Batterton v. Dutra Group

880 F.3d 1089
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 2018
DocketNo. 15-56775
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 880 F.3d 1089 (Batterton v. Dutra Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batterton v. Dutra Group, 880 F.3d 1089 (9th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Senior Circuit Judge:

We address the availability of punitive damages for unseaworthiness.

This case comes to us on a 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) certification for interlocutory appeal. The district court certified the appeal, and we granted permission for it. District courts within our circuit have divided on the substantive issue,1 as have the circuits,2 and the issue is of considerable importance in maritime law.

Facts

The case comes to us on the pleadings and nothing else. The district court denied a motion to strike .the portion of the prayer seeking punitive damages for unseaworthiness. We therefore take our facts from the complaint. They are not proved, and we intimate no view as to whether punitive damages may ultimately turn out to be appropriate.

The plaintiff, Christopher Batterton, was a deckhand on a vessel owned and operated by the defendant, Dutra Group. While Batterton was working on the vessel in navigable waters, a. hatch cover blew open and crushed his left hand. Pressur[1091]*1091ized air was being pumped into a compartment below the hatch cover, and the vessel lacked an exhaust mechanism to relieve the pressure when it got too high. The lack of a mechanism for exhausting the pressurized air made the vessel unseaworthy and caused permanent-disability-and other damages to Batterton.

Analysis

The only question before us is whether punitive damages are an available remedy for unseaworthiness claims. We answered it in Evich v. Morris.3 That would be the end of the case, except that Dutra contends, and the Fifth Circuit agrees,4 that the later Supreme Court decision in Miles v. Apex Marine Corp. 5 implicitly overrules Evich.

In Evich we squarely held that “[punitive damages are available under general maritime law for claims of unseaworthiness, and for failure to pay maintenance and cure.”6 We distinguished Jones- Act claims, where punitive damages are unavailable.7 The standard for punitive damages, we held, was “conduct which manifests ‘reckless or callous disregard’ for the rights of others ... or ‘gross negligence or actual malice [or] criminal indifference.’ ”8

Evich was a wrongful death case, not an injury case.9 But we did not speak to whether there might be any distinction regarding the availability of punitive damages according to whether the seaman had died. Generally, the availability of damages is more restricted in wrongful death cases than in injury cases. -So without authority to the contrary, we -have no reason to distinguish Evich and limit its holding to wrongful death cases. No party has suggested. that we do so.

Under Miller v. Gammie, 10 we must follow Evich unless it is “clearly irreconcilable” with the Supreme Court’s decision, in Miles. 11 Miles holds that loss of society damages are unavailable in a general maritime action for the wrongful death of a seaman and that lost future earnings are unavailable in a general maritime survival action.12 That is because wrongful - death damages are limited to “pecuniary loss”13 and because “[t]he Jones Act/[Federal Employers’ Liability Act] survival -provision limits recovery to losses suffered during the decedent’s lifetime.”14

The Supreme Court’s more recent decision in Atlantic Sounding Co. v. Townsend 15 speaks broadly: “Historically, punitive damages have been available and awarded in general maritime actions, including some in maintenance and cure.”16 Unseaworthiness is. a general maritime cause of action.17 Townsend reads Miles as [1092]*1092limiting the availability of damages for loss of society and lost future earnings18 and holds that Miles does not limit the availability of punitive damages in maintenance and cure cases.19 By implication, Townsend holds that Miles does not limit the availability of remedies in other actions “under general maritime law,”20 which includes unseaworthiness claims.

Arguably, Townsend leaves room for a distinction between maintenance and cure claims and unseaworthiness claims. The Court recognizes that “remedies for negligence, unseaworthiness, and maintenance and cure have different origins and may on occasion call for application of slightly different principles and procedures.”21 But nothing in Townsend’s reasoning suggests that such a distinction would mean that a limitation ought to be made on the availability of punitive, damages as a remedy for general maritime unseaworthiness claims.

So far our discussion suggests that Miles does not overturn Evich, that Evich remains in force as controlling circuit law, and that Evich’s holding that punitive damages are available as a remedy for unseaworthiness claims is undisturbed and binding. Appellant’s arguments to the contrary, though, are given force by McBride v. Estis Well Service. 22

McBride, a sharply divided Fifth Circuit en banc decision, holds that “punitive damages are non-pecuniary losses”23 and therefore may not be recovered under the Jones Act or under the general maritime law.24 We held in another context in Kop-czynski v. The Jacqueline that “[p]unitive damages are non-pecuniary” and so are not allowable under the Jones Act.25 McBride has five extensive and scholarly opinions addressing all sides of the question. Six dissenters note that Miles “addressed the availability of loss of society damages to non-seamen under general maritime law, not punitive damages,”26 and that “Townsend announced the default rule that punitive damages are available for actions under the general maritime law (such as unseaworthiness).”27

Well before our decision in Evich, the Supreme Court addressed in Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc. 28 whether the general maritime law affords a cause of action for wrongful death. The Court overruled its 1886 decision that it did not.29 Though Moragne concerns the availability of a wrongful death action under the general maritime law, it matters in our case, where the seaman did not die, because it bears on how we should understand Miles.

Moragne holds that the denial of a wrongful death remedy “had little justification except in primitive English legal history.”30 Lord Ellenborough had held in Baker v. Bolton

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Related

Dutra Group v. Batterton
588 U.S. 358 (Supreme Court, 2019)
Kennedy v. Carnival Corp.
385 F. Supp. 3d 1302 (S.D. Florida, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
880 F.3d 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batterton-v-dutra-group-ca9-2018.