Contango Operators, Inc. v. Weeks Marine, Inc. ( 2015 )


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  •      Case: 14-20265      Document: 00513058332         Page: 1    Date Filed: 05/28/2015
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 14-20265                           May 28, 2015
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    CONTANGO OPERATORS, INCORPORATED;
    CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS SEVERALLY SUBSCRIBING TO
    COMBINED COVER NOTE JHB-CJP-1718,
    Plaintiffs–Appellees,
    versus
    WEEKS MARINE, INCORPORATED; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendants–Appellants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    USDC No. 4:11-CV-532
    Before SMITH, PRADO, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:*
    Weeks Marine, Inc. (“Weeks”), and the United States appeal a judgment
    holding them 40% and 60% liable, respectively, for damages Contango Opera-
    tors, Inc. (“Contango”), suffered in a dredging accident. Weeks claims that it
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
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    No. 14-20265
    was not negligent as a matter of law and, alternatively, that it is only
    10% liable. The government urges that an exculpatory clause in Contango’s
    pipeline permit precludes holding it liable. We affirm.
    I.
    In November 2007, Contango obtained a permit from the Army Corps of
    Engineers (the “Corps”) to build a submarine pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico off
    the coast of Louisiana. Although the application indicated that the pipeline
    would cross the Corps-maintained Atchafalaya Channel, the Corps’s Regula-
    tory Division, which approved the pipeline, mistakenly did not forward that
    information to the Waterways Division, which provides those details to the
    engineers who prepare dredging contracts for Corps-maintained channels. In
    April 2008, Contango finished construction and submitted as-built drawings
    showing the pipeline’s placement to other government agencies, including the
    Minerals Management Service (“MMS”) and the Coast Guard, but not to the
    Corps.
    In August 2009, the Corps awarded Weeks a contract to dredge the chan-
    nel. The project specifications identified five submarine pipelines in or near
    the channel, but they omitted the Contango pipeline. At the time, National
    Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (“NOAA”) charts also did not include
    the pipeline.   That November and December, however, NOAA published
    updated versions of the two relevant charts on its website based on information
    it received from MMS; in December, the Coast Guard announced the addition
    of the pipeline in a local notice to mariners.      Nevertheless, Weeks relied
    entirely on the specifications to locate pipelines and did not consult other mate-
    rials for that purpose.
    2
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    In February 2010, Weeks’s dredging barge, the G.D. MORGAN, struck
    the pipeline, rupturing it and causing losses. Contango and its underwriters
    sued Weeks and the United States, alleging negligence under general maritime
    law. After a bench trial, the court held Weeks liable for 40% of the damages
    and the United States liable for 60%.
    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.” 1
    Foreseeability, breach of a duty, and allocation of fault are questions of fact, 2
    while interpretation of a permit is a question of law. 3
    III.
    Contango asserts that we lack jurisdiction to consider the issues Weeks
    raises. Contango’s theory is that the district court dismissed Weeks’s indemni-
    fication crossclaims against the government for lack of jurisdiction and that
    Weeks has not appealed that dismissal but is nevertheless attempting to main-
    tain the same claims. But Weeks is not seeking indemnification from the gov-
    ernment on appeal; instead, it is merely saying it is not liable to Contango. A
    ruling that the government is liable and Weeks is not would have the effect of
    requiring the government to pay for the entire amount of the damages, but
    Becker v. Tidewater, Inc., 
    586 F.3d 358
    , 365 (5th Cir. 2009) (quoting In re Mid-S.
    1
    Towing Co., 
    418 F.3d 526
    , 531 (5th Cir. 2005)).
    2E.g., United States v. Rodriguez, 
    553 F.3d 380
    , 395 (5th Cir. 2008) (foreseeability);
    Theriot v. United States, 
    245 F.3d 388
    , 400 (5th Cir. 1998) (per curiam) (breach of duty);
    Henderson v. Norfolk S. Corp., 
    55 F.3d 1066
    , 1069 & n.6 (5th Cir. 1995) (allocation of fault).
    See, e.g., Piney Run Pres. Ass’n v. Cnty. Comm’rs, 
    268 F.3d 255
    , 269 (4th Cir. 2001);
    3
    Nw. Envtl. Advocates v. City of Portland, 
    56 F.3d 979
    , 982 (9th Cir. 1995).
    3
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    that would not be indemnification, 4 so we have jurisdiction.
    IV.
    Weeks challenges the district court’s ruling that it is liable because it
    breached its duty of reasonable care by relying solely on the specifications to
    determine pipeline locations. 5 The court recognized that it was common prac-
    tice in the dredging industry to use only the specifications, but it noted that
    Weeks easily could have downloaded updated NOAA charts and used local
    notices to mariners to check for new pipelines. It explained that Weeks should
    have taken those precautions given the minimal burden of doing so and the
    risk of causing significant damage by striking a pipeline. We agree.
    “‘[N]egligence is an actionable wrong under general maritime law,’ and
    the elements of that tort are ‘essentially the same as land-based negligence
    under the common law.’” 6           “To state a claim for relief . . . the ‘plaintiff
    must demonstrate that there was a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff,
    breach of that duty, injury sustained by [the] plaintiff, and a causal connection
    between the defendant’s conduct and the plaintiff’s injury.’” 7 “[T]he appropri-
    4 See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 886A cmt. l (1979) (“Indemnity . . . shifts
    the entire loss from one tortfeasor to another.”).
    5 Alternatively, the court held Weeks liable under the rule from THE LOUISIANA,
    70 U.S. (3 Wall.) 164 (1865). We do not reach that issue.
    6 In re Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. LLC, 
    624 F.3d 201
    , 211 (5th Cir. 2010) (alter-
    ation in original) (quoting Withhart v. Otto Candies, L.L.C., 
    431 F.3d 840
    , 842 (5th Cir. 2005)).
    7Id. at 211 (alteration in original) (quoting Canal Barge Co. v. Torco Oil Co., 
    220 F.3d 370
    , 376 (5th Cir. 2000)).
    4
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    ate standard of care in an allision case is reasonable care under the circum-
    stances.” 8 That duty is “owed only with respect to the interest that is foresee-
    ably jeopardized by the negligent conduct.” 9 “[W]e have considered harm to be
    a foreseeable consequence of an act or omission ‘if harm of a general sort to
    persons of a general class might have been anticipated by a reasonably
    thoughtful person, as a probable result of the act or omission, considering the
    interplay of natural forces and likely human intervention.’” 10
    Weeks contends that, under Michigan Wisconsin Pipeline Co. v.
    Williams-McWilliams Co., 
    551 F.2d 945
    (5th Cir. 1977), the district court’s fac-
    tual findings mandate the conclusion that Weeks was not negligent. In its
    view, that case established that a Corps dredging contractor that justifiably
    relies on specifications provided by the Corps is not liable for damages that
    result. Weeks says that rule applies because the district court found that the
    Corps had omitted the Contango pipeline from the specifications, the custom
    of the dredging industry was to rely solely on the specifications, and no regu-
    lation required the crew of the G.D. MORGAN to carry updated NOAA charts
    or to review local notices to mariners.
    Weeks misreads Michigan Wisconsin. There, a Corps dredging contrac-
    tor struck a pipeline that had been constructed pursuant to a Corps permit.
    
    Id. at 946–47.
    The specifications had omitted the pipeline. 
    Id. at 948.
    The
    
    8Theriot, 245 F.3d at 400
    ; accord Fischer v. S/Y NERAIDA, 
    508 F.3d 586
    , 594–95
    (11th Cir. 2007) (collecting cases applying reasonable-care standard). “An allision is a colli-
    sion between a moving vessel and a stationary object.” 2 THOMAS J. SCHOENBAUM, ADMIR-
    ALTY AND MARITIME LAW § 14-2 n.1 (5th ed. 2014).
    9 Great 
    Lakes, 624 F.3d at 211
    (quoting Consol. Aluminum Corp. v. C.F. Bean Corp.,
    
    833 F.2d 65
    , 67 (5th Cir. 1987)).
    10 
    Id. (quoting Consol.
    Aluminum, 833 F.2d at 68
    ).
    5
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    pipeline owner sued the dredger, alleging negligence under general maritime
    law, and the dredger impleaded the government. 
    Id. at 949–50.
    The district
    court held the dredger liable but dismissed the third-party complaint against
    the government. 
    Id. at 950.
    We affirmed the judgment for the pipeline owner,
    agreeing with the district court that it was faultless. 
    Id. at 947,
    953. As for
    the third-party complaint, we announced a rule that, “if the [Corps] made a
    representation to [the dredger] on which the latter was justified in relying, and
    if that representation was the proximate cause of the injury to [the pipeline
    owner], then the Government must bear the liability.” 
    Id. at 951.
    We found
    those requirements satisfied because the Corps’s omission of the pipeline from
    the specifications was a positive assertion of its absence and the dredger had
    justifiably relied on that representation, because it was not required to inves-
    tigate the existence of pipelines independently. 
    Id. at 951–53.
    Accordingly, we
    reversed the dismissal of the third-party complaint. 
    Id. at 954.
    The rule in Michigan Wisconsin governs a dredger’s claim against the
    government, not a third party’s claim against a dredger. If Weeks were main-
    taining a cross-claim against the government, the government would be liable
    if the specifications were a representation on which Weeks was justified in
    relying, and the specifications were a proximate cause of Contango’s injury.
    But we have no occasion to consider that question, because the only claims
    before us are Contango’s claims against Weeks and the government. Michigan
    Wisconsin is inapplicable.
    Weeks’s only other argument is that a mistake in the specifications was
    unforeseeable. The district court’s implicit finding that Weeks could have anti-
    cipated an error was not clearly erroneous, particularly given that there have
    6
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    been other cases involving accidents caused by similar omissions. 11 Therefore,
    the court properly held Weeks liable because it breached its duty of reasonable
    care.
    V.
    The only issue the United States raises on appeal is whether the exculpa-
    tory clause bars recovery. The provision states in relevant part:
    Limits of Federal Liability. In issuing this permit, the Federal
    Government does not assume any liability for the following:
    ....
    b. Damages to the permitted project or uses thereof as a result of
    current or future activities undertaken by or on behalf of the
    United States in the public interest.
    The government submits that the clause applies because the Corps’s dredging
    project was an “activit[y] undertaken by or on behalf of the United States in
    the public interest.” We conclude that the clause does not shield the govern-
    ment from liability in this case.
    We interpret a permit in the same manner as we would a contract or
    other legal document. E.g., Piney 
    Run, 268 F.3d at 269
    . “[W]e first determine
    whether it is ambiguous; if ‘the language is plain and capable of legal construc-
    tion, the language alone must determine’ the permit’s meaning.” 
    Id. at 269–
    70 (quoting FDIC v. Prince George Corp., 
    58 F.3d 1041
    , 1046 (4th Cir. 1995)).
    “If [it] is ambiguous, however, then we must look to extrinsic evidence to
    determine the correct understanding of the permit.” 
    Id. at 270.
    11See S. Natural Gas Co. v. Pontchartrain Materials, Inc., 
    711 F.2d 1251
    , 1253–54
    (5th Cir. 1983) (omission from Coast Guard chart and Corps permits for private dredging
    projects); Michigan 
    Wisconsin, 551 F.2d at 947
    –49 (omission from specifications for Corps
    dredging contract).
    7
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    The language is clear. The introductory phrase “In issuing this permit,
    the Federal Government does not assume any liability” (emphasis added)
    refers only to taking on new liability. Accordingly, the clause means that the
    permit or its issuance does not provide a basis for liability for the types of dam-
    ages listed; it does not suggest the government is protected from existing
    sources of liability independent of the permit. 12
    The government asks us to consider other evidence despite the disclaim-
    er’s plain language. It says that, in 1986, the introductory phrase was changed
    from “the United States shall in no case be liable” to “the Federal Government
    does not assume any liability” but that a comment published in the Federal
    Register clarified that the change was not intended to narrow the clause’s
    scope. 13 Separately, the government points to a regulation requiring the Corps
    12   The Court of Federal Claims adopted the same interpretation of identical permit
    language. See Banks v. United States, 
    69 Fed. Cl. 206
    , 217 (2006) (“The limitation of the
    government’s liability in ‘[i]ssuing [a Section 10] permit’ on which [the government] relies is
    the statement that ‘the Federal Government does not assume any liability for the . . . [d]am-
    ages . . . caused by the activity authorized by this permit.’ But it is not legally relevant here
    whether [the government] ‘assume[s]’ liability or not. Under [United States v. Dickinson, 
    331 U.S. 745
    (1947)], [the government] is liable for all that has been taken as a result of its
    activities; there is no liability for the government to ‘assume.’ Nothing in the Permit Form
    operates to remove the liability.” (first, second, fourth, and sixth alterations in original)
    (citation omitted)).
    13 Final Rule for Regulatory Programs of the Corps of Engineers, 51 Fed. Reg. 41,206,
    41,213 (Nov. 13, 1986) (codified at 33 C.F.R. pt. 325, app. A) (“Limits of Federal Liability:
    One commenter suggested that the Government could, under certain circumstances, be held
    liable for damages caused by activities authorized by the permit and suggested that Item 3,
    which limits the Government’s liability, be deleted in its entirety. While it is true that some
    courts have found the United States liable for damages sustained by the owners of permitted
    structures or by individuals injured in some way by those structures, it has never been the
    intent of the Corps to assume either type of liability or to insure that no interference or
    damage to a permitted structure will occur after it has been built. In permitting structures
    within navigable waters, the Corps does not assume any duty to guarantee the safety of that
    structure from damages caused by the permittee’s work or by other authorized activities in
    the water, such as channel maintenance dredging. This is viewed as an acceptable limitation
    on the privilege of constructing a private structure for private benefit in a public waterway,
    8
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    to inform permit applicants “that the United States will in no case be liable for
    any damage or injury to the structures or work authorized . . . which may be
    caused by, or result from, future operations undertaken by the Government for
    the conservation or improvement of navigation or for other purposes.”
    33 C.F.R. § 320.4(g)(4).
    We decline the government’s invitation to review those materials. The
    government offers several reasons we should do so despite the permit’s clear
    language, but none is convincing.
    To begin with, the government suggests the clause’s history and regula-
    tory background are not extrinsic. They are. The legal definition of “extrinsic”
    is “From outside sources; of, relating to, or involving outside matters,” 14 and a
    body of contracts caselaw establishes that “extrinsic evidence” is anything out-
    side a contract itself. 15 The evidence the government asks us to examine falls
    squarely within that definition because it appears in the Federal Register and
    the Code of Federal Regulations, not in the permit itself.
    Next, the government claims that we should interpret a regulation in
    light of the regulations surrounding it and should defer to an agency’s reasona-
    ble interpretation of its own regulation where it is ambiguous. That may be
    particularly since insurance is readily available to protect the permittee from any damage
    his structure may sustain. Accordingly, the language in Item 3 has been further clarified to
    preclude any inference that the Government assumes any liability for interference with or
    damage to a permitted structure as a result of work undertaken by or on behalf of the United
    States in the public interest.”).
    14   BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 706 (10th ed. 2014).
    15See, e.g., Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Qore, Inc., 
    647 F.3d 237
    , 243 (5th Cir. 2011) (under
    Mississippi contract law, “extrinsic evidence” is anything outside “the four corners of the doc-
    ument”); Texas v. Am. Tobacco Co., 
    463 F.3d 399
    , 407 (5th Cir. 2006) (same under Texas law);
    Lifemark Hosps., Inc. v. Liljeberg Enters., Inc. (In re Liljeberg Enters., Inc.), 
    304 F.3d 410
    ,
    439 (5th Cir. 2002) (same under Louisiana law).
    9
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    true, but those rules are inapplicable because we are interpreting a permit, not
    a regulation.
    In addition, the United States urges that, under the parol evidence rule,
    we may look to extrinsic evidence to prove a meaning to which the provision is
    reasonable susceptible. Even assuming that principle applies, it does not help
    the government, because the clause is not reasonably susceptible to the govern-
    ment’s proposed meaning. See supra note 12 and accompanying text.
    Finally, the government says there is “no authority to support the propo-
    sition that an agency’s explanatory comments and regulations can be ignored
    as ‘extrinsic evidence.’ These are not merely additional documents that may
    inform a party’s intent in entering a contract; they are law promulgated by an
    agency . . . .” The government misunderstands the role of the permit in this
    litigation. The Corps has a duty of reasonable care under general maritime
    law, 16 and Congress waived sovereign immunity in cases alleging breaches of
    that duty. 17 The Corps has no power to escape that duty through regulation;
    instead, the question is whether Contango gave up its right to sue by accepting
    the permit’s terms. Consequently, we decline to consider the government’s
    extrinsic evidence and conclude that the clause means that the permit or its
    issuance does not provide a basis for liability for the types of damages listed. 18
    16See 
    Theriot, 245 F.3d at 400
    (“[T]he appropriate standard of care in an allision case
    is reasonable care under the circumstances.”); S. Natural 
    Gas, 711 F.2d at 1254
    (“It is settled
    in our Circuit that the duty owed by the Government in claims brought under the Suits in
    Admiralty Act is equal ‘to that of a private person in like circumstances.’” (citation omitted)
    (quoting Canadian Pac. (Berm.) Ltd. v. United States, 
    534 F.2d 1165
    , 1168 (5th Cir. 1976))).
    17   See 46 U.S.C. § 30903(a).
    The government postulates that there is no situation in which the clause would
    18
    apply under this interpretation. That is incorrect. For example, the Corps might issue a
    10
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    By this reading, the clause does not apply here. The Corps’s liability was
    based on its duty of reasonable care under general maritime law, just as
    Weeks’s was. The district court held the Corps liable because it had failed to
    exercise that level of care, as it did not include the Contango pipeline in the
    specifications or notify Weeks of the omission. Thus, liability was not based on
    the permit or its issuance.
    The government responds that the duty of reasonable care extends only
    to interests foreseeably jeopardized by the negligent conduct and that the
    Corps could foresee harm to the Contango pipeline only because of the informa-
    tion Contango provided in its permit application. In the view of the United
    States, that means the Corps’s duty to Contango arose out of the permit or its
    issuance, so the disclaimer applies. The government is correct that foreseea-
    bility is required, but the tortfeasor need only be able to foresee jeopardy to the
    “general class” of interests at issue. 19 The district court found that “[a]n alli-
    sion with a submarine pipeline is a foreseeable consequence of dredging when
    the dredger is not aware of the pipeline.” That finding establishes that the
    Corps could have foreseen jeopardy to the general class of interests in
    question—submarine pipelines—so it had a duty to use reasonable care to
    avoid harming those interests, a duty that was not based on the permit or its
    issuance.
    pipeline permit and then build a dam that makes it difficult to access the pipeline for main-
    tenance and repairs. The provision would apply if the pipeline owner sued, alleging that the
    Corps had implicitly guaranteed continued access to the pipeline.
    19 Great 
    Lakes, 624 F.3d at 211
    (“In the context of maritime torts, we have considered
    harm to be a foreseeable consequence of an act or omission ‘if harm of a general sort to persons
    of a general class might have been anticipated by a reasonably thoughtful person, as a proba-
    ble result of the act or omission, considering the interplay of natural forces and likely human
    intervention.’” (emphasis added) (quoting Consol. 
    Aluminum, 833 F.2d at 68
    )).
    11
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    The government’s reliance on Southern Natural Gas, 
    711 F.2d 1251
    , for
    the proposition that the Corps’s duty was based on permitting regulations is
    also misplaced. There, a dredger struck a submarine pipeline while working
    on a private project authorized by a Corps permit. 
    Id. at 1253–54.
    Based on
    permitting regulations, we determined that the Corps’s duty of reasonable care
    in that situation required it to warn permittees of hazards. 
    Id. at 1154–56.
    We held the government liable for part of the damages because the Corps had
    failed to do so. 
    Id. at 1157–59.
    But the fact that permitting regulations defined the Corps’s duty of
    reasonable care in that case does not mean they did so here. What constitutes
    reasonable care depends on “(1) general concepts of prudent seamanship and
    reasonable care; (2) statutory and regulatory rules . . . ; and (3) recognized
    customs and usages.” 20 In Southern Natural Gas, the Corps’s role was limited:
    It was merely permitting private dredging projects. Nevertheless, permitting
    regulations meant that its duty of reasonable care encompassed a duty to warn.
    Here, the Corps’s role was larger: It was conducting its own dredging project
    and hiring a contractor to dredge a specific area. Because of its greater role in
    this situation, we conclude that “general concepts of . . . reasonable care”
    imposed on the Corps an obligation to inform Weeks about submarine pipelines
    in the area. 21     In other words, the government’s duty of reasonable care
    20Combo Mar., Inc. v. U.S. United Bulk Terminal, LLC, 
    615 F.3d 599
    , 606 (5th Cir.
    2010) (omission in original) (quoting 
    Fischer, 508 F.3d at 594
    ).
    21  Cf., e.g., 
    Theriot, 245 F.3d at 393
    –95 (stating that district court did not clearly err
    in finding that Corps was negligent in failing to place warning sign at location of underwater
    sill it had constructed, even though no regulation required it to do so); Sheridan Transp. Co.
    v. United States, 
    834 F.2d 467
    , 474 (5th Cir. 1987) (holding that Coast Guard was not
    required to mark wreck, but once it chose to do so, it had duty to use due care).
    12
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    included a duty to warn Weeks of potential dangers, but that is not because of
    permitting regulations. 22
    Nor was the Corps’s breach predicated only on its failure to consult the
    information from Contango’s permit application when it prepared the specifi-
    cations. The Corps represented to Weeks that there were no other pipelines in
    the area, and it knew that Weeks would rely entirely on the specifications. If
    the Corps could not be sure the specifications were accurate, it should have
    warned Weeks of that limitation or required Weeks to inspect the site, 23 but it
    did neither. 24
    Further, the district court found that the Corps was negligent not only
    in preparing the specifications but also “in failing to warn or notify Weeks
    Marine of the existence of the Contango Pipeline before Weeks Marine’s barge
    struck the pipeline.” The Corps awarded the contract in August 2009, and
    Weeks struck the pipeline in February 2010. Updated NOAA charts and a
    local notice to mariners became available in the intervening months, but the
    Corps neither consulted them nor required Weeks to do so. As a result, the
    government’s liability was independent of the permit and its issuance, so the
    Any suggestion by the district court that the Corps had duties based on its role in
    22
    the permitting process does not change our conclusion, because we may affirm for any reason
    supported by the record. LLEH, Inc. v. Wichita Cnty., Tex., 
    289 F.3d 358
    , 364 (5th Cir. 2002).
    23 The Corps has done precisely that in the past. See Michigan 
    Wisconsin, 551 F.2d at 949
    (in which contract required dredger to “take[] steps reasonably necessary to ascertain
    the nature and location of the work and the general and local conditions which can affect the
    work” and to “investigate[] and satisf[y] himself as to the conditions affecting the work”).
    24The provision of the contract that came closest to warning Weeks of the risk of
    unidentified pipelines was insufficient to satisfy the Corps’s duty, given its awareness of
    Weeks’s reliance: “Any unidentified pipelines, structures, or utilities that may be found
    within the limits of the work, during the course of dredging shall not be disturbed nor shall
    excavation be performed at this location unless approved by the Contracting Officer.”
    13
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    exculpatory clause does not apply.
    VI.
    Although Weeks claims that it is liable for only 10% of the damages, we
    accept the district court’s finding that Weeks is 40% liable. Under general
    maritime law, joint tortfeasors are jointly and severally liable for the plaintiff’s
    damages. Coats v. Penrod Drilling Corp., 
    61 F.3d 1113
    , 1116 (5th Cir. 1995)
    (en banc). “[L]iability . . . is to be allocated among the parties proportionately
    to the comparative degree of their fault.” United States v. Reliable Transfer
    Co., 
    421 U.S. 397
    , 411 (1975). “Apportionment is not a mechanical exercise
    that depends upon counting up the errors committed by both parties. The trial
    court must determine, based upon the number and quality of faults by each
    party, the role each fault had in causing the collision.” Stolt Achievement, Ltd.
    v. Dredge B.E. LINDHOLM, 
    447 F.3d 360
    , 370 (5th Cir. 2006).
    It was appropriate for the district court to find that Weeks bore a sub-
    stantial portion of the responsibility because Weeks was operating the
    G.D. MORGAN at the time of the accident and the risk of causing substantial
    damage far outweighed the burden of downloading updated NOAA charts and
    using local notices to mariners to check for new pipelines. The fact that Weeks
    followed the custom of the dredging industry is not dispositive, because a
    common practice can still be negligent. 25 Moreover, the Eastern District of
    25 See, e.g., Gunn v. Mid-S. Health Dev., Inc., No. 99-40601, 
    211 F.3d 126
    (table), 
    2000 WL 309995
    , at *1 (5th Cir. Mar. 8, 2000) (per curiam) (stating that under Texas tort law,
    “conformity with the usual and customary practices of an industry does not, as a matter of
    law, absolve a party from negligence”); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 295A cmt. c
    (1965) (“[C]ustom is . . . not necessarily conclusive as to whether the actor, by conforming to
    it, has exercised the care of a reasonable man under the circumstances . . . . No group of
    individuals and no industry or trade can be permitted, by adopting careless and slipshod
    methods to save time, effort, or money, to set its own uncontrolled standard at the expense
    of the rest of the community. If the only test is to be what has always been done, no one will
    14
    Case: 14-20265       Document: 00513058332         Page: 15     Date Filed: 05/28/2015
    No. 14-20265
    Louisiana previously found a dredger liable for 50% of a pipeline owner’s dam-
    ages under similar circumstances. See S. Natural 
    Gas, 711 F.2d at 1252
    n.2.
    Considering Weeks’s negligence and that caselaw, the district court did not
    clearly err in finding Weeks 40% liable.
    AFFIRMED.
    ever have any great incentive to make any progress in the direction of safety.”); SCHOEN-
    BAUM, supra note 8, § 14-2 (“Custom . . . no matter how well entrenched, is not a rule of law
    that is invariably applied.”).
    15
    Case: 14-20265   Document: 00513058332      Page: 16   Date Filed: 05/28/2015
    No. 14-20265
    PRISCILLA R. OWEN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting
    in part:
    I agree that Weeks Marine, Inc. (Weeks) was properly found liable by the
    district court for damages that Contango Operators, Inc. (Contango) suffered.
    However, I do not join in the disposition of the Government’s appeal. I disagree
    with the panel majority’s interpretation of the exculpatory clause in the permit
    that the United States issued to Contango under Section 10 of the Rivers and
    Harbors Act of 1899, 33 U.S.C. § 403.
    Section 10 of the Act prohibits the creation of any obstruction in the
    navigable waters of the United States unless the proposed project has been
    recommended by the chief of the Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) and
    authorized by the Secretary of the Army. Contango desired to build a natural
    gas pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico that would cross the Atchafalaya Pass
    Channel, a shipping channel that leads from the Gulf of Mexico into the port
    of Morgan City, Louisiana. Contango applied for and the Government issued
    a permit allowing the construction of the pipeline.
    There is an exculpatory clause in the permit which provides:
    3. Limits of Federal Liability. In issuing this permit, the
    Federal Government does not assume any liability for the
    following:
    ...
    b. Damages to the permitted project or uses thereof as a
    result of current or future activities undertaken by or on behalf of
    the United States in the public interest.
    After the pipeline was constructed, the Corps undertook dredging
    operations in the Atchafalaya Pass Channel and awarded the dredging
    contract to Weeks. The plans and specifications prepared by the Corps and
    provided to Weeks specified the location of five pipelines in the Channel but
    did not include Contango’s pipeline. Weeks’ dredge struck Contango’s pipeline,
    16
    Case: 14-20265          Document: 00513058332        Page: 17   Date Filed: 05/28/2015
    No. 14-20265
    resulting in an explosion and fire. The pipeline was inoperable for 35 days.
    Contango sued Weeks and the Government for damages, contending that the
    Government was negligent in failing to identify the existence and location of
    Contango’s pipeline on the specifications provided to Weeks.
    In holding that this incident did not come within the exculpatory clause
    in the permit issued by the Government to Contango, the district court placed
    great weight on the term “assume.” The version of the exculpatory language
    that had appeared in Section 10 permits prior to the version at issue in this
    suit had provided that “the United States shall in no case be liable for any
    damage or injury to the structure or work herein authorized.” 1 The district
    court concluded that “assume” means that the Government does not “take on
    liability” while the older language indicated that the Government “is not liable
    for [any] damages” and that the two concepts were distinct.
    The panel majority opinion also places considerable weight on the term
    “assume,” concluding that the phrase “assume any liability” “refers only to
    taking on new liability.” 2 The majority opinion concludes that “the clause
    means that the permit or its issuance does not provide a basis for liability for
    the types of damages listed; it does not suggest the government is protected
    from existing sources of liability independent of the permit.” 3
    With great respect, I have difficulty following this explanation. The
    “types of damages listed” in the permit are quite broad.                  The damages
    identified are “[d]amages to the permitted project [Contango’s pipeline] or uses
    [of Contango’s pipeline] as a result of current or future activities undertaken
    1   33 C.F.R. § 209.130(c)(2)(vii) (1974).
    2   Ante at 8.
    3   
    Id. 17 Case:
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    by or on behalf of the United States in the public interest.” The reference to
    “current or future activities undertaken by or on behalf of the United States in
    the public interest” is also quite broad.              That reference is not limited to
    activities that relate only to the permit.
    Even giving the word “assume” a cramped meaning, the Government had
    no duty to Contango under admiralty law until the Government issued the
    permit to Contango allowing the pipeline to obstruct navigable waters. The
    exculpatory clause, fairly read in context, states that in exchange for allowing
    Contango to construct and operate a natural gas pipeline in navigable waters,
    the Government is not assuming, that is “taking on,” liability that it would not
    have had but for the issuance of the permit. In other words, since the only
    reason that the Government had any duty under admiralty law regarding the
    pipeline is because the pipeline is in navigable waters, the exculpatory clause
    says that by allowing the pipeline to exist in navigable waters, the Government
    does not assume any liability for damages to the pipeline “as a result of current
    or future activities undertaken by or on behalf of the United States in the
    public interest.” This is an express disclaimer of liability for the Government’s
    own activities, both at the time the permit was issued and in the future that
    damage this pipeline.
    The majority opinion relies on a decision of the Court of Federal Claims
    regarding the Section 10 exculpatory clause. 4 That was a takings case that is
    inapposite. In Banks v. United States, owners of property located on the shores
    of Lake Michigan contended that the Government’s activities in St. Joseph
    Harbor had resulted in erosion and that their properties were receding at a
    4   See 
    id. at 8
    n.13.
    18
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    rate of two feet per year. 5 There were two components of the claims at issue.
    One was that the Government had installed steel sheet pilings at the St.
    Joseph Harbor, which the plaintiffs asserted “created a wall blocking the sand
    that otherwise would have traveled south and protected the shoreline [south
    of St. Joseph Harbor] from erosion.” 6 The second component was that in an
    attempt to mitigate the erosion, the plaintiffs had placed shore protection,
    called “revetments,” on their properties. 7 The Government contended that it
    was not liable for erosion that the revetments caused. 8 In order to construct
    the revetments, the plaintiffs had obtained permits under Section 10 of the
    River and Harbor Act of 1899. 9 A threshold issue in the case was whether the
    erosion caused by the revetments, as distinguished from erosion caused by the
    steel sheets installed in the harbor, constituted inverse condemnation and
    therefore constituted a taking rather than a tort. 10 The court held that if the
    facts alleged by the plaintiffs were proven at trial, the erosion caused by the
    revetments would be a taking rather than a tort. 11                   In this context, the
    Government then argued that it was not liable for the erosion caused by the
    revetments because of the exculpatory clause in the Section 10 permits. 12
    Unsurprisingly, the Court of Federal Claims concluded that the exculpatory
    clause was not applicable to a constitutional takings claim. The court said, “it
    5   
    69 Fed. Cl. 206
    , 207-08, 214 (2006).
    6   
    Id. at 210
    (alteration in original).
    7   
    Id. at 208.
          8   
    Id. 9 Id.
    at 214.
    10   
    Id. at 212-14.
          11   
    Id. at 214.
          12   
    Id. 19 Case:
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    is not legally relevant here whether [the Government] ‘assume[s]’ liability or
    not.” 13     This meant that the court did not even consider whether the
    Government assumed liability under the exculpatory clause, much less what
    liability the Government had assumed under that clause. Citing a takings case
    that held the Government is liable for the cost of protective measures taken by
    property owners to prevent erosion caused by the Government, the Court of
    Federal Claims said, “[u]nder Dickinson, [the Government] is liable for all that
    has been taken as a result of its activities; there is no liability for the
    government to ‘assume.’” 14             This discussion does not support the panel
    majority’s interpretation of the exculpatory clause; it holds only that an
    exculpatory clause in a Section 10 permit does not apply when the Government
    has taken a private owner’s property for public use without compensation, in
    violation of the Constitution. The fact that the revetments that caused part of
    the erosion were authorized by a Section 10 permit had nothing to do with the
    fact that the initial erosion was caused by the Government and it would be
    liable for that erosion as well as the protective measures taken by the
    plaintiffs.
    The present case is not a takings case. It is a tort case. The tort
    committed by the Government caused “[d]amages to the permitted project
    [Contango’s pipeline] . . . as a result of current or future activities undertaken
    by or on behalf of the United States in the public interest.” The exculpatory
    clause applies.
    13   
    Id. at 217
    (second alteration in original).
    14Id. (citing United States v. Dickinson, 
    331 U.S. 745
    , 750 (1947) (holding that when
    the Government takes property by flooding it, the Government is also liable for the cost of
    protective measures by landowners in preventing erosion caused by raised water levels)).
    20
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    *****
    For the foregoing reasons, I concur in part and dissent in part.
    21