Appellee, Raymond Leger, was injured while working aboard a barge owned by appellant Dresser Offshore Services, Inc. [“Dresser”]. At the time of the accident, Leger was employed by Drilling Well Control, Inc. [“DWC”], a service company which specialized in the control of high pressure oil wells. Dresser was using the barge in a workover operation on an offshore oil well owned by Continental Oil Company [“Continental”]. DWC was called to the well site by Continental to correct technical difficulties which Continental and Dresser were encountering in the workover operation. On March 21, 1969, Leger and two other DWC employees arrived by workboat at the barge. They brought with them a pipe and bottle rack to be used in the workover operation. After the pipe and bottle rack were unloaded from the workboat, Leger first.asked John Bullard, the senior Continental representative aboard the vessel, for the use of the barge’s crane in helping to unload the pipe from the bottle rack. Bullard refused, indicating that the crane was too busy at that time. Leger then asked Hilliard Guidry, a Dresser employee, for the use of the crane. Guidry also refused. Leger then began to unload the pipe by hand, and he sustained the injury which is the subject of this suit.
Leger filed suit against his employer, DWC, under the Jones Act and general maritime law and against Continental and Dresser under general maritime law. On the morning of the trial Leger settled his claims against DWC and Continental for a total of $182,331.05. The Travelers Insurance Company, which provided liability insurance for DWC and Continental, settled Leger’s claim against DWC for $82,331.05 and Leger’s claim against Continental for $100,000.00. Dresser’s only issue on appeal is the effect of this settlement on the amount Leger was entitled to recover from Dresser. 1
Leger’s case against Dresser was tried twice. At the first trial, the jury found Leger’s damages to be $284,090.00. The trial court and Dresser’s counsel then learned that the release and indemnity agreement between Leger and Travelers Insurance Company provided that Travelers was to receive one-half of any funds actually collected by Leger from Dresser, whether the funds were collected as a result of judgment or settlement. The trial court granted Dresser’s motion for a new trial on the ground that the jury should have been informed that DWC and Continental were originally defendants, that Leger had settled his claims against them, and that Travelers was to receive one-half of all sums received by Leger from Dresser. The court considered it necessary that the jury be aware of the continuing interest in the law suit of the various witnesses from DWC and Continental.
The issue at the new trial was limited to liability, since the additional information to *1248 be submitted to the jury would have no bearing on the amount of damages. Thus, Leger's damages remained fixed at $284,-090.00. At the new trial the jury found the negligence of the parties as follows: Dresser — 45%; Continental — 20%; DWC — 0%; and Leger — 35% contributory negligence. Dresser filed a motion to alter the judgment, requesting that the court afford Dresser a credit against the judgment for the full dollar amount of the settlement ($182,331.05) between Leger, DWC, and Continental. The motion was denied, and the court, in accord with rules hereafter discussed, entered judgment against Dresser for $127,840.00. That amount reflects the total damages of $284,090.00 reduced by $99,430.17 representing the 35% contributory negligence of the plaintiff and by $56,-817.24 representing the 20% negligence attributed to Continental. No reduction in the judgment was made for DWC’s settlement since DWC was found not to be negligent. To put it another way, Dresser was charged by the judgment to pay only the portion of the total damages proportionate to its percentage of negligence (45% of $284,090.00).
The rules employed by Judge Hunter to determine the amount of credit against the judgment were derived from the following principles:
(1) Where the concurrent fault of two or more persons combine to produce injury, the parties at fault are joint tortfeasors and, as such, are liable to the injured plaintiff. 2
(2) The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have liberalized joinder 3 and impleader rules in maritime claims to facilitate the presence of all interested parties in one action. All potential joint tortfeasors may be made third party defendants, pursuant to Rule 14(c). Application of the Rule in this manner is the only possible interpretation of it consistent with its purpose and intent.
(3) Where there are two or more defendants (alleged joint tortfeasors), and the plaintiff settles with and grants a release as to one or more of them, reserving his rights against the remaining, the settling defendants are relieved of any further liability to the plaintiff. 4
(4) When two or more parties have contributed by their fault to cause injury to another, the liability for such damage is to be allocated among the parties proportionately to the comparative degree of their fault. 5
(5) A tortfeasor seeking to assert a reduction by the degree of fault of alleged joint tortfeasors must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the settling defendant was, in fact, at fault. 6
(6) A settling party’s negligence is considered only when he has been made a party to the suit. In such a case, the judgment awarded to the claimant against the nonsettling defendant is credited with the dollar amount represented by the proportion of negligence, if any, attributed to the settling parties.
Leger
v.
Drilling Well Control, Inc.,
Judge Hunter’s able opinion is in full accord with recent Supreme Court decisions in this area. The Supreme Court clarified in
Cooper Stevedoring Co. v. Kopke,
Intervening cases justify our departure from prior case law in this area.
See Billiot
v.
Stewart Seacraft Inc.,
*1250
In this case, Leger did not receive a double recovery for his injuries. In accord with its ground rules, the trial court rendered judgment against Dresser for $127,-840.00, representing Dresser’s percentage of negligence (45%) multiplied by Leger’s damages as found by the jury ($284,090.00).
8
Although Leger nominally received $310,-171.05 by virtue of the settlement and the judgment, we do not consider this a double recovery. Leger merely obtained a favorable settlement. By releasing DWC and Continental in exchange for $182,331.05, Leger “sold” or relinquished any claims which he had against them.
See Rose v. Associated Anesthesiologists,
The encouragement of settlements is the final factor which must be considered in this case. Whether the plaintiff or any of the defendants are ultimately found to have
*1251
made a favorable settlement, we will “respect the aleatory nature of the settlement process . . .
Doyle v. United States,
On cross appeal Leger contends that since Dresser had relinquished by contract its right to contribution from Continental, Leger’s recovery against Dresser should not have been reduced by the 20% negligence attributed to Continental. In view of the previously stated considerations, this argument is without merit. A distinction which would allow against Dresser a recovery greater than Dresser’s 45% negligence would run counter to the considerations of fairness, deterrence, and the avoidance of double recovery. While a contract between Dresser and Continental may prevent contribution between them, Leger may not use it to prevent a credit against the judgment in the amount of the percentage of negligence attributed to Continental.
For all of these reasons, we approve Judge Hunter’s scholarly approach and adopt his rules as our own.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Dresser’s other assignment of error was withdrawn at oral argument.
.
See Cooper Stevedoring Co. v. Kopke,
. We note, although we do not decide, that potential joint tortfeasors who have settled may be joined under Rule 19 in order to assess pro rata damages.
.
See Luke v. Signal Oil & Gas Co.,
.
See Harrison v. Flota Mercante Grancolombiana, S.A.,
. This follows as a natural corollary to rule six.
. It should be noted that this case does not involve those decisions dealing with the question of whether a vessel sued pursuant to section 905(b) of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, [LHWCA] 33 U.S.C. §§ 901, et seq., may reduce its liability to an injured longshoreman by the proportion of negligence attributable to the stevedoring company employing the longshoreman.
See, e. g., Samuels v. Empresa Lineas Maritimas Argentinas,
Consequently, we disagree with the view of the Third Circuit in
Dobbins
v.
Crain Bros., Inc.,
. The $127,840.00 figure may also be computed by subtracting the proportional negligence of Leger (35%), DWC (0%) and Continental (20%) from $284,090.00. The remainder is $127,840.00 attributable to Dresser.
. Indeed, in
Fruge
v.
Damson Drilling Co.,
. Implicit for Dresser’s argument that it should receive a dollar for dollar credit for amounts Leger received in settlement is that dollars or amounts received in pre-trial settlement are worth as much as dollars or amounts obtained through the trial process. Thus, Dresser argues that, if Leger obtains through settlement and trial a total of $310,171.05 he gains double compensation to the extent that the figure exceeds the $284,090.00 total damages found by the jury. We reject Dresser’s argument, since settlement dollars cannot be equated with dollars obtained in the trial process. Any amounts received in settlement are discounted both by plaintiff and defendant to take into account the risks and rewards of going to trial. Settlement dollars may be worth more or less than judgment dollars, depending on which party received the more favorable settlement.
It is clear that the condition vel non of double recovery depends upon whether one totals the absolute dollar figures of recovery and matches the total against the total damages or whether one totals the percentages of fault and sees that the total does not exceed 100%. Considering the competing principles involved, we choose the latter.
. The Doyle case contains an excellent discussion of the possible ways of dealing with this problem.
