Lead Opinion
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from special jury verdicts of over $300,-000 in favor of the plaintiff, Linda Landry, in her capacity as personal representative for herself and her two minor children. The awards were for injuries arising out of two separate mishaps suffered by her seaman husband Lloyd— one resulting in his death. The jury verdicts were for $7,500 for an injury to the
Neither party is satisfied. The plaintiff wants the judgment increased, because she contends that the remittitur was improper and further that the trial court erred in refusing to allow recovery for non-pecuniary loss under the teaching of Sea-Land Services, Inc. v. Gaudet,
We affirm the judgment of liability against the defendant, but vacate the award of damages and remand to the trial court for further proceedings as herein directed.
I.
Trial of this case required four days of extensive testimony, much of it concerning the technical details of the drilling operation where the decedent worked. We rehearse only a brief summary of the facts, addressed to points on appeal.
Lloyd Landry was a 27-year-old roughneck/seaman employed by the defendant, Two R. Drilling Co., on its vessel, Rig No. 6, a submersible oil-drilling, barge, located in Horseshoe Bayou, near Centerville, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. He had been so employed for approximately one year, was regarded by his superiors as a “good worker,” and was being paid $11,000 per annum.
On September 19, 1971, two fingers of Landry’s right hand (he was left-handed) were injured when struck by a sledgehammer wielded by a fellow employee of the company. Both fingers were badly lacerated, and the middle finger had a chipped bone. The company does not contest on appeal that its negligence caused these injuries. Landry underwent treatment consisting of suturing and medication. The attending physician prescribed Firoinal No. 3
Landry returned to work on September 26, 1971. He was wearing his right arm in a web-type sling. Early that morning, he washed off the shale shaker on the upper deck of the rig with the pressure hose provided for the task. The deck was not enclosed at this point, but a three-foot high metal guard railing surrounded the area. (The lower deck immediately below the shale shaker was also unenclosed and had no guard railing.) Landry was told -by the rig’s superintendent not to continue the job, but to go into the galley and watch television if he wished. The rig’s tool-pusher, who is second in command to the superintendent gave Landry a similar order. He told Landry not to resume his regular duties, lest he be injured, but permitted him to bring ice and root beer to the workers in the area. However, the driller, Landry’s immediate superior, told Landry a short time later to watch the shale shaker and rinse it off if necessary. Landry was last seen that day in the pump room shortly after 3 p. m., but only a few minutes earlier he had been observed rinsing off the shale shaker with the pressure hose. At 5:30 p. m., Landry did not answer the roughneck’s whistle, and a search of the rig began.
Landry’s widow brought a wrongful death action, in her capacity as personal representative
II.
The defendant assigns two errors, primarily
The second point requires only a brief answer as well. The burden on the plaintiff to prove proximate cause in actions based on the Jones Act and general maritime law is very light. Indeed, the most noted commentators in the field have called it “featherweight.” Gilmore & Black, Admiralty (1957), § 6-36, p. 311. The jury in such cases is entitled to make “permissible inferences from unexplained events,” Johnson v. United States,
The trial court instructed the jury, over the plaintiff’s objection, that with respect to Landry’s death only pecuniary damages were recoverable and that the plaintiff was not to be compensated for loss of love and companionship. During the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Court held that loss of “society” was recoverable in wrongful death actions under general maritime law. Sea-Land Services v. Gaudet,
The judgment of liability against the defendant is accordingly affirmed.
III.
Notes
. Firoinal No. 3 consists, in essence, of one-half grain of Codeine, one-fourth grain of Barbital (a barbiturate), and aspirin. Landry was instructed to take one pill every four hours “for pain.”
. The defendant maintains now, as it did unsuccessfully at the close of the plaintiffs case and at the end of trial, that the suit should be dismissed because Mrs. Landry did not prove that she was the personal representative of herself and the children. This argument is without merit. Rule 9(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., provides that a party desiring “to raise an issue as to * * * the authority of a party to sue or be sued in a representative capacity * * * shall do so by specific negative averment, which shall include such supporting particulars as are peculiarly within the pleader’s knowledge.” The defendants made only a general denial of Mrs. Landry’s authority and alleged no supporting particulars. This is insufficient to join issue on Mrs. Landry’s authority to sue, Young v. Pattridge,
The defendant cannot say that its rights are prejudiced by the application of the waiver doctrine in this case. It implies that because Mrs. Landry did not prove that she was her husband’s testamentary executor, her claim is technically defeated. This argument misconstrues the meaning of “personal representative” in such actions, however. These claims are brought for the benefit not of the decedent’s estate, Lindgren v. United States,
. The defendant also alleges error, without citing any authority, in the trial court’s refusal to propound a specific interrogatory to the jury on the question of the specific act of negligence or the specific state of unseaworthiness that led to Landry’s death. We cannot say, and the defendant has made no argument to lead us to believe, that this refusal was an abuse of the sound discretion of the trial court. Loffland Bros. Co. v. Roberts,
Nor are we able to agree with the defendant that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that it could use two separate Coast Guard safety regulations as standards for determining the adequacy of the vessel’s hand-railings. The trial court discussed its proposed charge with both counsel and there was no objection to the charge on the regulations. Consequently, the defendant is barred from raising this objection now. Rule 51, Fed.R.Civ.P.; Curd v. Todd-Johnson Dry Docks, Inc.,
. Inasmuch as this litigation has already carried on for over three years, through two trials and one appeal, we remand to the trial court with the direction to grant the plaintiff a new trial on the issue of damages, if she so elects. If the plaintiff does not elect to have a new trial on the issue of damages, then the judgment of $147,500 to Mrs. Landry and the remittitur of $100,000 to each child must stand. The trial court properly allowed the plaintiff to accept the remittitur or have a new trial, and we cannot say that the remission of the children’s award brought the awards below the maximum supportable by the evidence nor that the decision itself to order remission was a “grave abuse of discretion.” Bonura v. Sea-Land Service, Inc.,
If the plaintiff does, elect a new trial on the issue of damages, the trial court is directed to reduce the resulting award to Mrs. Landry and her children by 20% due to Landry’s contributory negligence. (We note that the trial court applied the 20% factor in remitting the children’s awards). The jury found that Landry contributed to his own drowning, apparently by continuing to wash the shale shaker after he had been told to render only light duties, and reduced the damage award by 20%. Although contributory negligence is often referred to in these cases as a factor “in mitigation of damages,” e. g., Pope & Talbot v. Hawn,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
Believing our opinion to be as mandated by the Supreme Court’s precedents on sufficiency of evidence in FELA and Jones Act matters
. See Gibson v. Elgin, J & E Ry.,
. 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil 554-5, note 80.
