Deborah Furka brought suit under the Jones Act against the Great Lakes Dredge and Dock Company after her husband died in an attempt to аid a fellow seaman. She won a jury verdict, but the $1,200,000 damage award was reduced to $420,000 because the jury found that Furka was 65% contributorily negligent. In
Furka v.
I.
The facts in this case are set forth in
Furka I.
There, this court held that the trial court’s jury instruction on contributory negligence “without referencе to the special context of rescue” was plain error.
At the second trial, the trial judge instructed the jury that:
In determining whether a rescue situation arose in this case, you shall consider thе following: 1) did Mr. Furka perceive the need for a rescue? and 2) if so, was there cause based on all the surrounding circumstancеs for a reasonably prudent person to have perceived the call to rescue and thereby launch the effort оf the attempt?
During its deliberations, the jury sent the court a note asking “[cjould we please have the definition of rescue as it pertains to this case again? What subjective and objective conditions needed to be present?” The court reinstructed thе jury as set forth above. The jury then answered the first special verdict question in the negative, finding that a rescue situation did not exist.
Furka сontends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury to consider whether a reasonably prudent person would have perceived the need for a rescue. She asserts that, after Furka I, the correct inquiry is whether the decedent acted wantonly and recklessly both in perceiving the need for and in attempting the rescue. Great Lakes concedes that Furka’s conduct during the rescuе must be evaluated under a wanton and reckless standard, but argues that his perception of the need for a rescue should be measured against that of a reasonably prudent person. We believe that to bifurcate the rescue doctrine in this way is tо trivialize it. We thus reverse and remand for another trial.
II.
In this cas.e, the trial judge correctly instructed the jury that Furka’s actions in attemрting the rescue must be evaluated under the wanton and reckless standard. He erred, however, in instructing the jury to determine whether a reasonably prudent person would have perceived the need for a rescue. Great Lakes cites numerous cases in which the courts have applied a reasonable person standard to evaluate perception and a wаnton and reckless standard to evaluate conduct during the rescue.
See,
e.g.,
Marks v. Wagner,
The wanton and reckless standard arose at common law in recognition of the fact that one may be driven tо acts during a rescue attempt that would not befit a reasonably prudent person. Rescue springs more from the impulse to aid than from any process of thought or measure of re
In
Furka I,
this court noted that the wanton and reckless standard was particularly applicable to maritime rescue attempts because “of all branches of jurisprudence, the admiralty must be the one most hospitable to the imрulses of man and law to save life and limb and property.”
Furka I,
We believe that the maritime rescuer’s perception of the need for immediate action must be evaluated under the same wanton and reckless standard. In rescue situations, perception and response are inextricably linked. The sаme standard governing conduct that saves the lives of seamen must apply to the perception that generates the аct. By definition, the perception of danger requiring prompt action is formed under the same stress and on the same imperfеct information as the rescue itself. If rescuers will not be charged with the simple negligence of their acts “in the excitement and confusion of the moment,” it is anomalous to charge them with a failure to prudently verify that immediate action is necessary.
See Wagner v. International Ry. Co.,
Furka’s course of conduct was continuous. To subject one part of it to a negligence standard and аnother to a wanton and reckless standard is to have angels dancing again on the head of the proverbial pin. Unless the рerception and the act of rescue are foolhardy, negligence will not be imputed. We hold that, in admiralty, the corrеct standard is whether the rescuer was wanton and reckless both in perceiving the need for a rescue and in undertaking it.
The instruction failed to reflect the standard set forth in Furka I. We reverse the judgment below and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
