Circuit Judge.
On July 13, 1981, appellant Hubert Johnson sustained injuries while working on a construction barge owned by appellee Beasley Construction Company (“Beasley”). Appellant sued Beasley under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, and Beasley moved for summary judgment on the ground that appellant was not a “seaman” as required under the Act. The district court granted Beasley’s motion and entered judgment in its favor. We affirm.
I.
The facts are not in dispute. Beasley is a structural steel contractor. It was hired to remove the swing span portion of a railroad bridge over the Illinois River at *1056 Pearl, Illinois, and to replace that span with a lift section to facilitate navigation in the river channel (the existing swing span rested on a pier-supported turntable that created an obstruction in the middle of the navigation channel). The lift section was to be raised by machinery situated in a control house set on concrete pedestals on the south side of the bridge. Because the navigation channel had to remain unobstructed during the time Beasley was constructing the lift section, the lift section had to be assembled on the west bank of the river on falsework downstream from the bridge crossing (the falsework consisted of towers made of steel braces set upon pilings that had been driven into the river bottom). Following construction of the lift section, it was to be floated into the gap left by the removal of the swing span and then hoisted into place for incorporation into the existing bridgework.
Appellant was a foreman in charge of a crew whose responsibilities were to construct the lift section and the control house. Because the work was to be performed over water, Beasley employed several barges and a tugboat. One of the barges, called the JFB-15, was a steel-decked floating work platform on which had been installed a large lifting crane. The JFB-15 measured 135 feet by 40 feet by 8 feet, and had a displacement of 405 tons. It had no motive power of its own and no steering capability, and was not equipped with cabins, galley, fresh water storage, permanent toilets, or fixed navigational lights. The workers on the JFB-15 were transported to and from the barge daily.
The primary role of the JFB-15 was to provide a site for the assembly of the control house and to assist in the construction of the lift section on top of the falsework. The JFB-15 was also used to transport iron to the work site. On these occasions, a tugboat would push the barge downstream to points where the supply trucks could get close enough to be reached with the crane. Appellant and his crew would assist with loading and preparing lines to shore. Thereafter, the tugboat would push the barge back upstream.
On July 13, 1981, the day of appellant’s injury, the specific project then ongoing was the construction of the control house. The JFB-15 was moored 80 to 100 feet from the shore at the edge of the river channel. Appellant was supervising the construction of the control house when Beasley’s tugboat collided with a 2,000 pound beam protruding over the edge of the JFB-15. The beam pivoted after being struck and caught appellant’s left leg, causing severe injury that eventually resulted in amputation of the leg. Appellant has received Illinois worker’s compensation for his injury, but brought this suit because the Jones Act would allow him to recover traditional tort damages.
II.
Claims brought under the Jones Act have not been litigated frequently in this circuit. We take this opportunity, therefore, to review briefly the development of the law in this area and what we believe to be the relevant and controlling principles. The Jones Act,’ 46 U.S.C. § 688, provides in relevant part:
Any seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the course of his employment may, at his election, maintain an action for damages at law, with the right of trial by jury and in such action all statutes of the United States modifying or extending the common law of right or remedy in cases of personal injury to railroad employees shall apply____
Under this Act, the prior maritime law of the United States was modified to give seamen the rights given to railway employees under the statutes comprising the Federal Employer’s Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. .§§ 51-60, which provide a right of action by a railway worker for damages arising from the negligence of the owner of a railway on which the worker was employed at the time of the accident.
See Lindgren v. United States,
*1057
under the Jones Act “to the liability of the owners of vessels for injuries to seamen extending territorially as far as Congress can make it go,”
id.
at 47,
Because the term “seaman” is not defined by the Jones Act, it has been left to the courts to define the compass of this term. Unfortunately, however, the case law interpreting the Jones Act has never been applied in a consistent manner. Not long after passage of the Act, the Supreme Court held that the term “seaman” was broad enough to include even longshoremen who were employed in maritime work on navigable waters, as their work was “a maritime service formerly rendered by the ship’s crew.”
International Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty,
In
South Chicago Coal & Dock Co. v. Bassett,
Bassett
was relied on in another LHWCA ease,
Norton v. Warner Co.,
If a barge without motive power of its own can have a “crew” within the meaning of the Act and if “crew” may consist of one man, we do not see why [the boatman] does not meet these requirements .... We said in the Bassett case *1058 that the term “crew” embraced those “who are naturally and primarily on board” the vessel “to aid in her navigation.” [309 U.S. at] 260 [60 S.Ct. at 549 ]. But navigation is not limited to “putting over the helm.” It also embraces duties essential for other purposes of the vessel. Certainly members of the crew are not confined to those who can “hand, reef and steer.” Judge Hough pointed out in The Buena Ventura,243 F. 797 , 799 [D.C.N.Y. (1916) ], that “every one is entitled to the privilege of a seaman who, like seamen, at all times contributes to the labors about the operation and welfare of the ship when she is upon a voyage.” And see The Minna,11 F. 759 [D.C.Mich. (1882)]; Disbrow v. Walsh Bros.,36 F. 607 , 608 [D.C.N.Y. (1888)] (bargeman). We think that “crew” must have at least as broad a meaning under the Act____
[The boatman here] performed on the barge functions of the same quality as those performed in the maintenance and operation of many vessels. His were indeed different from the function of any other “crew” only as they were made so by the nature of the vessel and its navigational requirements.
The Supreme Court in both
Bassett
and
Norton,
however, did not explicitly equate “seaman” under the Jones Act with “member of a crew” under the LHWCA. Indeed, in
Norton
the Court observed that “ ‘[s]ea-man’ as used in a particular context may of course have a broader meaning than ‘crew.’ ”
This decision clearly demonstrates that, since the passage of the Longshoremen’s Act, the court has retreated from the position taken in the Haverty case [International Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty,272 U.S. 50 ,47 S.Ct. 19 ,71 L.Ed. 157 (1926) ] and has narrowed the Jones Act concept of “seaman” to the point where it includes only one who is a member of the crew of a vessel plying in navigable waters.
Id. at 180.
These general parameters were taken by the appellate courts and put into a three-prong test that has become the touchstone of Jones Act analysis. This test, as articulated in
Wilkes v. Mississippi River Sand & Gravel Co.,
The Supreme Court has never given any more precise meaning to these requirements. Although certain classes of persons, such as passengers, guests, and trespassers, are clearly excluded from coverage because the Act requires that the “seaman” be injured “in the course of his employment,”
[w]ho else might be excluded (or included) was, as a matter of initial construction, impossible to say. After a half-century of litigation the answer to the riddle is not apparent. The Supreme Court has alternated between giving the term “seaman” an exceedingly broad construction and giving it a much narrower one. Consequently defendants have been encouraged to argue, in all but the most obvious cases, that plaintiff is not a Jones Act seaman and that the action must be dismissed. Thus there has always been, there continues to be, and presumably there will go on being a substantial amount of depressing litigation of this type.
G. Gilmore & C. Black, supra, at 328.
A brief review of the later Supreme Court cases demonstrates that there are few clues as to what the critical factors are in determining crew status. In
Gianfala v. Texas Co.,
Two years later, in
Senko v. LaCrosse Dredging Corp.,
The two most expansive readings of Jones Act coverage occurred in two short per curiam opinions. In
Grimes v. Raymond Concrete Pile Co.,
Finally, in the last case in which the Court specifically addressed this issue,
Butler v. Whiteman,
Diderot may very well have had the previous Supreme Court cases in mind when he wrote, “We have made a labyrinth and got lost in it. We must find our way out.” In an attempt to extract some controlling principles from these cases and other relevant appellate court cases, Judge Wisdom in
Offshore Co. v. Robison,
there is an evidentiary basis for a Jones Act case to go to the jury: (1) if there is evidence that the injured workman was assigned permanently to a vessel (including special purpose structures not usually employed as a means of transport by water but designed to float on water) or performed a substantial part of his work on the vessel; and (2) if the capacity in which he was employed or the duties which he performed contributed to the function of the vessel or to the accomplishment of its mission, or to the operation or welfare of the vessel in terms of its maintenance during its movement or during anchorage for its future trips.
III.
The district court in this case applied the traditional three-prong test without reference to the Robison reformulation of that test. It noted that the parties were in agreement that there was a material question of fact on the issue whether appellant, at the time of his injury, had a more or less permanent connection with the JFB-15. On the other two issues, the district court found that the vessel was not in navigation at the time appellant was injured, and that his duties were not primarily in aid of navigation; the court observed that appellant was employed as an ironworker and that his duties were those of an ironwork-er: “The fact that he did occasionally aid the deck hands in securing JFB-15 at various locations was a casual undertaking which was wholly coincidental to the *1061 achievement of the purpose for which he and his gang were employed.”
Appellant contends that the district court erred in both these findings and that it should have submitted the issues to the jury. In particular, appellant objects to the district court’s failure to apply the
Robison
test, under which appellant’s duties aboard the JFB-15 undoubtedly contributed to its “mission,” as that term was applied in
Robison
and as the cases following
Robison
have interpreted it,
see, e.g., Bennett v. Perini Corp.,
Although the
Robison
formula devised by Judge Wisdom is based on a well-rear soned attempt to extract relevant principles from then-existing case law, the formula has been appropriately described as an “analytical starting point rather than a self-executing formula.”
Brown v. I.T.T. Rayonier, Inc.,
Only Gianfala, Grimes, and Butler, of the Supreme Court cases, appear to be anomalous in giving insufficient attention to the employee’s duties as they relate to the transportation function of the vessel (insofar as this lack of attention is revealed by the facts in those cases); all were decided without extended discussion. Other Supreme Court cases, however, emphasize the duties of the employee as they relate to the operation and welfare of the vessel as a vessel —as a means of transport on water, In Senko, for example, the Court discussed ^he issue fulty and emphasized the navigational tasks Performed by the employee, This is consistent with the Supreme Court’s earlier emphasis in Bassett and Norton on duties tied to the transportation function of vessel as essential to a finding that an employee is a member of the crew.
We think Senko’s emphasis on “significant navigational functions” and
Bassett
and Norton’s emphasis on activities contributing to the operation and welfare of the vessel as a means of transport on water are critical to jurisdiction under the Jones Act. Because a Jones Act “seaman” is one who is a member of a
crew of a vessel, see Senko,
This view is consistent with the approach the Third Circuit has taken in more narrowly construing the “primarily in aid of navigation” requirement. In
Griffith v. Wheeling Pittsburgh Steel Corp.,
This approach was reaffirmed in
Simko v. C & C Marine Maintenance Co.,
The clear import of our opinion in Griffith is that a maritime worker who does not actually go to sea but who is injured while performing duties on a navigable vessel must establish that he performed significant navigational functions with respect to that vessel in order to recover under the Jones Act.
Id.
at 964-65. The court concluded that the injured employee failed to perform such functions, as his duties were limited to the cleaning and minor repairs of barges brought to his employer's facilities.
See also Lynn v. Heyl and Patterson, Inc.,
No doubt one of the reasons courts originally gave a liberal interpretation to “crew” status was to cover new categories of workers such as offshore-oilmen. Indeed, in
Robison,
Judge Wisdom hinted that a broad reading of the Jones Act was necessary to give such workers, who in “many instances ... are exposed to more hazards than are blue-water sailors,” protection.
While the liberal attitude of courts in finding employees of questionable status “seamen” may be commendable when the employee’s duties fall into the gray areas, we believe the purpose of the Jones Act is distorted when persons who are obviously not seamen recover damages at the ship owner’s expense. If the Jones Act is to retain any limitations on its coverage, we believe the employee’s duties with respect to the transportation function of the vessel should define them. We conclude that when the person’s status as a member of a crew is equivocal, “the work done by [the] employee will be crucial ____”
Braen v. Pfeifer Transportation Co.,
Applying these guidelines to the present facts, we must conclude that while appellant’s activities fall within the ambit of part 1, they fail to meet part 2. As for part 1, the district court acknowledged that the parties stipulated that there are facts suggesting that appellant had a more or less permanent connection with the JFB-15, 7 but it concluded that the JFB-15 “was not a vessel in navigation in the context of the event of plaintiff’s injury.” Although recognizing that in a different factual setting the JFB-15 might be considered to be a vessel in navigation, the court reasoned that at the time of injury it could not be considered so.
It was at that time a stationary platform secured to the falsework near the river bank. Its only function was that of a platform to facilitate the erection of structural steel. Although it was floating upon a navigable stream, it cannot be found to have been in navigation.
We believe the approach adopted by the district court was in error. The “vessel in navigation” requirement pertains not to the vessel’s mobility at the precise moment of injury, but to whether it has at times been employed as a means of transport on water for passengers or cargo and has not been withdrawn from navigable waters and laid up, say, for the season. The “vessel in navigation” requirement is, like the second part of our test, aimed at determining the injured party’s status as a member of a “crew.” Any floating structure, including those designed for special purposes, is a “vessel” capable of having a maritime “crew” so long as the structure at some time serves as a means of transport on water. “To be a vessel, the purpose and business must to some reasonable degree be the ‘transportation of passengers, cargo, or equipment from place to place across navigable waters.’ ”
Bennett v. Perini Corp.,
Similarly, the injured employee does not cease becoming a member of a crew if the vessel is docked or anchored at the moment of injury.
As properly construed, the “in navigation” requirement is used in its broad sense, and is not confined strictly to the actual navigating or movement of the vessel, but instead means that the vessel is engaged as an instrument of commerce or transportation on navigable waters. [Citation omitted.] Indeed, so long *1064 as the vessel is upon navigable waters, an injured Jones Act seaman may recover for injuries suffered while on the wharf. [Citations omitted.]
Griffith,
In this case, the JFB-15 was clearly a “vessel in navigation.” It was used to transport steel materials on the river and had not been withdrawn from the waters at the time of appellant’s injury. The district court erred in granting summary judgment for Beasley on this ground.
We conclude, however, that appellant fails to meet the second part of our test. The only evidence suggesting that appellant contributed to the transportation function of the JFB-15 was the statement that he may have thrown or fastened some mooring lines. We think that this task was insignificant with respect to the operation and welfare of the transportation function of the JFB-15.
See Griffith,
IV.
On these facts, there is no evidentiary basis for submitting this issue to the jury, and we accordingly affirm the decision of the district court granting Beasley’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. "The admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States shall extend to and include all cases of damage or injury, to person or property, caused by a vessel on navigable water, notwithstanding that such damage or injury be done or consummated on land.” 46 U.S.C. § 740.
. This view was subsequently ratified in
Senko:
"To recover [under the Jones Act] ... petitioner had to be a member of a crew, as that term is used in the Longshoremen's Act, at the time of his injury.”
. The first part of the Robison test synthesized then-existing case law corresponding to the first two parts of the traditional three-prong test, and the second part synthesized then-existing case law corresponding to the third part of the three-prong test.
. The Fifth Circuit, which developed
Robison,
also sometimes quotes a hybrid version in which the first two elements of the three-prong test are addressed in conjunction with the last element of the
Robison
test.
See Bertrand v. International Mooring & Marine, Inc.,
. For an example of how the failure to qualify this language leads, in our view, to an overly broad reading of “crew” status, see
Bennett v. Perini Corp.,
. Benefits under the LHWCA for loss of a leg (the injury suffered by appellant here), assuming only partial disability, are the lesser of 200% of the national average weekly wage or two-thirds of the employee’s average weekly wage, to be paid over a period of 288 weeks. See 33 U.S.C. §§ 906, 908. Typical tort damages under the Jones Act, because of the generous attitude of jurors, would normally be higher than the total recovery under the LHWCA.
. The requirement of a relatively permanent tie to the vessel is meant to deny seaman’s status to those who come aboard a vessel for an isolated piece of work, not to deprive a person whose duties are truly navigational of Jones Act rights merely because he serves aboard a vessel for a relatively short period of time.
Porche v. Gulf Mississippi Marine Corp.,
. About the only floating structures unable to act as a means of transport on water are offshore drilling platforms,
see, e.g., Thompson v. Crown Petroleum Corp.,
. The definition of "vessel” for purposes of our test is thus inextricably intertwined with the second part of our test requiring the injured employee to have held duties connected with the transportation function of the waterborne structure.
