Gadaleta v. Nederlandsch-Amerekaansche Stoomvart
This text of 291 F.2d 212 (Gadaleta v. Nederlandsch-Amerekaansche Stoomvart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff, a longshoreman, was injured August 31, 1956 while handling barrels •of pickled skins which had been unloaded from defendant’s vessel and stacked on defendant’s pier on August 23 and 24, 1956. Plaintiff’s claim was that he had .slipped on brine, which had leaked from broken barrels, while loading one of the heavy barrels on the plate of a hi-lo, and that he suffered a herniated intervertebral disc. Defendant introduced reports tending to show that plaintiff had •sprained his back while lifting a barrel, not because of having slipped, and some testimony that there was no brine on the pier.
The jury found for the defendant. The court dismissed the non-jury third party action over against the stevedore, plaintiff’s employer. Plaintiff appeals from judgment entered on the verdict, ■defendant, third party plaintiff, from the dismissal of the third party action.
Plaintiff bases his appeal on two grounds, exclusion from evidence of defendant’s answers to interrogatories propounded by the third party defendant, and refusal of the court to charge on a claim of negligence of defendant in unloading its vessel.
Answers to interrogatories clearly may be utilized as admissions. 4 Moore Fed.Prac. 2d Ed. p. 1190. F.R. Civ.P. Rule 33, Rule 26(d) (2), 28 U.S.C.A.; Lumbermen’s Mutual Ins. Co. of Mansfield, Ohio v. Cantex Mfg. Co., 5 Cir., 1958, 262 F.2d 63. The answers here, however, through the reference to the third party complaint in the interrogatories, were conditional on the prior establishment of the existence of the wet condition of the pier, which was not admitted by defendant. They would have been misleading to the jury under the circumstances. The court was therefore correct in excluding them.
Charge No. 3 rejected by the court was as follows:
“3. The defendant owed the duty to the plaintiff longshoreman to exercise reasonable care in discharging the cargo from the vessel to the pier and in stacking the cargo on the pier and in inspecting the cargo upon its discharge to the pier.” 1
[214]*214If negligence in discharging or stacking or in failing to inspect created a condition which caused injury, the pier owner might well be liable under New Jersey law.2 The difficulty with plaintiff’s position here, however, is that the record reveals no evidence as to the manner of discharge, stacking or inspection from which a finding of negligence could have been made. There was therefore no error in refusing the charge. We need not determine whether the charge as given would have been sufficient had such evidence been presented.
Since judgment for defendant on the principal action must be affirmed, the appeal from the dismissal of the third party action becomes academic.
Judgment affirmed.
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291 F.2d 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gadaleta-v-nederlandsch-amerekaansche-stoomvart-ca2-1961.