This action arises from the discharge by appellant-defendant Schlumberger Technology Corporation of plaintiff-appellee Donal J. Kelley from an offshore drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico after two urinalysis tests allegedly showed positive results for the presence of marijuana. Originally brought in state court, the case was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in December 1985. In his second amended complaint, filed on August 13, 1987, the plaintiff challenged the establishment, implementation, and administration of the drug testing program, as well as his discharge pursuant to it. He alleged an invasion of privacy under the Louisiana Constitution (Count One), tortious invasion of privacy (Count Two), wrongful discharge (Count Three), intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count Four), negligent infliction of emotional distress (Count Five), and defamation (Count Six). During the trial, the court directed a verdict for the defendant on Count Three, and the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed Count Four and Count Six. The jury found for the plaintiff on the three remaining counts: for violating the plaintiff’s right to privacy (Counts One and Two), the jury assessed damages at $1.00; and for negligently inflicting emotional distress on the plaintiff (Count Five), the jury assessed damages at $125,000.
Defendant raises two issues on appeal. First, it claims that the court erred in instructing the jury on the law governing Count Five, the negligent infliction of emotional distress. Second, it claims that the court abused its discretion in excluding certain statistical evidence offered to show the reasonableness of the drug testing program. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
At the time of his discharge, the plaintiff worked as a barge engineer on a drilling rig, the “Pentagon-82" (P-82), owned by the defendant and operating sixty miles off of the coast of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico. From March 1985, when he commenced his duties on the P-82, the plaintiff worked a schedule which alternated between two weeks of duty and two weeks of leave. On May 24,1985, while on one such leave, the plaintiff was contacted at his home and asked to return to the P-82 early because his relief had become ill. He re *43 ported back aboard the rig on May 26. On May 29, the defendant administered urinalysis tests to all personnel on the P-82, including the plaintiff. To insure against adulteration or substitution of the sample, a representative of the defendant watched as the plaintiff provided the sample. This aspect of the administration of the test was a critical component of the defendant’s drug testing program, a program which the defendant had developed over a period of two years, from 1982 through 1984, as a way to control suspected drug use among those working on drilling rigs. Direct observation of employees urinating was also at the core of the plaintiff’s complaint. During the trial he described himself as being “disgusted by the whole idea of someone being paid to look at [his] penis while [he] urinated.” After the first urinalysis test yielded what the defendant asserted were “positive results,” the defendant tested the plaintiff a second time. Again, the defendant claimed that the results showed an unacceptably high level of marijuana in the plaintiff’s urine. As a result, the plaintiff was discharged on June 6, 1985.
II. THE JURY INSTRUCTION
The defendant claims that it was prejudiced by the district court’s instruction on the law governing the claim for the negligent infliction of emotional distress. Plaintiff responds with two arguments. First, he alleges that the defendant did not preserve its right to review of any additional instructions that it now asserts the court should have given. Second, he alleges that even if the defendant did preserve its right of review, the court properly instructed the jury. We agree with the plaintiff on both scores.
It is helpful, at the outset, to present that part of the jury charge under challenge. After instructing the jury on the law governing the claims for invasion of privacy, the court continued with the claim for the negligent infliction of emotional distress:
The law says that every person — you, I, everybody, including Schlumberger — has a duty to use ordinary care to not injure others, not to inflict reasonably foreseeable harm to others. Now, ordinary care simply means that care which a reasonably prudent person would exercise under similar circumstances. If the person fails to use that ordinary care, he may be found to have been negligent. And if harm results from that failure, then the person may be found liable.
In the context of this case, an employer, like, Schlumberger, has a duty to use reasonable care in implementing and administering its drug program so as not to cause serious emotional distress to its employees____ So, the question, again, is: Did the defendant use reasonable care both in implementing the drug policy and in administering the urine test, given all of the circumstances surrounding its conduct and the particular concerns which the defendant had to meet?
If you find that the defendant has failed to use reasonable care in either respect, then you have to determine next whether the defendant’s conduct foreseeablely [sic] caused the plaintiff serious emotional distress. Note, this is a little different. Here, we’re not talking about whether there was an invasion of privacy, but whether there was a direct, serious impact on plaintiff’s psychological well-being, if you will.
If you find that the plaintiff has shown that the defendant acted unreasonably in implementing and administering the drug testing and that a reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would have been seriously distressed, then, the answer to Question 2(a) is yes; otherwise it is no. After the court completed the charge,
defendant’s counsel said:
On your instruction on Count 2, the intentional [sic] infliction of emotional distress, your Honor touched very, very briefly on the foreseeability issue, vis-a-vis, the employee; in other words, that it was reasonably foreseeable to the employer that a person in Mr. Kelley’s position would have reacted the way he claims he did. I would ask that you go over that again, because I really think that was missed.
This comment does not satisfy the “uncompromising language” of Federal
*44
Rule of Civil Procedure 51.
Elwood v. Pina,
Counsel here complained that the court “touched very briefly” on the “foreseeability issue” and that he would like for the court to “go over that again.” He did not explain with precision which aspect of the charge was objectionable. Nor did he explain how the phrase that he set forth— “that it was reasonably foreseeable to the employer that a person in Mr. Kelley’s position would have reacted the way he claims he did” — differed from the language used in the charge. His failure to object with the requisite specificity amounts to a failure to object. Accordingly, we will only reverse the judgment if “there is plain error ‘in exceptional or under peculiar circumstances to prevent a clear miscarriage of justice.’ ”
Brown,
We see no “plain error” here. In fact, we see no error at all. The controlling law in the case was the law of Louisiana.
1
In Louisiana, a plaintiff may recover for negligently inflicted emotional injuries even in the absence of any accompanying physical injury.
See Chappetta v. Bowman Transp., Inc.,
The defendant asserts that “the court should have instructed that the plaintiff could recover only if his emotional distress was foreseeable, that it anticipated that a reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would have sustained serious emotional distress as a result of the defendant’s conduct.” The language used by the court appears in the charge at two points. First, the court instructed the jury “to determine next whether the defendant’s conduct fore-seeablely [sic] caused the plaintiff serious emotional distress.” Later, the court instructed that the defendant could be held liable only if the jury found “that a reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would have been seriously distressed” by the defendant’s implementation and administration of the drug testing program. We simply fail to understand how any construction of this language could be found to differ substantively from the language offered here by defendant. The court communicated the defendant’s point, almost word for word. More importantly, the court “properly convey[ed] the applicable law of the case.”
Kibbe v. City of Springfield, 777
F.2d 801 (1st Cir.1985),
cert. dismissed,
III. THE EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE
During trial, the defendant offered evidence based on data gathered in the two years after the plaintiff was discharged to show that drug use on the rigs and lost time injuries declined after the drug testing program went into effect. 2 The defendant argued that this evidence was relevant to the reasonableness of its policy: “if the approach is successful, it is reasonable.” The court, however, refused to admit this evidence on the ground that any evidence of the policy’s reasonableness which developed after the time that the plaintiff was discharged could not be relevant to the question of whether the policy was reasonable in June 1985. The defendant here argues that this ruling by the district court constituted an abuse of discretion. We do not agree.
Negligence is conduct “ ‘which falls below the standard established by law for the protection of others against unreasonable risk of harm.’ ” W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton & D. Owen, Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 31, at 169 (5th ed. 1984) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 282). Assessing “risk” is simply another way of asking whether a harm is “foreseeable”: to escape liability, a defendant need not anticipate all possible consequences of a given action, but only those dangers “which [are] apparent or should be apparent to one in the position of the [defendant].” Id. at 170. In other words, “the [defendant’s] conduct must be judged in the light of possibilities apparent to him [or her] at the time, and not by looking backward____” Id. (emphasis added) (footnote omitted).
Here, the possibilities apparent to the defendant
at the time
of the discharge were those apparent in 1985; whether the program
eventually
proved successful (or unsuccessful) has no bearing on whether it was reasonable for the defendant, given what it knew in 1985, to implement and administer that program in 1985. We therefore find no abuse of discretion by the court in excluding all data on the drug testing program that the defendant generated in the two years subsequent to the plaintiff’s discharge.
See A.J. Cunningham Packing Corp. v. Florence Beef Co.,
The defendant relies extensively upon
Heagney v. University of Washington,
Because we find no abuse of discretion in admitting the evidence, we need not address whether its exclusion was nonetheless harmless. See Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 61.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In a memorandum issued on April 13, 1987, the court held that Louisiana law was controlling. Finding that the "basic choice of law rule for tort claims is lex loci delecti," the court concluded that "[a]ll of the events significant to [the plaintiffs] claim took place in Louisiana." Neither party has challenged this ruling on appeal.
. Specifically, the court excluded four documents: Exhibit X, which compared the number of lost time injuries in 1984 and 1985 to the total work hours; Exhibit Y, which showed, for each month in 1986, the number of lost time injuries, the number of persons tested, and the number of positive test results for all rig personnel and for the personnel employed by the plaintiffs division of the company only; Exhibit Z, which contained the same categories of information for the first seven months of 1987; and Exhibit CC, which contained the number tested, the number of positive results and the number of rigs for all personnel and the personnel employed by the plaintiffs division of the company only for 1984 through 1987. In addition to this documentary evidence, the defendant sought to introduce the testimony of Safety Director James Turnage, who was to comment on those statistics and the effectiveness of the drug testing program.
