The libelant, Omer Keel, an experienced riverhand, went to work as a deckhand on the towboat, Ark City, in July 1959'. The Ark City was a new vessel. The crew consisted of Keel and a pilot or “captain”. August 19, 1959, while Keel was cleaning the starboard side of the vessel with soap and water, the captain told Keel to make coffee. He got the coffeepot and two cups from the pilot house and stepped onto the starboard landing. It was slick from soap and water Keel had just applied to it. He slipped and fell to the deck three feet below, landing on his seat. The captain saw him in that position and laughed. He asked Keel if he was hurt and needed a doctor. Keel said “No”. Shortly after the fall, Keel left the employ of the shipowner.
The district court found that the Ark City was seaworthy in all respects, except for the landing or platform which was momentarily unseaworthy only by the act of Keel’s cleaning it with detergent soap and water. We hold that the decision below was not “clearly erroneous” under McAllister v. United States, 1954,
*903 “ * * * all the negligence which caused the fall was the negligence of Keel, it necessarily follows that I must conclude as a matter of law that Keel is not entitled to recover on his count based, under general maritime law, on his claim of un-
*904 We hold also that the record supports the trial judge’s finding that (1) Keel is not entitled to recover on his claim for cure and, (2) absent a showing that Keel’s unemployment was caused by the fall on the Ark City, and since Keel voluntarily terminated his employment, thus ending the voyage, he is not entitled to recover for maintenance.
The judgment is affirmed.
