Phillip Stanfield appeals from a final judgment in the district court following a bench trial of his claims under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.App. § 688. Stanfield contends that the district court erred in finding as a matter of law that he was not a “seaman” under the Jones Act because he was employed on a vessel that was not operating on navigable waters. He further contends that the district court erred in finding that the “fleet seaman" doctrine did not cure his problems arising from the location of the vessel at the time of the injury. We agree with the district court that the working location of the vessel on which Stanfield was assigned takes him out of the reach of the Jones Act. We therefore affirm.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Phillip Stanfield worked for defendant Shellmaker on a project-by-project basis from February 26, 1983, until his injuries precluded further active dredging work in March of 1984. Stanfield worked as a dredge surveyor, designing dredge cuts or excavations, plotting the dredge’s stations or positions, and calculating her daily production. When a dredging job was completed, Stanfield was laid off, to await being rehired for the next project.
The dredge to which Stanfield was assigned at the time of his injury was the Traveler. Like all of defendant’s dredges, it had no motive power of its own, and had to be moved either by tugs, or by pulling on its own anchors with a winch. The Traveler was licensed by the Coast Guard for coastwise operation, and had been so employed at times prior to the assignment in question here. The Traveler was also capable of being disassembled and transported overland by truck.
At the time of the injury, the Traveler was on an assignment to which it had been transported by truck. It was dredging the South Fork of the Kings River, a landlocked artificial waterway used for irrigation purposes. The object of the dredging was to reverse the flow of the South Fork to aid in irrigation. The South Fork lies wholly within the State of California and is not navigable.
Stanfield was assigned to work with the Traveler beginning on July 30, 1983. He lived in a motel and drove a truck to the South Fork, where he did his surveying. On August 4, 1983, while in his small survey boat on the South Fork, he went to aid *523 a crewman in a skiff, who was having difficulty moving one of the dredge’s anchors. The anchors had not been holding properly. Stanfield assisted the crewman, but injured his back in doing so. The injury was not immediately disabling, but became progressively worse, causing Stan-field to leave the project on September 29, 1983. He reported back to work for defendant on October 17, 1983 and was assigned to a different project, where he worked until his injury caused him to stop in early March, 1984. Unable to continue his previous type of work, Stanfield eventually found employment as a dredge consultant, at a considerably lower rate of pay than that which he had previously enjoyed.
Stanfield subsequently filed this action in district court, seeking compensation for unseaworthiness and for negligence under the Jones Act. The district court found that Stanfield’s injury had been caused by Shell-maker’s negligence, and that Stanfield had acted reasonably at the time of his injury and in his subsequent attempts to mitigate damages by finding other employment. Nonetheless, the district court denied recovery under the Jones Act because of its finding that at the time of his injury Stan-field was permanently assigned to a vessel that was operating in non-navigable waters.
DISCUSSION
The Jones Act provides an action for damages for “[a]ny seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the course of his employment.” 46 U.S.C.App. § 688 (emphasis added). We have said that status as a seaman depends upon three factors:
(1) the vessel on which the claimant was employed must be in navigation; (2) the claimant must have a more or less permanent connection with the vessel; and (3) the claimant must be aboard primarily to aid in navigation.
Estate of Wenzel v. Seaward Marine Services, Inc.,
Stanfield argues that the
Traveler
was “in navigation” because it was afloat and operating, and that there is no requirement that it be on navigable water. He relies in part on
O’Donnell v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
The Supreme Court’s ruling in O’Donnell did not suggest, however, that the Jones Act was to be cut entirely free from its moorings in admiralty jurisdiction. Quite the contrary:
The right of recovery in the Jones Act is given to the seaman as such, and, as in the case of maintenance and cure, the admiralty jurisdiction over the suit depends not on the place where the injury is inflicted but on the nature of the service and its relationship to the operation of the vessel plying in navigable waters.
Id.
at 42-43,
Since the subject matter, the seaman’s right to compensation for injuries received in the course of his employment, is one traditionally cognizable in admiralty, the Jones Act, by enlarging the remedy, did not go beyond modification of the substantive rules of the maritime law well within the scope of the admiralty jurisdiction whether the vessel, plying navigable waters, be engaged in interstate commerce or not.
Id.
at 43,
It is not surprising, then, that cases describing the reach of the Jones Act regularly assert the requirement that the seaman be serving a ship in navigation on navigable waters.
E.g., Swanson v. Marra Brothers, Inc.,
Stanfield does point out that a vessel may be “in navigation” even when undergoing temporary repairs in drydock.
See Hawn v. American S.S. Co.,
Stanfield makes one final argument concerning the
Traveler’s
work on the South Fork. Although he concedes that the South Fork was non-navigable in any usual commerce clause sense, he contends that it still might be navigable in the view of admiralty, if only because the
Traveler
floated on it and engaged in commercial activity. We cannot accept that broad view of admiralty jurisdiction. When the Supreme Court ruled that admiralty power was not limited to the high seas and waters subject to the ebb and flow of tide, but extended to navigable inland waters, the Court had the national interest in commercial water-borne traffic in mind.
The Propeller Genesee Chief v. Fitzhugh,
Indeed, we have defined a navigable waterway as one “used or susceptible of being used as an artery of commerce____ Commerce for the purpose of admiralty jurisdiction means activities related to the business of shipping.”
Adams v. Montana Power Co.,
Neither the rule nor the reasoning of Adams permits a conclusion that the Traveler was operating in navigable water at the time of Stanfield’s injury. The South Fork of the Kings River was landlocked and used only for irrigation. There is no suggestion that it was ever used, or ever could be, as an artery of shipping. The dredging done by the Traveler for purposes of irrigation was originally to be done by equipment operating on land, but the landowner determine that too much environmental damage would be done to the shore. The Traveler was accordingly trucked in to dredge. It subsequently was used for dredging on non-navigable waters in the Napa Sanitation District sewer pond and in a settling pond of the Chevron Chemical Company in Richmond, California. Its activities, commercial though they were, did not convert the South Fork into navigable waters, within the scope of the federal admiralty jurisdiction or the Jones Act.
FLEET SEAMAN DOCTRINE
Stanfield argues that, despite the
Traveler’s
operation in non-navigable waters, he qualifies as a seaman under the “fleet seaman” doctrine as it has been articulated by the Fifth Circuit.
See Braniff v. Jackson Avenue-Gretna Ferry, Inc.,
Even if we assume, without deciding, that the “fleet seaman” doctrine applies in this circuit, it is of no use to Stan-field. That doctrine was devised to ease the requirement that, to be a seaman, the claimant had to be “assigned permanently to a vessel.”
Braniff,
The Fifth Circuit decisions are inapplicable to Stanfield for two reasons. First, the “fleet seaman” doctrine presupposes permanent assignment to a number of vessels plying navigable waters. It does not encompass injury arising from service to a vessel in non-navigable waters. Second, Stanfield was permanently assigned to the
Traveler
at the time of his injury. He was serving no other vessel. The fact that, in different periods of employment, he worked on other vessels of Shellmaker that were located on navigable waters, does not alter the case before us. There is no difficulty herein finding a “more or less permanent connection” with a vessel.
Estate of Wenzel,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties disagree over the proper standard of review of the district court’s ruling. Shell-maker relies on our cases holding that the question of status as a seaman is usually for the jury,
e.g., Estate of Wenzel
v.
Seaward Marine Services, Inc.,
. “The admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States shall extend to and include all cases of damage or injury, to person or property, caused by a vessel on navigable water, notwithstanding that such damage or injury be done or consummated on land.” 46 U.S.C.App. § 740.
