Citizеns Casualty Company, a marine insurer, appeals from the District Court’s judgment awarding damages to Tomas Aguirre, Jr., Apolinar Compean, and Wilhelm Seafoods, Inc., for the grounding of their shrimper
O/S Miss Esmeralda.
The insurer argues that the owners’ operation of the
Miss Esmeralda
with a two-man crew made the vessel unseaworthy at the time of the accident. Consequently, Citizens contends, the trial court erred in failing to hold that the owners’ breach of the express warranty of continuing seaworthiness in their AHAB marine hull insurance policy susрended coverage and relieved the insurer of liability for damages, regard
On April 6, 1968, the Miss Esmeralda sailed from Port Isabel, Texas, to trawl for shrimp in the Gulf of Mexico. Whеn she weighed anchor, the shrimper was manned by two men, Captain Reyes and Atanacio (“Tanis”) Villaneuva. Although the vessel usually carried a three-man crew, it had been manned by two men on three previous trips in 1968. At least оne of the owners, Compean, knew that the Miss Esmeralda would be two-handed during the April voyage; indeed, he arranged for Tanis to accompany Reyes.
For two days the Miss Esmeralda fished approximately ten miles off the coast near Port Mansfield, Tеxas. On the morning of April 8, Reyes decided to trawl closer to shore. The vessel began operating on a south southeast-north northwest course parallel to the coast and one to one-and-one-half milеs offshore. About 11 a. m. a thick fog blanketed the area where the Miss Esmeralda was trawling. After a test with a try net produced no signs of shrimp, Reyes decided to quit fishing. He ordered Tanis to raise the boards and nets, so that they could put into Pоrt Mansfield. Reyes changed course from south southeast to southeast, away from the beach. He engaged the automatic pilot and left the wheelhouse to help Tanis raise the boards.
Soon after he began working with Tanis, Reyes noticed that the trawls on the starboard side of the vessel were not coming out of the water as rapidly as those on the port. The starboard boards, in the water two or three minutes longer than the port, acted as a rudder causing the boat to veer to the southwest and toward the shore. Whether Reyes was cognizant of this change in course is disputed, but he remained at the stern to assist Tanis “because I felt сonfident that we were some distance from the shore at the time.” The captain’s confidence was short-lived; for two or three minutes after the vessel headed southwest, she ran aground a short distance from the bеach.
Subsequently arrangements were made to salvage the
Miss Esmeralda.
After extensive repairs she returned to shrimping. The parties do not dispute the cost of the repairs or the sue and labor expense. The insurer denies liability solely on the basis of its policy, which contains аn express warranty of seaworthiness. According to the policy, it is “warranted that at the inception of this policy the vessel shall be in a seaworthy condition and, thereafter, during the currency of this policy, the аssured shall exercise due diligence to keep the vessel seaworthy, and in all respects fit, tight, and properly manned, equipped and supplied.” The insurer contends that operation of the
Miss Esmeralda
with two, rather than thrеe, men rendered her unseaworthy. Thus, by virtue of the owners’ breach of the express warranty, coverage under the policy was suspended or avoided during the
Miss Esmeralda’s
ill-fated voyage. At least, the insurer argues, coveragе was suspended during those periods between April 6 and April 8 when the shrimper was engaged in operations requiring a three-man crew. If breach of the express warranty automatically suspended coverage undеr the policy, the question whether unseaworthiness proximately caused or contributed to the grounding becomes irrelevant. Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Insurance Co., 5 Cir. 1969,
Unseaworthiness is a condition. How that condition arose, whether by negligence or otherwise, is irrelevant to the owner’s liability for personal injury or damage resulting from it. Usner v. Luckenbach Overseas Corp., 1971,
Determining the seaworthiness of a vessel at a particular moment in time is the responsibility of thе trier of fact. Gulfstream Cargo, Ltd. v. Reliance Insurance Co.,
supra,
Here the pertinent sequence of events begins with the failure of the starboard boards to leave the water as quickly as the port trawls. Acting as a rudder, the starboard boards impelled the
Miss Esmeralda
to veer toward the beach. The District Judge found that Reyes was cognizant of the shrimper’s change in course prior to her grounding. Therefore, he concluded, Rеyes’ negligence was the proximate cause of the grounding. According to the District Judge, the vessel was seaworthy, since raising the boards and nets is ordinarily a job for one man. We cannot accept this rationale for determining that the insurer was liable under its policy. First, we find nothing in the record to substantiate the statement that Reyes knew of the change in course before the accident. Indeed, the only reasonable impliсation derivable from his testimony is that the captain perceived nothing unusual until he felt a “bump”. Immediately he and Tanis ran to the wheelhouse and attempted to move the boat off the beach. Their remedial аction was too late, for “[i]t was already too far ashore.” At the time the
Miss Esmeralda
was five yards offshore, but Reyes could see only the edge of the beach. Thus neither he nor Tanis had
Second, irrespective of Reyes’ purported negligence, the record conclusively discloses that the
Miss Esmeralda
was unseaworthy at the time she ran aground. Although raising the boards may ordinarily be a one-man operation, it certainly became a two-man task under the circumstances
sub judice.
When the starboard and port boards rose unevenly, Reyes encountered a dilemma. If he returned to the wheelhouse, he risked injury to Tanis or damage to the nets or the vessel.
See, e. g.,
June T, Inc. v. King,
supra,
When thе owners attempt to shore up the District Court’s finding of seaworthiness by distinguishing other two-handed shrimper crew cases, they navigate dire straits. Ostensibly the owners are contending that in spite of the express warranty, coveragе under the policy may be suspended or avoided only when unseaworthiness is a proximate cause of personal injury aboard the vessel. Their assertion contradicts the language of
Tropical Marine Products, Inc., supra,
and
Spot Pack, Inc., supra.
In any event, since Reyes was not endowed with the ability to bilócate, unseaworthiness did exist. Moreover, it is clear that this unseaworthiness and the grounding were causally connected.
June T, Inc., supra,
and Sams v. Haines, S.D.Ga.1969,
Finally we conclude that Wilburn Boat Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co.,
The District Court’s judgment is Reversed.
