John T. Handy Co. v. Carman

648 A.2d 1115, 102 Md. App. 188, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 28, 1994
DocketNo. 232
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 648 A.2d 1115 (John T. Handy Co. v. Carman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John T. Handy Co. v. Carman, 648 A.2d 1115, 102 Md. App. 188, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 152 (Md. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

CATHELL, Judge.

This is a crabby case! Appellant, John T. Handy Co., Inc., appeals from a verdict rendered by a jury in the Circuit Court for Somerset County in which James Carman, Ward and Wade Walker, and Jack Howard, appellees and Crisfield crabbers,1 were awarded $78,850 in damages. The cause of action arose out of, and damages were awarded in respect to, the alleged negligence and/or breach of contract by appellant in [191]*191failing to keep shedding shanties operating in a proper fashion causing the deaths of tens of thousands of peelers, busters and, presumably, soft crabs.

Before proceeding to appellant’s questions, a rudimentary understanding of the soft shell crab process may be helpful. We will identify some of the stages and types of crabs, first noting that shedding is a vital part of the reproduction process, i.e., mating occurs during the female crab’s soft shell stage and males, being caring and attentive creatures, grab, restrain and enclose the females and thus protect them during the peeler, buster, and vulnerable soft shell stages.2

Peelers are hard crabs thinking about shedding. They are distinguished by colorations. Busters have gone further than thinking about it; they are literally “busting” at the seams. Soft crabs have “busted” out or shed their hard shells and their new shells have not yet begun to harden. Paper shells (buckrams) represent an intermediate stage, after the soft shell of the crab has begun to harden from the minerals in the water. Paper shells have little marketable value, though it is not uncommon for them to be eaten. The last stage is the return to the hard crab stage. There is a brief period during which time the soft crab must be removed from water, after the buster has completed the process of busting out, so it does not transmogrify into a paper shell and become a hard crab once again.

In order to monitor the process, female peelers are caught in open water, often enticed by hardshell male “Jimmy” crabs,3 and transferred to floats (usually, now in shanties) [192]*192where fresh salt water is continually pumped in (or, in some instances, naturally passes through floats that are anchored in waterways). This keeps the crabs alive as they pass through the various stages of the shed. During this process, the crabs (1,000 to 1,200 a float) require constant monitoring (tending) so that the soft shells may be immediately removed (fished) from the water in order to keep them in a soft state and to otherwise protect them from predation by other crabs.

Appellant presents five questions:

1. Did the Trial Court commit reversible error by instructing the Jury on the law of bailments?
2. Even if it was not erroneous for the Trial Court to have instructed the Jury on the law of bailments, was it reversible error not to also give the requested instruction that before the theory of bailment could be considered, the Jury must first find that the crabs had been delivered to John T. Handy Co., Inc., which thereafter had exclusive control of the crabs at the time of the alleged loss of crabs?
3. Did the Trial Court commit reversible error when, over objection, it admitted evidence of a compromise and settlement of a disputed claim in 1988 offered to show that [193]*193the intention of the parties in 1991 was that John T. Handy Co., Inc. would pay such claims?
4. Did the Trial Court commit reversible error when, over objection, it admitted into evidence the 1992 agreement between John T. Handy Co., Inc. and other crabbers to show the intent of the parties in 1991, where the 1992 agreement had been materially changed from 1991 to address the problems which had arisen with the Plaintiff Crabbers in 1991?
5. Did the Trial Court commit reversible error when, over objection, it permitted the Plaintiff Crabbers to appeal to the ethnic and racial biases of the Jurors by blaming the uninvolved Japanese owners of John T. Handy Co., Inc. for the problems alleged?

We shall address these questions as necessary. First, however, we shall note certain facts pertinent to our inquiry.

Facts

Appellant is a soft crab processor, ie., it is in the business of purchasing and processing soft crabs that it receives live (or “still”) from crabbers, and then reselling the processed crabs, frozen or alive. The shedding season runs roughly from May through September. One of, it' not the major, “runs” of soft shells occurs in the mid-May to early June period.

In earlier days of the industry, and to some extent even today, shedding was done by the crabbers in individual shanties or numerous floats actually situated in bay waters where the persons tending the floats would do so by way of catwalks over the water or from boats. Because of the necessity to “tend” the floats around the clock, they were luminated. It was not at all unusual to see strings of low intensity lights strung out over the water of many of the creeks, harbors, and crabbing centers of the lower shore.

Relatively recently, however, processors, such as appellant and others, began to construct “floats” that were not floated but, rather, were constructed out of the water and compart[194]*194mentalized in shanties,4 some containing scores of individual floats and most with a capacity of 1,000 to 1,200 crabs per float. Water is then pumped from the water source to the floats in a continual cycle to provide fresh salt water and, thus, oxygen in which the peelers and busters, are placed to complete the cycle to soft crab stage. A denial of water, or a breakdown in the pumping system, can cause massive kills, which is what allegedly occurred in the case sub judice. Some shanties that processors provide are rented out to crabbers who must provide their own pumps and water supply system to the leased floats. Other shanties, including the ones at issue here, are rented to the crabbers under arrangements that require the lessor, appellant here, to provide the water system to the shanties and floats. Under either type of arrangement, the processor’s primary purpose is. to have a ready supply of soft crabs available for purchasing, processing, and resale. Some arrangements,5 including those at issue here, require the crabbers to sell all of the marketable crabs shed in the shanties and floats rented from the processor to that processor. If the crabber does not do so, the arrangements require that the crabbers vacate the premises.6

Additionally, as part of the interaction between processors and “its” watermen,7 the processors regularly lend start up money to the watermen for new pots, repairs, etc., at the beginning of the season. The loans and the rental payments for the shanties and floats are deducted from the sums due the [195]*195watermen for the soft shells sold to the processor. Sales culminate when the soft shells are delivered to the processor’s “dock” throughout each day as they are removed from the floats. They are immediately placed in coolers to await further processing. A system of tickets has been devised to keep track of the source of the soft shells received.

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648 A.2d 1115, 102 Md. App. 188, 1994 Md. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-t-handy-co-v-carman-mdctspecapp-1994.