Moran Towing of Florida, Inc. v. Mays

620 So. 2d 1088, 1993 Fla. App. LEXIS 6763, 1993 WL 225635
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 28, 1993
DocketNo. 92-1577
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 620 So. 2d 1088 (Moran Towing of Florida, Inc. v. Mays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moran Towing of Florida, Inc. v. Mays, 620 So. 2d 1088, 1993 Fla. App. LEXIS 6763, 1993 WL 225635 (Fla. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

KAHN, Judge.

Appellee Moran Towing of Florida, Inc., operates a number of tugboats, generally on the St. Johns River in the Jacksonville area. Although not strictly a union shop, Moran and its predecessor have, for some 30 years, manned vessels with crews drawn primarily from the Masters, Mates and Pilots Union (union). Appellee Harold Mays, a chief engineer, has been a member of the union and, through his union affiliation, has worked for Moran or its predecessor on tugs operating on the St. Johns River since 1956. On August 8, 1989, Mays suffered injury when he slipped and fell while boarding a Moran tug. At the time of the accident, Mays was assigned to two different Moran vessels. On August 17, 1990, Mays reached maximum medical improvement. The collective bargaining agreement in effect between Morán and the union at the time of the accident covered the period from April 16, 1988, through April 16, 1991.

Mays brought an action against Moran seeking recovery for Jones Act negligence, unseaworthiness, and maintenance, cure and unearned wages. This appeal raises only the propriety of the award made by the trial court under the count seeking maintenance, cure and unearned wages. The circuit judge ruled that Moran had a duty to pay Mays unearned wages from the day of the accident until April 16, 1991, the end of the collective bargaining agreement, and accordingly entered judgment in favor of Mays on the claim for unearned wages. The court subsequently awarded [1090]*1090attorney’s fees based upon the recovery of unearned wages. We reverse.

As noted, Moran and its predecessor have had collective bargaining agreements with the union since at least the 1950’s. Under these contracts, the union tries to supply Moran with sufficient, available, fit-for-duty crews to man Moran’s vessels as necessary. The 1988 agreement provided that union crews assigned to Moran’s vessels would be paid strictly on the basis of days actually worked. If a crew member did not work on a particular day, he would not be paid. This provision represented a concession made by the union during the 1988 collective bargaining. Mays, who was 60 years old at the time of his injury, did not like the new agreement. The record reflects that within two months before the effective date of the 1988 agreement, six of Mr. Mays’ coworkers at Moran, aged 57 through 64, elected retirement. Four more retired during the three years of the agreement.

Testimony established that Harold Mays began working for Moran’s predecessor, Florida Towing Company, in 1956 and worked through, and even after, the date of his injury, August 8, 1989. During his first ten years, Mays occasionally took lengthy coastwise voyages from Florida to New Jersey, and also made ocean going voyages. In recent years, however, Mays has been assigned in the Jacksonville area to a number of different Moran vessels as chief engineer. From day to day Mays had assignments on different Moran vessels.

On the day of his accident, Mays had drawn a simultaneous assignment to two different vessels, the Cathleen E. Moran and the Mary Coppedge. Mays had no direct contract between himself and Moran, nor had he ever signed on shipping articles for a particular vessel. He fell while boarding the Cathleen E. Moran.

The Cathleen E. Moran is a harbor tug berthed at Blount Island in Jacksonville. The tug assisted other ships in harbor docking in the St. Johns River and moved barges around the Talleyrand Port in the Jacksonville shipyard. The tug never left Jacksonville. The Cathleen E. Moran had a captain and a regular crew, of which Mays was not a member. Through the union contract, however, Mays had worked periodically on that particular vessel for some three or four years before the accident.

On the day of his injury, Mays made one short trip aboard the Cathleen E. Moran in the very early morning. After that trip he worked on a water main on the pier and suffered injury while boarding the Cathleen E. Moran for the second trip of the day.

Mr. Mays’ Jones Act claim against Moran proceeded to a jury trial in February 1992. The judge decided during the trial to rule on and make an award as to Mays’ unearned wages claim as a matter of law separate from the jury’s verdict. The jury returned a verdict for Mays on his Jones Act claim in the amount of $335,000.00. It found Moran 70% comparatively negligent and Mays 30% comparatively negligent. Mays then moved for entry of judgment on the unearned wage claim, seeking an award of unearned wages from the last day he worked, November 27, 1989, until the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement on April 16, 1991. The trial court proceeded to enter two final judgments. Finding Mays entitled to recovery of $64,510.83 on his claim for unearned wages, the judge deducted this amount from the jury award, then assessed the 30% comparative negligence finding reached by the jury, and entered judgment in favor of Mays for $189,902.42. In this order the trial court also retained jurisdiction to modify the judgment to reflect the proper amount due plaintiff pursuant to the jury verdict, “in the event the unearned wage judgment is reversed.” In a second final judgment, the one under direct appeal here, the trial court awarded Mays $64,-510.83 and reserved jurisdiction to assess attorney’s fees. Being a no fault concept, recovery for maintenance, cure and unearned wages is not subject to comparative negligence, nor dependent upon the shipowner’s negligence. See generally, Gilmore and Black, The Law of Admiralty (2d Ed. § 6-6) (“except for injury and illness [1091]*1091caused by the seaman’s gross and willful misconduct or existing at the time the seaman signed on and knowingly concealed by him, the shipowner is liable for any injury which occurs or any illness which manifests itself while the seaman is under articles”).

Moran has always taken the position that it owed Mays no unearned wages at all. Moran fully paid Mays all unearned wages for the remainder of the day on which he was injured. Accordingly, argues Moran, since Mays was a daily worker simultaneously assigned to two different Moran vessels on that day, and the voyage on which he was injured concluded on the same day of the injury, no additional amount is owed. The controlling question in this case is whether the trial court overstepped its authority by awarding unearned wages for a period of time measured by the duration of the collective bargaining agreement.

The right of a seaman to recover unearned wages is a creature of maritime law arising under the historical concept of maintenance and cure. Maintenance and cure is a no-fault principle arising directly out of the relationship of the injured seaman and his vessel. Maintenance seeks to provide the ill or injured seaman with compensation sufficient to pay for care, including lodging expenses. It is in the nature of a per diem living allowance, which extends until the seaman reaches the point of maximum cure. Pelotto v. L & N Towing Co., 604 F.2d 396 (5th Cir.1979). Cure is the medical care necessitated by a seaman’s illness or injury which is borne by the employer or by the ship until the point of “maximum cure.” Id.

The third item of recovery in a maintenance and cure action is for unearned wages.

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Related

Bouchard Transportation Co. v. Connors
811 So. 2d 787 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2002)
Moran Towing of Florida, Inc. v. Mays
623 So. 2d 850 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
620 So. 2d 1088, 1993 Fla. App. LEXIS 6763, 1993 WL 225635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-towing-of-florida-inc-v-mays-fladistctapp-1993.