Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by libelant Martin Radovich from a decree of the district court dismissing his libel for personal injuries against the shipowner, Cunard Steamship Co., Ltd. For the reasons indicated below, we reverse.
Radovich, a longshoreman, was working aboard Cunard’s R.M.S. Mauretania on the morning of July 2, 1961, helping to unload cargo. Radovich was on deck as an “extra man,” participating in the discharge of automobiles through a hatch. An “extra man” holds a guide line attached to the car to keep it from striking anything on deck as it is carried through the air. Cunard supplied a standard 3% inch, three-strand rope for the “Burton” fall, which controls horizontal motion of the cargo. The longshoremen fixed the rope in a single purchase, in which a single length is connected to the wire fall, which controls vertical movement. In a double purchase, two pulleys and two lengths of
Radovich argues first that his proof that the rope snapped suddenly in the midst of the ordinary performance of the operation raised a presumption under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur that the rope was insufficient for its intended purpose, and Cunard did not adduce sufficient evidence to explain away or rebut this presumption. This statement of the res ipsa doctrine is faulty in a number of respects, but it is unnecessary to dwell on this point. It suffices to say that the trial judge found that the rope was new, unused, and without latent defect and broke solely because too great a strain was placed upon it and that these findings are clearly supported by the evidence.
Radovich’s other claim is more substantial. The trial judge found that the sedan was too heavy for the single purchase, that the sole reason the rope parted was that the longshoremen tried to lift the car without re-rigging the gear, and that a double purchase would have been effective. Accepting this finding arguendo, Radovich concludes that this proves unseaworthiness. The trial court reasoned that the use of the single purchase was the cause of the accident and, being an act, the cause was not a condition (unseaworthiness), but rather was operational negligence by the longshoremen. The cases in this circuit do make a distinction between operational negligence and an unseaworthy condition negligently created,
The difference between operational negligence and unseaworthiness has been questioned in this circuit
If anything emerges from these cases other than the difficulty of apply' ing the act-condition (or operational negligence-unseaworthiness) dichotomy, it is that the findings of the trier of fact should be left undisturbed, if the law to be applied to the facts is properly understood. Thus, Puddu, Spinelli, Massa, Reid, Skibinski, and Strika were all affirmances of the trier of fact (the jury in the last case; the judge in the others).
Applying these standards to this case, it is clear that Judge Cashin felt himself bound by two cases he considered indistinguishable from his own: Puddu v. Royal Netherlands S.S. Co., supra, and Spinelli v. Isthmian S.S. Co., supra. Thus, he stated:
In substance, this case is indistinguishable from the Puddu and Spinelli cases, supra. Too much stress was placed on serviceable equipment and that directly resulted in the injury to the libellant. In this Circuit such an act is operational negligence— it does not create an unseaworthy condition.
However, those cases did not preclude a finding of unseaworthiness by the court
While we feel that the single-purchase was inappropriate and unreasonable for the use it was applied to, and that at the time the lifting of the heavier sedan began a condition of unseaworthiness already existed, we would not necessarily reverse a contrary determination on these key issues by a trial court not mistaken as to its power under the applicable law. Our dissenting brother does not want to “inflict on the district court the impossible task of dealing with words and phrases that are like beads of quicksilver.” If by this he means the distinction between operational negligence and an unseaworthy condition, we agree, as indicated above, that it is difficult to draw the line between them. A position that it is impossible to do so with fairness and reason in fact poses the question of whether the distinction should not be dispensed with altogether. However, we leave that issue for another day; we simply hold today that the facts in the instant case allow a finding of actionable unseaworthiness, and that any impression gleaned from our prior decisions that such a finding is impermissible is erroneous.
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Cunard had also attempted to implead Gourock Ropework Co., Ltd., the alleged supplier of the rope used by the longshoremen. However, the claim against Gouroek was abandoned because Cunard was unable to serve process upon it.
. See Note, The Doctrine of Unseaworthiness in the Lower Federal Courts, 76 Harv.L.Rev. 819, 827-28 (1963).
. See Reid v. Quebec Paper Sales & Transp. Co.,
. Ferrante v. Swedish Am. Lines,
. In Grillea, the trier of fact apparently did not reach the issue.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) :
Since my brothers agree that it is difficult to see any real distinctions between cases where the stevedore lost and those where he won, compare, e. g., Massa v. C. A. Venezuelan Navigacion,
The majority opinion, with commendable candor, recognizes that attempting to read a purposeful design into the distinctions between “operational” negligence and unseaworthiness “engenders sympathy for a trial judge attempting to reconcile them.” Moreover, the majority, with seemingly great reluctance, reverses Judge Cashin, stating: “If anything emerges from these cases * * *, it is that the findings of the trier of fact should be left undisturbed, if the law to be applied ,to the facts is properly understood.” But, rhyme or reason evades us even when we exert all our energies to reconcile the cases defining “operational” negligence vis-a vis unseaworthiness. Here, we had a flawless rope which all morning long, had safely discharged vehicles weighing up to 2,800 pounds. It was then employed, during the same, sustained process of removing cargo and without any significant time lapse, to lift a 3,600 pound car. Is it not harsh to insist that the ship became unseaworthy because the stevedores did not recognize the 800-pound difference and immediately failed to employ a double instead of a single purchase rope? I see nothing but a continuous action discharging vehicles which lasted all morning — which unfortunately injured Radovich — and I am not able to discern any fine nuances or differences between the facts here and Judge Hays’ pointed illustration of one being hit by falling glass. Puddu v. Royal Netherlands S.S. Co.,
In light of the majority’s opinion, I have great difficulty imagining any act of “operational" negligence which cannot by clever advocacy and hair-line distinctions render the shipowner liable for unseaworthiness. And, since the Supreme Court has not spoken finally on this issue, I view the reversal in this case as an unfortunate vehicle for continuing the futile effort to define catchwords which elude grasp.
