Foster v. Destin Trading Corp.

670 So. 2d 1342, 1996 WL 88277
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1996
Docket95-CA-226
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 670 So. 2d 1342 (Foster v. Destin Trading Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Destin Trading Corp., 670 So. 2d 1342, 1996 WL 88277 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

670 So.2d 1342 (1996)

Melvin FOSTER and Lou M. Foster
v.
DESTIN TRADING CORPORATION and Blessey Marine Service, Inc.

No. 95-CA-226.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

February 27, 1996.

*1344 John J. McKeithen, Rebel G. Ryland, Louis V. Champagne McKeithen, Ryland & Champagne, Columbia, for Plaintiffs-Appellants Melvin Foster and Lou M. Foster.

Daniel E. Knowles, III, Lars O. Perkins Burke & Mayer, New Orleans, for Defendants-Appellees Destin Trading Corp. and Blessey Marine Service, Inc.

Before GOTHARD, CANNELLA and KLIEBERT, JJ.

THOMAS J. KLIEBERT, Judge Ad Hoc.

Plaintiff, Melvin Foster, appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants, Destin Trading Corporation (Destin Trading) and Blessey Marine Service, Inc. (Blessey), dismissing his action under the general maritime law and the Jones Act. (46 U.S.C.App. § 688). We affirm.

Foster and his wife, Lou, filed suit for damages against Destin Trading, as owner of the barges, and against Blessey, as his employer.[1] The matter went to trial on August 8 and 9, 1994. On November 17, 1994, the trial judge dismissed the case and rendered judgment against Foster, finding that he failed to prove that the vessel was unseaworthy or that Destin Trading or Blessey was negligent.

On appeal, Foster asserts that the trial judge erred in failing to find either Destin Trading or Blessey negligent, in failing to find the vessel unseaworthy, and in failing to award damages.

The evidence shows that on September 5, 1991, Foster, the forty-year-old relief captain of the tug/push vessel, the M.V. Laura Ann Blessey, severely injured his ankle while attempting to cross a single plank laid atop the highest portion of two barges 30 to 36 inches from their decks. The vessel was in Houston, tied up next to one barge, which in turn was tied up to another barge which was docked closest to land. At approximately 8:30 p.m., two United States Coast Guard Officers boarded barge WEB 205, the barge moored adjacent to the dock, for a routine inspection. The Blessey tankerman was asked by the Coast Guard to produce his tankerman's certificate, a normal request. He proceeded to the boat where he requested that plaintiff retrieve the document from his bunk room. Upon returning with the document, the Blessey tankerman informed plaintiff that he believed the Coast Guard was about to issue a citation, not to Blessey, but to the land-based Houston Fuel Oil tankerman, for discharging cargo with one of the hatch covers open. Despite the fact that Blessey personnel were not in charge of the operation, plaintiff decided to walk to the scene.

Plaintiff got off of M/V LAURA ANN BLESSEY and stepped onto barge WEB 206 at a point approximately three quarters of the way down her length. The Coast Guard Officers and the land-based tankerman were standing near the midpoint of barge WEB 205, closer to the dock than the exact center of the barge.

Barges WEB 205 and WEB 206 are nearly identical tank barges, both having a four-foot walkway surrounding a flat tank top elevated 30 inches above the walkway. The two barges were Coast Guard inspected at the time of the accident and the Certificates of Inspection for both barges were admitted into evidence. The tank tops of both barges have hatch covers located at the midpoint and at both ends. At the time of the accident, three 2" × 12" by 16' pressure treated *1345 pine boards extended across from the tank top of WEB 205 to WEB 206 at points approximately even with each of the hatch covers. Since the two barges were tightly cabled together at the time of the accident, the distance between the tank tops consisted only of the width of the two four-foot walkways surrounding each of the tank tops, or eight feet. At the level of the walkways, the two barges were cabled flush together leaving no gap. Foster was moving across a walkway from the barge adjacent to the tug to the second barge. As Foster moved across the board, it broke, causing him to fall to the deck 30 to 36 inches below. He was taken to Hermann Hospital in Houston, where he underwent surgery to his foot and ankle. Two screws were placed in his ankle. He weighed 325 pounds at the time of the accident and had a preexisting deteriorating disc condition of the lumbar spine, which was not reported to Blessey in his application.

On the date of the accident, Foster was acting as relief captain. The testimony showed that the captain or the relief captain, if he was on duty, had ultimate authority over the operations and safety of the crew and vessel, that the captain was responsible for ordering supplies for the vessel, that the supplies were delivered to the vessel, and that the captain checked the supplies as they were delivered. The list of needed supplies was faxed to the Blessey office, where is was reviewed and sent to the supplier. In this case, at the request of Foster and the tankerman, three planks of oak wood, size 2" × 12" × 16', were ordered. The supplier, however, delivered three pine boards instead. The witnesses were unable to state with any certainty who changed the order, but the evidence indicated that the Blessey port engineer checked orders as they came in and probably changed the order to pine because pine boards were customarily used for replacement boards in the holds of the tug vessels. Neither the captain nor Foster complained about the order.

Foster testified that he had worked as a tankerman, deck hand, steerage man, and relief captain for more than seventeen years. He testified that he had worked on three of the Blessey vessels and was promoted to relief captain on the last job. He stated that he and a tankerman discussed using the boards as a walkway with the captain because the tankerman requested it to shorten their routes while working. He noted that this was common practice by tankermen on other vessels. Foster testified that the captain agreed and that they ordered oak boards at Foster's suggestion because he knew that oak was used for diving boards and would be strong enough to perform as a walkway. He testified that he did not know about the strength of pine. Foster stated that the boards had been in use for about one month before the accident. According to Foster, he used the pine boards many times without any problems. On cross-examination Foster stated that he did not remember telling John Riojas, another tankerman, not to use one of the boards on this vessel because it was cracked. He thought that he might have had the discussion on another vessel. He also did not remember holding a discussion with Paul Yates, a tankerman who weighed more than he did, in which Yates informed Foster that he was not going to use the board because it made creaking sounds and he felt unsafe.

Yates testified by deposition. He stated that he was on the Laura Ann Blessey at the time of the accident, but did not witness Foster's fall. He testified that the boards were ordered after a discussion in the galley with George Jones, vice-president of Blessey, Foster, Walter Wyatt, the pilot, and himself. Yates stated that the crew used boards on other boats. He said that he did not know where the order to use the boards came from, but that they were bought for that purpose. At first, he stated, the boards were green and stable. Then, as they dried out, he heard cracking noises when he used the boards. Yates told Foster. Admitting that he weighed 400 to 420 pounds, Yates stated that after that, he discontinued using the board walkway. He denied seeing any cracks in the board that made cracking noise. Yates saw the broken board after the accident and noted that it had a jagged break, 3" to 4" from the end.

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Related

Foster v. Destin Trading Corp.
700 So. 2d 829 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1997)
Viator v. Liverpool & London SS Protection and Indem. Ass'n
701 So. 2d 487 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1997)
Milstead v. Diamond M Offshore, Inc.
676 So. 2d 89 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
670 So. 2d 1342, 1996 WL 88277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-destin-trading-corp-lactapp-1996.