Romero Reyes, a longshoreman, was injured when he slipped and fell from an allegedly unstable, poorly lit and defective gangway while boarding the CARIBBEAN, a barge owned by defendant Caribbean Barge Corporation. He sued the barge’s owner and an associated company for unseaworthiness and negligence. At the close of his evidence the court, upon defendants’ motion, directed a verdict on both counts for defendants, and he appealed.
The court stated several reasons for directing a verdict. First, it noted that Romero Reyes was injured a half hour before his shift was to commence; the court intimated, although it did not actually say, that he was not then a longshoreman, engaged in the ship’s work, to whom the vessel owner’s warranty of seaworthiness runs. Second, the court ruled that the gangway, which was permanently affixed to a pier-based tower and did not belong to the barge, was not a part of the ship or its appurtenances; accordingly, the barge owner’s warranty of seaworthiness did not cover the gangway, nor, in the court’s estimation, was the owner negligent. As we disagree with the court’s conclusions on these issues, we remand for a new trial.
I
It could not be ruled as a matter of law that Romero Reyes was not a longshoreman when injured, hence not entitled to the warranty of seaworthiness.
See
Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
Any question whether Romero Reyes had actually assumed the status of a working longshoreman would be for the jury. Zeidman v. Gutterson & Gould,
Romero Reyes’ longshoreman status was, moreover, admitted by defendants both in their answer to the amended complaint and in the pre-trial stipulation. It is unclear why the legal effect of these several admissions was overlooked.
“That which a defendant admits in his answer is binding upon him until he withdraws the admission by a proper amended or supplemental pleading.”
Freedom Nat. Bank v. Northern Illinois Corp.,
Of course, there are escape valves; a court has discretion, which we would seldom disturb, to allow amendments to pleadings, and it may permit the modification of stipulations to prevent “manifest injustice”. See F.R.Civ.P. 16. But no amendment or modification was ever requested or allowed. Although Romero Reyes did not emphatically direct the court’s attention to the pleadings and stipulation, we cannot say that he waived their benefits. Cf. F.R.Civ.P. 15(b). The presumption is rather the other way.
Defendants must be held to the position they freely adopted prior to trial. If they had cause for relief, they should have moved to amend, thereby forewarning Romero Reyes, who was otherwise entitled to suppose that he had no burden to prove employment. The spirit of flexibility behind the Rules is not intended to permit one of the parties to be booby-trapped. Defendants shall remain bound by admissions in the *869 pleadings and pre-trial stipulation unless the district court is later persuaded, for good cause shown, that they should be relieved.
II
The gangway from which Romero Reyes fell was owned and controlled by a concern we shall call Molinos. It did not belong to the barge or its owner. Suspended from a tower on pilings next to the dock, it could be raised or lowered by cables attached to the tower. The court concluded that the injury was caused by “pierside equipment attached to the pier based structure and not part of the ship or its appurtenances and that there was no member of the crew of the ship directing the plaintiff nor having any control over the plaintiff or his activities at the time.” Were the vessel owner’s duty determined by ownership of the gangway, we would agree with the district court. It is undisputed that a smaller portable structure was the only structure in the nature of a gangway actually belonging to the barge, and it was not in use at the time of the accident. The apparatus from which plaintiff fell was the regular means of boarding and leaving the vessel.
The seaworthiness warranty is not, however, limited to gear “owned” by the shipowner, and while the phrase “equipment appurtenant” to the vessel suggests equipment “belonging” physically to the vessel, it may, and in this case does, include equipment vital to the vessel’s mission that does not accompany it while at sea. “Seaworthiness” comprehends the owner’s duty to supply his crew with a suitable ship and equipment, and this includes providing them with a suitable means to board and disembark. The duty thus extends to the gangway by whomever supplied, owned or controlled. A crewman injured by an unfit hence “unseaworthy” gangplank may recover against the vessel’s owner. 3
In Victory Carriers, Inc. v. Law,
Appellees argue that in
Victory Carriers
the Court might not have been thinking of pier-based ramps owned by others, nor of injuries to persons embarking rather than going ashore.
Cf.
The Brand,
“Reliance upon the gangplank line as the presumptive boundary of admiralty jurisdiction, except for cases in which a ship’s appurtenance causes damage ashore, recognizes the traditional limitations of admiralty juris *870 diction . . . and decreases the arbitrariness and uncertainties surrounding amorphous definitions.”
The authorities are virtually unanimous that maritime liability encompasses the gangway. The Admiral Peoples,
In Ford v. Parker,
“simple and easily applied to situations which have heretofore been difficult of decision. And it seems entirely consistent with the real nature of the subject matter. Employes whose duties are on ships and require them to board and leave ships are engaged in a purely maritime activity . . . . In going to and fro in the performance of their duties it is reasonable that they should use and rely upon the safety of the only means of ingress to or egress from the ship as part of the ship’s equipment.” Id. at 101.
In Caldaro v. Baltimore & O.R.R.,
“subtle arguments concerning the source or ownership of its component parts. Whether the gangway is kept on the shore or on the ship, it is used to provide ingress to and egress from the vessel and is in that sense a part of the ship’s equipment.” Id. at 836.
Accord,
West v. Erie R.R.,
In view of the foregoing, our views on the negligence claim may be of little practical significance; however, we state them, though with perhaps less certainty.
4
Because the means of ingress or egress, by whomever furnished, are an “appurtenance” of the vessel, the owner has a duty of care regarding them. The owner is thus liable for a negligent failure to inspect a gangway and to warn against defects reasonably apparent from inspection or to take steps to repair or replace it. We finding nothing to the contrary in Usner v. Luckenbach Overseas Corp.,
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Congress has recently provided that vessels no longer owe a duty of seaworthiness to longshoremen, and are liable solely for their negligence. Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers Compensation Act Amendments of 1972, 86 Stat. 1263, amending 33 U.S.C. § 905 (1970). The amendment is prospective only, Addison v. Bulk Food Carriers, Inc.,
.
See also
O’Keeffe v. Smith, Hinchman & Grylls Associates, Inc.,
. It may, at first glance, seem harsh to hold the vessel owner for the fault of a shore-based operator. But the owner may often be entitled to indemnity, and may, of course, protect himself by private agreement and by insurance. For purposes of this suit, fault as between tort feasors is secondary to enforcement of the maritime worker’s right to a seaworthy vessel and appurtenances. “The fact that the unseaworthy condition [is! the fault of [the longshoreman’s] employer, and not the defendant, [is] immaterial.” Bostrom v. Astro Crecido CIA,
. In so stating, we refer to cases preceding the 1973 Amendments to the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers Compensation Act, supra n. 1. We have no need to consider, and do not consider, what duties and liabilities may exist under the 1972 Amendments.
