Lowe Engineers, Inc. v. Royal Indemnity Co.

297 S.E.2d 741, 164 Ga. App. 255, 1982 Ga. App. LEXIS 3295
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 3, 1982
Docket64637
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 297 S.E.2d 741 (Lowe Engineers, Inc. v. Royal Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe Engineers, Inc. v. Royal Indemnity Co., 297 S.E.2d 741, 164 Ga. App. 255, 1982 Ga. App. LEXIS 3295 (Ga. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Birdsong, Judge.

Doctrine of Binding Precedent. Lowe Engineers, Inc. (Lowe) is a company engaged in engineering studies, mapping, surveys and related services concerning navigable waters of the United States in several of the states of the United States including Arkansas. Its services included measuring length and width of rivers, depth, speed *256 of current flow, and height of river banks.

On September 30,1968, the appellee Royal Indemnity Company (“Royal”) issued to Lowe a policy of insurance covering workers’ compensation and employer’s liability. An exception for bodily injury, including death, sustained by a master or member of the crew of any vessel, was contained in the general liability portion of the policy. Royal’s coverage for non-worker’s compensation incidents was limited to $100,000 in the case of one or more deaths or injuries resulting while the policy was in effect. The policy period extended until September 30, 1969.

On May 8,1969, Lowe was engaged in mapping the Red River in the state of Arkansas. On that day a flat bottom boat containing six employees of Lowe capsized resulting in the drowning deaths of five of the employees. Apparently Royal commenced paying workers’ compensation to the survivors of the decedents. On January 16,1970, the survivors of four of the deceaseds filed suit against Lowe in a federal district court in Arkansas asserting that the complaint was based in admiralty or maritime jurisdiction as a violation of the Jones Act (46 U. S. C. A. § 683) and under principles of general maritime law. See Moragne v. States Marine Lines, 398 U. S. 375 (90 SC 1772, 26 LE2d 339).

On February 17, 1970, Royal notified Lowe that it would not defend the Arkansas lawsuit and denied coverage under its policy. The basis of its denial of coverage emanated from the allegations in the Arkansas case that the deceased workers were crewmen of a vessel under the maritime law of the United States and/or the Jones Act. Though Royal was not a party to the litigation in the federal court in Arkansas, the parties to that trial stipulated that Royal had paid certain workers’ compensation to the survivors and that a determination that the deaths resulted from a maritime accident and féll within the Jones Act or the general maritime law would entitle Royal to reimbursement for previously made workers’ compensation payments, as compensation under the maritime law was exclusive. The trial of the Arkansas action commenced on April 12, 1971. Judgment against Lowe and its umbrella insurer, United States Fire Ins. Co., was rendered on June 11,1971, in the amount of $455,000.

A similar complaint was filed in federal district court in Birmingham, Alabama, against Lowe by the survivors of the fifth deceased employee. The allegations of the complaint also sounded in violations of the Jones Act and general maritime law. However, this case was compromised by Lowe and its insurer with the plaintiffs in the amount of $70,000.

As a part of its decision the trial court in Arkansas determined that the individual employees were assigned to a specific crew and *257 that each crew had its own party chief, boat and equipment. The boats were used for transportation from one work site to another as well as being used for transportation to and from the point of departure. In substance, the court found that a substantial part of the work of the members of the staking crew (measuring length), the sounding crew (measuring depth) and the overbank crew (measuring bank height) was required to be done on water and was related to maintenance and operation of the boat assigned to those crews. The use of the boats was required in the performance of each crew’s work and constituted an integral part thereof. The court further found that the Red River was and is a navigable stream; that the boat used was a vessel; and that each person assigned was a seaman within the meaning of that word in admiralty law and by irrefutable implication each employee was a crewman of an assigned vessel. On appeal to the circuit court of appeals, the appeal was limited to the issue of damages. That court found a violation of either or both the general maritime law and/or the Jones Act and affirmed. Spiller v. Lowe, 466 F2d 903 (8th Cir. 1972).

On December 10,1974, Lowe and its umbrella insurer, U. S. Fire Ins. Co., filed the present lawsuit against Royal seeking the $100,000 coverage stated in Royal’s employer liability policy, over $21,000 in attorney fees, litigation expenses in excess of $66,000, interest in excess of $20,000, and statutory penalties and attorney fees. Royal answered contending that under the doctrine of binding precedent it had been judicially determined by the district court in Arkansas that the capsized boat was a “vessel” and that the deceased employees were “seamen” or “members of the crew” of that vessel. As members of the crew of a vessel, the employees fell within the exclusion contained within the policy issued by Royal excluding liability for the death of crewmen of a vessel. Royal moved for summary judgment upon this ground and the trial court granted the motion. Lowe and its umbrella insurer bring this appeal enumerating as error the application of the doctrine of binding precedent in the absence of privity between Royal and Lowe in the earlier judgment in Arkansas. Held:

As we perceive the issue facing the parties and the trial court, it was whether Royal had issued a policy that extended coverage to Lowe for the death of five of its employees and whether it improperly refused to defend a suit based upon employer liability or is now liable for the ascertained losses suffered by Lowe because of the judicially determined employer liability to its employees’ survivors (including costs, interest and statutory penalty for failure timely to respond to a claim by the insured). However, the threshold question on the issue of coverage still remained whether the exclusion in the policy of *258 insurance excluding coverage for the masters or crew members of vessels constituted a complete defense to Royal. In the original complaint filed by the survivors in Arkansas as well as the companion suit filed in Alabama, the complainants sought to establish by fact and law that the employees were seamen embarked as crewmen on a vessel in navigable waters so as to qualify them as claimants under the maritime law of the United States. This in substance would entitle them to compensation under the maritime equivalent of the Federal Employees Liability Act and authorize them to seek damages for tortious injury. Otherwise, they would be limited to workers’ compensation coverage only. That this was clearly understood as the threshold issue in that prior case is manifested by the agreement in the federal court that though Royal had commenced paying workers’ compensation benefits pursuant to its policy coverage, if the maritime nature of the incident was established, then Royal was to be discharged from its workers’ compensation obligation and previously made payments would be returned.

It is uncontested in the instant case that as between the claimants in the federal court and the appellant Lowe, it has been judicially settled that the five deceased employees were regularly assigned members of the several crews surveying the Red River.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.E.2d 741, 164 Ga. App. 255, 1982 Ga. App. LEXIS 3295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-engineers-inc-v-royal-indemnity-co-gactapp-1982.