his reputation.

Then there’s the case of the Staten Island Ferry, which
crashed into a concrete pier in New York Harbor in
2003. The captain and pilot were pursued not only by
the U.S. Coast Guard, but were obvious witnesses in
civil litigation, and faced potential criminal charges
as 11 passengers were killed and more than 70 were
injured. The litigations continued for nearly a decade.
The ferry captain had no insurance, and would be
bankrupt if not for a maritime lawyer stepping up and
defending the captain pro bono.

The pilot of the containership Cosco Busan pleaded
guilty to federal water pollution charges in an
agreement that called for him to serve two to ten
months in prison, pay a fine and surrender his license.
In 2007, the ship struck the Bay Bridge in San
Francisco spilling 53,000 gallons of fuel. Both the
U.S. Coast Guard and the NTSB conducted investigations.
The ship’s captain was also faulted for failing to plot
a navigation plan or communicate effectively with the
pilot.

In another harrowing incident, a pilot was sued
personally for $4.6 million by the tug company he was
affiliated with as a result of the grounding of a
sludge barge outside New York Harbor enroute to sea. I
represented that federal pilot, and while litigation
lasted over two years, the case was ultimately
dismissed. The pilot was fortunate to have had marine
license insurance that provided civil legal defense
coverage which eased his emotional (and financial) pain
tremendously. Some vessel owners provide this coverage
as an additional benefit to their licensed mariners.

Unfortunately, even with a “pilotage clause” in a pilot
ticket, pilots get sued. The pilotage clause in New
York Harbor, for example, states that the federal pilot
becomes the “borrowed servant” of the vessel, and that
no personal liability will be asserted against the
pilot except for his/her willful misconduct or gross
negligence. One shipowner tried to sidestep the terms
of the pilot ticket by alleging the pilot was guilty of
gross negligence in a simple grounding at the stern
during a routine docking maneuver. That argument did
not work and, ultimately, the claim was dismissed, and
the shipowner was required to pay the pilot’s attorney
fees (my firm) in defending against the bogus claims.
This pilot had license insurance that provided him a
defense, and the license insurer was made whole by the
recovery of its attorneys’ fees. Stevens Technical
Services, Inc v. MORMAC Marine Enterprises, Inc, 2004
WL 3152788 (EDNY 2004).

One may also recall the docking pilot of the motor
tanker BT Nautilus who was sued personally for a
grounding in 1990 that resulted in an oil spill. The
very reputable and respected federal pilot became
embroiled in the case primarily because the shipowner
had a statutory limitation of liability defense and
other defenses that the pilot did not have. Lawyers
figured suing the pilot was a way to do an end around
the ship owner. Pursuant to the pilotage ticket, the
vessel owner could be called upon to indemnify the
pilot against any liability to the plaintiffs. The
trial took 19 days, 27 witnesses, and 247 exhibits, and
was decided more than four years after the incident.

What’s the Lesson?

It is said that a collision at sea will ruin your whole
day. Yet, that saying must have been coined in the days
of wooden sailing ships when litigation perhaps was the
exception not the rule. Today, any type of major marine
casualty will not only ruin a captain or pilot’s entire
day, but can be agonizing and costly for years as
evidenced by the examples above, and as is already
obvious in the Ever Given casualty. Cases such as these
demonstrate not only how hazardous—and delicate—a job
maritime officers have, but how life can change for
these hard-working individuals in an instant. There are
not many jobs like that out there.

As I explained in my Fox 5 News interview, the Ever
Given casualty will cost billions of dollars and will
be a windfall for some and unfortunately a fall from
grace for others.


Responses:
[11703] [11706]


11703


Date: June 26, 2021 at 05:09:56
From: shatterbrain, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: The ‘Ever Given’ Will Ruin More Than Just a Muddy Canal


Coastal states should have been left to the Indians.


Responses:
[11706]


11706


Date: June 26, 2021 at 16:50:58
From: Captainj, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: The ‘Ever Given’ Will Ruin More Than Just a Muddy Canal


How about an explanation on that


Responses:
None


[ Disasters ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele