Gypsum Carrier, Inc. v. William D. Handelsman

307 F.2d 525
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 20, 1962
Docket17360
StatusPublished
Cited by111 cases

This text of 307 F.2d 525 (Gypsum Carrier, Inc. v. William D. Handelsman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gypsum Carrier, Inc. v. William D. Handelsman, 307 F.2d 525 (9th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

BROWNING, Circuit Judge.

Appellee was chief steward aboard the appellant’s S.S. Ocean Carrier. As the vessel was being prepared for sea, tackle which two members of the crew were attempting to secure for the voyage fell and struck appellee. Appellee filed two libels against appellant. The first sought maintenance and cure under the general maritime law. The second alleged a cause of action for unseaworthiness under the general maritime law and for negligence under the Jones Act, 1 and sought general and special damages. The libels were consolidated for trial before the court without a jury. Appellee was awarded $33,500.

We sustain the District Court’s finding of liability. We conclude that no errors prejudicial to appellant were made in the computation of damages. The judgment is affirmed.

I. LIABILITY

A. Contributory Negligence. Appellant concedes that there was evidence to support the District Court’s finding that its crewmen handled the tackle negligently. Appellant contends that the District Court should have found appellee guilty of contributory negligence.

Appellant suggests that the facts were undisputed and that the District Court’s holding that appellee was not negligent is therefore a conclusion of law which must be reviewed free of the protection of the “clearly erroneous” rule. 2

*528 We cannot agree. In some respects relevant to the issue of contributory negligence the evidence was unclear or conflicting as to precisely what appellee saw before the accident, where he was in relation to the tackle immediately before and at the moment of impact, and what he did. Appellant suggests that appellee knowingly placed himself in the path of the tackle and in consequence was struck as it fell. But to reach this conclusion one must reject the testimony of appellee, emphasize certain aspects of the deposition of one of two seamen who handled the gear, and draw inferences adverse to appellee from facts susceptible of contrary inferences.

Thus we need not consider whether a trial court’s conclusion as to the existence of negligence is generally to be classified as one of fact or of law. 3 Clearly enough in the present case it reflected a factual determination from conflicting evidence. There is nothing to indicate, as appellant suggests, that the District Court tested appellee’s conduct against an improper standard of care.

If the District Court had agreed with the appellant’s resolution of the problems of proof, it also would have concluded that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. The District Court did not interpret the evidence as appellant does, and neither do we. On an examination of the whole record, we cannot say that the District Court’s determination that appellant failed to carry its burden of proving contributory negligence was clearly erroneous. 4

B. TJnseaworthiness. The District Court also found that appellee’s injuries were caused by the unseaworthiness of the vessel. Appellant concedes the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of unseaworthiness, but contends that the finding of causation was clearly erroneous. Since appellant concedes its negligence, and since we sustain the District Court’s finding that appellee was not contributorily negligent, we need not reach this alternative basis for liability.

C. Injury. Appellant challenges the District Court’s finding that appellee sustained severe and permanent injuries as a result of the accident.

The falling tackle struck appellee’s head, causing an abrasion. He made immediate outcry, sought treament from the second mate who was acting as ship’s doctor, and during the remainder of the voyage requested and was given pain killers for severe headaches. When the voyage was completed, appellee sought medical care. He later suffered a blackout, and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests were performed. They revealed a brain lesion. There was testimony that the brain damage resulted from the accident, that it was the cause of appellee’s headaches, dizziness, and blackouts, and that it would prevent appellee from returning to his employment as chief steward.

The accident and the brain injury are indisputable facts. The District Court’s finding of a causal connection between the two rests principally upon (1) the appellee’s testimony of headaches, dizziness, and blackouts beginning with the accident, (2) his denial of any prior head injury sufficient to account for the brain lesion, and (3) medical opinion of causal relationship based upon these elements considered in the light of the objective symptoms (particularly the abnormal E EG).

Appellant suggests that the objective medical data was not conclusive for a *529 variety of reasons, and that the District Court’s finding of causal connection between the accident and the brain damage therefore depended upon acceptance of the testimony of the appellee. Appellant also points out that the District Court’s finding that the appellee does in fact suffer from incapacitating headaches, dizziness, and blackouts necessarily rested largely upon appellee’s testimony. Appellant then launches a vigorous attack upon appellee’s credibility.

Appellee was twice subjected to searching cross-examination in the trial court. During the trial appellant also attacked appellee’s credibility on the basis of voluminous evidence regarding earlier illness and injury claims made by appellee. The District Court resolved the issue of credibility in favor of appellee. While this circumstance does not totally insulate the District Court’s findings from review on appeal, it does, and should, condition that review. In admiralty appeals, as in civil appeals generally, “due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses.” 5 In this Court appellant has rested its argument, as it must, upon a belief that after reviewing the record as a whole we “will be clearly and firmly convinced that libelant’s accident of May 26, 1959, had no relation to his claim of serious and disabling injury * * We have reviewed the record with care, keeping appellant’s challenge to appel-lee’s credibility particularly in mind. We are not left with the conviction which appellant suggests.

D. Fraudulent Concealment. When appellee applied to appellant for employment, he did not disclose his record of prior claims upon other shipowner-employers for illnesses and injuries. Appellant asserts that the undisclosed facts were material to the risk which it undertook in hiring appellee, that appellee knew this, and that his failure to disclose the facts was “fraud ab initio which barred him from recovery on this claim based on his employment.” Appellee’s right to recover either for negligence under the Jones Act 6 or for maintenance and cure under the general maritime law 7 depended upon his status as a seaman.

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307 F.2d 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gypsum-carrier-inc-v-william-d-handelsman-ca9-1962.