While executing a routine turning maneuver in the Mississippi, the JALAVIHAR was grounded, destroying her steering mechanism. The owner of the JALAVIHAR, Seindia Steam Navigation Company, Ltd., declared a general average event and filed the present claim against the cargo owners, Usinas Siderugieas de Minas Geras, SA and Usiminas Importacao e Exportaeao, SA (hereinafter referred to collectively as Usiminas), for contribution. The district court found that a general average event occurred and found for Seindia. Usiminas brings this appeal claiming that this judgment was in error. We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I.
On March 7, 1994, the JALAVIHAR was docked at the Electro-Coal facility on the east bank Mississippi River, bow into the current and starboard side against the dock. After loading some coal owned by Usiminas, she was to depart the Electro-Coal facility, turn, and proceed to a nearby anchorage to await Usiminas’ instructions regarding her next loading port. At the time that the JALAVIHAR was ready to depart the Electro-Coal facility, there was a group of barges moored on the west bank slightly downstream of the Electro-Coal facility. Another ship was moored slightly downstream on the east bank which had a crane barge alongside it. The pilot testified that because of this second ship, the turn would have to occur some distance from the east bank or else the JALAVIHAR would be pushed downstream into the second ship. At the time the pilot commenced the maneuver, visibility was limited and had been reduced to zero by the time the JALAVIHAR was turning.
The turn was to be executed with the assistance of two tugs, the SANDRA KAY and the BILLY SLATTEN. The pilot testified that he told the tugs that initially the SANDRA KAY would be attached by a line to JALAVIHAR’s port bow and would be
As visibility was limited and getting worse, the master posted the chief officer as lookout on the JALAVIHAR’s bow and put the duty officer in charge of monitoring the radar. The chief officer was also in charge of making sure the crewmembers on the bow unfastened the lines which attached the JALAVIHAR to the dock and to the SANDRA KAY. The duty officer was in charge of carrying out engine orders given by the pilot and entering them in the ship’s log. The master testified that he also was monitoring the radar, as well as walking around with the pilot.
All went as planned until the JALAVIHAR began to move away from the dock. At that time, the pilot radioed the BILLY SLAT-TEN and asked the tug whether there were any lines on the bow. The captain of the BILLY SLATTEN radioed back that he didn’t know because he was stand by on the port stern. The pilot radioed back that he should have been stand by on the starboard bow and that he should move there immediately. The BILLY SLATTEN complied but in the time it took to move to the starboard bow, the JALAVIHAR had drifted further than anticipated toward the west bank and the barges.
Despite the unexpected drift, the JALAVIHAR continued its maneuver as planned. The pilot testified that he was aware of the location of the barges on the west bank and that he knew that the turn was going to be close but that at all times he thought the JALAVIHAR would clear the barges. The JALAVIHAR did in fact contact the barges and shortly thereafter ran aground, destroying her steering mechanism and necessitating the unloading of the cargo.
Seindia, the owner of the JALAVIHAR declared the grounding a general average event, and demanded contribution from Usiminas. Usiminas refused, and Seindia instituted the present suit. The district court found that the cause of the accident was a miscommunication between the pilot of the JALAVIHAR and the captain of the BILLY SLATTEN. The district court also found that the voyage of the JALAVIHAR had commenced at the time it left the dock and therefore any subsequent events did not render it unseaworthy and that Seindia exercised due diligence to render the JALAVIHAR seaworthy before beginning its voyage. The district court also rejected Usiminas’ assertion that the accident was caused by Scindia’s failure to require the master to discuss the maneuver with the pilot, post an adequate lookout, monitor the radar sufficiently, and maintain the anchor in a condition of readiness.
II.
The principle of general average provides that losses for the common benefit of participants in a maritime venture be shared ratably by all who participate in the venture.
Usiminas challenges the district court’s holding on three grounds. First, Usiminas claims that the district court applied the wrong burden of proof structure and instead it should have applied the rule of The Pennsylvania,
A.
Under the rule of The Pennsylvania, a vessel in violation of a statute bears the burden of showing not only that the violation did not cause the damage, it could not have. We decline to apply the rule of The Pennsylvania in this ease, where COGSA clearly provides the burden of proof structure.
The Pennsylvania provides a burden of proof structure for causation in maritime incidents. In California & Hawaiian Sugar Co. v. Columbia S.S. Co., Inc.,
B.
The district court found that Scindia had established that the accident was caused by navigational or managemental error, an excepted cause under COGSA, which therefore created a general average event. The district court then turned to Usiminas’ argument that the accident was also caused by the unseaworthiness of the JALAVIHAR. Because a vessel owner’s duty to provide a seaworthy vessel only applies prior to the commencement of the voyage, the district court addressed the question of whether the voyage had begun. The district court found
Usiminas asserts that the district court erred in finding that Scindia had proven navigational or managemental error. Usiminas claims that the voyage had not commenced and that navigational or manage-mental errors that occur before the commencement are best viewed as a failure of the carrier to exercise due diligence. Under this view, COGSA would only except navigational or managemental errors that occur after the voyage has commenced.
We see no reason to restrict the navigational error exception to errors occurring after the commencement of a voyage. We therefore agree with Scindia that COGSA excepts navigational errors regardless of whether they occur before or after a voyage commences and do not reach the question of whether a voyage had commenced in this case. Usiminas’ argument against this proposition relies upon language from this court’s opinion in Louis Dreyfus Corp. v. 27, 946 Long Tons of Corn,
The Louis Dreyfus court rejected this argument, citing International Navigation Co. v. Farr & Bailey Mfg. Co.,
We interpret Louis Dreyfus to stand for the proposition that a failure of the ship owner and its employees to detect a manufacturing flaw, if it occurs before the commencement of a voyage, is best viewed as a failure to exercise due diligence, and not an error in management. There is a fine line between actions that constitute errors in management and inaction that constitutes a lack of due diligence and the Louis Dreyfus court found that the timing of the engineer’s action best qualified it as a lack of due diligence.
Scindia claims that this court should look to the prior case of Mississippi Shipping Co. v. Zander,
Prior to its discussion of the commencement of the voyage, the Mississippi Shipping court noted that both parties had agreed that the hole was caused by negligence in the navigation of the vessel. The parties had both conceded that, “unlike the former days of the Harter Act when its Section 3 error in management exception was confined to events occurring after the commencement of the voyage, COGSA’s Section 4(2)(a) is now unconditional both as to due diligence and point in time.” Id. at 348 (citations omitted)(citing Isbrandtsen Co. v. Federal Insurance Co.,
Mississippi Shipping's, consideration of the issues presented here is dicta, however, we find its reasoning persuasive and adopt its approach and resolution to the present issue. Usiminas seeks to have this court declare that any navigational error that occurs prior to the commencement of a voyage results from a lack of due diligence to make a ship seaworthy. COGSA’s exception for navigational or managemental error, however, is not restricted to navigational errors occurring after the commencement of a voyage. The plain language of the statute excepts the carrier for liability from damage caused by “[a]ct, neglect, or default of the master, mariner, pilot, or the servants of the carrier in the navigation or in the management of the ship.” 46 U.S.C. § 1304(2)(a).
The Mississippi Shipping court used the example of immediate damage from navigational error to contrast the problem that arises when a vessel has a latent defect prior to the commencement of a voyage. That court was faced with the latter question, which it addressed by finding that the voyage had commenced at the time the defect was incurred and therefore the failure to detect and repair the defect could not be attributed to a lack of due diligence. The court in Louis Dreyfus directly faced the issue of whether a failure to detect a latent defect is an error in management or a failure to exercise due diligence. The Louis Dreyfus court found that failure to detect a latent defect is best characterized as a lack of due diligence. This is not the situation we are faced with here. Damage from the navigational error was immediate and no time for discovery lapsed. Therefore, the damage to the vessel was not caused by a failure to detect the damage but by the navigational error itself.
The only court to have ruled on the issue of whether navigational error prior to the commencement of a voyage is excepted error was the court in Isbrandtsen Co. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
We agree with Isbrandtsen and Mississippi Shipping that navigational error that occurs prior to the commencement of a voyage is excepted under 46 U.S.C. § 1304(2)(a). Any error by the pilot, therefore, was properly construed by the district court as navigational error. This court has noted that responsibilities of a pilot are broad and encompass, “the command and navigation of the ship.” Avondale Ind. v. International Marine Carriers,
C.
Once the carrier has established navigational or managemental error as a cause of the accident, the burden shifts to the cargo owner to prove that a concurrent cause of the accident was an unseaworthy condition. The carrier will then be afforded an opportunity to show that it exercised due diligence in preparing the vessel for its voyage. In this case, the district court found that the ship was seaworthy when it left the dock and that even if there was an unseaworthy condition, it was not a concurrent cause of the grounding and Scindia exercised due diligence in preparing the ship for its journey. Therefore, Usiminas may only prevail on appeal by proving that the district court erred in finding that Scindia exercised due diligence to make the JALAVIHAR seaworthy and that an unseaworthy condition was a concurrent cause of the grounding.
The district court determined that no unseaworthy conditions existed because the voyage had commenced, however, it also found that none of the conditions asserted by Usiminas as evidence of unseaworthiness were causally related to the grounding. Because we uphold the district court’s finding that the alleged unseaworthy conditions did not contribute to the grounding, we decline to reach the issue of whether the voyage had commenced. Usiminas claims that the JALAVIHAR was unseaworthy in three respects: 1) the posted lookout had duties in addition to lookout and therefore was not a competent lookout; 2) there was not a dedicated radar monitor; and 3) Scindia company policy does not require the master to discuss routine turning maneuvers with the pilot.
Usiminas initially argued that the master’s failure to discuss the maneuver with the pilot was an unseaworthy condition which caused the grounding. Scindia, however, correctly states that in Avondale Ind. v. International Marine Carriers,
The district court found that in the time it took the BILLY SLATTEN to shift its position, the JALAVIHAR drifted too far towards the west bank to facilitate the turn and therefore the accident was caused by a miscommunieation between the pilot and the BILLY SLATTEN. Usiminas claims that
Usiminas has also not shown that the district court erred in finding that the lack of a dedicated lookout and radar monitor were not concurrent causes of the accident. The district court found that at all times the pilot was aware of the position of the barges and that he thought the turn was going to be successful. His opinion was seconded by the captain of the BILLY SLATTEN. Radar and visual observation would have given him no more useful information than he already had. As we uphold the district court’s findings that none of the conditions that allegedly rendered the JALAVIHAR unseaworthy were concurrent causes of the grounding, we need not address Usiminas’ contention that the district court erred in finding that Scindia exercised due diligence in preparing the JALAVIHAR for her voyage.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we find that the district court correctly found that the damage to the JALAVIHAR was caused by an excepted COGSA error. Seindia may therefore recover in general average pursuant to the New Jason clause in its contract with Usiminas. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties have stipulated that if the accident is declared a general average event, Usiminas will pay $185,659.67 plus costs and interest, and if Usiminas prevails, Seindia will pay $208,754 plus costs and interest.
. The JALAVIHAR was chartered by Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao S.A. Docenave and subchartered to Usiminas. The "New Jason Clause” was included in the charter agreement between Docenave and Scindia and incorporated into the sub-charter between Docenave and Usiminas. The clause reads in part:
In the event of accident, danger, damage or disaster before or after commencement of the voyage, resulting from any cause whatsoever whether due to negligence or not, for which or for the consequence of which, the Owner is not responsible by statute, contract, or otherwise, the goods, shippers, consignees or owners of the goods shall contribute with the carrier in general average to the payment of any sacrifices, losses or expenses of a general average nature that may be made or incurred in respect of the goods.
. Similarly, the other case relied upon by Usiminas for the proposition that error that occurs before the commencement of a voyage is unexcepted error considered an error in management, not an error in navigation. See American Mail Line Ltd. v. United States,
. On appeal, Usiminas has dropped its contention that the JALAVIHAR was unseaworthy because her anchor was not ready to be dropped. The district court found that the order to drop anchor occurred after the ship had grounded and Usiminas has not challenged this factual finding.
