Bach v. Trident Shipping Co., Inc.

708 F. Supp. 776, 1989 WL 29688
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 27, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 87-5899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 708 F. Supp. 776 (Bach v. Trident Shipping Co., Inc.) 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
Bach v. Trident Shipping Co., Inc., 708 F. Supp. 776, 1989 WL 29688 (E.D. La. 1989).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

PATRICK E. CARR, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. By minute entry of March 16, 1989, the Court took the motion under submission on the briefs. For the following reasons, the Court now GRANTS the motion.

I.

On December 26, 1986, Eugene G. Bach Jr. suffered a fatal heart attack while aboard the M/V JAYMAT TRIDENT as a compulsory river pilot. His surviving wife and two children have sued the vessel owner, the voyage charterer, and the vessel for his death.

Bach was a 61 year old male who had worked as a river pilot for about 36 years; *777 he was a member of the Crescent City River Pilots Association, whose members serve as compulsory river pilots on the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Pilottown. 1 Among his normal duties as a pilot were climbing pilot, or Jacob’s, ladders 2 and climbing flights of stairs from the main deck of a vessel up to the wheelhouse of a vessel.

On December 26, 1986, Bach was to serve as the compulsory river pilot aboard the JAYMAT TRIDENT, an oceangoing bulk cargo vessel that is registered in and flies the flag of the Cayman Islands and whose officers are all Chinese. Early that morning, Bach was transported to the JAY-MAT TRIDENT by a pilot boat, the M/Y LITTLE RAY. The LITTLE RAY is equipped with two vessel boarding platforms affixed at the top of its wheelhouse; these platforms stand 11 feet lVz inches above the waterline.

To board the JAYMAT TRIDENT, Bach stepped from one of the LITTLE RAY’s boarding platforms onto a pilot ladder hanging on the port side of the JAYMAT TRIDENT and then climbed the ladder; 3 according to the vessel log, he boarded the vessel at 2:30 a.m. At that time, the deck of the JAYMAT TRIDENT stood 32.36 feet (9.86 meters) above the waterline. Thus, Bach had to climb on the pilot ladder a distance of at most about 21V4 feet.

Once aboard, Bach climbed four flights of stairs from the main deck to the vessel’s wheelhouse, from which pilots would direct the vessel. When he reached the wheelhouse, he replaced the New Orleans/Baton Rouge compulsory pilot, Lewis H. Taylor, who then proceeded down the same stairs to disembark by the same pilot ladder. Soon thereafter (according to the vessel log, it was 2:32 a.m.), Bach suddenly collapsed to the floor.

According to Captain Jao Chih-ping’s deposition, the quartermaster, who was in the wheelhouse when Bach collapsed, notified the captain, who returned to the wheelhouse; the captain tried to lift Bach, but was unable because Bach was unconscious; the captain then called back Taylor to resume piloting the vessel, asked Taylor to call the Coast Guard for medical help, and gave orders to drop anchor immediately; the second mate, who was the designated medical officer, came to the wheelhouse and, at Taylor and the captain’s request, watched over Bach to see that no one tripped over him in the dark. According to Taylor’s deposition, he returned to the wheel, took control of the navigation (according to the vessel log, it was 2:34 a.m.), and, while he was maneuvering the vessel to anchor, asked a crewmember to check Bach’s pulse; the crewmember apparently found no pulse.

There is no evidence that either Taylor or any crewmember attempted to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or to give other direct first aid to Bach, other than what is set forth above.

According to the vessel log, the Coast Guard did not arrive until 3:15 a.m. and emergency medical service technicians (paramedics) not until at 3:30 a.m. Their efforts to save Bach were to no avail; he was dead.

The Orleans Parish Coroner’s Office performed an autopsy on Bach later that morning. It found that he had “severe stenotic calcific coronary atherosclerosis *778 [with] recent ischemic myocardial changes.” It classified his death as “natural.” To paraphrase plaintiffs’ expert medical report in layman’s terms, Bach had a very acute heart disease and died from a heart attack. 4

At his deposition, plaintiffs’ medical expert, Dr. John H. Phillips Jr., testified (1) that the greater the physical stress Bach experienced just before his collapse, the greater was the likelihood that such stress played “an increasing role in his death” and (2) that a person climbing a ladder must exert more physical stress when such climbing requires the use of both hands and feet than when such climbing requires only the use of feet. 5 Further, he testified that Bach’s chances of survival would have been greater had he received CPR within four minutes of his collapse, but added that even if a crewmember had administered CPR and even if ideal professional medical attention had been available minutes after his collapse, the likelihood that Bach would have died anyway was 85% or greater. To quote Dr. Phillips’ report: “his chances for ultimate survival were clearly not very favorable ... and the prognosis following even the ideal scenario as outlined [in the report] would be poor.

Defendants now move for summary judgment on three points: 6 (1) plaintiffs cannot establish legal causation from Bach’s having to use a pilot ladder; (2) defendants owed no duty to apply CPR or other first aid to Bach; and (3) plaintiffs cannot establish legal causation from any inadequate medical attention on the crew’s part because, according to plaintiff’s own medical expert, the chances of Bach’s dying even if he had had the best medical attention as soon as he collapsed were more probable than not.

II. The ladder

Plaintiffs argue that defendants should have provided Bach with an angled accommodation ladder 7 instead of a vertical pilot ladder for the access all the way from the pilot boat to the JAYMAT TRIDENT. As sole support, they cite SOLAS Regulation 17(a)(ii) for Safety of Navigation:

Ships engaged on voyages in the course of which pilots are likely to be employed shall comply with the following requirements:

(a) Pilot Ladders
(ii) The ladder shall be secured in a position so ... that the pilot can gain safe and convenient access to the ship after climbing not less than 1.5 metres (5 feet) and not more than 9 metres (30 feet)____ Whenever the distance from sea level to the point of access to the ship is more than 9 metres (30 feet), access from the pilot ladder to the ship shall be by means of an accommodation ladder or other equally safe and convenient means. 8

*779 This regulation has been codified at 46 C.F.R. § 96.40-l(g) for cargo vessels “that normally embark[] or disembark[] a pilot from a pilot boat or other vessel”:

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708 F. Supp. 776, 1989 WL 29688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bach-v-trident-shipping-co-inc-laed-1989.