OCEAN DRILLING & EXPLORATION COMPANY et al., Appellants,
v.
BERRY BROTHERS OILFIELD SERVICE, INC., Appellee.
OCEAN DRILLING & EXPLORATION COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
BERRY BROTHERS OILFIELD SERVICE, INC., Appellee.
No. 23421.
No. 23422.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
May 10, 1967.
George B. Matthews, Thomas W. Thorne, Jr., New Orleans La., for Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co., J. A. O'Conner and Lemle & Kelleher, New Orleans, La., of counsel.
John A. Bernard, Lafayette, La., for Berry Brothers Oilfield Service, Inc., Davidson, Meaux, Onebane & Donohoe, Lafayette, La., of counsel.
Before GEWIN, THORNBERRY and DYER, Circuit Judges.
THORNBERRY, Circuit Judge.
In this consolidated appeal, Ocean Drilling & Exploration Company (ODECO) challenges the District Cоurt's dismissal of its third-party complaints for indemnity against Berry Brothers Oilfield Service, Inc. (Berry Bros.), a repair contractor, in separate actions instituted against ODECO by two employees of Berry Bros. for injuries sustаined in the course of performing repairs on a stationary offshore plaform owned by ODECO. As advanced by ODECO, the critical issue on this appeal is whether under the facts ODECO may invoke the Ryan doctrine1 in order to оbligate Berry Bros. to indemnify ODECO for any amounts it might be required to pay the injured claimants because of Berry Bros.' alleged breach of its implied warranty of workmanlike service. Convinced after carеful scrutiny of the record that the Ryan doctrine cannot be properly extended to the facts of this controversy, we affirm.
On or about March 8, 1964, ODECO engaged Berry Bros., a professional rig service cоntractor, to perform welding and repair services on a certain tank located on a fixed, unmanned platform resting in the Gulf of Mexico over thirty miles off the Louisiana coastline. In the cоurse of such repairs the tank exploded, resulting in injuries to Butler and Fagan, two members of Berry Bros.' repair crew. Each brought suit against ODECO under substantially identical complaints charging ODECO with negligence in failing to furnish a safe place to work and in failing to insure that the tank was free from explosive fumes. ODECO denied liability in each action and filed third-party complaints against Berry Bros. alleging that the explosion аnd resultant injuries had occurred in whole or in part from the failure of Berry Bros. to perform its repair contract in a reasonable and workmanlike manner. Alternatively, ODECO asserted that if the injuries were, in fact, due to any fault on its part, such fault was purely passive or technical, the injuries having been proximately caused by the active, primary negligence of Berry Bros. The District Court entered judgmеnts sustaining Berry Bros.' motions to dismiss the third-party complaints pursuant to Rule 54(b), thus giving rise to the instant consolidated appeal.
In Ryan, it was established that a stevedoring contractor who enters into a services agreement with a shipowner is liable to indemnify the shipowner for any damages sustained as a result of the stevedore's breach of its warranty of workmanlike service. That case, as well as subsequent dеcisions, made it clear that such right to indemnification is strictly contractual in nature, existing entirely independently of tort theories based upon concepts of "active-passive" and "primary-secondary" negligence. Italia Societa per Azioni di Navigazione v. Oregon Stevedoring Co., 1964,
Where the shipowner is liable to the employees of the stevedore company as well as its employees for failing to supply а vessel and equipment free of defects, regardless of negligence, we do not think it unfair or unwise to require the stevedore to indemnify the shipowner for damages sustained as a result of injury-producing defective equipments supplied by a stevedore in furtherance of its contractual obligations. * * *
Both sides press upon us their interpretations of the law in regard to the scope of warranties in nonsales contracts, such as contracts of bailment and service agreements. But we deal here with a suit for indemnification based upon a maritime contract, governed by federal law * * *, in an area where rather sрecial rules governing the obligations and liability of shipowners prevail, rules that are designed to minimize the hazards encountered by seamen, to compensate seamen for the accidents that inevitably occur, and to minimize the likelihood of such accidents.
In its third-party complaint ODECO admits that the platform on which the injuries occurred was a "fixed unmanned structure." Clearly not designed to float on water, see Offshore Co. v. Robison, 5th Cir. 1959,
Having concluded that ODECO is not entitled to seek contractual indemnity from Berry Bros. under the Ryan doctrine, we are left with the issue of whether a claim for indemnity remains available to ODECO under maritime tort principles.4 The Supreme Court in Ryan was not called upon to resolve this issue, and expressly declined to do so:
[T]he shipowner's action for indemnity here is not based merely on the ground that the shipowner and contractor each is responsible in some related degree for the tortious stowage of cargo that caused injury * * *. Such an action, brought without reliance upon contrаctual undertakings, would present the bald question whether the stevedoring contractor or the shipowner, because of their respective responsibilities for the unsafe stowage, should bear thе ultimate burden of the injured longshoreman's judgment. That question has been widely discussed elsewhere in terms of the relative responsibilities of the parties for the tort, and those discussions have dealt with concepts of primary and secondary or active and passive tortious conduct. Because respondent in the instant case relies entirely upon petitioner's contractual obligatiоn, we do not meet the question of a noncontractual right of indemnity or of the relation of the Compensation Act to such a right.
Sec. 5. The liability of an employer prescribed in section 4 [for compensation] shall be exclusive and in place of all other liability of such employer to the employee, his legal representative, husband or wife, parents, dependants, next of kin, and anyone otherwise entitled to rеcover damages from such employer at law or in admiralty on account of such injury or death. * *
33 U.S.C. § 905. The obvious purpose of this provision, as made clear by the Supreme Court in Ryan
is to make the stаtutory liability of an employer to contribute to its employee's compensation the exclusive liability of such employer to its employees, or to anyone claiming under or through such employee, on account of his injury or death arising out of that employment. In return, the employee, and those claiming under or through him, are given a substantial quid pro quo in the form of an assured compensation, regardless of fault, as a substitute for their excluded claims.
Affirmed.
Notes:
Notes
Ryan Stevedoring Co. v. Pan-Atlantic S. S. Corp., 1956,
E. g., D/S Ove-Skou v. Hebert, 5th Cir. 1966,
See Delta Eng'r Corp. v. Scott, 5th Cir. 1963,
Both parties appear to rely upon indemnity principles arising under state law in urging thеir respective positions with regard to this issue, but it is clear that federal maritime law, not that of Louisiana or any other state, controls this controversy. See Movible Offshore Co. v. Ousley, 5th Cir., 1965,
The same result, mоreover, would obtain were we to construe ODECO's third-party complaint as an attempt to seek contribution from Berry Bros. Halcyon Lines v. Haenn Ship Ceiling & Refitting Corp., 1952,
The Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. § 1333(c), expressly adopts the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act as the basis for compensation for the death or disability of an employee
