Francis Wright, Libelant v. Maryland Boat Line, Inc., Barry Portnoy, Etc., Libelant v. Tolchester Lines, Inc.

351 F.2d 922, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4188, 1966 A.M.C. 217
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 1965
Docket6415, 6416
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 351 F.2d 922 (Francis Wright, Libelant v. Maryland Boat Line, Inc., Barry Portnoy, Etc., Libelant v. Tolchester Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francis Wright, Libelant v. Maryland Boat Line, Inc., Barry Portnoy, Etc., Libelant v. Tolchester Lines, Inc., 351 F.2d 922, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4188, 1966 A.M.C. 217 (1st Cir. 1965).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a consolidated appeal from two proceedings, tried to the court below sitting in admiralty. The claims of both appellants-libelants arise out of injuries they sustained while employed as seamen on the SS Provincetown. Each appellant-libelant urges that the lower court’s award of damages to him was in several respects inadequate and must be reversed.

On July 6, 1962, libelants Wright and Portnoy were employed as seamen on the SS Provincetown, a passenger vessel that plied Massachusetts Bay between Boston and Provincetown. When the vessel was about four miles from Minot’s Light one member of the crew fell overboard and the ship’s officers ordered the number four lifeboat launched in order to attempt a rescue. While the lifeboat was suspended from the davits at approximately deck level some thirty feet above *923 the water libelant Portnoy was directed to enter the boat and tighten the seacock. This operation placed Portnoy in the stem of the boat. At the same time li-belant Wright entered the bow of the lifeboat. A third member of the crew, one White, a messman, then entered it amidships, whereupon the lifeboat suddenly dropped to the ocean and the libelants received the injuries for which they seek damages. It appears that when White entered the lifeboat he was quite close to the mechanism that released it from the hooks at the ends of lines by which the lifeboat would have normally been lowered slowly into the ocean. The district court found that White had negligently activated this mechanism when he entered the boat and that his negligence was a proximate cause of the lifeboat’s fall into the water. On appeal, none of the interested parties quarrel with the district court’s finding on the issue of proximate causation. The libelants do separately contend that the district court minimized the extent and gravity of their injuries, that consequently the damage award each received was inadequate, and that reversals are required. We take up the claim of each libelant separately.

I. Libelant Wright’s Claim.

At trial Wright introduced evidence establishing that on August 2, 1962 a competent doctor, a Doctor Tompkins, examined him and concluded on the basis of special sternum X-Rays that Wright’s manubrium was fractured; that, following this discovery, Wright had received treatment for this injury from August 2, 1962 until May 28, 1963; that he still experienced pain in his upper chest when he lifted heavy objects or coughed deeply; and that even though the fracture had healed it would permanently prevent Wright from doing any type of heavy labor. The district court believed this evidence but concluded that Wright had not proved that the injury to the manu-brium was caused by the accident of July 6, 1962. Therefore, all claims for damages based upon the injury to the manu-brium were disallowed below. The li-belant contends that this ruling is erroneous.

Plainly, libelant’s contention relates to the issue of cause-in-fact. No one doubts that the defendant would be liable for the injured manubrium and would have to respond in damages if it were established that Wright suffered this injury in the lifeboat accident of July 6, 1962. It is equally plain that the libelant had the burden of persuasion on this- issue. See McCormick, Evidence § 307 (1954). In an attempt to carry this burden the libelant introduced evidence that tended to prove the injury to his manubrium was so caused. He established that doctors at both the South Shore Hospital in Weymouth, where he was taken immediately after the accident, and at the United States Public Health Service in Brighton, where he recuperated for several days, discovered pain in his chest which might have been caused by a fractured manubrium. But both hospitals X-Rayed their patient and neither set of X-Rays indicated any injuries to the chest wall other than several broken ribs. In the court below Dr. Tompkins testified, however, that a fractured manubrium could not be detected by ordinary X-Rays of the type taken at both the Weymouth and Brighton hospitals, and that special sternum X-Rays were required. The first set of sternum X-Rays was taken on August 2, 1962, by Doctor Tompkins; and these X-Rays established that the manubrium was fractured. Doctor Tompkins also testified that the X-Rays of the manubrium taken on August 2, 1962 indicated that a certain amount of callus had begun to form around this fracture which tended to prove that the fracture had achieved a certain age. Libelant also introduced evidence tending to prove that he had no marks on his body when he was last examined at the Brighton Hospital on July 25, 1962 and that he had no marks on his body when he first visited Dr. Tompkins on August 2, 1962. Dr. Tompkins testified that it was highly improbable that the libelant could have fractured his manubrium between July *924 25 and August 2 without leaving marks on his body? and he also testified that he did not believe libelant would have lived had he first fractured his ribs in the fall in the lifeboat on July 6, 1962 and at some later time between then and August 2, 1962 had received a blow severe enough to fracture his manubrium. In short, it was Dr. Tompkins’s opinion that the fracture of the manubrium probably was caused by the libelant’s fall in the lifeboat. At the conclusion of Dr. Tompkins’s testimony libelant rested his case.

The district court’s conclusion that the libelant had not carried the burden of proving the fractured manubrium was caused by the lifeboat accident was based on evidence that the X-Rays taken at the Weymouth and Brighton hospitals did not disclose a fracture of the manubrium, the conclusion of the Brighton Hospital staff on July 25, 1962, the date of Wright’s last visit there, that he was experiencing only minor pain and would be fit for duty in one week, and the lapse of twenty-seven days between the lifeboat accident and the discovery of the fractured manubrium. Apparently the district court believed that these circumstances cast sufficient doubt on the issue of cause-in-fact to require a finding adverse to the petitioner on this issue.

On this record, however, it was sheer speculation for the trial court to find otherwise than that the fracture of the manubrium was caused by the lifeboat accident. See Yip Mie Jork v. Dulles, 237 F.2d 383, 385 (9 Cir. 1956).

As the opinion below indicates, the testimony of the expert, Dr. Tompkins, tending- to prove the lifeboat accident probably caused the fracture of the manu-brium, was uncontradicted. Furthermore, if one accepts Dr. Tompkins’s un-contradicted explanation of the circumstances which the lower court relied upon in denying libelant’s claim, one sees that these circumstances in no way tend to disprove a causal link between the lifeboat accident and the fractured manubrium. For example, appellee makes much- of the fact that the Brighton Hospital staff noted that appellant complained of little, if any, pain when one would expect the appellant to have been suffering considerable pain if his manubrium had been broken. The experiencing of pain, however, is a highly subjective matter, and we are reluctant to say that a failure to complain of serious pain provides a sufficient basis upon which to reject the testimony of a competent medical witness who concluded that a failure so to complain should be discounted.

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351 F.2d 922, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 4188, 1966 A.M.C. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-wright-libelant-v-maryland-boat-line-inc-barry-portnoy-etc-ca1-1965.