Fink v. Shepard Steamship Co.

192 P.2d 258, 183 Or. 373, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 175
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 192 P.2d 258 (Fink v. Shepard Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fink v. Shepard Steamship Co., 192 P.2d 258, 183 Or. 373, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 175 (Or. 1948).

Opinions

Action by Fred W. Fink against Shepard Steamship Company to recover for injuries sustained while plaintiff was employed as a seaman on a vessel owned by the United States through the War Shipping Administration and operated by defendant under a general agency service agreement. Judgment for plaintiff and defendant appeals. *Page 375

REVERSED AND REMANDED. This case, like Hust v. Moore-McCormack Lines, 328 U.S. 707,90 L.ed. 1534, 66 S.Ct. 1218 (reversing 176 Or. 662,158 P.2d 275), is concerned with the rights of seamen to recover for injuries sustained while employed on United States vessels as employees of the United States. There is but one point of difference: Hust was injured a few days before March 24, 1943, the effective date of Public Law 17 (78th Cong., 57 Stat. 45), otherwise known as the Clarification Act; while the plaintiff Fink was injured on August 2, 1943, after the act became effective.

Fink recovered a judgment based on the verdict of a jury from which the defendant has appealed. The principal question for decision here, as in the Hust case, is whether the plaintiff is entitled to maintain his action under the Jones Act, Act of March 4, 1915, 38 Stat. 1185, as amended June 5, 1920, 41 Stat. 1007 (46 U.S.C. § 688), with right to trial by jury, or whether his sole remedy is in the federal court against the United States under the Suits in Admiralty Act, 41 Stat. 525 (46 U.S.C. § 741). The question was raised on the trial by motions for nonsuit and a directed verdict, and later by motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and the court's rulings denying these motions are assigned as error.

Plaintiff was an able-bodied seaman on the S.S. George Davidson, a Liberty ship owned and operated by the United States through the War Shipping Administration. The defendant steamship company managed certain business of the vessel as General Agent for the Administration under a General Agency Service Agreement designated "GAA 4-4-42," identical with *Page 376 that involved in the Hust case. Plaintiff was injured while the vessel was at sea as the result, he claims, of the negligence of his superior officer in ordering him, unaided, to dump overboard the contents of an excessively heavy garbage can at a time when a strong sea was running.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the Hust case, which held that a seaman injured under like circumstances was entitled to sue and recover from the agent under the Jones Act in a state court, with the right to trial by jury, controls the decision here. The defendant, on the other hand, asserts, first, that this case presents a question which the Supreme Court of the United States expressly declined to decide in the Hust case, namely, the effect of the Clarification Act upon seamen's remedies with respect to injuries incurred after March 24, 1943, and that the purpose of that act was to remit the injured seaman for vindication of his rights to a suit under the Suits in Admiralty Act against the United States in the federal court; and, second, that in any event, the Hust decision has been overruled by the later decision in Caldarola v. Eckert, 332 U.S. 155,91 L.ed. 1566, 67 S.Ct. 1569. The ultimate position of the defendant is supported by a brief filed by the United States as amicuscuriae, the reasoning in which, however, is very different in some respects from that of counsel for the defendant.

For a solution of these questions a careful examination of the ground of decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in the Hust case is necessary. As a background for that examination we start with a brief statement of what this court held when the case was before it. From an analysis of the terms of the agency agreement and a consideration of the *Page 377 evidence relating to the functions actually performed by the agent, we reached the conclusion that Hust was not an employee of the agent, but exclusively of the Government. It followed, in our view, that the remedy given by the Jones Act, which was created only in favor of an employee against his employer for the latter's negligence, was not available to Hust in an action against Moore-McCormack. In reaching that conclusion we applied the familiar common law test for determining whether one is an employee of another, namely, "whether the latter has the right to order, direct and control the former in the performance of the work" (176 Or. 670). We held, further, that the General Agent was not owner of the vessel pro hac vice. There the opinion might have stopped but for the argument of the plaintiff that Congress had recognized the status of seamen on Government-owned vessels as employees of the agents in section 1 of the Clarification Act, hereinafter set out. Upon this point this court held that the Act did not deal with the liability of agents. We said:

"We do not mean to suggest that the purpose of the law was to grant to agents immunity from suit for their own torts, but simply that it leaves the question of the agents' liability untouched. It does not purport to create between the seamen and general agents of the War Shipping Administration a relationship of employer and employee, which, but for the Act, would not exist, nor to impose upon such agents liability for a tort which they did not commit. The whole purpose and intent of Section 1, in our opinion, was to create and declare in favor of seamen employed by the United States rights and remedies against the United States." (176 Or. 689).

Entertaining these views, it became unnecessary for us to express an opinion as to whether the so-called *Page 378 retroactive provision of the Clarification Act, hereinafter set forth, upon which the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States to some extent turned, gave Hust an election to pursue a remedy which we had already held was never available to him.

The Hust case was decided in the Supreme Court of the United States by a bench of seven judges. It was a four to three decision. The opinion of the court was written by Mr. Justice RUTLEDGE and concurred in by Justices BLACK, DOUGLAS and MURPHY. In addition, Mr. Justice DOUGLAS wrote a concurring opinion in which Mr. Justice BLACK joined. A dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice REED was concurred in by Justices FRANKFURTER and BURTON.

The opinion of Mr. Justice RUTLEDGE proceeds upon the following grounds: Prior to 1942, when the Government took over practically the entire merchant marine, seamen employed on vessels of the United States operated by private companies were even more favorably situated than privately employed seamen. The latter had their remedy under the Jones Act, and their rights under general maritime law and enforcible in admiralty, or by various forms of proceeding elsewhere.

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Related

Carslund v. United States
88 F. Supp. 105 (N.D. California, 1950)
Fink v. Shepard Steamship Co.
337 U.S. 810 (Supreme Court, 1949)
Healey v. Sprague Steamship Co.
275 A.D.2d 380 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1949)
City of Portland v. Duntley
203 P.2d 640 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1949)
Cosmopolitan Shipping Co. v. McAllister
335 U.S. 870 (Supreme Court, 1948)
McAllister v. Cosmopolitan Shipping Co.
169 F.2d 4 (Second Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
192 P.2d 258, 183 Or. 373, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fink-v-shepard-steamship-co-or-1948.