Manhattan by Sail, Inc. v. Charis Tagle

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 5, 2017
Docket16-607
StatusPublished

This text of Manhattan by Sail, Inc. v. Charis Tagle (Manhattan by Sail, Inc. v. Charis Tagle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manhattan by Sail, Inc. v. Charis Tagle, (2d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 2 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 3 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 4 5 August Term, 2016 6 7 (Argued: October 24, 2016 Decided: October 5, 2017) 8 9 Docket No. 16‐607 10 11 _____________________________________ 12 13 MANHATTAN BY SAIL, INC., as Owners, Operators, and Agents of the 14 Excursion sailing vessel, Shearwater Classic Schooner For Exoneration from 15 or Limitation of Liability, SHEARWATER HOLDINGS, LTD., as Owners, 16 Operators, and Agents of the Excursion sailing vessel, Shearwater Classic 17 Schooner For Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability, 18 19 Petitioners‐Appellees, 20 21 v. 22 23 Charis Tagle, 24 25 Respondent‐Appellant. 26 _____________________________________ 27 28 Before: 29 30 LEVAL, SACK, and RAGGI, Circuit Judges. 31 32 Passenger, claiming negligence as the cause of her injury during an 33 excursion on a sailing vessel when a crewman lost hold of a weighted halyard 34 which then swung free, striking passenger’s head, appeals from the judgment 35 of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York 36 (Valerie Caproni, J.) exonerating the vessel owner from liability after nonjury 37 trial. The district court concluded that the passenger failed to adduce 38 evidence that would sustain application of res ipsa loquitur to show 39 negligence because she failed to show that the occurrence was of the sort that 40 could occur only because of negligence. VACATED and REMANDED. 1 16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 2 DAVID R. HORNIG (GUERRIC S.D.L. 3 RUSSELL, on the brief), Nicoletti Hornig & 4 Sweeney, New York, NY, for Petitioners‐ 5 Appellees. 6 7 JONATHAN R. RATCHIK, Kramer & 8 Dunleavy, L.L.P., New York, NY, for 9 Respondent‐Appellant. 10 11 LEVAL, Circuit Judge:

12 Charis Tagle, who was injured while a passenger on the sailing vessel

13 Shearwater Classic Schooner (the “Shearwater”), appeals from the judgment

14 of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York

15 (Valerie Caproni, J.) entered after a nonjury trial, which exonerated the vessel

16 owners, Manhattan by Sail, Inc. and Shearwater Holdings, Ltd., from liability

17 for the injury. Tagle was injured when a deckhand unclipped a weighted

18 halyard from the forestaysail at the bow of the vessel and lost hold of it, so

19 that it swung free and struck her in the head. The shipowners offered no

20 evidence explaining why he lost hold of it. The district court ruled that the

21 passenger failed to show negligence or entitlement to application of the

22 doctrine of res ipsa loquitur because a seaman’s loss of control of a line can

23 occur without negligence. This was error. The passenger made a showing of

2 16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 negligence, which the shipowners failed to rebut. The judgment is vacated,

2 and the matter remanded with directions to enter a finding of negligence.

3 BACKGROUND

4 1. The Accident at Issue

5 On April 30, 2011, Charis Tagle purchased passage aboard the

6 Shearwater, a sightseeing vessel which takes passengers on excursions in

7 New York Harbor. Tagle boarded the ship, and a crewmember directed her to

8 sit on a wooden hatch next to the forestaysail mast. The forestaysail mast is

9 positioned between the main mast (near the center of the ship) and the bow.

10 The Shearwater cast off under engine power into the lower Hudson

11 River. David Zimmerman, the captain, ordered the crew to raise the

12 forestaysail. The forestaysail is raised by means of a halyard, which runs from

13 the base of the forestaysail mast vertically up the mast to a wooden block (or

14 pulley) near the top of the mast, through the block, and from there forward to

15 the bow, where it is attached to a grommet at the top corner of the triangular

16 forestaysail by means of a one‐pound stainless steel clip, called a pelican clip.

17 The sail is raised by pulling downward on the end of the halyard at the

18 bottom of the mast, so that the other end of the halyard (the end attached to

3 16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 the sail at the bow) pulls the top of the sail upward toward the pulley near the

2 top of the mast. When the pelican clip at the forward end of the halyard is

3 clipped to the sail, the forward part of the halyard is immobilized. On the

4 other hand, if the clip is detached from the sail when the halyard is extended

5 forward from the mast toward the bow, the halyard will be pulled by gravity

6 toward the base of the mast from which it hangs and, unless held secure, will

7 swing as a pendulum.

8 When Zimmerman ordered that the forestaysail be raised, Christopher

9 Biggins, a deckhand, detached the halyard from the sail. In his testimony at

10 trial, Biggins could not remember why he unclipped the halyard. Tugged by

11 gravitational force toward the mast, the freed halyard pulled loose from

12 Biggins’s grip and swung back towards the mast where Tagle was seated. The

13 clip at the end of the halyard struck Tagle and cut her forehead. Although

14 Biggins knew immediately after losing control of the halyard that it had

15 struck and injured a passenger, he testified at trial that he could not recall

16 why he lost control of it. The captain testified that Biggins reported at the time

17 that “while he was hooking up the halyard to the forestaysail, it slipped out of

18 his hands and swung like a pendulum . . . .” A‐63–64.

4 16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 2. The Instant Action

2 Tagle filed suit in New York state court, alleging that the negligence of

3 the crew caused her injury. The owners of the Shearwater then filed this

4 petition in admiralty seeking exoneration from liability, pursuant to the

5 Limitation of Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. § 30501, et seq. Tagle’s state court lawsuit

6 was stayed pending resolution of the district court’s action. The district court

7 conducted a bench trial on the question whether Tagle’s injury resulted from

8 negligence.

9 In summation, Tagle contended she had established that the

10 Shearwater’s crew breached their duty of care, and argued for application of

11 res ipsa loquitur. The court rejected her arguments. It reasoned that “sailors

12 do, even when exercising ordinary care, sometimes lose control of a line—

13 whether due to wind or an unexpected wave or wake.” A‐145 n.5. Because

14 this was not “the sort of accident that [can] occur only because of someone’s

15 negligence,” the court rejected the application of res ipsa loquitur, A‐145

16 (emphasis added), and found that Tagle failed to prove negligence. The court

17 accordingly granted the owners exoneration from liability.

5 16-607 Manhattan by Sail, Inc., et al. v. Charis Tagle

1 DISCUSSION

2 1. Res Ipsa Loquitur

3 On appeal, Tagle argues, inter alia, that the district court misapplied the

4 doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. We agree. That phrase means, “The thing speaks

5 for itself.” The doctrine enables a plaintiff to prevail in a certain type of

6 circumstance in proving negligence even though the plaintiff cannot show

7 exactly who or what caused her injury. Under that doctrine, a fact‐finder may

8 infer negligence merely from the happening of the event that caused the harm

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