The owner of the ship that rammed into a bridge in Baltimore last week,
killing six workers and throwing the eastern US transportation network into
chaos, is seeking to limit its liability to about $43.7 million.
The
company, Grace Ocean,
could face hundreds of millions of dollars in damage claims, legal experts say.
On Monday 1
April it filed a petition jointly with Synergy
Marine, which was operating the Singapore-flagged ship. They
claim the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge was “not due to any fault, neglect, or want of care” of the companies
and that they shouldn’t be held liable for any loss or damage from the
disaster.
But if they are held liable, it shouldn’t be for more
than the current value of the ship and its cargo, they said. Following the
crash, the total value has fallen from as much as $90 million to $43,670,000,
according to the filing in federal court in Maryland.
The
petition is a common move for ship owners in the wake of catastrophic crashes
like the one in Baltimore. It invokes a
19th-century law once used by the Titanic’s owner to reduce the ship owner’s
liability after a crash to the value of the ship and any pending freight.
The companies said they expect the liability limit
they are seeking to be “substantially less than the amount that has been or
will be claimed” in losses or damages.
The
petition comes less than a week after the March 26 crash and as parts of the
ship remain stuck at the site of the accident.