Martinez v. Permanente Steamship Corp.

237 F. Supp. 380, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7676
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedJanuary 13, 1965
DocketCiv. No. 1764
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 F. Supp. 380 (Martinez v. Permanente Steamship Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. Permanente Steamship Corp., 237 F. Supp. 380, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7676 (D. Haw. 1965).

Opinion

TAVARES, District Judge.

The Complaint in this case was filed August 5, 1959, against two defendants, Permanente Cement Company and Permanente Steamship Corporation. Permanente Cement was dismissed as a party defendant before trial. Hereinafter the [381]*381term defendant refers, therefore, only to the sole remaining defendant, Permanente Steamship Corporation. The Complaint sets forth two causes of action, the first of which is based on the Jones Act and seeks damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff in a fall from a bunk on board the S. S. Permanente Silverbow, on July 24, 1957, caused by the alleged unseaworthiness of the ship. On this first cause of action the jury rendered a general verdict in favor of the defendant.

The second cause of action seeks an award for maintenance and cure and, by stipulation, was reserved for decision by the Court. On this issue the defendant in its Answer admitted that it was a California corporation and submitted to the jurisdiction of this Court and filed a general appearance. Defendant admitted that at the time of the accident concerned it owned and operated the vessel S. S. Permanente Silverbow; it employed the plaintiff as a seaman, cook and baker; he was a member of the crew and he sustained injury aboard the ship on or about the 24th day of July, 1957.

Although admitting the general proposition of law that it is the defendant’s duty to provide plaintiff with maintenance and cure upon his becoming sick or injured while in the employ of defendant, the defendant claims the following defenses: (a) that injuries claimed to have been sustained by plaintiff, and which now constitute the basis for his claim of maintenance and cure, were not occasioned by the fall or accident of July 24, 1957, or any injuries actually sustained by the plaintiff on board ship, but were due to other and unrelated issues; (b) as a further defense, defendant alleges it has furnished maintenance and cure or caused maintenance and cure to be furnished plaintiff to the full extent required by law.

Included in this defense is the claim that if the plaintiff’s present ailments in the nature of alleged mental illness are real, which defendant denies, the plaintiff’s condition has reached a chronic and more or less static state beyond which further medical treatment will not effect a cure and hence the right to maintenance and cure has ceased.

The Court has carefully considered all of the testimony, exhibits, the pretrial order and other stipulations and admissions, and the record, and on the basis of all of the facts as disclosed thereby, the Court makes the findings of fact and conclusions of law hereinabove and hereinafter set forth. When this decision speaks of “now” or of conditions or facts existing in the present, it is to be understood that the Court is referring to the period of the trial of this case.

Although the evidence is to some extent conflicting, the Court finds that the preponderance of the evidence, and, indeed, the admissions of defendant itself, establishes the fact that the plaintiff on July 24, 1957, in the quarters assigned to him aboard the S. S. Permanente Silverbow suffered a bump on his head and sufficiently severe injuries to have caused, and which did cause, the illness from which he is now suffering, that he is in fact suffering from a form, at least, of mental illness, whatever it may be called, which renders him totally disabled to perform the duties of a seaman for which he was qualified and which he was able to perform before the accident.

In this connection, the Court especially notes that although highly-qualified medical experts testified on both sides and to a substantial extent, the testimony was conflicting as to whether the plaintiff is now suffering from any mental or physical illness or disability, and if so, the nature thereof, the Court finds from the preponderance of the testimony and evidence on this phase of the case, that the plaintiff is suffering from at least a mental illness, whether it be called a post-concussion syndrome or organic psychosis, or by some other name, and that such illness is not faked or simulated. Likewise the Court finds that the preponderance of this medical, and of the other evidence, establishes a causal connection between the present illness [382]*382and the injuries suffered from that accident. If, as some of the testimony tends to prove, the plaintiff was suffering from a latent and congenital condition of schizophrenia before and at the time of the accident, and is now suffering from an activation or “blowup” of that latent and possibly congenital condition, the Court is convinced by a preponderance of the evidence that the activation of that latent condition was caused and brought on by the accident and the injuries or conditions caused or induced thereby in a direct line of causal connection.

Therefore, unless the right to maintenance and cui*e was cut off by plaintiff’s maritime employment subsequent to the accident, on other vessels owned by other employers, the plaintiff is entitled to maintenance and cure.

The Court holds that, although subsequent to the termination of plaintiff’s employment on the S. S. Permanente Silverbow, he was employed on other vessels owned by employers other than the present defendant, for various periods, these subsequent employments, under the circumstances of this case and under the better rule of law as this Court finds it to be among conflicting decisions, did not terminate his l'ight to maintenance and cure which is based on conditions produced by the accident, but which conditions and their causal connection were. either latent or not discovered or identified by him or others until after 1960. Koslusky v. United States, 208 F.2d 957, 2d Cir., 1953. Moreover, the Court finds that, because of the plaintiff’s mental illness and mental condition, his acts or failure to act more seasonably or at all to alleviate his illness or condition do not constitute a waiver or estoppel on his part or otherwise cause him to forfeit his right and claim to maintenance and cure.

The defendant has raised the question as to whether there is sufficient evidence upon which the Court can find any particular amount as the reasonable and proper amount per day due for maintenance and cure. The Court finds that there is sufficient evidence (a) from the Answers to Interrogatories given by the plaintiff himself, wherein in answer to Interrogatory Number 11 propounded to him, the plaintiff answered that he had received maintenance and cure in 1958 and 1960 from other employers in the Hawaiian area at the rate of $56.00 a week and (b) from the testimony of the plaintiff himself at this trial to the effect that his necessary living expenses were $8.00 a day, to justify the Court in finding, as it hereby does, that $8.00 per day is the proper amount for maintenance and cure. There are some decisions which appear to have taken judicial notice of $8.00 per day as a minimum for maintenance and cure, but it is not necessary in this case for the Court to go this far.

In determining the period for which maintenance and cure is to be allowed, the Court accepts the statement made by plaintiff’s counsel in their brief and in the argument, that plaintiff is claiming maintenance and cure only for the period commencing January, 1961, and thereafter, which excludes maintenance and cure for any time prior to January 1, 1961.

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Related

Gore v. Maritime Overseas Corporation
256 F. Supp. 104 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 F. Supp. 380, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-permanente-steamship-corp-hid-1965.