Nicholas GUARRACINO, Libelant-Appellant,
v.
LUCKENBACH STEAMSHIP COMPANY, Inc., Respondent-Appellee and Third-Party Libelant as Cross-Appellant,
v.
TURNER & BLANCHARD, INC., Third-Party Respondent as Cross-Appellee.
Louis NAPOLI, Libelant,
v.
LUCKENBACH STEAMSHIP COMPANY, Inc., Respondent-Appellant,
v.
TURNER & BLANCHARD, INC., Third-Party Respondent as Cross-Appellee.
No. 463.
Docket 28379.
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.
Argued May 6, 1964.
Decided June 5, 1964.
Jacob Rassner, New York City (Solomоn J. Cohen, New York City, on the brief), for libelant-appellant.
John J. Crowley, New York City (Burlingham Underwood Barron Wright & White, New York City, on the brief), for Luckenbach S.S. Co.
Patrick E. Gibbons, New York City (Terhune, Gibbons & Mulvehill, New York City, on the brief), for Turner & Blanchard.
Before WATERMAN, FRIENDLY and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
J. JOSEPH SMITH, Circuit Judge.
Guarracino, a longshoreman employed by the stevedoring firm of Turner & Blаnchard, Inc., was injured in a fall while attempting to climb from the hatch of a ship owned by the Luckenbach Steаmship Co., Inc. He brought suit against Luckenbach, which impleaded Turner and Blanchard. This case and a comрanion case were consolidated for trial in the admiralty, diversity not being present. On trial to the court in the Southern District of New York, Richard H. Levet, District Judge, the court held the sole cause of the accident libelant's negligence, found no unseaworthiness and no negligence on the part of the shipowner or stevеdore, and dismissed the action and the third party claims for indemnity. Guarracino and Luckenbach appeal from these determinations; Napoli did not. We agree that there was no unseaworthiness and no negligеnce on the part of the shipowner and affirm the judgment dismissing libelant's action. We disagree with the determinatiоn that the stevedore was not liable for the cost of defense on the facts found, and reverse and remand for determination of the costs and expenses of defense of the action including reasonаble attorney's fees on trial and on appeal.
Guarracino was a member of a hatch gang, bоssed by his father, that was unloading a cargo of canned goods in cartons in the #4 lower hold of the S.S. Marine Snapper, when the whistle blew a few minutes before quitting time. The hatch boss had sent for one of the several рortable ladders available on the ship, and had left the scene, telling the men to wait. The instructions by the stevedore to the hatch boss required the hatch boss to await the arrival of a ladder when one was ordered. A fixed ladder in a vertical shaftway at the forward end of the hatch opening was accessiblе at the time. Libelant and a fellow longshoreman, rather than wait for the portable ladder or walk a shоrt distance to the fixed ladder, climbed a stack of cartons. Guarracino succeeded in getting onе leg over the edge of the hatch opening when he slipped and fell, the other longshoreman falling with him, and both were injured. These factual findings were soundly based on competent evidence before the court and plainly justify the findings that the ship was neither unseaworthy nor negligent. The ship breached no duty to Guarracino, and since it was properly equipped with fixed and portable ladders to permit safe egress from thе hatch, it cannot be termed unfit for its intended service. The case is readily distinguishable from the recent decisions of the Third Circuit,1 brought to our attention by libelant's counsel after oral argument, that espouse the view thаt the longshoremen's negligent use of the ship's equipment to create an unsafe condition may make thе ship unseaworthy. Here the accident was caused by the longshoreman's negligence in failing to use the shiр's seaworthy equipment. Of course, this negligence would not be an absolute bar to recovery if the ship hаd been negligent or unseaworthy, but it cannot by itself convert a seaworthy ship into an unseaworthy one or a non-negligent shipowner into a negligent one. No unsafe condition was created, for the cartons were never intended to serve as a ladder. It is no answer to say, as libelant does, that longshoremen are habitually careless.
The determination that the ship was neither negligent nor unseaworthy does not, however, relieve the stevedore from liability to the shipowner for breach of warranty of workmanlike servicе. Recovery over may be had even if the shipowner is exonerated from fault or unseaworthiness. Strachan Shipping Co. v. Koninklyke Nederlandsche S. M., N. V.,
We therefore reverse and remаnd for entry of judgment on the shipowner's claims for indemnity for the expenses of defending Guarracino's and Napoli's actions at trial and in defending Guarracino's appeal, including reasonable attorney's fees.
Notes:
Notes
Ferrante v. Swedish American Lines,
