Defendant-Appellant Scurlock Marine, Inc. moves this En Banc Court to consider whether seamen, in Jones Act negligence cases, are bound to a standard of ordinary prudence in the exercise of care for their own safety, or whether they are bound to a lesser duty of slight care. On appeal to a panel of this Court, Scurlock Marine had assigned as error,
inter alia,
the district court’s instructions to the jury charging that seamen were bound only to a duty of slight care for their own safety. The panel denied Scurlock Marine relief on this point because the jury instructions were consistent with what the panel considered was the settled law of this Circuit.
Gautreaux v. Scurlock Marine, Inc.,
BACKGROUND 1
Archie Scurlock, as President and owner of Scurlock Marine, Inc., (“Scurlock Marine”) *1243 purchased the MN BROOKE LYNN in May, 1993, and retained Lance Orgeron as her first and permanent captain. Scurlock hired Charles Gautreaux as the BROOKE LYNN’s relief captain in October, 1993. Gautreaux was qualified for the position, having worked as a tanker man since the early 1980s and having recently earned a United States Coast Guard master’s license.
The BROOKE LYNN is a standard inland push boat, equipped with two towing winches on her bow, which are used to secure lines joining the BROOKE LYNN to the barges in her tow. The starboard side winch is hydraulic, and the port side winch is electric. Upon being hired, Gautreaux was taken to the BROOKE LYNN and instructed on her operation by Archie Scurlock. Orgeron took Gautreaux on a tour of the vessel, showing him her layout and familiarizing him with her equipment. Orgeron showed Gautreaux the manual crank handle that accompanied the port side electric winch and told him that it was to be used to override the electric switches on the winch if they faded. Orger-on explained that, if the winch became “bound up” and failed to engage by use of the electric ignition switch, the manual crank should be attached to the winch motor and turned a few times to “unbind” the winch, and then the electric ignition switch should be used to try to engage the winch. Neither Scurlock nor Orgeron told Gautreaux that if he needed to use the manual crank handle to unbind the winch, he should not leave it on the winch motor when attempting to engage the winch by use of the electric ignition switch.
About four months after he was hired, Gautreaux, serving as captain of the BROOKE LYNN, relieved the tanker man on duty and began off loading of the barge in tow. As the barge discharged its cargo, it began to rise in the water, eventually causing the towing wires to become taut. Noticing this, Gautreaux attempted to relieve the tension in the wires by unwinding them from the winches. He released the starboard wire first, which caused that side of the BROOKE LYNN to drop and the port side towing wire to become even tighter. Gautreaux then attempted to release the port side wire, but the electric winch would not work. He attached the manual crank to the winch motor, and began turning the crank while simultaneously pressing the electric ignition switch. When the motor started, the manual crank handle flew off and struck Gautreaux on the right side of his face, crushing his right eye and inflicting other severe injuries.
. Gautreaux sued Scurlock Marine, alleging that his injuries were caused by its negligence and the unseaworthiness of the BROOKE LYNN. Gautreaux’s primary complaint was that Scurlock Marine failed to properly train him in the use and operation of the electric towing winch and its manual crank handle, thereby not providing him a safe place to work. Scurlock Marine answered and sought exoneration from or limitation of its liability. After a two-day trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Gau-treaux on his Jones Act negligence claim, but found the BROOKE LYNN seaworthy. The jury apportioned fault 95% to Scurlock Marine and 5% to Gautreaux and awarded a total of $854,000 in damages. 2
The district court entered judgment for Gautreaux for $811,300. By separate order, the district court denied Scurlock Marine’s petition for limitation of liability. Scurlock Marine moved in the alternative for judgment as a matter of law, for new trial, or to alter, amend, or remit the judgment. The district court denied these motions, conditioning its denial of Scurlock Marine’s motion for new trial on Gautreaux’s acceptance of a remittitur. 3 Gautreaux accepted the remitti- *1242 tur, and the district court entered an amended judgment for $736,925 for Gautreaux. 4
On appeal to this Court, Scurlock Marine ■ argued,
inter alia,
that in its instructions regarding contributory negligence, the district court erred by charging the jury that a Jones Act seaman need exercise only “slight care” for his own safety. Scurlock Marine maintained that the standard to which Gautreaux, and all seamen, should be held is that of a reasonably prudent person exercising ordinary or due care under like circumstances. Accordingly, Scurlock Marine urged this Court to abandon the slight care standard in Jones Act cases, contending the standard “has evolved from this Court’s blind adherence to an
incorrect
statement of the law.”
Gautreaux,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
While trial courts are accorded substantial latitude in formulating jury instructions, “we must reverse when we have a substantial doubt that the jury has been fairly guided in its deliberations.”
Bode v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
The district court’s instruction, consistent with the Fifth Circuit’s Pattern Jury Instructions, 5 informed the jurors that “[i]n determining whether the plaintiff was contribu-torily negligent, you must bear in mind that a Jones Act seaman does not have a duty to use ordinary care under the circumstances for his own safety. A Jones Act seaman is obliged to exercise only slight care under the circumstances for his own safety at the time of the accident.” Scurlock Marine asserts that this charge is defective, maintaining that historically, Jones Act seamen had been expressly bound to a standard of ordinary prudence under like circumstances. In support of its contention, Scurlock Marine cites early Supreme Court opinions to illustrate that the phrase “slight negligence” or “slight care” stood not for the duty of care owed by employers and employees, as the phrase is now understood, but for that quantum of evidence necessary to sustain a jury verdict on review. The duty of care owed by both parties, Scur-lock Marine contends, had always been, and should remain, that of the reasonable person.
We acknowledge there is much confusion in this Circuit as to the proper standard of care by which juries should measure a plaintiffs duty under the Jones Act to protect himself. While some courts have instructed juries that a plaintiffs duty is only one of slight care, as did the district court in the instant case, others charge that the duty is one of ordinary prudence. Admittedly, this Court has been less than clear in its articulation of the proper standard of care to which seamen are bound. We granted this en banc rehearing to eliminate the uncertainty and to consider returning, as Scurlock Marine requests, to the reasonable person standard.
A The Development of the Slight Care, or Slight Negligence, Standard
The language chosen by Congress to determine the responsibility of both employers and employees under the Jones Act is simple and direct. Nothing in the statute *1241 indicates that Congress intended to hold Jones Act employees to a standard of slight duty of care in the exercise of concern for their own safety. Below, we explain the statutory scheme and Supreme Court precedent interpreting it before we illustrate our departure from their clear mandates.
1. The Statutory Scheme and Supreme Court Precedent
Under the Jones Act, seamen are afforded rights parallel to those of railway employees under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (“FELA”). 46 U.S.C. § 688. Section 51 of the FELA provides, in pertinent part, that “[e]very common carrier by railroad ... shall be liable in damages ... for such injury or death
resulting in whole or in part
from the negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employees of such carrier.” 45 U.S.C. § 51 (emphasis added). A seaman is entitled to recovery under the Jones Act, therefore, if his employer’s negligence is the cause, in whole or in part, of his injury. In their earlier articulations of § 51 liability, courts had replaced the phrase “in whole or in part” with the adjective “slightest.” In
Rogers v. Missouri Pacific R. Co.,
Nothing in these cases, then, supports the proposition that the duty of care owed is slight. Rather, the phrase “in whole or in part” as set forth in the statute, or, as it has come to be known, “slightest,” modifies only the causation prong of the inquiry. The phrase does not also modify the word “negligence.” The duty of care owed, therefore, under normal rules of statutory construction, ' retains the usual and familiar definition of ordinary prudence.
See Texas Food Indus. Assoc. v. United States Dept. of Agriculture,
Despite the clarity of the Supreme Court’s decisions, the word “slightest,” used initially to refer to the quantum of evidence of an employer’s breach of duty necessary to sustain a jury verdict, soon took on a different referent. Once the Supreme Court had reduced the statutory language “in whole or in part” to “any part, even the slightest,” it was not long before our court further reduced the phrase “any part, even the slightest” to a shorthand expression of “slight negligence” or “slight evidence of negligence.” Thereafter we used the phrase “slight negligence” uncritically. Justice Frankfurter’s comment on the (mis)use of the phrase “assumption of the risk” in FELA actions aptly applies to our discussion today: “A phrase begins life as a literary expression; its felicity leads to its lazy repetition; and repetition soon establishes it as a legal formula, undiscriminatingly used to express different and sometimes contradictory ideas.”
Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
Guided by the Supreme Court, we had initially employed the phrase “slight negligence” as a shorthand expression for the standard by which we measure, in our review of a jury verdict, the sufficiency of evidence establishing a causal link between an employer’s negligence and a seaman’s injury. Significantly, an employer’s duty of care always remained that of ordinary negligence. Soon, however, we began using the phrase “slight negligence” to refer not only to the sufficiency of the evidence inquiry but also to that duty of care Jones Act employers owed to their employees. A plaintiff, therefore, could now reach the jury not only with “slight evidence” of his employer’s negligence, but also with slight evidence of his employer *1240 having been only “slightly negligent.” Once we had characterized the phrase “slight negligence” as shorthand to depict a duty of care owed by an employer to its employee, it was not long before we also used the phrase to represent the plaintiffs duty of care to protect himself from work-related injuries. We did so by rephrasing “slight negligence” to “slight care.”
Historically, then, Jones Act employers and seamen were expressly bound to a standard of ordinary prudence; when the phrase “slight negligence” came to stand for the duty of care owed by employers and employees, however, employers were understood to be held to a higher degree of personal responsibility as to their employees, and plaintiff-seamen were understood to be held to a lower degree of personal responsibility for themselves. We hold that the historical interpretation always should have been, and should now be, applied in this Circuit. We offer the following survey of our ease law, however, to illustrate just how we devolved from the Supreme Court’s pronouncements in Rogers and Ferguson to our “settled law” today.
2. Our Departure from the Standard of Reasonable Care
In
Page v. St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co.,
As to both attack or defense, there are two common elements, (1) negligence, i.e., the standard of care, and (2) causation, i.e., the relation of the negligence to the injury. So far as negligence is concerned, that standard is the same — ordinary prudence — for both Employee and Railroad alike.
In
Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
In the following years, we vacillated considerably in our pronunciations of the proper standard of care. In
Perry v. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York,
Later, in
Ivy v. Security Barge Lines, Inc.,
Our decisions imputing to Jones Act employers a higher duty of care than that imposed on all other employers stretch the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Rogers
and
Ferguson
quite far. Our decisions discussing an employee’s duty of care stretch farther. In
Spinks v. Chevron Oil Co.,
Spinks,
however, was not the definitive word on the issue. Just as we had done for the standard of care to be applied to maritime employers, we vacillatéd — often in the same opinion — as to the duty a seaman owed to look after his own safety, describing this duty as one of both reasonableness
and
slight care. For example, in
Bobb v. Modern Products, Inc.,
In contrast to the broad duty imposed upon a vessel owner to supply a safe work place, the seaman’s duty to protect himself is slight. Although the seaman has a duty to use reasonable care, this duty is tempered by the realities of maritime employment “which have been deemed ... to place large responsibility for his safety on the owner.”
(citations omitted). One year later, in
Thezan v. Maritime Overseas Corp.,
We were quite explicit, however, in
Brooks v. Great Lakes Dredge-Dock Co.,
B. Ordinary Prudence
The above survey of our decisions shows the confused start and the diverted path leading to the “settled law” in this Circuit that a Jones Act employer is bound by a greater-than-ordinary standard of care towards its employees and that a seaman owes only a slight duty to look after his own safety. We agree with the Third Circuit that nothing in the text or structure of the FELA-Jones Act legislation suggests that the standard of care to be attributed to either an employer or an employee is anything different than ordinary prudence under the circumstances.
Fashauer v. New Jersey Transit Rail Operations, Inc.,
By its very terms, the FELA provides that “the damages shall be diminished by the jmy in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to such employee.” 45 U.S.C. § 53. The statute does not distinguish between degrees of negligence; the statute does not say that the plaintiff only has a slight duty of care. Under the statute, a plaintiffs recovery is reduced to the extent that he is negligent and that such negligence is responsible for the injury. In such a situation, one must assume that Congress intended its words to mean what they ordinarily are taken to mean — a person is negligent if he or she fails to act as an ordinarily prudent person would act in similar circumstances. Such a reading also is in accord with the FELA’s pure comparative negligence scheme; and to adopt [plaintiffs] argument would be to abandon the clear dictate of the statute in favor of a policy decision to favor employees over employers.
Id.; see also Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
We find further support for our position in Supreme Court precedent. In
Urie v. Thompson,
A seaman, then, is obligated under the Jones Act to act with ordinary prudence under the circumstances. The circumstances of a seaman’s employment include not only his reliance on his employer to provide a safe work environment but also his own experience, training, or education. The reasonable person standard, therefore, and a Jones Act negligence action becomes one of the reasonable seaman in like circumstances. To hold otherwise would unjustly reward unreasonable conduct and would fault seamen only for their gross negligence, which was not the contemplation of Congress. See Robert Force, Allocation of Risk and Standard of Care Under the Jones. Act: “Slight Negligence,” “Slight Care”?, 25 J. Mar. L. & Com. 1, 31 (1994).
By ascribing to seamen a slight duty of care to protect themselves from the negligence of their employers, Spinks and its progeny, specifically Brooks, are repugnant to the principles we espouse today and are therefore overruled. Moreover, by attributing to Jones Act employers a higher duty of care than that required under ordinary negligence, Allen and its progeny repudiate the reasonable person standard and are also overruled.
CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing discussion about the appropriate standards of care that should guide employers and employees under the Jones Act, we hold that the jurors in the instant ease were improperly instructed as to Gautreaux’s duty to exercise care for his own safety. We, however, express no opinion as to the proper apportionment of fault between the two parties. We accordingly AFFIRM the district court’s determination of the amount of damages, VACATE the district court’s judgment as to comparative fault and REMAND for proceedings to determine the comparative fault (if any) of the plaintiff and apportionment of the damages consistent with this opinion. In all other respects, we reinstate the panel’s opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, and REMANDED.
Notes
. This factual summary is taken almost verbatim from our panel opinion in this case.
Gautreaux v. Scurlock Marine, Inc.,
. The jury’s award was:
Past and future pain and suffering and disability $300,000
Past lost wages 24,000
Future lost wages 500,000
Future medical expenses 30,000
Total $854,000
. The district court found the jury's award of $500,000 for lost future wages excessive and against the great weight of the evidence, insofar as the award was premised on Gautreaux's inability to return to minimum-wage employment during the first two years after the accident. Accordingly, the district court conditioned denial of Scurlock Marine's new trial motion on this *1242 element of damages on Gautreaux's acceptance of an award of $400,625.
. On June 7, 1995, the district court further amended its judgment, discovering that it had failed to reduce the remitted amount of lost future wages by Gautreaux’s percentage of fault.
. The drafters, not surprisingly, apparently relied upon our explicit statement in
Brooks v. Great Lakes Dredge-Dock Co.,
