Bungе Corporation (“Bunge”) employed Plaintiff, Robert M. Taylor, as a longshoreman. While Taylor was working on a barge owned by Bunge (the “Vessel”), a mule rope broke and hit him in the leg, causing a compound fracture and some permanent loss of function. Taylor received worker’s compensation benefits of $143,-938.34 from Bunge’s worker’s compensation insurer. Taylor then sued the Vessel in negligence under § 33(a) of the Longshoremen’s and Harborworker’s Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 933(a) (the “LHWCA”). Subsequently, Taylor settled with the Vessel for $700,000.00 in addition to the worker’s compensation benefits already paid. Bunge’s insurers are now doing battle over who should bear the burden of Taylor’s worker’s compensation benefits.
In
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Pfeifer,
I. FACTS
A.The Parties and Their Hats
Taylor: an injured longshoreman.
Bunge: Taylor’s employer, and owner of the Vessel. 2
The Vessel: a grain barge owned by Bunge, upon which Taylor was injured.
Insurance Company of North America (“INA”): the carrier of Bunge’s worker’s compensation policy (the “Comp Policy”). 3
B.A Settlement, But at Whose Expense?
Taylor received worker’s compensation payments of $143,938.34 from INA under the Comp Policy. Taylor then brought a negligence action against the Vessel under LHWCA § 33(a), 4 as permitted by LHWCA § 5(b). 5 The Vessel settled Taylor’s claims for $700,000.00 over and above the worker’s compensation benefits already paid. 6 INA now seeks to enforce the employer’s lien against Taylor. The Vessel opposes this claim, arguing that because Bunge, as owner of the Vessel, has agreed to indemnify Taylor against INA’s subrogation claim, INA is actually suing its own insured, Bunge, which is prohibited by Louisiana and federal law.
C.The Stakes
If we determinе that the compensation insurer can enforce the employer’s lien against the settlement fund, INA, as worker’s compensation insurer will be reimbursed for the $143,938.34 in worker’s compensation benefits paid out of the Comp Policy. The Vessel will be liable for a total of $843,928.34. 7 If, on the other hand, the employer’s lien is defeated, INA, as worker’s compensation insurer, will remain liable for the $143,938.34 already paid, and the Vessel will be liable for the remaining $700,000.00. 8
This dispute is, therefore, a dispute between INA and the Vessel 9 over who must bear the burden of the $143,938.34 in worker’s compensation benefits already paid.
D.The Outcome Below
The district court ruled that INA was not suing its own insured, but was instead suing Taylor; Bunge was only involved by virtue of its contractual agreement to in *1326 demnify Taylor. The district court therefore gave effect to both the lien and the settlement agreement and entered judgment against Bunge. Bunge appeals in its capacity as owner of the Vessel.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Statutory Overview
In a negligence regime, an injured person has an uncertain possibility of being fully compensated for loss resulting from his or her injury. The LHWCA, like most worker’s compensation schemes, exchanges this low probability of a high recovery for a certain, but limited, recovery under a strict liability regime.
Peters,
If ... the person entitled to ... compensation determines that some person other than the employer is liable in damages, he need not eleсt whether to receive such compensation or to recover damages against such third person. 11
An important aspect of tort law in admiralty has long been the “action in rem” against the vessel. 12 LHWCA § 5(b) codifies this principle, saying that:
In the event of injury caused by the negligence of a vessel, then such person ... may bring an action against such vessel as a third party in accordance with the provisions of § 933 of this title.
33 U.S.C. § 905(b). In
Jones & Laughlin,
1. Third Party Actions Under § 33(a) and The Problem of Double Recovery — The Automatic Lien
The existence of a third party action under LHWCA § 33(a) creates the possibility of double recovery: an injured longshoreman, who receives compensation benefits from the employer, proves the negligence of a third party, and receives compensation for his full economic loss, receives compensation in excess of actual damages. He or she is compensated twice, once in the negligence action, and once in strict liability, receiving the full measure of damages under each theory.
13
However, “The courts have long recognized a right of subrogation to the extent of payments made.”
When a settlement is involved, the existence of a double recovery is not as obvious.
14
The employer’s lien nevertheless attaches to the settlement fund.
Bloomer v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
(1) the worker retains his litigation expenses and a reasonable attorneys’ fee; (2) the employer receives from the recovery a credit for any compensation liability not yet satisfied and reimbursement for compensation already paid; and (3) the worker retains what is left if anything.
Id.
at 312;
see also Hayden v. Kerr-McGee,
Thus the LHWCA creates a harmonious scheme, guaranteeing both that the exclusive remedy against the employer is the employee’s action for statutory benefits, and that, in the event of a longshoreman’s recovery against a third party, the employer’s lien prevents double recovery.
2. Vessel Negligence v. Exclusive Remedy — § 5(b) and The Principle of Equal Treatment
This case is complicated somewhat by an important and longstanding feature of the law of admiralty. Admiralty involves ships, and, in courts of admiralty, ships are treated as having an existence separate and apart from their owners. In admiralty one may generally sue the vessel owner, but one may always sue the vessel itself. 15 LHWCA 5(b), 33 U.S.C. § 905(b), codifies this common law principle. 16
Vessels and vessel owners frequently employ their own longshoremen. When this is the case, the action against the vessel creates, an alternative route for placing liability on the shoulders of the employer, and thereby seemingly conflicts with the principle of exclusive remedy.
The Supreme Court has conclusively determined, however, that when Congress enacted LHWCA § 5(b) they intended to continue to treat vessels as third parties, even when the vessel is owned by the longshore
*1328
man’s employer, or is the longshoreman’s employer. In
Jones & Laughlin,
the Supreme Court noted that, “Most longshoremen whо load and unload ships are employed by independent stevedores, who have contracted with the vessel owners to provide such services.”
The second sentence of § 5(b) makes it clear that such a separate action is аuthorized against the vessel even when there is no independent stevedore and the longshoreman is employed directly by the vessel owner. That sentence provides: “If such person was employed by the vessel to provide stevedoring services, no such action shall be permitted if the injury was caused by the negligence of persons engaged in providing steve-doring services to the vessel.” If § 5(a) had been intended to bar all negligence suits against owner-employers, there would have been no need to put an additional sentence in § 5(b) barring suits against owner-employers for injuries caused by fellow servants.
Id.
at 530-31,
The legislative history demonstrates that the rationale for this decision was a desire that longshoremen employed by independent contractors and longshoremen employed directly by the vessel be treated equally. The House Report states that “The Committee’s intent is that the same principles should apply in determining liability of the vessel which employs its own longshoremen ... as apply when an independent contractor employs such persons.”
Id.
(quoting H.R.Rep. No. 92-1441, pp. 7-8 (1972)). This principle of similar treatment for independent contractor employed longshoremen and vessel employed longshoremen was reaffirmed by the Supreme Court in
Edmonds v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique,
B. ■ Applying Statutory Principles To The Settlement
The case law deals with double recovery by creating a lien against the settlement fund, and articulates a general principle of equality between independent contractor employed, and vessel employed, longshoremen. These two principles stated in Jones & Laughlin and Peters control the result in this case.
The settlement between Taylor and the Vessel provides that the Vessel will indemnify Taylor against the employer’s lien for benefits paid. Bunge notes that the settlement agreement is virtually identical to the settlement agreement involved in
Allen v. Texaco, Inc.,
*1329 Today, however, we are faced with a settlement of the type addressed in Peters in the context of a third party action against the vessel, where the vessel is also plaintiffs employer, as permitted by § 5(b). The sole question before us is whether Peters covers such actions.
The principle of equality articulated in Jones & Laughlin compels a conclusion that Peters controls. If we disallow the lien in cases such as this one, injured vessel employed longshoremen could easily word settlement agreements to avoid the employer’s lien. This would create a number of inequalities between vessel employed longshoremen and longshoremen employed by independent contractors, as well as between vessels which hire their own longshoremen and those which hire independent contractors: (1) vessels which employ longshoremen would face increased worker’s compensation premiums; 18 (2) liability insurers of such vessels would receive a windfall; and (8) longshоremen employed by such vessels would be able to extract part of the liability insurer’s windfall during settlement negotiations. 19 We therefore conclude that the employer’s automatic lien applies in actions under § 5(b) where a vessel-employer has agreed to indemnify the plaintiff for worker’s compensation benefits paid.
C. Examining Appellant’s Argument
The Vessel argues that allowing the employer’s worker’s compensation carrier to exercise the employer’s lien in actions such as this one, 20 conflicts with the basic principle of insurance law that an insurer may not subrogate against its own insured. 21
The Vessel relies on 16
Couch on Insurance 2d
§ 61:133 at 313 (1983), which states: “No right of subrogation can arise in favor of the insurer against its insured, since by definition subrogation arises only with respect to rights of the insured against third persons to whom the insurer owes no duty.”
Id.; see Wager v. Providence Insurance Co.,
Even were this not true, the facts of this case would still not conflict with the spirit of the black letter rule. Appellant concedes that the purpose of the rule is to prevent a circumstance where “To allow subrogation ... would permit an insurer, in effect, to pass the inсidence of the loss, either partially or totally, from itself to its own insured, and thus avoid the coverage which its insured purchased.”
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Murray Plumbing & Heating Corp.
We must therefore carefully examine the risk against which the Comp Policy insures. A worker’s compensation policy guards against an employer’s statutory liability for workplace injuries to employees. The statutory scheme imposes liability for all workplace injuries with the caveat that the employer, or his worker’s compensation insurer, will be entitled to exercise a lien against any recovery from third parties. The statute does not impose liability upon an employer for the negligence of a third party. As we demonstrated above, a vessel is considered a third party even where the vessel is owned by, or is, the longshoreman’s employer. Thus by enforcing the employer’s lien against the settlement fund, INA is not trying to avoid the risk against which it insured. 22
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons we conclude that the worker’s compensation carrier’s ability to recover under the employer’s lien against the settlement fund is not affected either by the fact that Bunge was both employer and owner of the Vessel, or by the indemnification terms of the settlement. Thе order of the district court is accordingly AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 33 U.S.C. § 905(b).
. New York Marine Managers, Bunge’s excess liability insurers, have stepped into Bunge’s shoes during this litigation to oppose INA’s claim against the settlement fund.
. INA is also Bunge's primary liability carrier. The liability policy has a limit of $500,000.00 which will be exhausted by the settlement under either possible outcome of this case.
. 33 U.S.C. § 933(a).
. 33 U.S.C. § 905(b).
. The settlement agreement included a clause under which Bunge, as owner of the Vessel, agreed to indemnify Taylor for any attempt by the worker’s compensation insurer to exercise employer’s lien for reimbursement of the worker's compensation benefits already paid.
. This $843,938.34 in liability would then be divided as follows. INA, as primary liability insurer of the Vessel would be liable up to the $500,000.00 limit of the liability policy. Bunge’s excess insurers would be liable for the remainder of $343,938.34.
. This $700,000.00 in liability would then be divided as follows. INA, as primary liability insurer of the Vessel would be liable up to the $500,000.00 limit of the policy. Bunge’s excess insurers would pay the remaining $200,000.00.
. Financial responsibility for Vessel negligence lies with Bunge. Since, under either proffered interpretation of the LHWCA, the settlement exceeds the limit of Bunge's primary liability policy, carried by INA. Bunge’s excess insurers will, therefore, either bear or escape the burden of the disputed sum. Consequently, Bunge’s excess insurers are prosecuting this apрeal in Bunge’s name. See note 2.
. 33 U.S.C. § 905(a) provides:
The liability of an employer prescribed in ... this title shall be exclusive and in place of all other liability of such employer to the employee. ... In such action the defendant may not plead as a defense that the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow servant, or that the employee assumed the risk of his employment, or that the injury was due to the contributory negligence of the employee.
. 33 U.S.C. § 933(a). If, however, the employee does not exercise his right to sue third parties within six months, his rights are assigned to his employer, who may seek indemnification for compensation benefits paid. The employer has ninety days to exercise his right to sue or that right reverts to the employee. 33 U.S.C. § 933(b).
. See note 15.
. When an employee receives a formal award of compensation, § 933(e) deals with this problem by govеrning the distribution of any damage judgment against third parties. However, as we said in
Allen v. Texaco,
. If a third party could settle around the employer, he or she could, by settling, force the employer to bear part of the third party’s expected liability. A longshoreman, aware of this possibility would be able to extract some of this benefit during settlement negotiations. The longshoreman might not receive a full double recovery, but would thereby receive a recovery in excess of the settlement value of his or her claim.
. This is known as an "action in rem” against the vessel.
See The Resolute,
. Prior to the 1972 Amendments to the LHWCA, an employee could bring an action against the vessel for unseaworthiness, and recover full damages on a strict liability basis. Under
Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
In 1972, Congress added § 905(b) tо the statute. This amendment superseded the Sieracki-Ryan line of cases, abolished the absolute duty of seaworthiness, and replaced it with a duty of due care. 33 U.S.C. § 905(b). The Supreme Court has held, however, that
Reed
survives the amendments, and an injured longshoreman may still bring an action against a vessel owned by his or her employer.
Jones & Laughlin,
.
Jones & Laughlin,
held that the employer’s lien exists in cases which go to trial. 462 U.S. at
*1329
530 n. 5,
.This is evident from the facts of
Allen,
. See note 17.
. Here, the longshoreman’s employer owns the vessel, and the vessel has agreed to indemnify the injured longshoreman for the employer’s lien.
.
Boston Insurance Co.
v.
Pendarvis,
. That a separate risk is involved is supported by the example of
Allen v. Texaco,
Furthermore, we noted earlier that blocking the lien creates the opportunity of double recovery by the longshoreman. It would be ludicrous to require the worker's compensation insurer to insure against a financial risk that was actually greater than the plaintiffs actual damages, or the settlement value of such a claim.
