               Case: 16-15535       Date Filed: 11/14/2017       Page: 1 of 30


                                                                                  [PUBLISH]
                  IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                            FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                              _______________________

                                     No. 16-15535
                               _______________________

                      D.C. Docket No. 4:16-cv-00162-WTM-GRS


SCL BASILISK AG,
THORCO SHIPPING A/S,

                                                                      Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                                            versus

AGRIBUSINESS UNITED SAVANNAH LOGISTICS LLC,
AGRIBUSINESS UNITED INC.,
AGRIBUSINESS UNITED DMCC INC.,
AGRIBUSINESS UNITED DMCC (DUBAI) LLC,
SONADA AGRO LIMITED (UK) LLC,

                                                                    Defendants - Appellees.

                                 ____________________

                      Appeal from the United States District Court
                         for the Southern District of Georgia
                               ____________________

                                   (November 14, 2017)

Before WILLIAM PRYOR, JORDAN, and RIPPLE, * Circuit Judges.
*
 Honorable Kenneth F. Ripple, United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by
designation.
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RIPPLE, Circuit Judge:

        Invoking the district court’s maritime jurisdiction, the plaintiffs SCL

Basilisk AG (“SCL Basilisk”) and Thorco Shipping A/S (“Thorco”) brought this

action for an order requiring the posting of security by Agribusiness United

Savannah Logistics LLC (“Agribusiness Savannah”), Agribusiness United Inc.,

Agribusiness United DMCC, Inc., and Sonada Agro Limited (UK) LLC

(“Sonada”), in aid of a pending international arbitration in London, United

Kingdom. After a hearing, the district court denied relief, and the plaintiffs timely

appealed. We now affirm the district court’s judgment. The relief sought by the

plaintiffs is not authorized by Rule B of the Supplemental Rules for Admiralty or

Maritime Claims and Asset Forfeiture Actions (“Supplemental Rules”), Georgia

law, or principles of maritime law.

                                               I

       The underlying petition arose out of a commercial dispute between the

plaintiffs, SCL Basilisk and Thorco, and defendants Agribusiness Savannah and

Sonada, 1 over the performance of a charter agreement. On December 30, 2015,



1
 In their petition, SCL Basilisk and Thorco identified the primary defendants as Agribusiness
Savannah and Sonada; they alleged that the other named defendants, Agribusiness United Inc.,



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SCL Basilisk executed a voyage charter party with Agribusiness Savannah for the

carriage of grain from New Orleans to Portugal and Morocco. Agribusiness

Savannah later requested that the charterer be changed to Sonada for insurance

coverage reasons. 2 On March 4, 2016, a letter of indemnity was issued by Sonada

as charterer and Agribusiness Savannah as guarantor. The letter required the

posting of security if the SCL Basilisk were arrested or detained, and provided for

indemnification against liability, loss, and damage.

       The M/V SCL BASILISK was detained pursuant to a writ of attachment

issued in the Eastern District of Louisiana at the request of a nonparty on a claim

unrelated to the present dispute. There was a delay by Sonada and Agribusiness

Savannah in posting security, and, as a result, SCL Basilisk incurred damages in

the amount of $452,528.86. In February 2016, SCL Basilisk instituted arbitration

proceedings against Sonada and Agribusiness Savannah in a London arbitration as

required by the charter agreement.




Agribusiness United DMCC Inc., and Agribusiness United DMCC (Dubai) LLC, were the
primary defendants’ “paying agents and/or alter egos.” R.1, ¶ 3.
2
 SCL Basilisk discovered later that Sonada had been incorporated only two days before
Agribusiness Savannah requested the change.




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          On June 24, 2016, SCL Basilisk filed a “Petition and Application for an

Order for Security in Aid of Foreign Arbitration Pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 9-9-30” in

the federal district court in Savannah, Georgia. 3 In its petition, SCL Basilisk

identified Sonada as a foreign entity having an office and registered agent in

Savannah, Georgia, and a registered agent in Roswell, Georgia; Agribusiness

United Inc. as a Georgia corporation with a principal office and registered agent in

Savannah, Georgia; Agribusiness Savannah as a Florida corporation with a

principal office address in Savannah, Georgia; and the other Agribusiness entities

as foreign companies, but registered to do business, and with registered agents for

service of process, in either Atlanta or Savannah, Georgia.4 The petition sought

$667,528.86 5 to secure a possible judgment in the pending arbitration in London.

It asserted that the requested relief was authorized by section 9-9-30 of the Georgia

Code.

          The district court expedited the matter and held a hearing on July 11, 2016.

One week later, it issued an order denying the requested relief. In its order, the

3
    See R.1 (capitalization removed).
4
    R.1, ¶¶ 6–10.
5
  This includes $200,000 for recoverable costs, including attorneys’ fees, and for interest at the
rate of 3.5% compounded quarterly. Id., ¶ 43.




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district court first noted that the relief that the plaintiffs sought was not available

under maritime law. The court explained that Supplemental Rule B allows entities

to sue in personam and attach property as security for a claim. 6 Supplemental Rule

B requires, however, that the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s attorney sign and file an

affidavit stating that the defendant cannot be found within the district. The

plaintiffs could not meet this requirement because, “according to their filings, all



6
    Supplemental Rule B states in relevant part:

          (1) When Available; Complaint, Affidavit, Judicial Authorization, and
          Process. In an in personam action:

          (a) If a defendant is not found within the district when a verified complaint
          praying for attachment and the affidavit required by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a
          verified complaint may contain a prayer for process to attach the defendant’s
          tangible or intangible personal property—up to the amount sued for—in the hands
          of garnishees named in the process.

          (b) The plaintiff or the plaintiff’s attorney must sign and file with the complaint
          an affidavit stating that, to the affiant’s knowledge, or on information and belief,
          the defendant cannot be found within the district. The court must review the
          complaint and affidavit and, if the conditions of this Rule B appear to exist, enter
          an order so stating and authorizing process of attachment and garnishment. The
          clerk may issue supplemental process enforcing the court’s order upon application
          without further court order.

                 ...

          (e) The plaintiff may invoke state-law remedies under Rule 64 for seizure of
          person or property for the purpose of securing satisfaction of the judgment.

Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. B (emphasis added).




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Defendants are present in some fashion in this district.” 7 Rule C of the

Supplemental Rules8 also was not available to the plaintiffs. The district court

explained that Supplemental Rule C allowed a party to sue a ship directly in rem.




7
    R.30 at 5.
8
    Supplemental Rule C provides in relevant part:

          (1) When Available. An action in rem may be brought:

          (a) To enforce any maritime lien;

          (b) Whenever a statute of the United States provides for a maritime action in rem
          or a proceeding analogous thereto.

          Except as otherwise provided by law a party who may proceed in rem may also,
          or in the alternative, proceed in personam against any person who may be liable.

          Statutory provisions exempting vessels or other property owned or possessed by
          or operated by or for the United States from arrest or seizure are not affected by
          this rule. When a statute so provides, an action against the United States or an
          instrumentality thereof may proceed on in rem principles.

          (2) Complaint. In an action in rem the complaint must:

          (a) be verified;

          (b) describe with reasonable particularity the property that is the subject of the
          action; and

          (c) state that the property is within the district or will be within the district while
          the action is pending.

Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. C.




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Because the plaintiffs are the owners of the M/V SCL BASILISK, pursuing

attachment under Supplemental Rule C would result in a suit against themselves.

          The district court then evaluated whether the plaintiffs could recover under

section 9-9-30 of the Georgia Code. That provision states: “Before or during

arbitral proceedings, a party may request from a court an interim measure of

protection, and a court may grant such measure, and such request shall not be

deemed to be incompatible with an arbitration agreement.” Ga. Code Ann.

§ 9-9-30. According to the plaintiffs, section 9-9-30 grants courts the authority to

award petitioners “a broad range of provisional or interim relief.” 9 In evaluating

this request, the district court noted that it could apply state law to supplement

maritime law if the result did not “frustrate national interests in having uniformity

in admiralty law.” 10 The court looked to the test set forth in Misener Marine

Construction, Inc. v. Norfolk Dredging Co., 594 F.3d 832, 839 (11th Cir. 2010):

“State law may be applied to issues of a maritime nature if: (1) there is not an act

of Congress that speaks to the issue; (2) the state law does not contravene a

characteristic feature of the general maritime law; and (3) the state law does not

9
    R.1, ¶ 44.
10
  R.30 at 7 (quoting Coastal Fuels Mktg., Inc. v. Fla. Express Shipping Co., 207 F.3d 1247,
1251 (11th Cir. 2000)).



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interfere with the proper harmony and uniformity of maritime law.” The district

court then determined that, if section 9-9-30 had the broad scope that the plaintiffs

imputed to it, the provision would run afoul of all three requirements.

           First, the court observed that federal law already spoke to the intersection of

maritime law, arbitration, and security pending arbitration. Section 8 of Title 9 of

the United States Code allowed a party to begin a proceeding “hereunder by libel

and seizure of the vessel or other property of the other party according to the usual

course of admiralty proceedings,” and still proceed to arbitration. “The usual

course of admiralty proceedings,” the court continued, involves “libel or seizure

pursuant to Rule B or Rule C.” 11 “Because there is an act of Congress that speaks

to the issue, and because the application of § 9-9-30 would contravene the

application of this act,” the court concluded that it could not “grant the relief

Plaintiffs seek.”12

           The court further expressed the concern that the state statute “contravenes a

characteristic feature of general maritime law and interferes with its harmony and




11
     Id. at 8.
12
     Id.




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uniformity.” 13 In its view, “[m]aritime attachment is by any test a characteristic

feature of the general maritime law.” 14 Plaintiffs, however, were seeking a remedy

under state law because they were unable to meet the requirements of attachment

under the Supplemental Rules. According to the district court, allowing plaintiffs

to seek attachment outside of the rules would not only subject entities to varying

security and attachment requirements, it also would allow them to bypass the

procedural requirements of the Supplemental Rules.

           Finally, the court observed, even if there were no impediments to invoking

the state statute, it could not “discern what relief would be applicable.”15 In the

district court’s view, section 9-9-30 did not have the expansive scope that the

plaintiffs attributed to it. Instead, it simply permitted the court to grant remedies

otherwise available under federal and Georgia law. It did not create new remedies.

           Accordingly, the district court denied the plaintiffs’ request for an order of

security. The plaintiffs timely appealed.




13
     Id.
14
     Id. (quoting ContiChem LPG v. Parsons Shipping Co., 229 F.3d 426, 433 (2d Cir. 2000)).
15
     Id. at 10.




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                                             II

          “Maritime parties are peripatetic, and their assets are often transitory.” Aqua

Stoli Shipping Ltd. v. Gardner Smith Party Ltd., 460 F.3d 434, 443 (2d Cir. 2006),

overruled on other grounds by Shipping Corp. of India Ltd. v. Jaldhi Overseas Pte

Ltd., 585 F.3d 58, 61 (2d Cir. 2009). Thus, “it is frequently, but not always, more

difficult to find property of parties to a maritime dispute than of parties to a

traditional civil action.” Id. As plaintiffs acknowledge, “[t]he standard procedural

mechanism . . . to address this problem is maritime attachment, which allows a

plaintiff to secure its claim against a defendant’s property found within a district

and simultaneously to subject the defendant to the personal jurisdiction of the

corresponding district court up to the value of the property attached.”16

                                             A.

          “Typically actions for attachment are brought under Rule B(1)(a) [of the]

Supplemental Rules . . . .” Everspeed Enters. Ltd. v. Skaarup Shipping Int’l, 754

F. Supp. 2d 395, 400 (D. Conn. 2010). Rule B states in relevant part:

          (1) When Available; Complaint, Affidavit, Judicial
          Authorization, and Process. In an in personam action:


16
     Appellants’ Br. 10–11.




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              (a) If a defendant is not found within the district when a
       verified complaint praying for attachment and the affidavit required
       by Rule B(1)(b) are filed, a verified complaint may contain a prayer
       for process to attach the defendant’s tangible or intangible personal
       property—up to the amount sued for—in the hands of garnishees
       named in the process.

Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. B (emphasis added). “[T]here are two reasons for the

procedure authorized in Supplemental Rule B: to assure a respondent’s

appearance, and to assure satisfaction in case the suit is successful.” Nehring v.

Steamship M/V Point Vail, 901 F.2d 1044, 1051 (11th Cir. 1990) (alteration in

original) (quoting Polar Shipping Ltd. v. Oriental Shipping Corp., 680 F.2d 627,

637 (9th Cir. 1982)). “Supplemental Rule B, however, cannot be used purely for

the purpose of obtaining security: ‘The two purposes may not be separated,

however, for security cannot be obtained except as an adjunct to obtaining

jurisdiction.’” Id. (quoting Seawind Compania, S.A. v. Crescent Line, Inc., 320

F.2d 580, 582 (2d Cir. 1963)).

       Here, SCL Basilisk and Thorco cannot meet the requirements for invoking

Rule B(1)(a). Specifically, all of the defendants can be found in the district.17


17
  The plaintiffs suggest for the first time in their reply brief that, depending on how the language
of Rule B is interpreted, the defendants’ registrations to do business in the district may not render
them “found within the district” for purposes of Supplemental Rule B. Reply Br. 5 (internal
quotation marks omitted). This is both contrary to the position they took in their opening brief,



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Thus, at least in these circumstances, the plaintiffs’ purpose in invoking Rule B is

not “to gain jurisdiction over an absent defendant,” Aqua Stoli Shipping Ltd., 460

F.3d at 437, and Rule B(1)(a) is inapplicable. See Everspeed Enters. Ltd., 754 F.

Supp. 2d at 400 (holding that “Rule B(1)(a) is inapplicable” where each of the

defendants resides or has a principal place of business in the district in which the

action is brought). Indeed, the plaintiffs admit that such is the case: “When a

defendant appears by registration within a district, attachment under Rule B(1)(a)

is no longer available.” 18

                                                B.

          Rule B, however, also allows plaintiffs to employ state measures of

protection. Supplemental Rule B(1)(e) provides that a “plaintiff may invoke



see Appellants’ Br. 22 (“When a defendant appears by registration within a district, attachment
under Rule B(1)(a) is no longer available.”), and in the district court, see R.35 (Tr. Hr’g July 11,
2016) at 15 (“Now, because the defendants know that Rule B was going to be employed against
them, they took affirmative steps to avoid us from being able to use the Rule B remedy.”); see
also id. at 11, 13, 17 & 19. However, even if the plaintiffs had not conceded the point, we would
not consider this argument because they failed to raise it before the district court, see Norelus v.
Denny’s, Inc., 628 F.3d 1270, 1296 (11th Cir. 2010) (“[I]ssues not raised in the district court
should not be considered on appeal.”), and they failed to raise it in their opening brief, see Conn.
State Dental Ass’n v. Anthem Health Plans, Inc., 591 F.3d 1337, 1351 n.11 (11th Cir. 2009)
(“Because they raised this argument for the first time in their reply brief, we treat this argument
as waived.”).
18
     Appellants’ Br. 22.




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state-law remedies under Rule 64 for seizure of person or property for the purpose

of securing satisfaction of the judgment.” Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. B(1)(e). For its

part, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 64 provides:

      (a) Remedies Under State Law—In General. At the
      commencement of and throughout an action, every remedy is
      available that, under the law of the state where the court is located,
      provides for seizing a person or property to secure satisfaction of the
      potential judgment. But a federal statute governs to the extent it
      applies.

      (b) Specific Kinds of Remedies. The remedies available under this
      rule include the following—however designated and regardless of
      whether state procedure requires an independent action:

      • arrest;
      • attachment;
      • garnishment;
      • replevin;
      • sequestration; and
      • other corresponding or equivalent remedies.

Fed. R. Civ. P. 64.

      Although at least some of these specifically enumerated remedies are

available under Georgia law, see Ga. Code Ann. § 18-3-1 (identifying grounds of

attachment); id. § 18-4-1 et seq. (setting forth garnishment procedures), the

plaintiffs have not pursued them. Instead, they have petitioned for “an order




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requiring the posting of security pursuant to Georgia Code . . . § 9-9-30.”19

According to the plaintiffs, section 9-9-30 provides a remedy that “correspond[s]”

or is “equivalent” to those enumerated in Rule 64(b). 20 In their view, the provision

is a grant of authority empowering courts to create interim measures of protection.

We cannot accept this argument.

          1. Language and history of section 9-9-30

          Section 9-9-30 of the Georgia Code is a provision within Georgia’s

relatively recently enacted International Commercial Arbitration Code.21 The

provision states, “Before or during arbitral proceedings, a party may request from a

court an interim measure of protection, and a court may grant such measure, and

such request shall not be deemed to be incompatible with an arbitration

agreement.” Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-30. On its face, the language of section 9-9-30

reflects the policy that a party’s resort to a court for an order to preserve assets (in

the event of arbitral victory) or to protect trade secrets (in the course of arbitral

discovery) is compatible with having the merits of a dispute determined in an

19
     R.1, ¶ 1.
20
     Appellants’ Br. 14 (alteration in original) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 64(b)).
21
  See Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-20(a) (“This part shall be known and may be cited as the ‘Georgia
International Commercial Arbitration Code.’”).




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arbitral forum. The provision therefore serves an important function in fostering a

legal climate conducive to international arbitration 22: it guarantees that a party’s

resort to a court for interim measures cannot be interpreted as a waiver of his or her

right to arbitrate the merits of the underlying dispute.

       This plain meaning is confirmed by the notes to the working drafts and the

final report of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law

regarding the Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration (“UNCITRAL

Model Law”), on which Georgia’s International Commercial Arbitration Code is

based. See Stephen L. Wright & Shelby S. Guilbert Jr., Recent Advances in

International Arbitration in Georgia: Winning the Race to the Top, 18 Ga. B.J.,

June 2013, at 18–19 (“The ICA Code itself is based primarily upon the 1985

UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration . . . , as amended

in 2006.”). 23 In the notes to the Fourth Draft, the drafters observe:


22
  See Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-20(b) (“The purpose of [the Georgia International Commercial
Arbitration Code] is to encourage international commercial arbitration in this state, to enforce
arbitration agreements and arbitration awards, to facilitate prompt and efficient arbitration
proceedings consistent with this part, and to provide a conducive environment for international
business and trade.”).
23
  Section 9-9-30 is based on Article 9 of the UNCITRAL Model Code which reads: “It is not
incompatible with an arbitration agreement for a party to request, before or during arbitral
proceedings, from a court an interim measure of protection and for a court to grant such
measure.” In their reply brief, the plaintiffs submit that, because the Georgia General Assembly



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       20. Article 9 expresses the principle of compatibility of an arbitration
       agreement with a request to a court for an interim measure. There are
       two aspects of this principle.

       21. One aspect is that it applies to courts of the State of the model law
       requested to grant an interim measure and provides that a court shall
       not refuse to grant such a measure on the ground that there is an
       arbitration agreement.

       22. The other aspect is that the rule expresses the principle according
       to which a request by a party for an interim measure should not be
       construed as a waiver of the arbitration agreement. This principle
       should apply irrespective of whether such a request is made to a court
       in the State of the model law or to a court in any other State.

Howard M. Holtzmann & Joseph E. Neuhaus, A Guide to the UNCITRAL Model

Law on International Commercial Arbitration 341 (1989) (“Holtzmann &

Neuhaus”) (quoting Fifth Secretariat Note Territorial Scope of Application and

Related Issues A/CN.9/WG.II/WP.49 (21 December 1983)) (bracketed references

omitted). Moreover, the Commission’s final report confirms that Article 9 was not

meant to expand the panoply of remedies available in the courts of states that may

adopt the UNCITRAL Model Code:



used the active, as opposed to the passive, voice in part of section 9-9-30, it must have intended a
different—and broader—meaning. There is no support for this assertion.

       As will be discussed in greater detail, see infra note 28, UNCITRAL amended the Model
Code in 2006. The language that forms the basis of section 9-9-30, however, did not change.




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       It was understood that article 9 itself did not regulate which interim
       measures of protection were available to a party. It merely expressed
       the principle that a request for any court measure available under a
       given legal system and the granting of such measure by a court of
       “this State” was compatible with the fact that the parties had agreed to
       settle their dispute by arbitration.

Id. at 345–46 (quoting Commission Report A/40/17 (21 August 1985)). Thus, the

official commentary to the UNCITRAL Model Law dispels any notion that the

provision was intended to authorize new remedies. Instead, section 9-9-30 simply

confirms that a party’s request to have a court order an interim measure already

within its legal arsenal is compatible with that party’s desire to submit the merits of

the dispute to arbitration. 24


24
   A number of other states have adopted a version of Article 9 of the UNCITRAL Model Code.
See Cal. Civ. Code § 1297.91; Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 50a-109; 710 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann.
§ 30/5-15; La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 9:4249. As with Georgia’s version, courts in those jurisdictions
have not had the opportunity to address definitively the meaning of those provisions. Two cases,
however, shed some light on how these statutes are viewed. See Stemcor USA Inc. v. CIA
Siderurgica Do Para Cosipar, 870 F.3d 370 (5th Cir. 2017); Everspeed Enters. Ltd. v. Skaarup
Shipping Int’l, 754 F. Supp. 2d 395 (D. Conn. 2010). In Stemcor USA, the Fifth Circuit held that
the Louisiana attachment statute could be used to secure an arbitral judgment prior to the
prevailing party commencing a confirmation proceeding. 870 F.3d at 380. In doing so, the court
noted that “[r]eading Louisiana law to allow for pre-suit attachment in aid of arbitration makes
sense of the statutory scheme as a whole because other provisions of Louisiana law assume that
some state-law preliminary remedies are available to aid arbitration.” Id. at 379 n.6 (emphasis
added). The court went on to observe that Louisiana had adopted the UNCITRAL Model Law
and that “[i]t would be strange for Louisiana to have adopted the UNCITRAL Model Law
without allowing for state law interim remedies in aid of arbitration.” Id. Had the court believed
that Louisiana’s version of the UNCITRAL Model Law was an independent grant of substantive
relief, it would not have had to consider if Louisiana’s attachment statute provided a remedy.




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           2. Language and history of section 9-9-38

           The plaintiffs also note that the term “interim measure” is employed in

another part of the International Commercial Arbitration Code, section 9-9-38.

They explain that “[t]he ICA Code expressly gives an arbitrator the authority, upon

application of a party, to ‘grant interim measures as [the arbitrator] deems

appropriate’ and to ‘modify, suspend or terminate’ such measures.”25 “With no

indication to the contrary,” the plaintiffs conclude, “it then follows that § 9-9-30,

which employs the same phrase, ‘interim measure,’ is designed to extend a similar

authority to the courts.” 26




        Similarly, in Everspeed Enterprises, the plaintiff had supplemented a previous
application for prejudgment remedy “with an application for an order pendente lite in aid of the
arbitration” under sections 50a-109 (Connecticut’s version of Article 9) and 52-422
(Connecticut’s pendente lite statute). Id. at 404. While recognizing that it had the “jurisdiction
and authority to grant injunctions and provisional remedies in the context of pending arbitrations,
including international arbitrations” under section 50a-109, the court questioned whether it had
the authority to provide the plaintiff with the relief it sought because the specific statutory
requirements for an order pendente lite had not been met. Id. at 405 (quoting Bahrain
Telecomm. Co. v. Discoverytel, Inc., 476 F. Supp. 2d 176, 180 (D. Conn. 2007)). As in Stemcor
USA, if the court perceived section 50a-109 as an independent grant of substantive authority, as
opposed to an enabling statute that authorized the use of existing state remedies in aid of
international arbitration, it would not have undertaken this inquiry.
25
     Appellants’ Br. 28 (second alteration in original) (emphasis added).
26
     Id.




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          The fact that sections 9-9-30 and 9-9-38 both employ the term “interim

measure” does not mean that the measures available to courts under section 9-9-30

are coextensive with those available to arbitrators under section 9-9-38. Read in its

entirety, the language of the two provisions is not the same; section 9-9-38

expressly gives an arbitrator the authority to “grant interim measures as it deems

appropriate.” Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-38(a) (emphasis added).27 Courts are not

granted the same leeway.

27
     Section 9-9-38 reads in relevant part:

          (a) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the arbitration tribunal may, at the
          request of a party, grant interim measures as it deems appropriate.

          (b) The arbitration tribunal may modify, suspend, or terminate an interim measure
          it has granted, upon application of any party or, in exceptional circumstances and
          upon prior notice to the parties, on the arbitration tribunal’s own initiative.

          (c) The arbitration tribunal may require the party requesting an interim measure to
          provide appropriate security in connection with the measure.

                 ...



          (g) The party who is seeking or has obtained recognition or enforcement of an
          interim measure shall promptly inform the court of any termination, suspension,
          or modification of that interim measure.

          (h) Where recognition or enforcement of an interim measure is sought in a court
          of this state, such court may order the requesting party to provide appropriate
          security if the arbitration tribunal has not already made a determination with
          respect to security or where such a decision is necessary to protect the rights of
          third parties.




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      That the Georgia General Assembly intended to provide arbitrators with

greater flexibility than courts with respect to interim measures also finds support in

section 9-9-39. Section 9-9-39, concerning enforcement of interim measures,

recognizes that an arbitral panel’s authority to order interim measures of protection

may extend beyond that of the courts. It provides that a court may refuse to

recognize or enforce an interim measure ordered by an arbitrator if the court

determines that the measure “is incompatible with the powers conferred upon the

court, unless the court decides to reformulate the interim measure to the extent

necessary to adapt it to its own powers and procedures.” Ga. Code Ann. § 9-9-

39(a), (a)(2)(A). If the power of arbitrators and courts to order interim measures

were coextensive, this provision would be unnecessary.

      The commentary to the UNCITRAL Model Code also supports the

conclusion that the scope of 9-9-30 and 9-9-38 are very different. As originally

drafted, Article 17 of the UNCITRAL Model Code, on which 9-9-38 is based,

stated:

      Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the arbitral tribunal may, at
      the request of a party, order any party to take such interim measure of
      protection as the arbitral tribunal may consider necessary in respect of
      the subject-matter of the dispute. The arbitral tribunal may require
      any party to provide appropriate security in connection with such
      measure.


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UNCITRAL Model Law Art. 17 (1985), reprinted in Holtzmann & Neuhaus at

1245. Commentators observed that Article 17 was “related to, but distinct from,

Article 9, which states that it is not incompatible with the arbitration agreement for

a party to request from a court—or for the court to grant—an interim measure of

protection.” Holtzmann & Neuhaus at 530. The articles differ in that, “[u]nlike

Article 17, Article 9 does not grant any authority but only states the principle that

certain action, if permitted under other law, is not inconsistent with arbitration.”

Id. (emphasis added). Although the 2006 Amendments to the UNCITRAL Model

Law significantly expanded Article 17, those amendments did not blur the

distinction between the powers of arbitrators and the powers of courts to grant

interim measures of protection.28



28
     Article 17 now reads:



          Article 17. Power of arbitral tribunal to order interim measures

          (1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the arbitral tribunal may, at the
          request of a party, grant interim measures.

          (2) An interim measure is any temporary measure, whether in the form of an
          award or in another form, by which, at any time prior to the issuance of the award
          by which the dispute is finally decided, the arbitral tribunal orders a party to:




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               (a) Maintain or restore the status quo pending determination of the
        dispute;

                (b) Take action that would prevent, or refrain from taking action that is
        likely to cause, current or imminent harm or prejudice to the arbitral process
        itself;

              (c) Provide a means of preserving assets out of which a subsequent award
        may be satisfied; or

                (d) Preserve evidence that may be relevant and material to the resolution
        of the dispute.

UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration 1985 With amendments
adopted in 2006 (2008), http://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/arbitration/ml-arb/
07-86998_Ebook.pdf. The 2006 Amendments also expanded Article 17 in other ways, most
notably by (1) the addition of Articles 17 B and 17 C, which set forth procedures for a different
procedural tool, “preliminary orders”; and (2) the addition of Articles 17 H and 17 I, which
address the recognition and enforcement of interim measures. Id.

       Although the Georgia General Assembly incorporated much of the new recognition and
enforcement language into its International Commercial Arbitration Code, see Ga. Code Ann.
§§ 9-9-38, 9-9-39, it did not incorporate the 2006 Amendments’ definition of interim measure.

       Despite this fact, the plaintiffs urge that this definition should govern the court’s
consideration of their petition. The plaintiffs’ argument proceeds as follows: The Georgia
General Assembly modeled the International Commercial Arbitration Code on the UNCITRAL
Model Code. UNCITRAL defined “interim measure” broadly in its Arbitration Rules. See
Reply Br. 9. The plaintiffs therefore conclude that,



                 [i]f the Assembly had meant to limit parties’ relief to use of Georgia’s
        attachment statute, the Assembly would not have adopted this broad language
        wholesale when a simple cross-reference to the attachment statute would have
        sufficed. Notably, the Assembly did not simply copy Article 9 of the Model Law;
        it rearranged the language as it saw fit, yet it retained “interim measure of
        protection.” This suggests that the Assembly meant to incorporate the prevailing
        international meaning of the term “interim measure.”

Id. at 10 (citations omitted).



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       In sum, none of the SCL Basilisk’s arguments persuade us that section

9-9-30 grants a court authority to create new substantive remedies; rather it

confirms that a court’s grant of interim relief, utilizing existing state remedies, is

not inconsistent with submitting a merits determination to an arbitrator. 29

                                                 C.

       The plaintiffs’ final argument is that, even if the relief they seek is not

specifically authorized by Supplemental Rule B or section 9-9-30, the district court

nonetheless possesses equitable powers under maritime law to grant the security in

aid of arbitration that they seek. In making this argument, the plaintiffs rely




        The plaintiffs are correct that the Georgia General Assembly did not adopt wholesale the
UNCITRAL Model Code. However, the discretion the General Assembly exercised in
determining which provisions to adopt and which to leave out cuts against the plaintiffs’
argument. The UNCITRAL Model Code contains an expansive definition of interim measure
(indeed, one that is materially indistinguishable from that incorporated into the UNCITRAL
Model Arbitration Rules, see id. at 9); yet this definition was not incorporated into Georgia’s
International Commercial Arbitration Code. This intentional omission suggests that the General
Assembly did not intend for courts to employ the UNCITRAL Model Law’s definition of interim
measure.
29
  Because section 9-9-30 is not a substantive grant of authority, it does not conflict, indeed it is
consonant, with 9 U.S.C. § 8, which “permit[s] a party having an admiralty cause of action to
commence a suit in admiralty, despite an agreement to arbitrate, so that ‘the vessel or other
property’ may be seized and held as security until the arbitration is concluded.” Greenwich
Marine, Inc. v. S.S. ALEXANDRA, 225 F. Supp. 671, 674 (S.D.N.Y. 1964).




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primarily on Schiffahartsgesellschaft Leonhardt & Co. v. A. Bottacchi S.A. de

Navegacion, 773 F.2d 1528 (11th Cir. 1985) (en banc).

       In Leonhardt, Bottacchi’s property had been attached pursuant to

Supplemental Rule B. Bottacchi then moved to dismiss the complaint and quash

the process of attachment. It “argued that Rule B(1)[30] violated due process in

failing to provide adequate judicial supervision of the attachment process and that,

because the rule constituted the sole authority for the court’s issuance of the writ,

the writ had to be dissolved.” Id. at 1530. The district court held that Bottachi’s

due process rights had not been violated because it had been afforded preseizure

notice and a timely hearing. See id. Nevertheless, the district court held Rule B(1)

invalid under the Due Process Clause because it failed to provide “(1) procedural

safeguards in place of preseizure notice and hearing; and (2) a prompt

postattachment hearing.” Id.

       A panel of this court reversed, holding “that because Bottacchi was accorded

due process in the particular case, the lower court erred in proceeding to determine

the facial constitutionality of Rule B(1).” Id. We took “the case en banc to


30
  At issue in Schiffahartsgesellschaft Leonhardt & Co. v. A. Bottacchi S.A. de Navegacion, 773
F.2d 1528 (11th Cir. 1985) (en banc), was the constitutionality of the former version of
Supplemental Rule B.



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address the confusion that appears to have arisen in the district courts over the

relationship between Rule B(1) and the courts’ inherent admiralty powers.” Id. at

1530–31.

      Turning to the question of the courts’ inherent admiralty powers, we

determined that the district court did have “the power to issue the writ of

attachment independent of its authority derived under Rule B(1).” Id. at 1531. We

observed that, “[w]hen the Constitution was adopted, the existing maritime law

became the law of the United States ‘subject to power in Congress to alter, qualify

or supplement it as experience or changing conditions might require.’” Id. at

1531–32 (quoting Detroit Trust Co. v. The Thomas Barlum, 293 U.S. 21, 43, 55

(1934)). Among the maritime procedures in place at the time of the Constitution

was maritime attachment, according to which “the person injured may have his

action in personam, and compel appearance by the process of attachment on the

goods of the trespasser.” Id. at 1532–33 (quoting Manro v. Almeida, 23 U.S. (10

Wheat.) 473, 495–96 (1825)).

      We then turned to whether Congress had altered the concept of maritime

attachment as it existed at the time of the Constitution’s adoption. We observed

that the Supplemental Rules, “promulgated by the Supreme Court and enacted by




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Congress[,] constitute[d] the only statutory restrictions on maritime attachment

placed on a federal district court’s power to apply admiralty law and procedure.”

Id. at 1533. The advisory committee notes to those rules made clear, however, that

the Supplemental Rules were “not to be construed as limiting or impairing the

traditional power of a district court, exercising the admiralty and maritime

jurisdiction, to adapt its procedures and its remedies in the individual case,

consistently with these rules.” Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. A advisory

committee’s note) (emphasis added). Evaluating the procedures that the district

court had employed, we concluded that those procedures, which included a timely

postattachment hearing, were “entirely consistent with Rule B(1).” Id. Because

the court had exercised its inherent maritime powers—and had done so

consistently with the Supplemental Rules—there was no occasion to consider the

constitutionality of Rule B. The only remaining question was whether “the

procedures utilized by the district court” comported with due process. Id. We

concluded that “the concept of due process [was] sufficiently flexible and the

realm of admiralty sufficiently distinct to uphold the constitutionality of the

procedures afforded Bottacchi by the district court in the exercise of its inherent

power to apply maritime law.” Id. at 1539.




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       Similar to their reading of section 9-9-30, the plaintiffs perceive Leonhardt

as granting district courts carte blanche “to fashion appropriate prejudgment

remedies” as justice so requires. 31 We do not view Leonhardt as supporting such a

broad proposition. In Leonhardt, we determined that district courts possess the

inherent admiralty powers that existed at the time the Constitution was adopted.

Congress, we acknowledged, had the power to alter those powers and had done so

in the Supplemental Rules. Nevertheless, district courts still may apply and adapt

their inherent admiralty powers as long as they do so consistently with the

Supplemental Rules.




31
   Appellants’ Br. 22. In their reply brief, the plaintiffs rely on United Shipping Services Three,
Inc. v. U.S. Express Lines, Ltd., No. CIV. A. 98-950, 1998 WL 770599 (E.D. Penn. Nov. 5,
1998), and Trans Ocean v. Baltic Shipping Co., Civ.A. Nos. 95-2192 & 95-2635, 1995 WL
495908 (E.D. La. Aug. 18, 1995), for the proposition that Leonhardt “only required that a district
court act ‘consistently with [the] rules’ holistically, and it did not specify any brightline
requirements.” Reply Br. 4 (quoting Leonhardt, 773 F.2d at 1533). Neither case, however, is
persuasive. In United Shipping Services Three, the court mistakenly characterized our holding in
Leonhardt accordingly: “even if Rule B does not apply because the defendant could be found
within the district, a district court might attach property under its general inherent admiralty
powers.” 1998 WL 770599, at *1. The court went on to state that it did not agree with that
holding and determined, instead, that “a maritime attachment of defendant’s property must
comply with Rule B.” Id. Trans Ocean, as well, does not support plaintiffs’ assertion. It merely
summarizes the general principle from Leonhardt that “federal courts have inherent power to
issue and maintain writs of maritime attachment quite apart from the requirements of Rule B.”
Trans Ocean, 1995 WL 495908, at *2 n.2.




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         Properly understood, therefore, it is clear that Leonhardt does not support

the plaintiffs’ claim for security in aid of arbitration. Although we recognized in

Leonhardt that district courts have inherent admiralty powers, those powers are the

ones that existed at the time the Constitution was adopted. At the time the

Constitution was adopted, courts did possess the power to attach a vessel; however,

then as now, one of the purposes of maritime attachment was to secure jurisdiction.

See id. at 1532–33 (“[T]he person injured may have his action in personam, and

compel appearance by the process of attachment on the goods of the

trespasser . . . .” (quoting Manro, 23 U.S. (10 Wheat.) at 496). Thus, the plaintiffs

are seeking a remedy different from any historical concept of maritime attachment.

Moreover, Leonhardt confirmed that a district court must exercise its inherent

admiralty powers consistent with the Supplemental Rules. As we have discussed

at some length,32 Supplemental B “cannot be used purely for the purpose of

obtaining security: . . . security cannot be obtained except as an adjunct to

obtaining jurisdiction.” Nehring, 901 F.2d at 1051 (quoting Seawind Compania,

S.A., 320 F.2d at 582). A district court’s order of attachment solely for the purpose



32
     See supra at 10–12.




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of obtaining security, therefore, would be contrary to the Supplemental Rules.

However, this is exactly the relief that the plaintiffs are seeking.

                                      Conclusion

      We conclude that neither Rule B, section 9-9-30, nor principles of maritime

law authorize the specific relief sought by the plaintiffs. We therefore affirm the

district court’s judgment.

      AFFIRMED




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JORDAN, Circuit Judge, concurring.
      For me, this case ultimately comes down to how we interpret the phrase

“interim measure of protection” in Ga. Code. Ann. § 9-9-30. Unfortunately, we do

not have any guidance from the Georgia courts on the meaning of this language.

      Admiralty courts may in appropriate cases apply equitable principles, see,

e.g., Schoenamsgruber v. Hamburg Am. Line, 294 U.S. 454, 477 (1935), but the

Supreme Court has not allowed federal courts to order the pre-judgment restraint

of assets under their traditional equity powers. See, e.g., Grupo Mexicano de

Desarollo, S.A. v. Alliance Bond Fund, Inc., 527 U.S. 308, 332 (1999); De Beers

Consolidated Mines Ltd. v. United States, 325 U.S. 212, 222–23 (1945). Against

this backdrop, I would not read the phrase “interim measure of protection” as

permitting an order requiring the posting of pre-judgment security for a pending

arbitral proceeding. With these thoughts, I join the court’s opinion.




                                         30
