Darreyl Wayne Gough, Cross-Appellant v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. Of America, Cross-Appellee

996 F.2d 763, 1993 WL 266867
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 1993
Docket92-4220
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 996 F.2d 763 (Darreyl Wayne Gough, Cross-Appellant v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. Of America, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darreyl Wayne Gough, Cross-Appellant v. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. Of America, Cross-Appellee, 996 F.2d 763, 1993 WL 266867 (5th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

When a fishing vessel backed over a natural gas pipeline that was supposed to have been buried, a fireball swept the ship killing eleven of its fourteen crew. Her captain, Darreyl Wayne Gough, survived by fleeing the pilot house and jumping overboard. He sued the pipeline owner, NGP, under general maritime law. A Beaumont jury awarded Captain Gough $2 million, but assessed to him 35 percent of the fault for the accident. NGP challenges the damage award which rested in substantial part on emotional distress. We are persuaded that Captain Gough suffered a sufficient physical impact but order a remittitur of damages. We also affirm the finding of contributory fault, finding the evidence sufficient to support it, rejecting the Captain’s claim that an earlier finding in a limitation proceeding that NGP was solely at fault was binding.

I

On October 3, 1989, Zapata Haynie Corporation’s steamer F/V Northumberland was operating near Sabine Pass. Darreyl Wayne Gough captained the vessel as it fished for menhaden roughly one-half mile from the Texas coast. The Captain had previously fished in the same area of the coast during the 1988 and 1989 fishing seasons. He did not consult navigational charts on October 3; he claimed to know that coastline “like the back of [his] hand.”

Late that afternoon, when the Northum-berland deployed its purse boats, radar showed that it was one-half mile from shore. Captain Gough’s cousin Mac Gough was in charge of the ship while Captain Gough was in a purse boat. Mac Gough thought that the Northumberland was floating freely, not touching bottom, because the ship moved without hindrance. He admitted that it was possible for the ship to skim through the soft mud bottom of Sabine Flats without being felt on deck. After the set, Captain Gough returned to the pilot house of the Northum-berland. The ship’s bow was pointed toward the shore. Around 5:45 p.m., Captain Gough began.backing the ship away from the beach at what Mac Gough described as moderate speed. All three survivors, Captain Gough, Mac Gough, and crew member Arthur Jackson, testified that the ship did not touch bottom.

After backing three hundred feet, the Nor-thumberland suddenly stopped. There was an immense explosion. The ship struck and ruptured NGP’s submerged sixteen-inch diameter gas pipeline. Within seconds, a fireball swept the ship from stern to bow. The Captain and Mac Gough escaped the pilot house, jumped overboard, and swam away from the heat and flames. Spotter helicopters dropped rafts and tried to assist survivors. Captain Gough tried to assist one injured seaman who slipped away and drowned. Eleven crew members died; Mae Gough and Jackson were severely burned. All three survivors were pulled from the water and airlifted to a Beaumont hospital by helicopter.

Captain Gough was in the hospital for only two days, but soon began experiencing nightmares, flashbacks, and depression. Psychiatrists and psychologists diagnosed post-trau-matie stress disorder, and Captain Gough began therapy. One expert testified that post-traumatic stress disorder typically requires two to three years of treatment. Captain Gough’s therapist testified that the demands of various lawsuits continue to aggravate Captain Gough’s condition and delay recovery. She was uncertain how long it would take before Captain Gough could func *765 tion adequately, and noted that the memories of this event will remain the rest of his life.

Captain Gough claimed that as a result of the post-traumatic stress disorder, he was unable to return to work as a mariner. He now earns his living, for less pay, as a carpenter. An economist testified that this diminished earning capacity resulted in a total pecuniary loss of $559,401.

The NGP pipeline was unmarked. The Corps of Engineers permit issued to NGP in 1972 required that the pipeline be buried three feet under the seabed and that NGP maintain it in accordance with the plans. Three days after the accident a diver inspected the pipeline and found it exposed for more than fifty feet between the point at which the Northumberland sank and the shore; it was exposed for more than three hundred feet farther out to sea. In places, nearly half of the pipe’s diameter was unburied.

NGP elicited testimony suggesting that Captain Gough’s handling of the ship could have led to the allision. On a previous occasion, the Northumberland’s anchor had gotten hung up on a submerged five-inch pipeline after the ship was anchored overnight. The anchor picked up the pipeline, but came free after it was lowered again. Mac Gough testified that Captain Gough occasionally got into the mud, rather than always maintaining a margin between the keel and bottom. The Northumberland was not equipped with a fathometer. Coastline charts feature a warning concerning submerged pipelines. National Ocean Service chart 11342 states: “Caution ... Additional uncharted submarine oil and gas pipelines and submarine cables may exist within the area of this chart. Mariners should use caution when anchoring, dragging or trawling.” Captain Gough admitted that he was familiar with this warning.

The six-person jury deliberated for eighty-two minutes. In a note to District Judge Fisher, the jury asked whether it could award Captain Gough more than he asked for. 1 It then found both NGP and Captain Gough negligent and responsible for the accident. The jury assigned them 65 and 35 percent of the fault, respectively. The verdict then awarded Captain Gough $2,000,000 in total damages. 2

II

Captain Gough’s physical injuries had little compensable value. He presented evidence of economic loss, but the principal basis on which the Captain sought damages was the emotional distress associated with post-trau-matie stress disorder. NGP contends that the maritime law does not permit recovery for purely emotional damages. We think that this assertion is too broad.

Beyond question, purely emotional injuries will be compensated when maritime plaintiffs satisfy the “physical injury or impact rule.” Plaisance v. Texaco, Inc., 966 F.2d 166, 168-169 (5th Cir.1992) (en banc). Either a physical injury or physical impact has traditionally been required. See Hagerty v.L & L Marine Services, Inc., 788 F.2d 315, 318 (5th Cir.1986). 3 Hagerty, a Jones Act case, questioned the wisdom of this rule, but found that the plaintiff suffered both a physical impact and injury. Id. at 318 & n. 1.

The impact or injury rule is an arbitrarily stated rule with important functions. One purpose is “to provide courts with an objective means of ensuring that the alleged mental injury is not feigned.” Hagerty, 788 F.2d at 318. A more important purpose of the rule is to provide a principled basis for limiting liability. Traumatic events may cause foreseeable emotional distress through a broad range of time and space.

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Bluebook (online)
996 F.2d 763, 1993 WL 266867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darreyl-wayne-gough-cross-appellant-v-natural-gas-pipeline-co-of-ca5-1993.