James Varnado v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Company, Badeaux, Discon, Cumberland & Barbier, Intervenors-Appellants

608 F.2d 557, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9619, 1980 A.M.C. 2990
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1979
Docket76-1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 608 F.2d 557 (James Varnado v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Company, Badeaux, Discon, Cumberland & Barbier, Intervenors-Appellants) 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
James Varnado v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Company, Badeaux, Discon, Cumberland & Barbier, Intervenors-Appellants, 608 F.2d 557, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9619, 1980 A.M.C. 2990 (5th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff Varnado, a seaman on a drilling barge, was injured March 6, 1971, when he fell in the mud room of the vessel. Varna-do, then not quite 23 years old, was working as a roustabout in his first offshore job and had been at work only a few days.

Varnado sued his employer under the Jones Act and general maritime law alleging negligence and unseaworthiness. In a trial in 1974 a jury returned Rule 49(a) special verdicts finding that defendant was liable to Varnado and that Varnado was damaged in the amount of $100,000 but was 50% contributorily negligent. Judgment was entered for Varnado for $50,000.

Defendant moved for judgment n/o/v and for new trial, and the court granted the new trial motion without statement of reasons.

In 1976 a second jury trial was held. Plaintiff contended that drilling gel was brought into the mud room in paper sacks, some of which were torn causing gel to leak out onto the floor, that the gel mixed with water and collected in indentations on the floor, which caused the floor to be slippery and brought about plaintiff’s fall. Defendant asserted plaintiff was contributorily negligent for several reasons, including that one of his duties was to help keep the floor clean and dry and that he failed to do so. During closing argument plaintiff’s counsel addressed several jurors by name and made requests of them as follows:

Mr. Olivier, you are an architect, sir, you know about stress on steel. You tell your fellow jurors when you are in there about how they have indentations on mud room floors.
And Mr. Duhe, you are a lab technician, you work for Shell Chemical Company, sir, you tell them what happens to drilling gel when it’s mixed with water and how difficult that is to clean up when you try.
And Mr. Gaudet, you’ve worked with a bag company for twenty-five years, sir, you tell your fellow jurors what happens when you put substances in paper bags and how they tear and there is nothing that can be done.
There is no doubt, ladies and gentlemen, liability is proved.

T. 523. 1

A few minutes later, plaintiff’s counsel addressed another juror, Professor Honoré, *559 concerning the testimony of Professor Goodman, plaintiff’s economic expert, as follows:

Professor Honoré, I notice you pay particular attention, sir, to Professor Goodman, perhaps you have something in common. In the lost wages, sir, when he computed the lost wages of a man that was discharged from April 9th, 1971 to the date of this trial, he did it on a very scholarly basis and I noticed, with particularity, how you were following, sir.
I ask you to help your fellow jurors in computing lost damages and lost wages. Dr. Goodman assessed lost wages at thirty thousand four hundred and eighteen dollars and seventeen cents. The lost wages of the future, which, remember, no one is contending here, that Mr. Varnado cannot work. I didn’t say that. Counsel is trying to imply that I said that.
Mr. Varnado, we think, can get a job, but at a minimum wage and I made sure that Dr. Goodman, Professor Honoré—

T. 529. The court called counsel to the bench and held a bench conference. The court asked defendant whether it had any motions to make. Defendant orally moved for a mistrial. After a brief colloquy, the court said:

Accordingly, now, I will grant the motion for a mistrial.
However, I will order Counsel to continue and we’ll submit the case to the Jury as well.

T. 531. The conference ended, and plaintiff’s counsel resumed his jury argument. When the judge instructed the jury, after a few opening remarks, he said:

Now, in this case, ladies and gentlemen, we have had an unusual occurrence during argument which I must comment upon and that is, that counsel had addressed almost each member of the jury individually by name. Now, this is an improper practice.
MR. DAIGLE [attorney for defendant]:
Your Honor, I must say, I did not do that.
THE COURT:
I understand.
Counsel for one of the parties has addressed various members of the jury by name and this is an improper practice. As a result of this, the Court called counsel to the Bench and certain action was taken. The reason it’s improper is that it puts an undue burden on any of you to ask you individually to take some action. I, therefore, caution you not to allow this addressing of you individually by counsel in any way to affect your discharge of your duty in considering the facts and applying the law as set forth in these instructions. Disregard it all together. As the jury, each of you is to deliberate on the facts as you heard them in the courtroom and the evidence that you received from the law. You are all to deliberate without any undue burden being put on you individually with regard to any particular fact or factor in the case. You are not to consider or single out any one part of the instruction as stating the law as a whole or, stating the law, but rather you are to consider the instructions as a whole.
Neither are you to be concerned with the wisdom of any rule of law stated by the Court, regardless of any opinion that you may have concerning what the law ought to be. It would be a violation of your sworn duty as jurors to base a verdict on any view of the law other than that set forth in these instructions, just as it would be a violation of your sworn duty to base your verdict on any facts, other than those brought out from the witness stand and from exhibits that have been entered into evidence in this courtroom.

Rec. V, pp. 3-5. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and the court entered judgment thereon.

Varnado appeals, objecting to the granting of a new trial and to the continuation of the second trial to verdict and judgment after the judge told counsel he was granting a mistrial.

A. The motion for a new trial

We are hampered in reviewing the district judge’s order because of its unillumi- *560 nating nature. It consists of only a typewritten notation that the motion for new trial is granted. The motion asserted several grounds: failure to grant a directed verdict on the grounds of insufficient evidence of both negligence and unseaworthiness and failure to prove that plaintiff’s slipping and falling was the proximate cause of his back injury; failure to prove loss of wages as an element of damages [and, impliedly, that this caused an excessive award of damages]. Because of the form of the judge’s order we review all the grounds asserted.

The evidence of injury and of proximate cause was sufficient to submit to the jury under Boeing v. Shipman, 411 F.2d 365 (CA5, 1969) (en banc).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 F.2d 557, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 9619, 1980 A.M.C. 2990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-varnado-v-ocean-drilling-exploration-company-badeaux-discon-ca5-1979.