Howard Little v. Charles F. Green

428 F.2d 1061, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8517
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 24, 1970
Docket28161
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 428 F.2d 1061 (Howard Little v. Charles F. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard Little v. Charles F. Green, 428 F.2d 1061, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8517 (5th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

Howard Little, a seaman who was injured while working as a member, of the crew of the shrimp trawler ROVING GAMBLER, sued Charles F. Green, the owner of the vessel. Little’s complaint contained a count under the Jones Act 1 for negligence, and a count under the General Maritime Law for breach of the warranty of seaworthiness. 2 The issues of negligence and unseaworthiness were tried to a jury and a general verdict was returned for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals on a claim of confusion between the legal principles applicable to negligence and the strict liability doctrine of unseaworthiness which allegedly arose both in statements of counsel to the jury and in the instructions of the court. He also contends the ROVING GAMBLER was unseaworthy as a matter of law. Finding no reversible error in the record, we affirm.

Plaintiff Little was acting as a rig-man on the ROVING GAMBLER on January 6, 1967. He was operating winches to bring in the nets used for catching shrimp when the cable attached to the net overrode or wound upon itself on the winch drum. Little tried to correct the override by kicking it. His leg was caught in the cable and drawn into the winch and he was seriously and permanently injured.

At the time of the accident the ROVING GAMBLER had a crew of three: a captain who was in command and usually piloted the vessel; a rigman who operated the winches which lowered and raised the nets; and a header who cut *1064 off the heads of the shrimp. Both the captain and the header were supposed to assist in certain phases of the net operations.

The ROVING GAMBLER operated two large trawl nets simultaneously— one off each side of the vessel — by trailing them from cables attached to port and starboard booms known as outriggers. The forward end of each trawl net was held open when in the ocean, by a pair of heavy wooden vanes called doors. Each net and set of doors was put out and hauled in through power supplied by a separate deck mounted winch. Each winch utilized approximately 150 fathoms of cable. This cable was shackled to an additional fo'rty fathoms of double cable forming a bridle which ran to each of the doors.

Each winch was separately controlled by a pair of levers. One lever mounted horizontally and close to the deck of the ship, was operated by foot. This horizontal lever functioned as a brake to stop and hold the winch drum. The other lever was mounted in a vertical position and was intended to be operated by hand. By means of a friction coupling, this vertical lever caused power to be transferred to the winch. This power operated only in one direction (that of winding in the cable and nets), since the drag of the water on the nets as the boat moved forward supplied the necessary force to carry out the nets. The vertical levers were arranged so that pushing them toward each other operated the winches. Releasing the vertical levers released the friction coupling and permitted the winches to roll free, unless the foot lever brake was applied. When raising the nets, the captain reduced the speed of the trawler but remained in the wheelhouse until the bridle broke water, at which time the speed was further reduced and the captain was to come back to the winch and assist in the final operations necessary to bring up the nets.

The cable on the ROVING GAM-T'' ER’s winches was made of metal and in diameter. As it wound onto h, the size of the cable and the tension induced by the drag of the net were normally sufficient to keep it from overriding on itself, but such a condition did occur occasionally. When the bridle had left the water and begun to wind onto the winch, the bulk of the shackle and the double cable made it more likely that an override would occur than when the single cable was being taken in. Such an override of either the cable or the bridle was undesirable but it was not a major problem. No mechanical means of correcting an override was provided on the winches aboard the ROVING GAMBLER and no regularly used or known mechanical device for correcting such overrides was disclosed by the proof. One of Little’s witnesses testified:

“Q Well, is there any other way for a man to do it [i. e. prevent or correct an override] ? That you know of?
“A One of the latest methods we use, we have what we call a guide— I think one of our boats has it. It is a piece of steel that we put down over the bridle and it has a handle on it and we guide both those bridles in with that handle. I haven’t used it. I don’t know how effective that is.
“Q You do not have a mechanical means ?
“A There is no other way except physical — you could use your hands or your feet. That is the only way it can be done. Or just let it go like it is.
“Q You know of no other method of getting that cable back?
“A No.” (Emphasis supplied)

The preferred method of eliminating an override was for one of the crew members to tap the cable lightly with his hand, instead of following this practice, Little chose to kick the cable on the occasion of his injury.

Acting without the captain’s knowledge, Little had chained together the vertical levers that controlled the power to the two winches operating the sepa *1065 rate nets with a jury rig appliance he had brought aboard. The effect of this phain device was to keep the power to the winches locked in the on or incoming position without the necessity for the rig-man’s holding the two levers with his hands. Consequently, when Little’s foot was caught, the winch power could not be stopped by simply releasing his hand hold on the levers.

In his brief and argument here, Little urges reversal on these points: (1) The vessel was unseaworthy as a matter of law. (2) Counsel for defendant, in his opening statement and closing argument, misstated the law applicable to unseaworthiness by intimating that the jury must find that Green had done something “wrong” in order for Little to recover and the court failed to correct the misimpression conveyed by such statement. (3) The instructions of the court failed to properly set out the law to the jury, in that they were confusing and improperly commingled principles of negligence and unseaworthiness.

Little makes no valid challenge of the jury’s verdict on the negligence issue which he raised below. There is substantial evidence on which the jury could base its finding that Little knew the dangers of kicking the cable to correct an override. In fact it is without dispute that Little had been twice warned against this practice. Therefore, if he was to recover at all it must necessarily have been on the basis of unseaworthiness.

I.

UNSE AWORTHINE SS

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Bluebook (online)
428 F.2d 1061, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-little-v-charles-f-green-ca5-1970.