Adams v. Liberty Maritime Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 4, 2020
Docket2:16-cv-05352
StatusUnknown

This text of Adams v. Liberty Maritime Corporation (Adams v. Liberty Maritime Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Liberty Maritime Corporation, (E.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------X FRANCIS ADAMS,

Plaintiff,

MEMORANDUM & ORDER,

No. 16-CV-5352 (GRB) -against-

LIBERTY MARITIME CORPORATION, FUTURE CARE, INC., and CAPTAIN JOHN JOSEPH MCAULIFFE,

Defendants. ---------------------------------------------------------X GARY R. BROWN, United States District Judge. This matter is before the Court following a bench trial resulting from the consent of the parties to the undersigned, then serving as a magistrate judge, for all purposes. Subsequently, the undersigned was confirmed as a United States District Judge. However, in the interests of judicial economy, the undersigned retained jurisdiction over this matter pending its resolution. For the reasons discussed herein, the Clerk of the Court will be directed to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff to the extent described below.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff Francis Adams (“Adams”) filed this suit against his former employer, defendant Liberty Maritime Corporation (“Liberty”), his former supervisor, defendant Captain John McAuliffe, and Liberty’s telemedicine contractor, Future Care, Inc. (“Future Care”), for injuries that allegedly resulted from events that occurred in October 2013 upon Liberty’s vessel, the Liberty Eagle. Plaintiff’s claims against Future Care were dismissed at summary judgment, as were Plaintiff’s negligence per se claims and Plaintiff’s claim for maintenance and cure for all amounts paid by third parties. See Docket Entry (“DE”) 81. This left Plaintiff’s claims for unseaworthiness against defendant Liberty, for maintenance and cure against defendant Liberty, and for negligence under the Jones Act against both remaining defendants. A bench trial was held before the undersigned over four days in December 2019. This opinion follows.

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

After careful evaluation of the testimony presented at trial, assessment of the credibility of the witnesses and review of the exhibits admitted into the record, I find the evidence establishes the following facts:

In the fall of 2013, the Liberty Eagle, a bulk carrier vessel operated by defendant Liberty, picked up its crew, including Adams and defendant Captain John McAuliffe. Trial at 27, 31, 251. After picking up the crew, the vessel sailed to Houston, Texas and loaded a humanitarian cargo of sorghum destined for the Port of Sudan. Id. at 26-27; Mallory Deposition at 16; Otumfo Deposition at 9.

At that time, Adams was a 59-year-old able-bodied (“AB”) seaman, a level above ordinary seaman. Trial at 22, 121. However, for this voyage (as on previous voyages), Adams took on the additional role of bosun (or “boatswain”), a position that entails supervisory responsibilities over the other ABs in the deck department, including cargo discharge as well as maintenance and repair of equipment.1 Id. at 24; Mallory Deposition at 12; Otumfo Deposition at 8-9, 45. As bosun, Adams reported to the chief mate, Paul Mallory. Trial at 252. At this point, Adams was known to have underlying conditions of high blood pressure and diabetes. Id. at 411; Dr. Duarte Deposition at 27. Nevertheless, after physical examinations of Adams taken by his own doctor as well as the Coast Guard, his union, and Liberty itself, Adams was ultimately deemed fit for duty. Trial at 27- 29; Plaintiff’s Exhibits 6, 31.

After picking up crew and provisions, the Liberty Eagle departed from Texas in September and began its voyage to Sudan. Trial at 27; Otumfo Deposition at 9. Around the time that the

1 A bosun is also the level above AB seaman, and is thus separately a rating and (as here) a job that is taken by the lead AB. Trial at 121, 253. Liberty Eagle was approaching the Port of Sudan, near the beginning of October, Adams began to experience swelling and pain in his legs and feet. Trial at 41, 43, 187, 253; Otumfo Deposition at 11-12, 29, 51; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2. On October 3rd, Adams reported this condition to the chief mate and the third mate medical officer, who then reported the issue to the captain. Trial at 43-45. Adams spoke with Captain McAuliffe shortly thereafter, at which time the captain took photographs of Adams’s feet and legs. Id. at 47-49, 141, 258. The captain then emailed Future Care, Liberty’s telemedicine services provider, with details of Adams’s complaints, his vital signs—including high blood pressure and a high pulse—and the pictures of his legs, with the note that the swelling “started two days ago.”2 Id. at 50, 141-43, 254, 259, 317; Dr. Bourgeois Deposition at 53-54; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2.

Future Care then relayed this information to Dr. Brian Bourgeois, a physician engaged by Future Care to provide medical advice to Future Care’s clients.3 Dr. Bourgeois Deposition at 15, 18. Dr. Bourgeois then responded—in a message also conveyed via Future Care—diagnosing Adams with venous stasis disease, a chronic vein disease “not specifically treatable with medication.” Trial at 259, 264; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2. Dr. Bourgeois further advised that Adams should soak his feet with Epsom salt, but that “[n]o other treatment is indicated” and that Adams could continue to work. Trial at 264; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2. However, Dr. Bourgeois also advised the captain to confirm that Adams had no difficulty breathing when sleeping or climbing stairs, and to check Adams’s breathing “for any wheezing or rough crackles.” Trial at 261, 296; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2. Dr. Bourgeois failed to explain the purpose of this additional inquiry.

Dr. Bourgeois ultimately testified at his deposition that he had raised these secondary questions about Adams’s breathing because Adams’s symptoms had also presented “in [his] mind” a “differential diagnosis”4 of congestive heart failure. Dr. Bourgeois Deposition at 59-60. Dr.

2 Liberty had contracted with Future Care to provide medical support services for its ships, including the Liberty Eagle. Trial at 346-47. While the parties dispute the precise nature of these services—addressed in further detail below—it is nevertheless evident that Future Care provided some form of telemedicine services to Liberty’s vessels, including the Liberty Eagle. Id. at 346. 3 Dr. Bourgeois was, in fact, the lead physician with Future Care’s “international shipboard medical call line.” Dr. Bourgeois Deposition at 14. 4 As explained by Defendants’ medical expert, a differential diagnosis demonstrates that a doctor is “trying to decide . . . what is the most likely diagnosis” among multiple possible diagnoses that could explain the problems presented. Trial at 397. Bourgeois explained that such breathing issues, in conjunction with the reported swelling and Adams’s preexisting hypertension (i.e., high blood pressure) and diabetes, would be “the kind of classic presentation symptoms of someone with congestive heart failure.” Id. at 23-24. Indeed, in his testimony, he conceded that swelling caused by venous stasis disease—the only diagnosis he presented to the Captain—“take[s] a fairly long time to develop” and doesn’t occur overnight. Id. at 25. The fact that Adams’s swelling began only two days prior, then, would seem to justify more serious consideration of the differential diagnosis, especially one as consequential as congestive heart failure. However, Dr. Bourgeois failed to inform anyone on the Liberty Eagle of his differential diagnosis, relying instead on examination by maritime officers with little to no medical training to gather and report additional data that would bear on his theory, but without advising anyone as to the purpose of this endeavor. Trial at 334-36; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2.

Captain McAuliffe showed Adams the response from Dr.

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Adams v. Liberty Maritime Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-liberty-maritime-corporation-nyed-2020.