Nelson M. Gosnell, a seaman, brought this action under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688 (1982), and under general maritime law to recover damages for injuries he received when he fell forty feet down an unlighted escape hatch aboard the S.S. SEATTLE. Defendants Sea-Land Service, Inc. and Reynolds Leasing Corporation appeal a district court judgment against them, alleging that several jury instructions were incorrect or confusing, and that a special jury verdict finding defendants to be negligent but their vessel not tо be unseaworthy was inconsistent. Gosnell cross-appeals a district court ruling that he is not, as a matter of law, entitled to recover $18,651.53 in medical expenses for maintenance and cure paid by his union’s medical and hospitalization plan because he did not personally incur such expenses. Having found that the special jury verdicts are not inconsistent, that the jury instructions correctly advised the jury on the applicable law, and that the appellee is not entitled to recover unincurred expenses for maintenance and cure, we affirm.
I
On April 21, 1980, Nelson M. Gosnell secured a temporary job as a relief Third Assistant Engineer for a fourteen-day coastwise trip aboard the S.S. SEATTLE. At the time, Gosnell had bеen a licensed Third Assistant Engineer for approximately four and one-half years. Gosnell arrived aboard the SEATTLE at about 4:00 p.m. on April 21, having spent the afternoon with a friend, Joe Black, preparing for departure. Black accоmpanied Gosnell aboard the SEATTLE and remained aboard as Gosnell checked in with the chief mate and settled into his cabin. The ship was scheduled to depart at approximately 6:00 p.m., and Gosnell was to go on duty in the engine room аt 8:00 p.m. that evening. Gosnell and Black ate dinner together prior to 6:00 p.m., during which time Gosnell drank a beer, his fourth since 2:30 p.m. that afternoon.
At approximately 6:00 p.m., Black left the SEATTLE. On the way back to his room, Gosnell realized that he had forgotten to ask Black to leave the lights on in his house while he was gone. Gosnell, however, was unable to catch Black on the ship and decided not to follow him off the ship since it was preparing to depart. Gosnell chose instead to рroceed to the bow of the SEATTLE on the fo’c’sle head in order to shout instructions to Black.
At that time, the port and starboard passageways on the SEATTLE were different. While the port passageway ran unobstructed to a ladder which led tо the fo’c’sle, the starboard passageway had no such ladder. Gosnell testified that he was unaware of the difference and that, assuming he could reach the fo’c’sle either way, he chose the starboard passageway. Gosnell found no ladder on the starboard side and proceeded toward the port side by way of a lateral passage. Part way across this passage, Gosnell saw and entered an escape hatch in the trunk of the vessel, believing he could reach the fo’c’sle by this route. The escape hatch led to a ladder in an interior trunk compartment which extended from a point three deck levels below Gosnell to the fo’c’sle head a level above him. The trunk was unlighted and, in fact, was sealed at the top with no access to the fo’c’sle. Gosnell entered the hatch, stepped on a ladder rung, and reached in the dark for a higher rung that was not there. Gosnell slipped off the ladder and fell forty feet down the escape hatch. There was no claim at trial that the rung had any foreign substance on it or that the ladder itself was in any way defective.
Plaintiff instituted this proceeding on April 15, 1981, alleging a right to recovery based upon the dеfendants’ negligence pursuant to the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, and upon the unseaworthiness of the vessel. Both allegations rested on the fact that the escape hatch was unlighted.
At trial, plaintiff called as an expert witness Mr. Preston Harrison, a marine engi
Defendants’ expert, Commander Paul Joseph Pluta of the United States Coast Guard Marinе Office in Baltimore, testified that the SEATTLE met all Coast Guard inspection requirements at the time of the accident. In response to questions concerning 46 C.F.R. § 112.05-15(d), Commander Pluta testified that no emergency lighting was required because the escaрe hatch in this case did not fall within any of the areas specified by the regulation. Before submitting the case to the jury, the trial judge ruled as a matter of law that the regulation did not apply to the trunk in this case. That ruling has not been appealed.
At the end of the trial, the jury returned a verdict accompanied by answers to written interrogatories finding (1) that defendants were negligent under plaintiff's Jones Act claim, and (2) that the vessel, S.S. SEATTLE, was not unseaworthy. The jury also found that Gosnell was contributorily negligent, that his negligence accounted for sixty-eight percent (68%) of his injuries, and that Gosnell had sustained $482,000 in damages. Upon final judgment, the trial judge reduced the damages award to $154,240 in accordance with the verdict.
The district court denied the dеfendant’s alternative motions for judgment n.o.v. or for a new trial on the issues of negligence and unseaworthiness. The defendants appeal the denial of the motions and the entry of judgment for the plaintiff.
In addition, plaintiff cross appeals a trial court ruling that he is not entitled to recover $18,651.53 in medical expenses paid pursuant to his union’s medical and hospitalization plan for his maintenance and cure. Sea-Land’s collective bargaining agreement with Gosnell’s union, thе Marine Engineers Beneficial Association (MEBA), provided that all shipowners would be assessed a certain amount to contribute to the MEBA medical fund. Medical expenses of $18,-651.53 were paid out of the MEBA medical fund for Gosnell’s maintenanсe and cure. At trial, the parties agreed to treat the $18,651.53 in issue separately and allow the trial judge to rule as a matter of law whether Gosnell should recover the sum. The court concluded in a final letter ruling that plaintiff could not reсover because he did not personally incur any medical expenses or liability.
II
Defendants contend that the jury’s findings that defendants were negligent and the vessel was not unseaworthy are inconsistent and irreconcilable because both claims arise from the same alleged unsafe condition, the unlighted escape hatch. They argue that since the jury found the escape hatch not to be unseaworthy (and therefore “safe”), the jury could not at the same time find the hаtch to be unsafe under the negligence claim.
The standard of review for allegedly inconsistent verdicts is well established. When the use of a special verdict form leads to apparently conflicting jury findings, the court has a duty under the seventh аmendment to harmonize the answers, if it is possible to do so under a fair reading of them.
Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores, Inc. v. Ellerman Lines, Ltd.,
In the present case, we need only look to the substantive law encompassed within the district сourt’s instructions to determine that the jury’s findings are not inconsistent. Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness are two separate and distinct claims,
Usner v. Luckenbach Overseas Corp.,
The trial court correctly instructed the jury on the elements of Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness, including the different standards for causation. The jury found that plaintiff met his causation burden under the Jones Act “producing cause” standard, but not under the more rigorous unseaworthiness proximate or substantial cause standard. Thus, it can be reasoned that the jury found that in spite of Gosnell’s own contributory negligence, defendants’ failure to illuminate the escape hatch in question contributed in some part, however slight, to Gosnell’s injuries under the Jones Act claim. Apparently, however, thе jury also found that Gosnell’s own negligence was of such a degree that it prevented the same unlighted escape hatch from being the proximate cause of his injuries under the unseaworthiness claim. We can see no inconsistency in these jury findings.
Defendants contend that
Bemardini v. Rederi A/B Saturnus,
Defendant’s reliance on
Bemardini
is unpersuasive. The .plaintiff in
Bemardini
was a longshoreman and not a seaman subject to Jones Act coverage. Thus, the court did not have to apply the different causation standard for Jones Act negligence. Moreover, the
Bemardini
court noted that the trial judge below “recognized in his charge that a finding of unseaworthiness was a precondition to a finding of negligence.” Id. at 663. That is quite different from the present case where the trial judge charged the jury that they could find either unseaworthiness, Jones Act negligence, or both under the applicable law. Given this instruction, and given our constitutional mandate to harmonize jury’s find
III
Defendants contend that the district court erred in instructing the jury as to safe alternative routes, the inapplicability of the assumption of risk defense, and Jones Act “course of employment.” From our examination of the record and consideration of the arguments, both oral and written, we find no reversible error in these instructions. Read as a whole, the instructions fairly and adequately advised the jury with resрect to liability under the Jones Act.
Chavis v. Finnlines Ltd. O/Y,
IV
We also find no merit in plaintiffs cross-appeal for $18,651.53 in medical expenses for maintenance and cure paid by his union’s medical and hospitalization plan. In order to recover for maintenance and cure, a seaman must offer proof of expenditures made or liability incurred.
Spanos v. The LILY,
AFFIRMED.
