Helen Mascuilli, Administratrix of the Estate of Albert Mascuilli, Deceased v. United States

313 F.2d 764
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1963
Docket13745
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 313 F.2d 764 (Helen Mascuilli, Administratrix of the Estate of Albert Mascuilli, Deceased v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helen Mascuilli, Administratrix of the Estate of Albert Mascuilli, Deceased v. United States, 313 F.2d 764 (3d Cir. 1963).

Opinions

KALODNER, Circuit Judge.

Did a district court judge err when, in a wrongful death action in admiralty which alleged unseaworthiness and negligence, he entered a Pre-Trial Order which resolved the issue of liability in favor of the libellant and directed that the trial of the cause be restricted exclusively to the issue of damages ?

That question is presented on thjs appeal from a subsequent decree entering judgment in favor of the libellant and against the respondent in the amount of [765]*765$124,000 following trial on the issue of damages.1

The Government has premised its appeal on the grounds that the judge who entered the Pre-Trial Order erred- (1) “in summarily holding the United States liable notwithstanding the existence of genuine issues of material fact” and (2) in imposing liability without making specific findings of fact and stating conclusions of law “as required by Admiralty Rule 46%”; and on its contention that there can be no recovery for unseaworthiness under the Pennsylvania Wrongful Death Statute.

Albert Mascuilli, a longshoreman employed by Northern Metals Company, stevedoring firm, was fatally injured under circumstances later detailed while assisting in loading cargo aboard the US NS Marine Fiddler, a vessel owned and operated by the United States. The libellant, his widow and Administratrix of his estate, filed action in admiralty against the United States for wrongful death alleging unseaworthiness of the vessel and negligence of its employees.

The Government, in its Answer to the libel, denied generally the allegations of unseaworthiness and negligence and affirmatively alleged that Maseuilli’s death was caused solely by the negligence of Northern which, it was averred, had exclusive custody, control and supervision over the entire cargo loading operation. It later filed its Answers to the Interrogatories which accompanied the libel. Thereafter, the libellant filed written Requests for Admissions of Facts, to which the Government made no reply.

There followed a pre-trial conference at which libellant moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the unanswered Requests for Admissions must be deemed admitted and that these Admissions were sufficient to support a finding of liability against the Government. She then withdrew 2 the Motion for Summary Judgment and moved instead for a finding of liability under Rule 44% of the Rules of Practice in Admiralty and Maritime Cases, “Pre-Trial Procedure; Formulating Issues”. Following argument on this Motion the district court judge, on December 5, 1960, filed a “Memorandum”, reported at 188 F.Supp. 754 (E.D.Pa.1960), in which he stated in part:

“We are convinced from an examination of the requests for admissions, which were not denied, that the liability of the respondent is established beyond question. * * * We conclude, therefore, that the Court has the authority in these particular circumstances, and in the light of Rule 44% of the Admiralty Rules, 28 U.S.C.A. to limit the issues to be tried to the question of damages.”

In the Pre-Trial Order it was said in part:

“The liability issue is resolved by reason of the admitted facts and there is no issue as to liability now existing between the parties to this action; the admitted facts clearly establish liability of the respondent for the death of Albert Mascuilli on May 1, 1959; it will be unnecessary to adduce any further proofs relating to liability at the trial of this cause; the evidence at the trial shall be restricted exclusively to proof of the quantum of damages.”

As was earlier stated, at the trial on the issue of damages only, the trial judge issued a Decree awarding $124,000 to the libellant.

These facts are undisputed:

On May 1, 1959, the Marine Fiddler, a military transport, was being loaded in part with a cargo of 61%-ton Army [766]*766tanks by the Northern Metals Company (“Northern”) an independent stevedore, under a contract with the Government which gave Northern sole custody and control of the cargo areas of the vessel and its cargo handling gear. The initial rigging of the gear had been previously carried out by the ship’s crew.

The vessel was equipped with a heavy lift swinging boom. This consisted of a large jumbo boom, capable of supporting weights up to 150 tons, which was located amidship at the after portion of the No. 3 hold, and three vang guys which were powered by winches and which swung the jumbo boom into the desired position. Two of the vang guys were on the starboard side of the vessel and one on the port side. The vang guys were electrically powered and each was equipped with a tripper (circuit breaker) in the electrical circuit designed to shut off the winch should the strain exceed the designated safe load to be carried. The vang guys were attached to the cargo hook by means of fish plates (triangular shaped pieces of metal) and shackles. The vang guy on the port side which figured in this accident was attached to a separate fish plate which, in turn, was shackled to the cargo hook. The shackle was 2^4 inches in diameter and weighed approximately 90 pounds. It had a rated strength of 225 tons and a safety factor of four giving it a safe working load of 56 tons.

Just prior to the accident, one of the Army tanks had been lifted from the pier and was centered over the hatch opening of No. 3 hold preparatory to its being lowered into the hold. Mascuilli was assisting in guiding the tank through the hatch opening when the shackle connecting the port vang guy to the fish plate on the boom parted causing the vang guy and its appurtenances to lash back and strike Mascuilli. He died half an hour later.

That the vang guy shackle parted because of excessive strain was never disputed. The Government had so stated in its Answers to libellant’s Interrogatories. Moreover, Requests for Admissions No. 18, admitted by reason of the Government’s failure to reply, stated that “The shackle parted because of the excessive strain placed upon it in the loading operation.”

In its Pre-Trial Memorandum below, the Government took the position that the accident was caused solely by the improper handling of the boom and winches by the stevedoring contractor and its employees and not by reason of fault or negligence on its part or by any defect in the shackle which parted.

The libellant in her Pre-Trial Memorandum did not make any claim that the shackle was defective. She, in sum, ascribed the parting of the shackle to the excessive strain placed upon it in the loading operation by reason of the asserted circumstances that the 61%-ton weight of the Army tank being loaded at the time of the accident was “heavier than the safe working load of the shackle”, viz. 56 tons. The Government, said the libellant, “knowing the nature of the cargo to be loaded aboard the vessel, and being aware of the working capacity of the gear, was negligent in not providing stronger shackles, and the use of a shackle whose safe working load was less than the weight of the draft made the deck of the vessel an unsafe place to work” and “these circumstances constitute an unseaworthy condition.”

On this appeal the libellant urges that the admitted fact that the 56-ton safe working load

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313 F.2d 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helen-mascuilli-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-albert-mascuilli-deceased-ca3-1963.