Appellant Bradford McPhillamy brought unseaworthiness and Jones Act claims against appellee Brown & Root, Inc., his employer, after a frayed and overloaded cable on his barge snapped and struck him in the face. The district court denied McPhillamy’s motion for directed verdict and sent the case to the jury. The jury found the employer negligent and the vessel unseaworthy, and awarded McPhillamy $75,000 actual damages and $25,000 punitive damages. McPhillamy appeals, claim
Facts and Proceedings Below
Bradford McPhillamy worked as a “stabber” on Brown & Root’s Lay Barge M-289 in the Gulf of Mexico. At the time of the accident, Brown & Root was laying a 24-inch natural gas pipeline in the Gulf. As “stabber,” McPhillamy was responsible for hooking a cable, called an “endowire,” to each new segment of pipe about to be welded to the pipeline. The endowire, which is attached to the barge, pulls and snugs the new pipe segment to the pipeline so it can be welded at the joint. During this operation, the endowire is almost always under tension.
On March 2, 1984, the endowire broke and snapped back into McPhillamy’s face. He suffered facial lacerations that eventually necessitated plastic surgery. The accident loosened some of his teeth and also caused or exacerbated various behavioral problems. Brown & Root stipulated at trial that Lay Barge M-289 was a vessel within the meaning of the Jones Act, that McPhillamy was a seaman, and that the cable in question struck McPhillamy.
The evidence showed that the one-half-inch cable was too small for pulling the 24-inch pipe, and that the cable was worn and rusty. The cable had broken three times earlier on the night of the accident and it had also frayed once to the point of separation. After the final break before McPhillamy’s injury, his foreman warned him to be cautious because the cable was “rotten.” A replacement cable was ready and the changeout would have taken less than thirty minutes. McPhillamy’s foreman, aware of the dangerous cable, did not direct his men to replace it even when the pipe laying operation ceased for about an hour while a flawed weld was repaired.
Brown & Root presented no evidence to exonerate itself from liability. At the close of the evidence, McPhillamy moved for a directed verdict on the issues of unseaworthiness and Jones Act negligence. In response to this motion, defense counsel suggested three things: (1) McPhillamy should not have been standing where he could be struck by the cable if it broke (even though there was uncontradicted testimony that he could not perform his job as “stabber” and yet remain out of danger’s way); (2) McPhillamy was responsible for the break because he and others had spliced the cable after it had broken earlier in the shift (though there was no evidence that the endowire broke at the splice); and (3) there was no evidence of how the cable came apart. Based on these assertions, Brown & Root insisted the case should go to the jury. The court, though “not inclined to think [the case] particularly close,” expressly reserved decision on McPhillamy’s motion pending the jury verdict. Neither party suggested that the jury be requested to allocate damages between the Jones Act and unseaworthiness claims.
The jury found that Brown & Root was negligent, that its barge was unseaworthy, and that McPhillamy was not contributorily negligent. The jury awarded $75,000 in compensatory damages and $25,000 in punitive damages. The district court entered judgment in this amount along with post-judgment interest.
In his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, McPhillamy raises the same issues now before us: namely, that he is entitled to prejudgment interest and that, if not, the district court wrongfully foreclosed the possibility of that interest by refusing to grant a directed verdict in his favor on unseaworthiness liability.
Discussion
A. Prejudgment Interest
As the judgment now stands, McPhillamy is not entitled to prejudgment interest because the jury awarded damages on the Jones Act and unseaworthiness claims without allocating its award between the claims. The plaintiff is not entitled to any prejudgment interest in cases such as this unless the jury apportions the damages between the Jones Act claim and
B. Directed Verdict
Perhaps recognizing that we are bound by Domangue and Wyatt, McPhillamy argues that the trial court erred in not entering a directed verdict on the unseaworthiness claim. If the district court had granted his motion, McPhillamy claims he would have abandoned his Jones Act claim. Then he would have asked the jury to return a finding of damages on the unseaworthiness count, and he would have been eligible to receive prejudgment interest on this award. See note 1, supra.
McPhillamy’s argument fails, however, because the district court did not err in refusing to grant a directed verdict.
2
The standard for whether a directed verdict may be entered on an unseaworthiness claim is enunciated in
Boeing Co. v. Ship-man,
In reserving judgment here, the district court was following a practice we have described as “highly desirable,”
Green v. Reynolds Metals Co.,
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s refusal to add prejudgment interest to the jury’s award.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The award of prejudgment interest under maritime law is "well-nigh automatic."
Reeled Tubing, Inc. v. M/V CHAD G,
If the Jones Act claim is tried to the court, “the allowance of prejudgment interest is within the discretion of the trial court.”
Williams v. Reading & Bates Drilling Co.,
. Thus we need not discuss whether McPhillamy would have been entitled to prejudgment interest on the punitive damages, though it is at the least highly doubtful that he would have been so entitled.
See Illinois Central R.R. v. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp.,
