*874 OPINION OF THE COURT
These appeals are from adverse judgments in two actions consolidated for jury trial in the district court. The action for maintenance and cure was dismissed by the court at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case 1 and the other, brought under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.A. § 688, for negligence and under the maritime law for unseaworthiness, resulted in a defense verdict. 2
Appellant was employed for two years as a seaman on appellee’s river towboat, M/V Sara. His employment duties included unloading barge cargoes of gravel, sand, coal, fuel oil and gasoline. On occasion, it was necessary for him to enter the holds of fuel barges to start pumping engines with ether or gasoline. As a result of this activity he was allegedly compelled to inhale fumes which had accumulated in the hold. In addition, appellant claimed that he inhaled the towboat engine’s diesel oil fumes which permeated the living quarters of the crew.
Although appellant ceased work on the M/V Sara in April, 1965, a physician who examined him in 1966 expressed the opinion that appellant’s disability, emphysema, could have been precipitated during the period of his exposure to “diesel fumes, the dust, sand, coal, oil” aboard the M/V Sara. Appellant contends that this testimony was sufficient to establish a prima facie ease for maintenance and cure, and that the court below erred in dismissing the action on the grounds that proof of some “specific determinable and ascertainable event” was necessary.
In Gooden v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
Moving to the appeal from the jury’s verdict, we are not persuaded by the several allegations of error advanced. First, appellant impugns the trial court’s refusal to admit evidence that the
Sara’s
engines were defective. We note, however, that there was no allegation in the complaint nor at pre-trial that the damaging fumes emanated from a defective engine. Under these circumstances, permitting the assertion of this new position at trial “would impair the efficacy of the pretrial conference procedure and would have been manifestly unfair” to the defense. Wiggins v. City of Philadelphia,
Appellant also contends that it was improper to receive evidence of a ten-year-old felony conviction for receiving stolen goods which was introduced to impeach the credibility of a liability witness. Primary support for this position is placed on McIntosh v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
This court noted in United States v. Evans,
Finally, we find no merit in appellant’s contention that the trial judge erroneously equated unseaworthiness with negligence in his charge to the jury. We detect no such error in reviewing the charge as a whole. Kolman v. Jacoby,
Accordingly, the judgment in favor of the appellee at No. 17988 will be affirmed. The judgment at No. 17989 will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Appeal No. 17989.
. Were this a diversity ease we would reach the same result. Given a conflict' between a state’s and the federal rules of evidence, the rule that would admit the evidence is the one to apply. Grossman v. U. S. Slicing Machine Company,
. Appeal No. 17988.
