Helen Reabe Sobosle v. United States Steel Corporation

359 F.2d 7, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6435, 1966 A.M.C. 886
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 19, 1966
Docket15322
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 359 F.2d 7 (Helen Reabe Sobosle v. United States Steel Corporation) 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 Reabe Sobosle v. United States Steel Corporation, 359 F.2d 7, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6435, 1966 A.M.C. 886 (3d Cir. 1966).

Opinion

FREEDMAN, Circuit Judge.

This admiralty appeal deals with a seaman’s right to additional maintenance and cure. It arises out of an old injury and requires consideration of the earlier *9 proceedings which the seaman brought against the shipowner.

Twenty years ago, on August 9, 1946, libellant was employed as a chambermaid on a vessel owned and operated by Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, now United States Steel Corporation. On that day while in the course of her employment libellant suffered apparently slight injuries about the head and left shoulder. She brought two actions against respondent, one under the Jones Act for negligence and the other in admiralty for maintenance and cure. The Jones Act claim was denied on the ground that the accident resulted solely from libellant’s own negligence. Reabe v. Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, 100 F. Supp. 726 (W.D.Pa.1951). She was, however, awarded maintenance and cure amounting to $5,424 in the admiralty action, on the ground that she was suffering from a “functional nervous condition” caused by her injuries, which totally disabled her for work from March 30, 1947 1 until the time of the trial, March 14, 1951, 2 and that this disability “may continue in the future.” The District Judge stated in his opinion: “The testimony has convinced me that further treatment will be of benefit to the libellant.” Reabe v. Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, 100 F.Supp. 728, 730 (W.D.Pa.1951).

Eight months later, on July 17, 1952, libellant, now Mrs. Sobosle, filed a new libel in admiralty for maintenance and cure for the period beginning March 14, 1951, the date of the prior trial. After a trial held on May 21 and 24, 1957, the District Judge, on June 5, 1957, found that libellant was still suffering from the functional nervous condition at the time of the trial, that the finding on the prior libel that this condition was caused by the original injuries was binding, and that this condition had totally disabled her from working. He also found that her condition had progressively worsened as a result of respondent’s neglect to afford her the medical care which the court had previously found that she required and which respondent was legally obliged to provide, and that her condition would be improved in the future by medical care. A new award, amounting to $10,569, was made for maintenance and cure from March 14, 1951 to May 27, 1957. In the course of his opinion, the District Judge said: “It is my suggestion that the seaman make immediate arrangements to secure the medical attention and treatment that has been recommended by her attending physician [Dr. Max H. Weinberg], and it would seem most practical and realistic that the defendant shipowner agree to make provision to underwrite the cost of this expense. I make this recommendation for the reason that maintenance and cure must continue until every approach reasonably known to medical science is applied in an effort to cure the seaman and if the suggestion is followed, the parties and the court will within a reasonable length of time in the future be able to know the answer to this most unfortunate situation.” Sobosle v. United States Steel Company, 151 F.Supp. 767, 768-769 (W.D.Pa.1957).

The order, in addition to the award of maintenance and cure, went on to state that since libellant was in need of medical care immediately, the court, as guardian of the seaman, directed that she promptly place herself'under the care of Dr. Weinberg, and that he make written monthly reports to the court regarding his treatment and inform the court when in his opinion the seaman was cured, the disability had become permanent, or the maximum cure possible had been effected. On July 8, 1957 libellant entered a sanatorium for the further treatment recommended by Dr. Weinberg. She remained there for eight weeks and the cost, amounting to $773.46, was paid by respondent. On August 26, 1957, Dr. *10 Weinberg wrote to the District Judge recommending that libellant be transferred to a Pittsburgh hospital for shock therapy. Shortly afterward, on September 7, 1957, he informed the District Judge that libellant had not submitted to the shock therapy but instead had left the sanatorium and returned home, and that he could do nothing further. The District Judge thereupon directed the parties, their counsel and the attending physician, to appear before him to show cause why an order should not be entered terminating maintenance and cure as of the date of libellant’s refusal to comply with the direction of her attending physician.

At the hearing Dr. Weinberg made it clear that in his opinion libellant was incompetent to such a degree that appointment of a guardian would be justified. He thought libellant was then a paranoid case and described as superstitious her fearfulness of the effects of the treatment on her daughter.

On October 3, 1957, the court entered two orders. In one, respondent’s liability for maintenance and cure was terminated as of September 7, 1957. In the other, the court found that libellant’s failure to accept shock treatment was “due to difficulties and involvements which exist in the family relationship of the seaman with her husband and daughters, and coupled with the neurosis and anxieties of the seaman,” and that if she “had her normal faculties and was not subject to the involvements heretofore expressed, she would have [accepted the treatment].” In these circumstances the court found that “a duty exists for the court to make available to the seaman appropriate relief if and when circumstances change.” The court therefore made the first order subject to the condition that if Dr. Weinberg at any time should certify that libellant’s condition could be improved by further medical treatment, and if she should be willing to submit herself for the treatment recommended by Dr. Weinberg, and if appropriate members of the family required by Dr. Weinberg and the hospital to agree in writing before such treatment was rendered should do so, the court on appropriate petition would set the matter for hearing, “after which such order will be entered by the court as the circumstances and the law require as to whether further treatment will be authorized or directed to be given as recommended by Dr. Max H. Weinberg at the expense of the United States Steel Corporation”. The order stated: “If compliance is not made in all respects with this order, the decree entered on the 3rd day of October, 1957, terminating maintenance and cure as of September 7, 1957, will remain final and conclusive in all respects.”

Almost seven years later, on September 2, 1964, libellant filed the present petition for modification of the order of October 3, 1957. She alleged that in the intervening period she and her husband had been divorced, 3 Dr. Weinberg had died on August 29, 1962, 4 and she had been examined on March 24, 1964, by another physician, Dr. B. J. Johnston, who had found that she was totally and permanently disabled due to the injuries she sustained, complicated by a post-traumatic mental disorder, .and had recommended hospitalization for physical therapy and other treatment. He specifically recommended against shock therapy. Attached to the petition was the written consent of her daughter to the order of October 3, 1957, and to any treatment which might be ordered by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
359 F.2d 7, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 6435, 1966 A.M.C. 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helen-reabe-sobosle-v-united-states-steel-corporation-ca3-1966.