Jimmy Yelverton appeals from the entry of an adverse judgment following a bench trial on three of his four claims against Mobile Laboratories, Inc. (Mobile). We affirm.
I.
Yelverton was employed by Mobile as a radiographic technician. 1 On August 16, 1977, Yelverton drove from his home in Laurel, Mississippi, to Mobile’s place of business in Harvey, Louisiana. Yelverton’s work schedule called for him to arrive at Mobile’s yard in Harvey at 3:30 a.m. where he was to pick up radiographic equipment. Following the pick-up he was supposed to travel to Venice, Louisiana, to meet a crew boat.
Yelverton arrived at the yard in Harvey five hours late. He maintains that he advised Mobile’s dispatcher, Fred Hogue, that he was experiencing brake troubles. Hogue, however, remembers only that Yelverton was experiencing mechanical difficulties and cannot recall that Yelverton complained specifically about his brakes. Yelverton requested a company car but none was available. Told by Hogue that if he did not proceed immediately to Venice his job would be in jeopardy, Yelverton went on in his own car. 2 While traveling on Highway 23, a two lane highway, he was struck by another automobile skidding diagonally across the road.
Yelverton sued Mobile, alleging a right to recover under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, and general maritime law for his personal injuries suffered in the accident. Yelverton maintains that when he saw the skidding car advancing towards him he applied his brakes and they failed. He argues the failure of his brakes caused him to collide more forcefully with the oncoming vehicle and, therefore, that Mobile’s negligent disregard for the condition of his brakes was the producing cause for some part of his injuries.
The district court,
II.
A. Negligence.
The district court noted in its opinion that the evidence relating to Mobile’s awareness of Yelverton’s brake problem was in conflict. It stated that in its view,
[i]t is more plausible ... that Yelverton told Fred Hogue about general car problems only in an effort to explain his extreme tardiness in reporting for work that day. When Yelverton arrived in Harvey, Louisiana, the site of the defendant’s offices, he was already some five hours late, a fact that obviously irritated Fred Hogue ... and one that delayed the barge crew from departing from Venice. Thus, we do not accept Yelverton’s testimony that he expressly told Fred Hogue about his brakes. His concerns at the time were to explain his lateness and ‘to get down to Venice.’ While Yelverton may have requested a truck, he did not preface it by apprising the defendant of an unsafe condition on his car.
In support of his argument that the trial court’s interpretation is erroneous, Yelverton points to Hogue’s deposition testimony in which Hogue admitted that he had earlier made a statement to Yelverton’s attorney that he could not tell “one way or another whether Jimmy told [him] something was wrong with his brakes because so much time has elapsed____”
Hogue’s statement to Yelverton’s attorney is somewhat more favorable to Yelverton than Hogue’s later statements taken at deposition. When confronted with this pri- or statement at deposition, Hogue replied:
I am saying that [Yelverton] did not that I remember tell me anything about the brakes. Okay. Now whether it’s because of the time lapse or not is something I don’t ... I would remember. I would have remembered it if he had told me something like that I feel sure of that. I feel sure of that____ he could have said that to me, but I did not hear it and I do not recollect it at all____ I remember the conversation and several details about it but I do not remember anything about the brakes.
Yelverton’s position appears to be that because the earlier statement (that he could not recall whether or not Yelverton mentioned a problem with brakes) was rendered when Hogue’s recollections would normally have been fresher, it is presumptively more credible than Hogue’s later, less ambiguous testimony (that he had no recollection of a discussion regarding brakes and that he believes he would have such recollection had the discussion actually taken place). He further argues that because the prior statement is consistent with Yelvertons’ account, Yelverton’s version must be accepted as true. We disagree.
In reviewing a judgment of a trial court, sitting without a jury in admiralty, this court may not reverse the judgment below unless it is “clearly erroneous.”
Pacific Employers Insurance Co. v. M/V Gloria,
If the district court’s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety, the court of appeals may not reverse it even though convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently. Where there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.
United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
B. Maintenance.
Yelverton admits that he produced no evidence concerning the value of his food and lodging. He claims that notwithstanding this absence of proof he is entitled to the “going-rate” of fifteen dollars a day.
Our exhaustive research of the case law in this circuit has revealed no case which has awarded a “going-rate” of maintenance to a plaintiff who has failed to submit evidence of his costs. A seaman’s burden of production in establishing the value of his maintenance is feather light: his own testimony as to reasonable cost of room and board in the community where he is living is sufficient to support an award.
Curry v. Fluor Drilling Services, Inc.,
The record being devoid of any evidence upon which to base an award of maintenance, the district court’s denial of maintenance was not erroneous.
C. Punitive Damages and Attorney’s Fees.
A shipowner who arbitrarily and capriciously denies maintenance and cure to an injured seaman is liable to him for punitive damages and attorney’s fees.
Harper v. Zapata Offshore Co.,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Yelverton’s primary duty was to conduct radiographic examinations of welds on under-water pipelines located in the East Bay off the coast of Louisiana.
. Use of personal vehicles on company business was a common practice at Mobile. Employees were reimbursed for their mileage.
. We also note that even if the district court had had only Hogue’s earlier statement to Yelverton’s counsel before it, it would have been entirely free to disbelieve Yelverton’s uncorroborated version of the facts.
In re Westec Corp.
v.
Carpenter,
. Readers of this opinion may think it unfair that a technical stumbling block, created by Mobile’s failure to pay maintenance voluntarily, has effectively immunized Mobile from liability. We note, without implying that the outcome would differ under dissimilar facts, that Mobile settled a state workmen’s compensation claim with Yelverton and therefore actually provided support during his convalescence.
