Gordon Anderson v. Iceland Steamship Company

585 F.2d 1142, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 8702, 1979 A.M.C. 2629
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1978
Docket77-1266
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 585 F.2d 1142 (Gordon Anderson v. Iceland Steamship Company) 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
Gordon Anderson v. Iceland Steamship Company, 585 F.2d 1142, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 8702, 1979 A.M.C. 2629 (1st Cir. 1978).

Opinion

BOWNES, Circuit Judge.

Iceland Steamship Company (“Iceland”) appeals from a verdict of $65,000 plus interest in favor of longshoreman Gordon Anderson. Following a five day trial, the jury returned a verdict finding that shipowner Iceland’s negligence was partially responsible for Anderson’s injury. The jury found both the shipowner and Anderson equally negligent and apportioned liability equally between them. Iceland timely moved for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a), and both for a new trial, Fed.R.Civ.P. 58, and for a judgment n. o. v., Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b), within ten days after entry of judgment. All were denied.

Factual Background

Iceland’s vessel, GODAFOSS, entered the port of Gloucester, Massachusetts, on November 5, 1974 carrying a cargo of frozen fish. Unloading was handled by the Elliott Stevedoring Company and took place at a pier owned by Quincy Market Cold Storage and Warehouse Company. Longshoreman Gordon Anderson worked as a checker on the pier, checking markings on the cargo after it had been removed from the ship’s hold and had been placed on a forklift for transfer to Quincy Market Cold Storage’s freezers. Anderson’s checking station was a desk inside a shed on the pier. Simultaneously checking the cargo was an employee of Quincy, ascertaining the condition of *1144 the cargo prior to storage in Quincy’s freezers.

Both Anderson and Quincy’s checker were responsible for noting “exceptions” to the condition of the cargo. An exception is noted when the cargo is received in an unacceptable condition, such that Quincy assumes no responsibility for it. Exceptions are noted to wet, leaking and soft cargo. None was noted on either November 6 or November 7, during the unloading of the GODAFOSS. Cargo that is received in a wet, soft, leaking condition is considered distressed and is not sold for human consumption. State and federal agents are called in to determine the disposition of the cargo. None was called for the GODA-FOSS cargo. When cargo is received in a wet, soft, leaking condition, the longshoremen’s contract with the Elliott Stevedoring Company calls for extra pay for the special handling such cargo requires. No extra pay was requested or paid for the GODAFOSS cargo. The longshoremen and the stevedore supervisor testified that when cargo is received in a wet, soft, and leaking condition, a special procedure is employed to unload it. Shovels are used to deposit the cargo in barrels which the bridle lifts from the hold. This procedure was not employed for the GODAFOSS cargo.

Cargo that is received with open flaps, torn cartons, and fish exposed is considered normal. Testimony indicated that fish arrives in this condition from practically every ship entering Gloucester and that it requires no special handling. If “remastering” is necessary, the Elliott supervisor testified that it would be done by the stevedor-ing contractor, inside the warehouse building. Remastering involves placing smaller cartons of fish into larger “master” containers and is done when the original containers have torn or when otherwise needed to make handling easier. Elliott assigned one man for two hours to perform remastering duties on the GODAFOSS cargo and billed Iceland Steamship Company for the costs, as is customary.

The GODAFOSS had encountered stormy seas en route, which caused the cargo to shift. When the ship next put into port, still in Iceland, new masters were obtained and the cargo partially remastered by the ship crew. There were insufficient masters available at the small port in Iceland so part of the cargo remained unmastered. To prevent further slippage, cargo was stowed over the unmastered cargo. The unmas-tered cargo was sitting beneath other stowage so no attempt was made to remaster at Reykjavik, the next port of call. There was trial testimony that it is not uncommon for ships to be unloaded in Gloucester with no master cartons whatsoever. There was further testimony that, due to the rigors of ocean sailing, it was rare to encounter cargo that' was totally intact without evidencing some effects of the travails of sea travel.

The GODAFOSS was unloaded during November 6 and 7. Stevedoring operations were under the control of Elliott Stevedor-ing Company. There was no evidence that the ship’s crew or officers played any role in unloading the cargo. According to the testimony, the cargo was raised from the hold with a bridle and pallet. Anderson testified, both in his pretrial deposition and at trial, that he had complained to the longshoreman working the hold that the racks which were being sent up from the hold were unsteady, causing cartons to fall from the forklift once aboard the dock. He testified that he repeated his complaint to the longshoremen seven or eight times on November 7, the day he was injured. In his pretrial deposition, Anderson attributed the unsteady racks to the fact that the longshoremen were throwing the cargo onto the pallets. 1 At trial, he attributed the unsteady pallets to the fact that the cartons were wet, soft and leaking, and he testified that the messy conditions inside the hold, due to the unmastered cartons, made it difficult for the longshoremen to properly stack the racks. Anderson stated at trial *1145 that he requested a mate from the GODA-FOSS to send someone down to remaster the cartons in the hold and, according to Anderson’s trial testimony, was told that crew members would do so.

Two fellow longshoremen testified that they recalled that the cargo that day was wet, soft and leaking. Neither longshoremen kept records and both conceded that they had unloaded approximately three hundred ships during the intervening nearly two and one-half years. The GODAFOSS recorded temperatures inside the hatch every four hours on November 6, after the longshoremen had completed discharging for that day. The warmest temperature recorded was 20.2 below zero on the Centigrade scale. 2 At 8:00 P.M. on November 7, after closing the hatch following discharge of the cargo, the recorded temperature was minus 21 on the Centigrade scale.

Anderson testified that the dock area had become covered with gurry 3 and slime. He attributed this to the fish cartons which continued to fall from the pallets and spill their contents over the dock. Although attempts were made, by Anderson and the forklift operator, to pick up the spilled cartons, Anderson claimed that some of the fish remained on the floor and was subsequently run over by the forklift, causing additional juices and slippery substances to coat the area. He testified that the vicinity where he was working was “slippery and gooey[.]” This characterization was implicitly challenged by the Quincy checker, working adjacent to Anderson, who stated that the floor where he worked was not slippery.

The Elliott supervisor testified that it is the responsibility of the stevedoring contractor to maintain the dock in safe working condition.

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Bluebook (online)
585 F.2d 1142, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 8702, 1979 A.M.C. 2629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-anderson-v-iceland-steamship-company-ca1-1978.