Allen v. Union Barge Line Corporation

239 F. Supp. 1004, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7560
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1965
Docket739
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 239 F. Supp. 1004 (Allen v. Union Barge Line Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Union Barge Line Corporation, 239 F. Supp. 1004, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7560 (E.D. La. 1965).

Opinion

WEST, District Judge.

Libelant, Walter M. Allen, was employed by Dravo Corporation in a capacity which he described as a “handy man,” but which actually appears to be that of a shipfitter. Dravo is a corporation engaged in the business of performing maintenance work, repair work, dry-docking, etc. of seagoing and other vessels. On March 23, 1963, while libelant was working aboard the M/V MARINER, a towboat owned and operated by respondent, Union Barge Line Corporation, he was injured when a scaffold upon which he was working collapsed. He brings this libel against the Union Barge Line Corporation, as the owner of the M/V MARINER, and also against the M/V MARINER in rem, alleging that his injuries were caused by the negligence of Union and by the unseaworthiness of the vessel, M/V MARINER. He also libels Aetna Casualty and Surety Company as the liability insurer of Union, and as the liability insurer of the directors, supervisors, stockholders, agents, employees, and representatives of Dravo Corporation, whom he contends were individually guilty of negligence proximately causing his injuries. Union answered admitting ownership of the MARINER; denying negligence; denying that the MARINER was In any way unseaworthy; and alleging that the accident was caused entirely by the fault and negligence of libelant. Aetna answered admitting its insurance coverage of both Union and Dravo; denying negligence on the part of Union; denying that the MARINER was unseaworthy; and alleging that the libelant had assumed the risk of his employment and that the accident was caused by his own negligence. As insurer of Dravo, Aetna also contends that libelant’s exclusive remedy lies under the provisions of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, and that there was no independent negligence on the part of the directors, supervisors, stockholders, agents, employees, and representatives of Dravo causing or contributing to the cause of libelant’s injury.

*1006 Union, and its insurer, Aetna, also filed a petition under the 56th Admiralty Rule against Dravo, seeking indemnity for any sums that they, or either of them, might be ordered to pay libelant as a result of this accident on the ground that if the MARINER was unseaworthy she was unseaworthy only because Dravo failed to perform its contract of repair in a workmanlike manner. Dravo answered the 56th Rule petition, denying all allegations of negligence and alleging that it performed its work on the MARINER in a workmanlike manner. Aetna then, as Dravo’s compensation insurer, filed an intervening libel, seeking reimbursement from libelant, Union and the MARINER, for all money paid to libelant under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act in the event libelant is granted recovery in this suit. In this posture, and after pretrial conference, the case, came on for trial on November 2, 1964, following which briefs were filed by counsel for all parties. Now, after carefully considering the record herein, the evidence adduced at trial, and the arguments and briefs of counsel, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On March 16, 1963, the M/V MARINER, a towboat owned and operated by respondent, Union Barge Line Corporation, arrived at the repair facilities of Dravo Corporation on the Mississippi River at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to receive its routine annual maintenance servicing which Dravo had contracted to perform. Included among the items of maintenance and repair to be performed by Dravo were such things as cleaning gate valves; fabricating a steel grating walkway at the after end of the pilothouse; fabricating and installing pipe storage rack in the shaft alley; installing grab rails in showers; installing new towing kevels; washing down engine room; removing accumulated sludge; installing rubbing bars on port and starboard stern; installing a closed jacket water cooling system; and removing propeller shafts and installing new sleeves thereon.

2. Dravo contracted to perform all work called for by its contract with Union in “a good and workmanlike manner.”

3. The M/V MARINER arrived at the Dravo repair facility on March 16, 1963, and was placed in a floating dry-dock on March 18, 1963. She was returned to the water on March 25, 1963, and left the repair yard, with all repairs and maintenance completed on April 4, 1963.

4. Libelant boarded the M/V MARINER on March 23, 1963, as an employee of Dravo. He was to assist in the removal of the propeller shafts by removing the couplings therefrom.

5. The M/V MARINER is a 192 foot long diesel powered push boat. She has twin screws with her two shafts separated by a centerline bulkhead. This bulkhead has an opening at each end to provide access from one shaft alley to the other. There was, at the time of the accident, no walkway along the shafts. To inspect the shafts it was necessary to walk along the hull braces which were four or five feet below the level of the shafts. Each shaft had three carrier bearings in the shaft alley and one bearing at the bulkhead separating the engine room from the shaft alley. The shafts are approximately 13 inches in diameter, and each half of the couplings or bearings weigh approximately 350 pounds.

6. While either removing or replacing a coupling from the shaft, libelant was working on a scaffold, which had been erected to facilitate working on the shaft, when it collapsed causing him to fall four or five feet to the bottom of the hull where he landed astraddle of an angle iron brace, causing him severe injury.

7. The scaffolding was furnished and erected in the shaft alley by Dravo prior to its use by libelant.

8. The scaffolding was defective in that one of the 2 x 4’s used to support the plywood platform had a large knot in it and it was because of this defective *1007 2x4 that the scaffold collapsed causing libelant’s injury.

9. The defect in the lumber would not have been noticeable even by reasonable inspection, and libelant was not guilty of any negligence whatsoever which in any way caused or contributed to the cause of this accident.

10. The work being done on the M/V MARINER at the time of this accident was nothing but usual, routine maintenance work such as is performed on the vessel every year or two. The performance of this work did not take the vessel out of navigation.

11. While it is true that the entire crew did not remain aboard during the repair period, the entire engine room crew and the galley crew did remain aboard and did perform their regular duties during the entire time.

12. The defective scaffolding from which the libelant fell and injured himself created an unseaworthy condition aboard the M/V MARINER, which unseaworthy condition was caused entirely by the negligence of Dravo Corporation resulting in their failure to perform their work under their contract with Union in a workmanlike manner.

13. Respondent, Union Barge Line Corporation, was not guilty of any negligence causing or contributing to the cause of this accident.

14. Libelant was 40 years old at the time of his injury. He had a congenital defect in his spine at the fifth lumbar interspace, which defect, in all probability, made him more susceptible to injury than he would otherwise have been.

15.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. Supp. 1004, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-union-barge-line-corporation-laed-1965.