Hill v. Flota Mercante Grancolombiana, S. A.

267 F. Supp. 380, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9049, 1970 A.M.C. 740
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 9, 1967
DocketNo. 6109
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 267 F. Supp. 380 (Hill v. Flota Mercante Grancolombiana, S. A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Flota Mercante Grancolombiana, S. A., 267 F. Supp. 380, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9049, 1970 A.M.C. 740 (E.D. La. 1967).

Opinion

RUBIN, District Judge.

Eddie Lee Hill, a longshoreman who stands 5 feet 11 inches tall, and weighs 250 pounds, hurt his knee while [381]*381descending a ladder through a hatch opening. There was nothing wrong with the ladder. The opening was larger than the standard size. Nonetheless, Hill says the vessel was unseaworthy, and his lawyer puts his case with commendable candor: The hatch itself was not too small. But, he contends, Hill was too large to use the hatch safely. Hiring longshoremen too big for the available hatch renders a vessel unseaworthy, he says. Albeit ingenious, that’s a thin argument but, even so, there’s no opening in the jurisprudence wide enough to squeeze i£' through. At least when the hatch openings are bigger than the standard size, they don’t render a vessel unseaworthy even for stout longshoremen.

The factual background may be sketched briefly. The República del Equador is a C1-M-AV1 type vessel. It arrived in New Orleans in the early afternoon of June 5, 1963, and cargo operations began shortly after docking. The next day Hill was descending the fixed ship’s ladder from the weather deck into one of the ’tween decks. His foot slipped and he bumped his right knee. The ladder was in good condition, and there was no oil, grease, or other foreign substance on it. Hill and his fellow longshoremen had used ladders of identical construction on similar type vessels on a number of occasions before the accident, and had never complained about the ladder or asked for alternate means to enter the cargo spaces. Both Hill and the shipowner called witnesses expert in the field of naval architecture, and the witnesses on both sides testified that oval hatches having dimensions of 15 inches by 23 inches are standard, and widely used. The dimensions of the hatch in question were 17 inches by 25 inches. After his injury, Hill was off work for 25 weeks, and he was paid $70 a week in compensation, together with $945.55 in medical expense under the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act.1

Hill sued the shipowner on the basis that “the owner failed to provide [Hill] with a safe place to work; failed to provide safe ingress and egress to the cargo area; failed to provide proper safety devices; failed to provide adequate supervision of activities and working conditions.”

The shipowner filed a third-party complaint against the stevedore.

It is of course true that it is the obligation of the shipowner to provide at least one safe and accessible ladder for each gang working in a hatch,2 but the ladder provided here was safe and accessible. There were ten hold men working the hatch in question. Six of them were men of substantial girth, although none was larger than Hill. Hill and two of the other longshoremen testified that they had some difficulty getting into a hatch such as the one involved here. Nonetheless, all of them had used this hatch opening, or like hatch openings on similar vessels, without trouble, and they all continued to use the same hatch opening and the same ladder without problems after Hill was hurt.

A big, heavy man must obviously use more care in descending a ladder than a small agile man. A basketball player 6 feet 11 inches tall must lower his head when going through doorways. This does not mean that every hatch must be provided with alternate ladders, or every door made as tall as a steeple. The hatch opening was big enough and safe enough to make the vessel seaworthy. It is horn-book law that the owner of the vessel is not required to provide an accident free ship, but only one reasonably fit for its intended use. “The standard is not perfection.” 3

[382]*382But counsel urges that Hill was his own unseaworthy condition. He was himself unfit for the operation at hand unless a Jacob’s ladder or some other means of descending into the hatch was provided. But it’s a far stretch (and worse than a tight squeeze) to reach this result reasoning by analogy, from the rule that a ship is unseaworthy if it puts to sea with an incompetent master or an untrained or fever-ridden crew.4 There is no justification to extend Judge Hand’s famous standard for measuring the seaworthiness of personnel by requiring the owner to warrant that the seaman is not only equal in disposition and seamanship, but no larger in girth, than ordinary men in the calling.5 But this is indeed plaintiff’s contention because he asserts that the longshore gang was “improper” for this ship because its men were too big for the hatch.

In Holmes v. Mississippi Shipping Co., 5 Cir., 1962, 301 F.2d 474, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a seaman is not entitled to recover damages for injuries caused by unseaworthiness of his former vessel if the seaman himself constituted the unseaworthiness. In discussing the case of the mentally disturbed seaman who sought to recover from the shipowner when he cut off his own hand, the court stated that recovery cannot be had by a seaman injured solely by his own negligent, or his own irresponsible, act.6

The plaintiff relies upon Admiral Towing Company v. Woolen, 9 Cir., 1961, 290 F.2d 641, which involved the disappearance of a tug at sea. The owner had employed an agent to bring the tug from San Francisco to Astoria, Oregon. The agent was to take on a crewman, but, without the owner’s knowledge, he employed an inexperienced seventeen year old school boy for the job. The Court held that the trial court was justified in finding that the vessel was unseaworthy because the owner failed to supply an adequate and competent crew; and the owner was therefore liable for the boy’s death. In a sense it can be said that the court found that the inexperienced hand was himself the unseaworthy condition. But that is not the true meaning of the decision. What the case holds is that a vessel equipped with an incompetent crew is unseaworthy. There is an inherent defect in the crew that violates the owner’s warranty. It is interesting to note further, however, in connection with the Admiral Towing case that the law has always imposed a special obligation on those dealing with persons whom they know to be incompetent or inexperienced to exercise a greater degree of care towards them.7 This is, in general, a rule of tort law, not of unseaworthiness, but the principle would appear to be applicable in determining whether the owner of a vessel had discharged his duty to provide a competent crew.

[383]*383There is no occasion to apply the Admiral Towing Company decision here. Physically and mentally, Eddie Lee Hill was equipped for his job — indeed he urges that he was over-equipped. There was no defect in the vessel or its crew. He should not be permitted to recover for unseaworthiness.

INDEMNITY

The shipowner asserts that the stevedore owes it the costs of its defense including reasonable attorney’s fees.

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267 F. Supp. 380, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9049, 1970 A.M.C. 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-flota-mercante-grancolombiana-s-a-laed-1967.