This cause is before the Court on a motion for summary judgment, filed by Paterson and Sons (hereinafter called Paterson), the defendant and third-party plaintiff in the ease, against the plaintiff Alonzo McKnight. Since under Fed. Rules Civ.Proc., Rule 56, 28 U.S.C.A., the pleadings, depositions and admissions on file, together with any affidavits, must show that there is no genuine issue of material fact before a summary judgment can be granted, a brief resume of thе settled facts, as shown from the record of the case as a whole, is in order.
McKnight, at the time of the alleged injury, was employed as a longshoreman by the Nicholson Cleveland Terminal Company (hereinafter called Nicholson), a stevedoring contractor and the third-party defendant in this case. At the time in question, the plaintiff was working in the hold of Paterson’s vessel, the Humberdoc, assisting in unloading newsprint. There is no question that Nicholson was acting as an independent contractor, and that it had complete control and operation of the unloading process being undertaken at that time. The injury to plaintiff, upon which this action is based, was apparently inflicted as a result of being struck by part of the unloading gear being lowered into the ship’s hold by means of a shore-based, Nicholson owned and operated crane. Although the original petition filed in the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas court (the case was removed here by Paterson) alleged that the unloading gear which caused plaintiff’s injury was owned by Paterson, subsequent pleadings, especially the deposition of McKnight, the affidavit of the crane operator, and plaintiff’s supplemental brief in opposition to this motion clearly show this allegation to be mistaken and without merit. In assuming the facts that are most favorable to plaintiff, as is our duty in resolving this motion, the injury may have occurred either because of a defect in the crane itself, or because of the negligence of the Nicholson-employed signalman stationed on the deck of the ship. But in neither event does a question of fact arise cоncerning the status of either Nicholson or Paterson as to the unloading process in general, and the ownership, control and location of the crane in particular, and thus the undetermined cause of the injury does- *436 not create, for our purposes, a material issue of fact.
On the above uncontroverted recitation of fact, 1 the Court is faced with two questions of law: 1) Whether the injury suffered by plaintiff was in any way caused by negligence on the part of the vessel owner through its equipment or employees, and 2) whеther the vessel Humberdoc was, at the time of the injury, in an unseaworthy condition, which condition materially caused or contributed to the injury of plaintiff?
We will dispose of the negligence issue first. Although plaintiff, by means of an affidavit attached to his reply brief to this motion, alleged negligence on the part of Paterson in allowing Nicholson, the independent stevedoring contractor, to operatе a defective crane, the allegation actually is grounded on unseaworthiness. Although a shipowner is liable in negligence for any lack of reasonable care in ascertaining the methods and manner in which an independent contractor carries on his activities, Halecki v. United N. Y. and N. J. Sandy Hook Pilots Ass’n, 2 Cir., 1958,
The allegation of unseaworthiness presents a far more complex problem. It cannot now be denied that longshoremen, though employed by an independent contractor, are, when performing the “ship’s service”, entitled to the same protection against unseaworthiness that members of the crew doing the same work would receive. Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 1946,
We now turn to what we consider the controlling issue on this motion; i. e., whether the crane and its attached loading gear, if proved defective, will make the Humberdoc unseaworthy so as to hold the vessel and its owner liable to this injured plaintiff. In reaching our decision the court recognizes the fact that although the crane and attached gear were entirely owned and operated by the independent stevedoring contractor, this is not decisive of the question of unseaworthiness. Two recent Supreme Court decisions clearly indicate that a vessel can become unsea-worthy even thоugh the equipment making it so was initially brought onto the vessel by an independent contractor without the knowledge of the officers or crew of the vessel, and even though such equipment is expected to remain on the ship only temporarily. See Alaska S.S. Co. v. Petterson, 1954,
Although there appear to be no reported cases which сontain the identical facts of the instant case (yet the same loading and unloading process must occur countless times during each shipping season), the decisions of federal courts attempting to isolate and define situations wherein the injured employer of an independent stevedoring contractor can proceed against a non-negligent vessel owner as a result of injuries suffered while working on the vessel are numerous. Since the increasing policy of the law is towards liberality in affording the injured longshoreman recourse against the vessel owner, 2 no decision in this area can be well-considered unless the court examines the more important or landmark decisions to determine whether the case before it falls within the liability pattern as established by these cases, and even though the precise factual situation before the court might afford a basis for departure from the more liberal precedents, a non-conforming decision on the District level would be at best tenuous.
In Petterson v. Alaska S.S. Co., supra,
In Rogers v. United States Lines, supra, special tub gangs of the stevedor-ing contractor would use one of the ship’s booms, the ship’s winches, and a ship’s runner on one of the winches, together with the stevedore’s land fall and attached runner. One of the unloading tubs swung across the hold and struck the plaintiff. It was conceded that the accident wаs caused by the land fall runner, operated at the time by stevedores, rewinding on the winch drum, *438 which forced the tub into the plaintiff. The Third Circuit held that the vessel did not adopt the stevedore’s land fall runner as an appurtenance of the ship, and thus was not liable to the injured longshoreman on the basis of unseaworthiness. The decision was reversed by the Supreme Court without opinion but clearly on the issue, of unseaworthiness, as indicated by Justice Burton’s dissent.
These two cases then form the background 4 for the plaintiff’s claim in the instant case that the Humberdoc was un-seaworthy because of the allegedly defective crane used in the unloading operation. There are of course other cases which, to a lesser degree, illustrate the tendency towards increasing the situations wherein the vessel and its owner are held absolutely liable for injuries tо longshoremen engaged in the “ship’s service”, but since in these cases the instrumentality causing the injury was initially owned by the vessel, they clearly fall within the outer boundaries of liability as established by the Petterson and Rogers cases.
There are several cases decided after Petterson that are worth mentioning for purposes of comparison, in that they either actually, or by suggestion, reject the allegation of unseaworthiness in cases factually similar to the instant case. In Fredericks v. American Export Lines, Inc., 2 Cir., 1955,
The plaintiff in Roper v. United States,. D.C.E.D.Va.1959,
Is there a reasonable basis for distinguishing the rationale of the Petter-son case from the holding in Fredericks v. American Export Lines? We think there is, and that this distinction is determinative of the problem presently-confronting this Court. In the first place, the defective equipment in Petter-son which caused the injury was of the type commonly found as a part of the *439 -gear of both the vessel and the stevedore. 6 The same can be said of the ■equipment causing the injury in Rogers v. United States Lines, supra. Once this duplicity of gear is .recognized, it is a fairly easy step to reason that the vessel had integrated or adopted such equipment, at least temporarily; into its own gear, since it is the type that the Ship would be expected to furnish its own • seaman for use on the ship. In the instant situation it cannot be seriously •contended that the crane used in the unloading operation is equipment coiji-monly found among the ship’s gear. Both its size and sole function rebel against any argument that a ship might '“adopt” or “integrate” such equipment .as part of its gear. 7 Since it is clear from the Grillea case, supra, that unseaworthiness can exist only when there is .a defect in the hull, gear or stowage of the vessel, if the crane was not adopted ■or integrated as ship’s gear, this cause for unseaworthiness will not lie.
Nor do we feel that the crane can be considered an appurtenance of the ship. Although it is still true that “it may not be a simple matter to define what is and what is not an ‘appurtenance of a ship’ ”, 8 our understanding of a ship’s appurtenances does not include this crane. The crane was based on shоre, was owned by the independent contractor, and it seems mere accident that this crane, rather than another, was used in this particular unloading operation. The crane never became physically attached to the ship in any manner, nor did it at any time during the unloading process touch any part of the vessel. 9 In fact, it seems that the crane would be imperfectly operated if any of its elongation or attached unloading gear even touched part of the ship during the unloading process. The vessel owner had no control over the choice of the crane, and no authority in the direction of its use, nor was it necessary for the Humberdoc to function as a maritime vessel.
In reaching the conclusion we do, the Court is fully aware of the impact the decision in Seas Shipping Co, v. Sieracki, 1945,
Since, as a matter of law, we find neither negligence nor unseaworthiness on the part of the Humberdoc, her owner, and her crew, defendant Paterson’s motion for summary judgment is hereby granted.
Notes
. Nicholson, the third-party defendant, supports Paterson’s motion for summary judgment.
. Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, supra; Alaska S.S. Co. v. Petterson, supra; Pope & Talbot, Inc. v. Hawn, 1953,
. What actually struck plaintiff is not clear from the opinion, but apparently it was some of the ship’s equipment being supported by this block. See discussion in Klimaszewski v. Pacific-Atlantic S.S. Co., 3 Cir., 1957,
. One case on the District level seems to extend the doctrine of the Petterson case. In Considine v. Black Diamond S.S. Corp., D.C.D.Mass.1958,
. Although the longshoreman was standing on the pier when the injury occurred, this should not have been the determining factor in the court’s decision, for Strika v. Netherlands Ministry of Traffic, 2 Cir.,, 1950,
. This common core of usage was emphasized in the opinion of Chief Judge Denman, 9 Cir., 1953,
. Tools or equipment, owned and exclusively possessed by an independent contractor, do not automatically become part of the lessee’s plant or premises merely because such equipment is indispensable to the work the independent contractor has agreed to perform. Fredericks v. American Export Lines, supra. Compare with Sanford v. Caswell, 5 Cir., 1953,
. The Ontario, 1871, 18 Fed.Cas. pages 736, 741, No. 10,543. “Appurtenance” generally means “the right to the use of those things that are essential to the full enjoyment of the premises conveyed.” Lee v. City of Park Hill,
. This physical touching of the vessel may have formed the basis for the decision in Considine v. Black Diamond Steamship Corporation, supra note 4. “ * * * in the Alaska Steamship case (and other Supreme Court decisions), there was always present some actual material defect in the gear either belonging to the ship, or allowed to be on it; thus the defective device or part of the ship could be, although snugly, fitted into the immemorial definition of unseaworthiness as being a defect in the ship’s hull, gear or stowage * * Rodriguez v. The Angelina, D.C.,
. The Petterson and Rogers cases expanded the scope of equipment that could render a ship unseaworthy. Other cases have increased the number and type of occupations that are included within the term “ship’s service”. See Pope & Talbot v. Hawn, supra note 2; Torres v.
*440
The Kastor, 2 Cir., 1955,
. See note 7 supra.
. The location of the injured party was not important to Judge Hand either in Strika v. Netherlands Ministry of Traffic, supra note 5.
