Plaintiffs-Appellants Frank and Martha Payne brought this action in 1997 under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2671 et seq., to recover for injuries sustained by Mr. Payne when he fell into a “pref hole” at the United States Postal Service (“USPS”) Buffalo Processing and Distribution Center on William Street (“William Street Facility”) in Buffalo, New York. After a six-day bench trial, the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Arcara, /.), finding that the United States had not been negligent in maintaining its property, issued a judgment in favor of the defendant-appel-lee. On appeal, the Paynes contend that the district court made clearly erroneous findings of fact, wrongly failed to conclude that the defendant had been negligent, and misapplied the law of New York. Because we deem each claim to be without merit, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
The following facts were presented at trial. At the time of the accident, Mr. Payne was an independent contractor who hauled mail for the USPS. On September 30, 1996, at approximately 6:55 p.m., Mr. Payne arrived at the William Street Facility, backed his truck up to the loading dock, and went inside. According to standard procedure, a driver such as Mr. Payne would then unload hampers and containers of mail from his truck. “Mail handlers” would empty the containers into one of two kinds of “dump holes”: large “bulk holes,” for bulk mail, and smaller “pref holes,” for first class or priority mail. Pref holes— the kind of hole involved in the incident here at issue — are about three feet square and approximately nine feet deep. They
According to Mr. Payne, after entering the William Street Facility on the evening in question, he stepped over a closed pref hole on his way to speak to another driver, Mr. Kolb. Payne testified that the two men had a short conversation, and that he then took a few steps backwards and fell straight into the pref hole, sustaining injuries to his ribs and leg. Kolb testified to essentially the same facts. A mail handler, Mr. Trzaska, testified, however, that he had personally opened the pref hole at 6:00 p.m., as he usually did, and had left it open until the accident, because it was in constant use during that time. According to Trzaska, Payne walked over the open hole before talking to Kolb, and, after their conversation, turned around and walked straight into the hole.
The district judge believed Trzaska’s version of events. He also determined that dump holes are necessary to the business of the USPS, and that the USPS had attempted to minimize their danger by (a) not allowing the public into the facility and (b) requiring that dump holes be covered when not in use. Judge Arcara also found that the pref hole was in constant use at the time of the accident, and, in the alternative, that it was about to be used in the unloading of Payne’s truck. Leaving the cover open thus did not, in his view, render the area unduly hazardous, or violate USPS safety policy. He concluded, therefore, that the William Street Facility was reasonably safe under the circumstances.
He also determined that the pref hole was an “open and obvious condition” that was readily observable, and that Payne himself, having visited the facility almost daily for many years, was familiar with it. The court relied for this conclusion upon Payne’s testimony that he was aware that dump holes were a potential hazard, and that he knew that someone had recently fallen into a dump hole. The district court then considered
Michalski v. Home Depot, Inc.,
II. DISCUSSION
A. The District Court’s Findings of Fact
We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error, and will overturn them only if they are unsupported by the record.
See Ching Sheng Fishery Co. v. United States,
The appellants also claim that the district court clearly erred in finding that the pref hole was in “constapt use.” Since the district court found that the hole was about to be used to unload Mr. Payne’s truck-—-a conclusion that the appellants do not challenge—-whether the hole was in constant use or not makes no difference. In any case, the district court did not clearly err in its determination, based on the testimony given and in light of data offered about the normal rate of arrival of trucks, that the pref hole was, in fact, in constant use at the time in question.
Lastly, the appellants argue that the district court wrongly concluded that the USPS did not have cause to think that Payne would be distracted at the time of the accident. We agree with Payne up to a point. By all accounts, the loading area at the William Street Facility is always hectic and noisy. Further, although, as the district court found, drivers are expected to unload their trucks as quickly as possible and without conversation, no evidence was adduced of a strict silence rule. Thus, USPS, as the property owner, was obliged to consider the possibility of distracting conversation as well as workplace noise in calculating proper safety precautions. But this—as we discuss below— does not in itself mean that the defendant failed to exercise reasonable care.
B. The District Court’s Determination of No Negligence
The appellants also claim that the district court erred in concluding that the defendant was free from negligence on the facts as they were found. We recently reaffirmed with little discussion the long-held rule of this Circuit that a district court’s finding with respect to the existence of negligence is reviewed
de novo. See Ching Sheng Fishery Co.,
First, the other circuits and commentators unanimously disagree with us. As far as we can tell, all other circuits review a district court’s determination as to the existence of negligence for clear error only.
2
Even if our. rule is reconcilable with governing Supreme Court precedent, however, it is arguably no longer consistent with prevailing tort law. The primary justification for the rule is found in
Mamiye Brothers v. Barber S.S. Lines, Inc.,
where Judge Henry Friendly emphasized “the need for consistency in judicial decision.”
[t]he law of negligence has ... followed the path anticipated in the celebrated passage of Holmes’ lectures of 1881, fulfilling “the tendency to become more and more concrete by judicial decision and by statute” without interfering with “the general doctrine maintained as to the grounds of liability.”
Id.
at 776-77 (alteration omitted). But, instead, the law of torts has moved in precisely the opposite direction. And the question of the existence of negligence— of the “ought,” so to speak — has become primarily one for the factfinder to determine on the basis of the specific and complex events of each individual case. Holmes’ view has, in other words, today “been largely rejected,” and specifically so by New York courts.
See Stagl v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
Given this state of affairs and the law of the other circuits, it is not surprising that we have severely undercut our rule over the years since it was established. We have held, for example, that “the trial court’s finding should ordinarily stand unless the court manifests an incorrect conception of the applicable law.”
Esso Standard Oil S.A. v. S.S. Gasbras Sul,
It follows that, even if our rule is consistent with a sound reading of McAllister, it seems ripe for review. Accordingly, we would, in the appropriate case and after full briefings, welcome the opportunity to have our whole Court reconsider the rule. But this is not such a case. This is so because, on either de novo or clear error review, we come to the same conclusion; the defendant was not negligent. In other words, although, despite the open and obvious nature of the risk, the defendants did have a duty of care to Mr. Payne, that duty was adequately discharged. To see why, we need only to review briefly the court’s findings of fact.
Given these factual conclusions — and especially the district court’s additional finding that the pref hole was open (a) because it was in “continuous use” at the time of the accident and (b) because the mail from Payne’s truck was about to be dumped— we hold that the defendant was not negligent in its behavior with respect to the pref hole. And this remains so even though we do believe that the USPS did have cause to expect that drivers would be somewhat distracted in the loading dock area. 6
C. The District Court’s Application of New York Law
The appellants’ claim that the district court misapplied New York law is also unavailing. Under New York law, landowners have a duty to maintain their properties in a reasonably safe manner.
Basso v. Miller,
III. CONCLUSION
We have considered all of the appellants’ claims and find them meritless. Under the de novo standard of review which, according to the law of our Circuit, we must apply, we find that the appellee was not negligent. The judgment of the district court is, therefore, AffiRmed.
Notes
. This review can occur in a full reconsideration in banc, or through the unanimous consent of the active judges of the court, following the circulation of an opinion raising the issue.
. See 9A
Charles Allen Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 2590 (3d ed.1999);
see also Hitchcock v. United States,
. In
McAllister,
a plaintiff who contracted polio aboard a U.S. War Shipping Administration vessel sued the United States, alleging that its representatives had negligently allowed residents of Shanghai (a city where polio was ostensibly prevalent) to mingle with the crew onboard the ship. The district court found for the plaintiff, and we reversed its determination of negligence, after presumably following Circuit precedent and applying a
de novo
standard of review.
When confronted with this authority, Judge Henry Friendly, writing for the panel in
Mamiye Bros. v. Barber S.S. Lines, Inc.,
read
'McAllister
to apply the clear error rule only to the question of the existence of causation, rather than to that of negligence.
. New York, moreover, refers to the question of the reasonable safety of premises as a question of fact for the jury.
See Michalski,
. The safety policy in question instructs employees to "[c]lose dump holes when you are not using them.” Plaintiffs also put into evidence safety memos which note that "[a]ll covers should be closed when not in use,” and that it is expected that “dump hole covers will be closed every time workers are away from their work area and/or are finished dumping.” The district court concluded that there was no breach of USPS policy, because the pref hole was in use at the time of the accident.
The appellants also seem to allege a violation of an OSHA regulation, 29 C.F.R. § 1910.22(c), which provides that "[clovers and/or guardrails shall be provided to protect personnel from the hazards of open pits, tanks, vats, ditches, etc.” There were, of course, covers on the holes, so on a literal reading of what this statute requires, there was no violation. In addition, the district court found that the covers were not only available but were being used appropriately.
. Since, on de novo review, we reach the same conclusion as the district court, it follows a fortiori that, were we to apply the rule of our sister circuits, we would not deem the district court’s findings on the question of the existence of negligence to be clearly erroneous.
