Lead Opinion
On December 6, 1966 the defendant American Export Isbrandtsen Lines, Inc., (Export) and the defendant House of Albert, a partnership, entered into a contract under the terms of which the defendant House of Albert was granted a concession by Export to maintain, staff and operate the barber and beauty shops on Export’s three large passenger liners. During the life of the contract, one of them, the S.S. INDEPENDENCE, made a voyage to the Mediterranean and back between February 28, 1967 and May 4, 1967. The plaintiff, Anna Mahramas, a professional hairdresser, was at that time employed by House of Albert, and she was assigned to work in the beauty shop on the S.S. INDEPENDENCE on the Mediterranean cruise. While so employed on the vessel, the plaintiff was required to have seaman’s papers and sign ship’s articles, but she was hired and paid solely by House of Albert as called for by the contract, and took orders only from House of Albert’s supervisor on the ship. There was an informal understanding that Export, as the shipowner, would furnish the plaintiff and other employees of House of Albert who were on the ship, subsistence and quarters.
The plaintiff shared a cabin with another beauty shop employee, and used the upper of the two berths in the cabin, to which access was gained by a ladder. It is the plaintiff’s claim that on March 11, 1967, as she started up the ladder to her upper berth, the bottom step gave way; as a result she struck her face against the side of the ladder and fell to the floor of the cabin, straining her lower back.
She brought this action on November 21, 1967 under the Jones Act
She worked every day throughout the voyage. After her return on May 4, 1967 she was treated by two dentists for an infection in her teeth. On June 9, 1967 she had outpatient treatment in the surgery clinic at the United States Public Health Service Hospital on Staten Island for diarrhea, resulting from antibiotics given her for the infected teeth. June 13, 1967, the surgery clinic found her fit for duty. Thereafter she made a last voyage for House of Albert, during August, on another ship.
She complained of back pain for the first time when she returned to the surgery clinic on September 22, 1967 but she denied having had any injury to her back. She returned there twice in the early part of October for difficulty in swallowing and for lower abdominal pain. She again went there on October 17th for abdominal pain and attended the orthopedic clinic which descxúbed her symptoms as a gradual onset of lumbosacral pain and pain in knee and fingers. It was at that time that she first made mention of what the medical record described as a “vague [history] of trauma, March 1967, when she tripped on a step aboard ship and struck her face.” From then on until she commenced the action on November 21, 1967 she made several more visits to the Public Health Hospital for removal of a scar from her knee, lower abdominal pain and swallowing difficulty. On November 24, 1967 she visited the orthopedic clinic where she represented that her back pain had gone away.
The plaintiff’s roommate, Rabar, testified that the plaintiff never mentioned having an accident on the ship or that there was a broken step on the ladder; and Rabar said she never asked anyone to fix the ladder.
Plaintiff, in rebuttal, offered the testimony of one Caparones, another House of Albert employee on the ship, who said the plaintiff had told him she had hurt her jaw when she fell in her stateroom because a ladder was broken. Previously, however, he had said she had not told him how the accident occurred, and he had never'heard about or seen any broken step in her cabin. Outside of the plaintiff’s own testimony, there was no evidence of a broken ladder step or of any accident befalling the plaintiff.
The court dismissed the Jones Act and maintenance and cure claims against Export because it was not the plaintiff’s employer and against House of Albert because it did not own or control the ship. The court then found against the plaintiff on the unseaworthiness and genei’al negligence claims, because she “failed to show by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the accident occurred as she has testified.”
We affirm the judgments of the district court, though on somewhat different legal bases from those relied on by the court below.
This case raises important questions concerning the proper pax'ties
At the outset, it should be noted that there is no question raised concerning the propriety of the plaintiff’s actions against the shipowner for unseaworthiness and general negligence. The duty to provide a seaworthy ship extends not only to the owner’s employees but to all “who perform the ship’s service . . with his consent or by his arrangement,” Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
The primary questions raised on this appeal, however, go to the proper parties for the purposes of the Jones Act and maintenance and cure. While the origins of those actions, their mode of trial, and the bases and measures of recovery under them are all quite different, the parties to both of these actions are the same — a plaintiff seaman against his employer. The Supreme Court has pointed out that both causes of action depend upon the same relationship between the parties, Fink v. Shepard Steamship Co.,
The courts have long given seamen status to those performing tasks not necessary to the actual navigation of the ship, Warren v. United States,
There has never been any question that the Jones Act applies only between employees and their employers, Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc.,
The House of Albert, although admitting that it was Mrs. Mahramas’ em
An employer, although not a shipowner, can still become liable to his employees under the admiralty laws where he has hired them to do maritime work, Sieracki, supra,
In determining a seaman’s employer, a court must look to “the plain and rational meaning of employment and employer,” Cosmopolitan Shipping, supra,
In the present case as in Schiemann, supra, the House of Albert, an independent contractor, was clearly the employer; there was no evidence and no possibility of a reasonable inference to the contrary, and the question was properly taken from the jury and decided by the court, see also, Fitzgerald, supra,
Therefore, Mrs. Mahramas’ claims under the Jones Act and for maintenance and cure were properly dismissed against the defendant Export, the shipowner, because it was not her employer, but the House of Albert was a proper party for the plaintiff to sue on these claims because it was her employer. On the merits of her Jones Act claim, however, she failed to prove any negligence on its part. The House of Albert moved for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s case and, because we can perceive no theory, nor is one presented by the plaintiff, upon which the House of Albert, its agents or its employees, could have been negligent in connection with the alleged accident, the motion was properly granted by the district court as to the Jones Act claim.
On the other hand, a seaman is entitled to maintenance and cure whenever he is disabled “in the service of the ship” no matter what the cause, The Osceola,
In the present case, however, even if it is assumed, arguendo, what she claims, that her injuries did arise in the service of the ship, the plaintiff offered no proof of loss, and therefore she cannot recover.
The duty to provide maintenance and cure is imposed “to safeguard the seaman from the danger of illness without succor,” but it “does not extend beyond the seaman’s need,” Calmar Steamship, supra,
The appellant also argues under the doctine of Fitzgerald v. United States Lines,
The judgments are affirmed.
Notes
. The Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, in pertinent part, reads as follows:
“Any seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the course of his employment may, at his election, maintain an action for damages at law, with the right of trial by jury, and in such action all statutes of the United States modifying or extending the common-law right or remedy in eases of personal injury to railway employees shall apply
. The appellant challenges the sufficiency of the court’s findings of fact pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 52(a), but, although the findings are brief, they fully state the basis of the court’s decision and are adequate compliance -with Rule 52(a), Lemelson v. Kellogg Co.,
. The Compensation Act is the exclusive remedy for an employee, not a member of the crew of a vessel, against his employer when an injury occurs “upon the navigable waters of the United States,” 33 U.S.C. §§ 902(4), 903(a). Because the injury in this case did not arise upon the navigable waters of the United States, the Act clearly does not apply to this plaintiff, see, Panama Agencies Co. v. Franco,
. It should be noted, however, that effective November 26, 1972, employees covered by the Compensation Act may no longer bring an action against the shipowner for unseaworthiness, Pub.Law 92-576, § 18 (a).
. The dissenting opinion assumes and complains that this decision deprives the plaintiff of any right to sue the shipowner for defective conditions or other negligence on board the ship and leaves her with only a right of action for the “crumb” of maintenance and cure. In saying this, however, it disregards the fact that she had the right to maintain and did maintain actions for unseaworthiness and general negligence against Export, which were decided adversely to her on the merits.
. We do not read the dissent as disputing the need for an employer-employee relationship, but construe it as favoring the broadening of the definition of “employer”.
. It could be argued that the obligation of maintenance and cure should fall upon the ship because it is only the shipowner, through the master, who can order the vessel into port for emergency medical care in extreme circumstances; however, the ship is required to exercise reasonable care for all those legitimately on board and we see no reason why an employer, not the owner, could not seek indemnification against the owner for any maintenance and cure that he became liable for because of the owner’s negligence. We question the continued validity of The Federal No. 2,
. These authorities make it crystal clear that under the Jones Act the shipowner is not always the employer of every person given seaman status aboard the vessel as the dissent claims.
. Signing ship’s articles makes a seaman subject to the rules and discipline of the ship, but this does not make him the ship’s employee, see Hull v. Philadelphia & R. Ry.,
. Export provided House of Albert employees with their staterooms and retained full and exclusive control over these quarters ; therefore, House of Albert could not be held negligent for permitting any defects to exist there.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
The majority has to rely heavily upon Schiemann v. Grace Line, Inc.,
I start with the proposition — conceded by the majority — that a beautician on a cruise ship is a seaman, just as are cooks, mess men, muleteers, bartenders, musicians, telephone operators, laundresses, and even barbers (Schiemann, supra) when they are performing services that render the ship’s voyage economically viable.
The question is, then, whether a shipowner is liable to a seaman under the Jones Act because of the latter's status qua seaman or whether the test of “employment” used in railroad cases decided under the FELA
“It seems, therefore, that when a man is performing a function essential to maritime service on board a ship the fortuitous circumstances of his employment by the shipowner or a stevedoring contractor should not determine the measure of his rights. This is the very basis on which the Jones Act was held applicable to give redress to an injured stevedore in International Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty, [272 U.S. 50 ,47 S.Ct. 19 ,71 L.Ed. 157 (1926)] . . . .”149 F.2d 98 , 101 (3rd Cir.)
Haverty did extend Jones Act coverage to stevedores and permitted suit against the stevedore company.
All the considerations which gave birth to the liability and have shaped its absolute character dictate that the owner should not be free to nullify it by parcelling out his operations to intermediary employers whose sole business is to take over portions of the ship’s work or by other devices which would strip the men performing its service of their historic protection.
Of Jones Act liability, 46 U.S.C. § 688, the same may be said. Cf. Warner v. Goltra,
[The Jones Act] is to be liberally construed to carry out its full purpose, which was to enlarge admiralty’s protection to its wards .... Being an integral part of the maritime law, rights fashioned by it are to be implemented by admiralty rules not inconsistent with the Act . . . . (Citations omitted.)
Accord, Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. v. Smith,
Schiemann mentions none of the Supreme Court cases previously alluded to Desper, Cortes, Seas Shipping, Haverty. Rather, it tracks the railroad cases which involve different underlying common law concepts. Even so, at ordinary common law a person may be the servant of two masters at one time as to one act, if the service to one does not involve abandonment of the service to the other. Restatement (Second) of Agency § 226 (1957). One doubts whether today’s Court facing the problem afresh would decide the lead case on which Schiemann rests,
The argument made here does not mean that as between the concessionaire and the shipowner they may not contract that the former will save the latter harmless in situations in which the shipowner is held liable to the seaman under the Jones Act. It would mean, however, that by contract with the concessionaire the shipowner could not escape liability to a seaman for the shipowner’s negligence in failing to provide a safe bunk ladder, the claim made here. That liability would accrue in the words of the statute when the seaman suffers “personal injury in the.course of his employment . . . .” A seaman’s “course of employment” in the service of the ship includes using the ladder to his bunk to go to bed. Cf. Sentilles v. Inter-Caribbean Shipping Corp.,
To construe the Jones Act as the majority does leaves a gaping hole in its coverage: those who are concededly seamen but hired by a concessionaire are not entitled to recovery under the Jones Act for the shipowner’s negligence; they cannot recover in the usual case against the concessionaire because, except in connection with the equipment or management of the concession, the concessionaire has nothing to be negligent about. They are not wards of the admiralty, they are orphans at sea, with the crumb of concessionaire’s liability for maintenance and cure, but without the bread-and-water sustenance of liability on the part of anyone for negligence under Jones Act principles.
. See generally Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
. Compare Wells Fargo & Co. v. Taylor,
. Apparently the status theory was not advanced in argument in Schiemann for Chief Judge Clark cast his dissent,
. Desper held, however, that a person engaged in seasonal repairs on vessels “laid up for the winter” was not a seaman.
. Shortly after Haverty Congress passed the Longshoreman’s Act, 33 U.S.C. § 903 et seq., which replaced the Jones Act as the remedy for longshoremen against their employers. The provisions of the Longshoreman’s Act, of course, specifically incorporate the liberal provisions of the Jones Act such as elimination of assumption of risk and the fellow-servant rule. 33 U.S.C. § 905. They also provide very specific compensation for different types of disability. 33 U.S.C. § 908. Thus, while Congress repealed the result in Haverty with a new statute, it did not change the concept of. extending liberal protection to maritime workers which Haverty advanced.
. While she retained rights to sue the shipowner for general negligence or for unseaworthiness and while as the majority suggests in footnote 5 these were decided against her, they were decided by the trial judge without the benefit of a trial by jury to which under the Jones Act she would have been entitled and subject, at
. The majority says in its footnote 8 that United States v. W. M. Webb, Inc.,
