McGhee v. United States

165 F.2d 287, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3194
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1947
Docket77, Docket 20748
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 165 F.2d 287 (McGhee v. United States) 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
McGhee v. United States, 165 F.2d 287, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3194 (2d Cir. 1947).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

When this case was before us upon the first appeal, we were not satisfied that the libellant had proved that the ship’s plates had been strained on the first voyage; or that the ballast had been improperly stowed on the second, and that the stowage had also contributed to the eventual cracking of the plates on March 5, 1943; and we sent the case back for re-examination of these two issues. 1 At that time the only testimony as to negligence except the libellant’s came from the respondent’s witnesses, Hathaway and Nesbit; and we found it too contradictory and in general too unsatisfactory to support the findings. (The libellant then argued that this insufficiency in the testimony of the respondent was not a ground for sending back the cause; but in that he was mistaken, since, as we have just said, he had to rely upon the respondent’s witnesses to make out a case of negligence at all.) Upon the second trial Hathaway and Nesbit were recalled and re-examined at length; and the evidence as a whole ranged much further afield. The libellant put on one, Archer, as an expert, who testified that the inadequate ballast on the first voyage had contributed to the final cracking of the plates, and that improper stowage of the ballast on the second had done the same. The respondent also added largely to the testimony on its side; it called several experts, among them two, Stover and Vasta, who testified upon the basis of experiments as to the tension which could have been set up in plates under the conditions to which the Hooker had been exposed, and to the breaking strains of such plates. The judge concluded that Hathaway and Nesbit had *289 been right in their opinions on the first trial; he found that the plates cracked on March 5th in part because of the strains on the first voyage, and in part because the ballast was improperly stowed on the second; and he answered in the affirmative both questions which we put to him. He also held that the Hooker was unseaworthy when she broke ground, and he entered a decree for damages in the same amount as upon the former appeal upon both grounds.

My brothers are satisfied that we should not be warranted in holding that the findings of negligence were “clearly erroneous” ; and since, if so, the decree was right, they deem it unnecessary to go further. Personally, I do not think it necessary to decide that the testimony of Stover and Vasta was not conclusive in the respondent’s favor on the issue of negligence. I should be the last to hold, when the judge has seen the witnesses, as in this case he did with a single exception, that on the issue of credibility we were in a position to overrule him. Indeed, we said upon the earlier appeal that “the record does not preserve many of the factors which may have made that opinion persuasive” : i. e., Hathaway’s. I should not, therefore, venture to differ with the judge’s conclusion that Hathaway and Nesbit spoke their honest opinions on the first trial; but that does not mean that the testimony of Stover and Vasta should not overbear that of the other two and of Archer. Nobody could reasonably question the truth of the experiments on which they based their conclusions; and I should not be willing to treat findings as conclusive if they contradicted inferences rationally inevitable from scientific data. I prefer to rest my vote upon the finding of unseaworthiness, without deciding whether the finding of negligence should stand.

When the “Hooker” broke ground on February 21, 1943, she was not fit for the voyage on which she was embarked: a west bound trip from Scotland to this country in March. The highest wind she encountered was only number seven on the Beaufort Scale — 35 miles, a “moderate gale” — and it must be seldom that a ship does not encounter as severe weather on such a trip. Although there was some testimony as to an exceptional sea shortly before she “hogged,” nothing occurred which an able ship would not have withstood. Whether she would have lived, had she been otherwise ballasted on either or both trips, it is not necessary to say; and whether — in the light of their later history— “Liberty” ships were originally seaworthy, when ballasted like the “Hooker,” is also not material; although it must be remembered that upon the issue of seaworthiness later experience is relevant, though it was not available at the time. If she was unseaworthy in fact, even though it was nobody’s fault, McGhee could recover. 2 To this the respondent answers that, having elected originally and throughout the first trial, to stand upon § 33 of the Jones Act, 3 McGhee irretrievably committed himself to proving that the respondent was negligent, and abandoned any right he had to recovery for unseaworthiness, simpliciter. Section 33 of the Jones Act3 provides that a seaman “may, at his election, maintain an action * * * at law” in which his rights are measured by those of a railway employee; and in Panama R. Co. v. Johnson, 4 the court said, although in discussing quite another question, that the act left his maritime right of action to the seaman as an “alternative” to that under the Jones Act. In Engel v. Davenport, 5 the question was whether the statute of limitations applicable to railway employees governed an *290 action brought by a seaman under the Jones Act in a state court. The plaintiff had declared for injuries suffered from a defective appliance and had charged that the defect was negligent. The court held that he was privileged to base his recovery upon the Jones Act; and that, if he did, he was free to take advantage of the longer limitation applicable to that cause of action than the state statute would have allowed, had he sued under the maritime law. That did indeed recognize a cause of action under the Jones Act for negligent unseaworthiness, additional to that under the maritime law; and obviously the plaintiff was bound to prove negligence, if he wished to invoke the longer period. Pacific Steamship Co. v. Peterson, 6 held no more than that a seaman who had received maintenance and cure might still sue under the Jones Act, although during the discussion (278 U.S. p. 138, 49 S.Ct. 77) Sanford, J., repeated that that action was an “alternative” to an action to recover indemnity for unseaworthiness. In Kunschman v. United States, 7 we held that when the seaman had died, the shipowner’s liability did not survive, and that his administratrix was obliged to prove that the ship’s unseaworthiness had resulted from the owner’s negligence. It was not a cause of “election” at all, any more than was Engel v. Davenport, supra, 8 for the right under maritime law was no longer available.

We do not mean that a seaman may go to trial on both causes of action simultaneously, and recover upon one or the other as the evidence turns out; we said the opposite in Skolar v. Lehigh Valley R. Co. 9

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Bluebook (online)
165 F.2d 287, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcghee-v-united-states-ca2-1947.