E. N. Bisso and Son, a Louisiana Partnership Composed of E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, Ii, and E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, II v. Jules Miller

233 F.2d 855, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4761, 1956 A.M.C. 1067
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1956
Docket15899
StatusPublished

This text of 233 F.2d 855 (E. N. Bisso and Son, a Louisiana Partnership Composed of E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, Ii, and E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, II v. Jules Miller) 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
E. N. Bisso and Son, a Louisiana Partnership Composed of E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, Ii, and E. N. Bisso and J. A. Bisso, II v. Jules Miller, 233 F.2d 855, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4761, 1956 A.M.C. 1067 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by appellee under the Jones Act 1 to recover damages for injuries sustained by him on July 12, 1953, while employed by appellant as a seaman on its tug, Napoleon, at New Orleans, Louisiana. The complaint al *856 leged that appellee suffered a broken hip and resulting complications from appellants’ negligent failure to furnish him a reasonably safe place to work, as well as from negligence of the tug crew and general unseaworthiness of the tug. Appellants, in answer, denied any negligence, and pleaded contributory negligence proximately causing appellee’s injury. Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee, with his damages assessed at $20,000.00.

Broadly stated, the testimony as to the manner of appellee’s injury presumably accepted by the jury, and tending to support the verdict and award, shows that on the date of the accident the old ferryboat, Wayne, was moored to the east bank of the Mississippi River at appellants’ landing at the end of Walnut Street in New Orleans; that the tug, Napoleon, under a bareboat charter to appellants, was bringing up a barge to be secured to the outboard side of the Wayne; that, to facilitate the mooring operation, appellee and another deckhand, Boudreaux, were then standing at the head of the barge as it was coming in, with the intention of passing a line from the barge to the mooring bitts on the Wayne and securing it; that, as the barge was practically abreast of the Wayne, appellee stepped from the deck of the barge to a railing on the Wayne almost level with it, walked about three steps forward to a roof support two feet from the bitt, and reached back to grasp the line from Boudreaux, about which time the barge, then making from two and one-half to three miles an hour, struck a steel davit rigged on the outboard side of the Wayne, causing it to roll upward and backward in a twisting fashion so as to strike appellee and knock him to the deck of the Wayne, and cause the injuries for which recovery was sought.

Appellants’ basic reliance for reversal is upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to show any breach of their duty to afford appellee a reasonably safe place to work, or to show any negligent operation or unseaworthiness of the tug which might otherwise justify the award. They insist that the physical facts proved, as well as the witness Boudreaux’s vacillations, inconsistencies, and recantation at the trial of his former testimony as to appellee having been struck by the davit, 2 require this Court’s determination, as a matter of law, that the accident could not possibly have happened as appellee testified; or that, even accepting appellee’s version of his injury, it resulted from his own negligence in voluntarily leaving his place of safety on the barge to step into the unsafe condition aboard the Wayne created by the swinging davit.

Appellee insists that his testimony as to the manner of his injury was not ■contrary to the physical facts, or manifestly incredible, but was justifiably credited by the jury as entirely plausible and consistent with the physical circumstances and its finding of appellants’ liability for their failure to provide appellee with a reasonably safe place to work; that, in spite of Boudreaux’s testimonial vacillations, the jury was justified in crediting his initial testimony corroborating appellee’s version of the accident, which was supported by another prior, consistent statement of this same witness,2 3 and was warranted in rejecting his *857 belated effort to exculpate his employer by reversing his testimony, as aforementioned; finally, that, under other testimony, the jury was warranted in finding that appellee did not voluntarily step aboard the Wayne into the path of the swinging davit, but only did so in furtherance of his duties and in an effort to pass the line through the mooring bitts on his first attempt so as to avoid a collision with other barges ahead, under which theory the finding of liability was fully justified.

A careful study of this record in the light of the above arguments has failed to convince us that the verdict rendered is so lacking in the required evidentiary •support under the conflicting testimony as to warrant reversal. See Schulz v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 350 U.S. 523, 76 S.Ct. 608; Wilkerson v. McCarthy, 336 U.S. 53, 57, 63, 69 S.Ct. 413, 93 L.Ed. 497; Lavender v. Kurn, 327 U.S. 645, 653, 66 S.Ct. 740, 90 L.Ed. 916; Cf. Wright v. Paramount-Richards Theatres, 5 Cir., 198 F.2d 303, 307-308; see also, 20 Am.Jur., Evidence, § 1183, p. 1033; Wheeler v. Des Moines City R. Co., 205 Iowa 439, 215 N.W. 950, 55 A.L.R. 473. Appellants’ arguments as to the physical impossibility of appellee having been struck by the davit, as he testified, are demonstrably unsound, in that they are mainly based on testimony by appellants’ own witnesses as to the size, weight, and shape of the davit, which was contradicted by appellee’s proof and presumably rejected by the jury. Indeed, the short answer justifying the jury’s rejection of many of appellants’ assumptions as to the dimensions and rigid attachment of the davit, precluding its movement in the manner claimed, is that the jury was not bound to credit this proof in view of appellee’s testimony that the davit which struck him was not the same as that revealed by the photographic exhibits and described by appellants’ witnesses, but was much shorter; as well as by other testimony that it was only loosely secured near the top of the Wayne’s railing by a one-half inch rope, rather than doubly attached to the side of that vessel both by a rope near the top and chain at the bottom, as appellants attempted to prove. 4

In a somewhat analogous factual situation in a suit brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq., this Court recently rejected a similar argument that the physical facts and mathematical probabilities involved precluded the occurrence of an injury in accordance with the claimant’s proof, stating in part:

“Appellant’s mechanical theory that the boom could not have jerked appellee from five to seven feet is based not upon fact but upon the assumption that the safety chains would not permit the boom to swing more than two and one-half feet from the side of the car. On the basis of this premise it is argued that if the boom did in fact swing westward from either the center of *858 the car or the car’s westward edge it would in neither instance exert a pull because of the slack in the line. This theory is based on the expression of a witness’ best opinion as to the amount of slack in the line which, after all, was only an estimate and not a statement of an absolute fact concerning which there can be no dispute so as to bring into play the doctrine of absolute physical facts.

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Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
318 U.S. 54 (Supreme Court, 1943)
Lavender v. Kurn
327 U.S. 645 (Supreme Court, 1946)
Wilkerson v. McCarthy
336 U.S. 53 (Supreme Court, 1949)
Schulz v. Pennsylvania Railroad
350 U.S. 523 (Supreme Court, 1956)
Wright v. Paramount-Richards Theatres, Inc.
198 F.2d 303 (Fifth Circuit, 1952)
Ft. Worth & D. Ry. Co. v. Prine
211 F.2d 697 (Fifth Circuit, 1954)
Wheeler v. Des Moines City Railway Co.
215 N.W. 950 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
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132 F.2d 693 (Seventh Circuit, 1943)
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233 F.2d 855, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4761, 1956 A.M.C. 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-n-bisso-and-son-a-louisiana-partnership-composed-of-e-n-bisso-and-j-ca5-1956.