Matson Terminals, Inc., a Corporation v. William E. Caldwell, and Sea-Land Service, Inc., Etc.

354 F.2d 681
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1966
Docket20026_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 354 F.2d 681 (Matson Terminals, Inc., a Corporation v. William E. Caldwell, and Sea-Land Service, Inc., Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matson Terminals, Inc., a Corporation v. William E. Caldwell, and Sea-Land Service, Inc., Etc., 354 F.2d 681 (9th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

JERTBERG, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by a ship owner, Sea-Land Service, Inc., (Sea-Land), against the contracting stevedore company, Mat-son Terminals, Inc., (Matson), to recover indemnity for breach of a stevedore’s implied warranty of workmanlike service.

Under a written contract, Matson agreed to act as stevedore and terminal operator and “ * * *, as directed, with all possible dispatch, load and/or discharge all cargoes of vessels owned, operated or controlled by” Sea-Land, “and will perform terminal services upon such vessels” at Matson operated piers. Sea-Land granted to Matson the exclusive right of handling all such cargoes at the rates of charges fixed in the schedule.

Matson agreed “while doing the utmost to carry out all the work hereby undertaken to be done”, it was not to be responsible for delays or losses caused by strikes, labor troubles, Acts of God, etc. All work to be performed by Matson was to be in accordance with working rules as set forth in agreements between the longshoremen and the Pacific Maritime Association. In the absence of such agreements, current practice of the port prevailed. Matson agreed to be responsible “for all losses and damage to the vessel, its equipment or cargo, caused through or as the result of its own negligence or malpractice.” In the event of such loss or damage such fact is to be called to the attention of Matson and acknowledgment thereof obtained. In a like manner, Matson is to call to the attention of Sea-Land “unsatisfactory conditions which may exist for which the owner is responsible and obtain acknowledgment thereof.”

Sea-Land agreed “to supply booms, adequate winches in good working order *682 and with sufficient steam or power for their efficient operation; blocks, topping lifts, guys and wire falls of sufficient length and strength, lights on vessel for work at night, and derricks or cranes for such heavy lifting as exceeds the capacity of ship’s gear.”

Following the unloading operations and while a pontoon was being put back in place, various longshoremen, including one Caldwell, employed by Matson and acting within the course and scope of their employment, helped in guiding the pontoon into place either by pushing or pulling on the guy lines after the pontoon was lifted by a winch operated by a longshoreman, likewise an employee of Mat-son and acting within the course and scope of his employment. Caldwell was injured when the pontoon “jumped” and struck him on the hand.

Caldwell brought suit against Sea-Land alleging negligence and unseaworthiness on the part of Sea-Land. Sea-Land included Matson in a third party indemnity action, alleging inter alia, breach of implied warranty of expertise owing Sea-Land by Matson.

Following trial to the court sitting without a jury, the district court found that the pontoon struck Caldwell as the result of a defective condition in the winch mechanism, and concluded the vessel was unseaworthy by reason thereof. The district court found that Matson breached its contract, express and implied, with Sea-Land.

Judgment was rendered in favor of Caldwell against Sea-Land and in favor of Sea-Land against Matson in the amount of $14,785,81, consisting of $12,-556.09, personal injury award, $39.52 costs, and $2,190.20 attorney’s fees. The judgment in favor of Caldwell was paid by Sea-Land. Caldwell is not concerned in this appeal.

No question is raised as to the jurisdiction of the district court or of this court.

There appears to be little, if any, dispute between the parties as to the facts of the case. They may be summarized as follows:

About April 10, 1962, Sea-Land’s vessel, S.S. SHORT HILLS, docked in the Los Angeles harbor at a Matson operated pier. The gear was rigged by longshoremen and uncovering operations were commenced. The first winch operator was Frank C. Salcido, who alternated as a winch operator and hatch tender with Robert Rheinhardt, a winch operator and hatch tender of long experience who was also the safety man of the longshoremen. Almost immediately on checking out the gears and winches, before or at the time when uncovering operations were commenced, Mr. Salcido discovered that the winch was not operating properly. He reported such fact to Mr. Rheinhardt. Mr. Rheinhardt immediately took over the operation of the winch. His first task was to remove a series (6) of heavy metal pontoons which were covering the ship’s hatch. Each pontoon weighed one and one-half to two tons. As he began the removal of the first pontoon, he also experienced difficulty with the winch which would not hoist on one gear — there was a slippage. Rheinhardt thereupon notified his hatch foreman, who told the ship’s mate, who told the ship’s electrician. The work of removing the pontoons, however, continued although with difficulty. Certain compensating movements were required. Rheinhardt was aware at that time that Safety and Health Regulations for Longshoring (June 1960) issued by the United States Department of Labor, provided at Section 9.53(c) (2) that winches shall not be used when one or more control points, either hoisting or lowering, is not operating properly. The ship’s electrician arrived when there were one or two pontoons remaining to be removed. He observed Rheinhardt operating the winch. The electrician went away stating “I’ll see what I can do about it.” The remaining pontoons were removed with the same difficulty. The electrician returned and inquired “How are they working now?” At that time all of the pontoons had been removed and the winch was *683 handling empty cardboards, pallet boards and light cargo, at which time the winch appeared to operate properly. Rheinhardt never asked the electrician if repairs had been effected, never saw him do anything to remedy the defect, and was never advised that anything had been done.

Between the uncovering and the covering operations Rheinhardt had no trouble with the winches. Covering operations started on April 12, 1962 and Caldwell was injured during the course of replacing the first pontoon, and just prior to the time the pontoon was almost seated, at which time Rheinhardt noticed slippage. As to this circumstance Rheinhardt, in substance, testified: that when the pontoon was within inches of where it was to be placed, he discovered the winches weren’t in proper working order —there was a slipping — at which time he attempted to compensate for the slipping by putting the winch into a higher control point, at which time he could have stopped the operation but which he did not do because the pontoon was almost where they were trying to place it.

Rheinhardt testified that it was the custom and practice in the industry for the ship’s crew to maintain and repair the ship’s gear, and that after a report is made to the shipowner of a malfunction of the ship’s gear, “the job will be shut down completely by pulling or disconnecting the power which will make it completely impossible to use the equipment, or else, ‘or they will tell you to go ahead and work it [the equipment] and they will fix it.’ ”

The findings of fact of the district court include the following:

“VI
“That on April 12, 1962, CALDWELL was guiding a pontoon into position at hatch No. 1; that while so engaged, the pontoon swung from the coaming of No.

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354 F.2d 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matson-terminals-inc-a-corporation-v-william-e-caldwell-and-sea-land-ca9-1966.