In this consolidated case arising in admiralty, Plaintiff-Appellant Jimmie John Miller, Jr. (Miller) filed suit against Defendant-Appellee Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. (PHI) for injuries allegedly sustained in a helicopter crash in the Gulf of Mexico on July 14, 1988. Following PHI’s pre-trial stipulation of liability, the only issue at trial was damages. The sole legal question was whether Miller’s wife (Jolain Miller) had a claim for loss of consortium under general maritime law. The district court held that damages for loss of consortium were not recoverable under general maritime law, but awarded Miller $12,000 for general damages and $2,569.13 for economic loss. The Millers appeal the court’s awards, the findings of fact upon which they were based, and the court’s holding that loss of consortium is not cognizable under general maritime law. We AFFIRM.
BACKGROUND
On July 14, 1988, Jimmie Miller, an employee of Forest Oil Company, was enroute with other crew members to an oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico, aboard a PHI helicopter. Upon takeoff from a platform on which the helicopter stopped to drop off some of the crew members, the helicopter crashed in Vermilion Block 255B, some eighty miles off the shore of Louisiana, killing one of the eight crew members on board. Six of the helicopter occupants filed personal injury actions which were consolidated; only the present action was litigated.
Prior to trial, PHI stipulated to liability and Miller waived claims for punitive damages. The issue before the district court was *121 the amount of Miller’s damages for physical and emotional suffering, and for economic loss. Miller claimed the accident caused two ruptured discs, which led to anterior lumbar fusion surgery and which left him “permanently disabled” from heavy labor.
The district court’s damage assessment was complicated by two factors. First, Miller had been employed in an extremely heavy manual labor occupation which had caused a history of physical problems and had led to repeated medical treatments. Second, there was evidence to show that, as early as 1983, “hereditary arthritic changes had already begun ... and therefore were not caused by the accident.” As a result, the court was left to determine to what degree the helicopter crash contributed to Miller’s injuries. Specifically, the threshold question was whether the helicopter crash caused a herniated disc or whether it merely aggravated pre-existing problems. The same analysis was necessary for the emotional suffering claim as Miller had abused both drugs and alcohol in the past.
The district court concluded that the preponderance of the evidence did not show Miller had suffered a herniated disc as a result of the accident. At worst, the crash merely caused a back strain and pain due to a pre-existing osteoarthritic condition. The court decided that the pain Miller had suffered would be adequately compensated by $9,000.
The conclusion that the accident caused a mere back strain was also dispositive of the district court’s award for economic loss. The court awarded one month’s lost wages because it believed Miller’s long term physician, who seemed to have felt that Miller could soon return to work. As the court noted, its evaluation was substantiated by all but one of the orthopedists and neurologists that examined Miller. The findings and awards were influenced by the court’s view of Miller’s credibility as a witness.
As to Miller’s claim of psychological damage, the district court found that the evidence was again far from clear concerning the cause of Miller’s problems. The court noted Miller’s pre-accident substance abuse, beginning in high school and continuing while he worked for Forest Oil, and his short stay in a detoxification program after the accident. Although causation of Miller’s mental problems was tenuous, the court found that some depression was independently caused by the accident. Accordingly, the court awarded Miller $3,000 for his mental suffering.
DAMAGE FINDINGS
The standard of review to apply in our inquiry into all findings of fact, including damage awards, is a clearly erroneous standard. See
Graham v. Milky Way Barge, Inc.,
The district court concluded that Miller was not credible in any of his assertions, whether to the court or to the doctors. Miller implies by his laundry list of factual discrepancies or “omissions” that the court would not have reached this credibility assessment but for its pervasive errors in findings. As we have said before, “this Court should be wary of attempting to second guess the district court, which has the decided advantage of first hand experience concerning the testimony and evidence presented at trial.”
Graham v. Milky Way Barge, Inc.,
LOSS OF CONSORTIUM
The recoverability of damages for loss of consortium is a legal question that is subject to
de novo
review.
Pullman-Standard v. Swint,
Miller contends that the district court erred in finding that general maritime law precludes his claim for loss of consortium. Although Miller recognizes that Miles v. Apesc Marine Corp. 2 prevents such a claim in a seaman’s wrongful death suit, he argues that in a case involving a non-seaman, or longshoreman such as himself, recovery for loss of consortium, established in Sea-Land Services, Inc. v. Gaudet 3 , has not been limited. Miller contends that the purpose in disallowing seamen a remedy for loss of consortium in Miles was to bring uniformity between the remedies available under general maritime law, the Jones Act, and the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA). Miller argues, however, that because neither the Jones Act nor DOHSA applies to longshoremen, the uniformity purpose has no effect. Therefore, any limitations imposed by the Supreme Court’s decision in Miles have no effect on a longshoreman’s loss of consortium claim.
In
Gaudet,
the Supreme Court held that the decedent’s wife could recover for loss of consortium in a maritime wrongful death action involving a longshoreman.
4
Four years later, the Court limited its holding in
Gaudet
to deaths occurring in territorial waters.
Mobil Oil Corp. v. Higginbotham,
Only two years later, in
American Export Lines, Inc. v. Alvez
5
,
the Supreme Court held that an injured harbor worker’s wife could recover for loss of consortium under general maritime law. The Court relied on
Gaudet
in extending the recovery that was already available to the dependents of longshoremen who were killed within the scope of employment to injured longshoremen’s dependents.
American Export Lines, Inc. v. Alvez,
The Supreme Court attempted to remedy the anomaly it had created between
Gaudet
and
Higginbotham
through its decision in
Miles
by restoring “a uniform rule applicable to all actions for the wrongful death of a seaman, whether under DOHSA, the Jones Act, or general maritime law.”
Miles v. Apex Marine Corp.,
The Supreme Court’s explicit limitation of Gaudet to its facts, as well as its implicit limitation of Alvez to its facts as interpreted by this Court, indicates that the Supreme Court did not intend to overrule Gaudet or Alvez. As a result, we are unable to extend the uniformity rule of Miles to longshoremen killed or injured in territorial waters. Therefore, an inconsistency remains between deaths and injuries of longshoremen in territorial waters, where loss of consortium is available under Gaudet and Alvez, and death and injuries of longshoremen on the high seas. Until such time as the Supreme Court resolves this inconsistency with regard to longshoremen, we must apply the law as it exists today.
In applying the law to the facts in this case, it is uncontested that the injuries of which Miller complains were the result of a casualty occurring some eighty (80) miles off the Louisiana coast, outside territorial waters. 6 Because Miller’s injuries occurred outside territorial waters, Miller’s claim fails to satisfy one of the two equally important requirements of Gaudet and Alvez as limited by Miles; and it must, therefore, fail.
CONCLUSION
We therefore find that the district court was not clearly erroneous in its findings on damages or in its decision to dismiss the loss of consortium claim. We also find no abuse of discretion in the damage awards. We AFFIRM.
Notes
. See
United States v. Gypsum Co.,
.
.
. Although the Supreme Court characterized the plaintiffs claim in Gaudet as a loss of society, this Court interprets a claim for loss of society to be substantially the same as a claim for loss of consortium.
.
. Miller testified in trial that the helicopter crashed upon takeoff from Vermillion 255B, approximately eighty miles offshore.
