Bruce W. Christensen appeals the district court’s order granting Appellees’ summary judgment motions. Christensen is a longshoreman who was injured while helping to retie a ship that had broken free from the dock. Christensen filed negligence claims against the ship, a second ship that had been tied to the same cleat on the dock, and the dock owner. The district court held that, as a matter of law, the injury was not a foreseeable result of appellees’ acts. We reverse. Genuine issues of material fact exist as to breach of duty and proximate cause that must be resolved at trial.
I.
Bruce Christensen worked as a longshoreman, or stevedore, in Coos Bay, Ore
On April 19, 1997, diming a rainstorm with high wind gusts, the cleat holding the mooring lines of the two ships detached from the Georgia-Pacific dock. Christensen was sitting in his truck on his dinner break when the ship broke away from the dock and started drifting into Coos Bay. He went down to the dock, responding to yells for help from the ship’s crew. He and another longshoreman helped tie one small line, and then several other longshoremen arrived to help with the larger second line. The men lined up in a row to pull the ship’s line across the dock to another cleat. Christensen injured his back while pulling on the line.
Christensen filed a negligence claim in state court against Southern Route Maritime for not monitoring its mooring lines and for allowing Western Condor to tie to the same cleat, and against Georgia-Pacific for allowing two ships to tie to the same cleat and for not properly constructing its dock. Georgia-Pacific immediately removed the case to federal court on the basis of diversity and federal question jurisdiction.
The district court granted Southern Route Maritime’s motion for summary judgment. The court held that Southern Route Maritime owed no duty to Christensen. Alternatively, it held that even if a duty existed, Southern Route Maritime’s negligent act did not proximately cause Christensen’s injury. After this ruling, Christensen moved for reconsideration of the court’s order, and the other two defendants moved for summary judgment. The court granted the motion to reconsider but did not change its decision. It also granted summary judgment in favor of Anglia Maritime and Georgia-Pacific, holding that their acts were also not proximate causes of Christensen’s injury. Christensen appeals those decisions. We have jurisdiction to hear this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
A. Southern Route Maritime’s Duty of Care
The Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (LHWCA)
While Christensen can sue a vessel for negligence under the LHWCA, the Supreme Court has limited the duties that a vessel owner owes to the stevedores working for him or her.
[1] Christensen presented evidence that it was the custom of the maritime industry, and the practice of the Asian Hawk, to have the ship’s crew assess the mooring conditions and loosen the lines as conditions changed.
Alternatively, Southern Route Maritime had a duty to intervene when the weather and decreased weight of the ship created a strain on the lines. The crew of the vessel should have known there was a great strain on the lines, creating a dangerous situation, because it was responsible for monitoring the lines. The stevedores could not reasonably be expected to remedy the situation when they had no duty to inspect the lines (and therefore no knowledge of the condition of the lines) nor any control over the mooring of the ship. Therefore, Southern Route Maritime had a duty to intervene when the increasing strain on the lines created a dangerous situation.
Our conclusion concerning Southern Route Maritime’s duty accords with a decision of the First Circuit. In England v. Reinauer Transportation Co.,
Summary judgment is rarely granted in negligence cases because the issue of “[w]hether the defendant acted reasonably is ordinarily a question for the trier of fact.”
B. Anglia Maritime and Georgicir-Pa-cific’s Duty of Care
The duty of care that Anglia Maritime owed to Christensen differs from that owed by Southern Route Maritime. Anglia Maritime owns a vessel which allegedly contributed to the cause of Christensen’s injury. Although the LHWCA allows Christensen to sue Anglia Maritime for negligence,
[T]he Committee does not intend that the negligence remedy authorized in the bill shall be applied differently in different ports depending on the law of the State in which the port may be located. The Committee intends that legal questions which may arise in actions brought under these provisions of the law shall be determined as a matter of Federal law.23
We held in Peters v. Titan Navigation Co.
Georgia-Pacific is not a vessel owner at all, so Christensen cannot bring an action against it under the LHWCA. A negligence claim against Georgia-Pacific may arise under either state law or general maritime law. To create a maritime tort, the incident must have occurred on navigable waters and have a maritime flavor.
The tort involved in this case meets the requirements for a maritime tort. The injury is deemed to have oc
Like general negligence claims under the LHWCA, maritime negligence actions involve a duty of reasonable care.
III.
After examining the duty and breach factors, we still must address the issue of causation. The district court held that, even assuming a duty and breach existed, Christensen had failed to provide sufficient evidence to establish that a question of fact existed regarding whether the appellees’ acts caused his injury. The court concluded that Christensen’s injury was not a foreseeable result of appellees’ acts. We believe the district court erred in making such a conclusion as a matter of law.
As with the issue of breach, proximate cause is usually a factual decision that should be decided at trial.
The situation that arose on the evening of April 19, 1997, was an emergency. The ship had broken free from the dock and was drifting into Coos Bay. Christensen responded to calls for help from the ship’s crew and assisted in rescuing the ship. Under the rescue doctrine, which has long been recognized in tort law, the “foreseeable damages from a wrongful act include damages for the injuries sustained by one who seeks to rescue the person first endangered by that wrongful act.”
Appellees argue, and the district court held, that Christensen was not a foreseeable plaintiff because he was doing his normal work under normal conditions. They explain that it is not foreseeable that a worker will injure himself while doing his routine tasks. Even if this statement is true, a dispute of material fact exists as to whether Christensen was performing a routine task under normal conditions. Christensen offered evidence that he had not performed lines work since 1994 because of a previous back injury and that this particular occasion was the only lines work he did all year. He also offered evidence that the retying of the ship was not conducted under normal conditions.
CONCLUSION
Southern Route Maritime owed a duty to Christensen under Scindia’s active control duty or intervention duty. Anglia Maritime and Georgia-Pacific owed a duty of reasonable care to Christensen. A genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the three appellees breached then-duties. There is also an issue of fact as to whether Christensen’s injury was a foreseeable result of appellees’ acts. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s grant
REVERSED and REMANDED. '
Notes
. The federal question jurisdiction was based on the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (LHWCA), 33 U.S.C. §§ 901-950.
. Lopez v. Smith,
. Id.
. 33 U.S.C. § 904.
. Id. § 905(b).
. Id. § 902(3). Despite the fact that Christensen was not engaged in his usual duties of unloading cargo at the time of his injury, he is still covered by the LHWCA. The LHWCA covers persons whose employment requires them to spend at least part of their time doing longshoring operations. Northeast Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo,
. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. v. De Los Santos,
. Id.
. Id. at 167, 175-76,
. The turnover duty requires the ship owner to turn over the vessel to the stevedores in a safe condition and to warn them of any hidden hazards. There is no dispute that Southern Route Maritime turned over the ship in a safe condition because the Western Condor had not yet arrived.
. Scindia,
. Id. at 175-76,
. Such conditions may include high winds or the decreased weight of the ship as the cargo is unloaded. A reduction in weight causes the ship to ride higher in the water and subjects it to an increased sail effect from the wind pushing against the side of the ship, thereby creating a strain on the lines.
. The language of Scindia suggests that custom alone can create a duty.
.
. Id. at 271-73.
. Id. at 272.
. Id. at 273.
. Martinez v. Korea Shipping Corp., Ltd.,
. The record contains evidence from the Asian Hawk's captain that the crew did loosen the lines as the cargo was unloaded and that it was not unusual to have two ships tied to the same cleat. The record also contains evidence from Christensen’s expert that it was
. The LHWCA allows a stevedore to sue any vessel that negligently causes an injury, whether the stevedore is working on that vessel or not. 33 U.S.C. §§ 905(b), 902(21).
. See Scindia,
. H. Rep. No. 92-1441, at 8 (1972), reprinted in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4698, 4705.
. 857 F.2d 1342 (9th Cir.1988).
. Id. at 1344.
. As noted in footnote 20, there is a dispute over whether it was reasonable for two ships to tie to the same cleat. There is also a lack of evidence regarding whether Southern Route Maritime gave Anglia Maritime permission to tie to that cleat. Christensen presented evidence that it is the practice of the industry to allow the first ship who ties to a cleat the right to deny permission to another ship to tie to the same cleat.
. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
. Id.
. 46 U.S.C. app. § 740. This act extends admiralty jurisdiction to incidents where the damage or injury was caused by a vessel on navigable water notwithstanding that the injury actually occurred on land, such as a dock or pier. The injury in this case was caused by a vessel on navigable water breaking free from a dock and needing to be retied. Therefore, it satisfies the location test of maritime torts. See also Grubart,
. See H20 Houseboat Vacations Inc. v. Hernandez,
. The commercial impact prong considers whether the general features of the incident could hypothetically have an effect on maritime commerce. It does not require that any impact actually occurred. Grubart,
. See id. at 539,
. See Sisson v. Ruby,
. Peters,
. The record contains no evidence regarding whether the dock owner has a responsibility to monitor how ships tie to the dock or whether the dock in question was improperly constructed.
. Martinez,
. Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Atropos Island,
. Hanseatische Reederei Emil Offen Co. v. Marine Terminals Corp.,
. Stewart v. Jefferson Plywood,
.Christensen offered evidence that weather conditions were poor, the ship was at an odd angle to the dock, the tugboat originally called to help was not powerful enough to complete the job, and two other longshoremen who helped re-secure the ship called the situation an "emergency type of thing” and a "panic situation.”
