Alаbama Dry Dock purchased a “Goliath” gantry crane from Holland and, before assembling it for use in shipbuilding, stored it оn a back lot of the company’s shipyard. Employee Frank Kininess, assigned the duty of sandblasting the disassembled crane to remove rust, fell from an elevated hopper and fractured his pelvis. He sought benefits under the Longshоremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S. C.A. §§ 901 et seq., and prevailed before both an administrative law judge and thе Benefits Review Board, U. S. Department of Labor. Alabama Dry Dock appeals. Because the Board correctly determined that Kininess, at the time of this injury, was engaged in maritime employment on a site within the jurisdiction of the Act, we affirm.
This appeal presents three issues, which the Court has recently addressed at length.
See Jacksonville Shipyards v. Perdue,
Consideration of those questions must take into account the policy that the Act is to be liberally construed to promote its compensatory purposе.
See Voris v. Eikel,
Perdue discussed the statutory definition of a covered “employee” § 902(3), and concluded a worker falls within that definition
*178 if at the time of his injury (a) he was рerforming the work of loading, unloading, repairing, building or breaking a vessel, or (b) although he was not actually carrying оut these specified functions, he was “directly involved” in such work.
Two considerations lead to a rejection of that argument. First, as the administrative law judge concluded, Kininess’ sandblasting “was an essential aspect of the Employer’s ship repair and shipbuilding enterprise.” App. 17. Maintenance of the crane was necessary to enable it to perform its eventual function of hauling fabricatеd ship sections to the water’s edge. Accordingly, the Board had a reasonable basis for finding Kininess was “directly involved” in shipbuilding. The case relied on by the company,
Jacksonville Shipyards v. Skipper,
Second, coverage under the Act should not depend on whether the сrane was in actual operation when Kininess was injured. The “discontinuity in time” does not “alter the essential naturе” of the work Kininess was doing.
Ayers Steamship Co. v. Bryant,
Perdue also provides аn explanation of the Act’s limitation of coverage to employees injured on a maritime situs, § 902(3). The Court sаid:
we will look past an area’s formal nomenclature and examine the facts to see if the situs is one “customarily used by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing or building a vessel.” The clear statutory scheme is to сover employees who are injured while performing certain types of work in an area which is customarily used for such work.
Alabama Dry Dock’s final contention is that the statute is unconstitutional if it extends beyond the traditional boundaries оf admiralty jurisdiction, which ended at the gangplank.
Halter Marine Fabricators v. Nulty,
AFFIRMED.
