Mrs. Katrina Pavlides v. Galveston Yacht Basin, Inc., Amf Slickcraft Boat Division, Etc.

727 F.2d 330
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1984
Docket83-2003
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 727 F.2d 330 (Mrs. Katrina Pavlides v. Galveston Yacht Basin, Inc., Amf Slickcraft Boat Division, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mrs. Katrina Pavlides v. Galveston Yacht Basin, Inc., Amf Slickcraft Boat Division, Etc., 727 F.2d 330 (5th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

*333 GEE, Circuit Judge:

On a February Sunday in 1976, Sam Pav-lides and four of his chums set out on a fishing trip in Pavlides’ Robalo 236 motorboat. Four of them, including Pavlides, never returned: they died while attempting to swim to safety from their swamped boat. The fifth, Anthony Moustakelis, made it to an adjacent oil rig.

On this appeal, the decedents’ estates challenge the trial court’s conclusion that the manufacturer of the boat, AMF Slick-craft Boat Division, Inc. (AMF) was not strictly liable for defects in design, manufacture or marketing. 1 We conclude that the trial court applied an erroneous measure of the duty to warn, one unduly prejudicial to plaintiffs. Therefore, we remand for the trial court to reconsider the evidence under the correct standard, and to make further rulings as necessary, in accordance with this opinion.

The Accident: February 1, 1976

After launching Pavlides’ Robalo 236 from the Galveston Yacht Basin, the five fishermen involved in this case filled the boat’s fuel tank and motored out into the Gulf of Mexico to fish. 2 They made fast to one oil rig, fished for about 15 minutes, then moved to another — a trip of about five minutes. After some 15 minutes at the second rig, Moustakelis noticed about an inch and a half of water in the stern of the boat, but Pavlides told him not to worry. However, as the boat continued to take on water through the bilge 3 the men became concerned. Pavlides attempted to use the bilge pump and the radio, but neither worked since by then water had flooded the batteries in the rear of the boat. The men then attempted to start the engines and self-bail the boat, as Pavlides had been instructed by the salesman to do should the bilge take on water. They accidentally cast off from the rig with only one engine working; shortly after, the operating engine failed, indicating that water had reached its air intake. Moustakelis testified that at that point they felt it was too dangerous to open the bilge access port and try to identify the problem. 4

As the now-powerless boat drifted back past the rig, Moustakelis abandoned ship and swam to it. The other four men remained in the boat, trying to bail it manually as it continued to sink by the stern. Three of the decedents then put on life jackets and tried to swim to the rig but were swept back by the current. The fourth, Jack Nikolaides, swam without a life preserver to within a few feet of the rig, but the current prevented him from reaching it. According to Moustakelis’ testimony, at that time only the forward portion of the boat was above water, but it had not turned over.

Moustakelis lost sight of the men and the boat as they continued to drift away from him. He could not tell whether the boat *334 had capsized or not when he lost sight of it. Moustakelis was rescued several hours later by a private boat and the Coast Guard was then called to the scene. They found the Robalo 236 some six hours after the accident, by which time it had fully capsized. The bodies of two of the decedents were found; the other two are presumed dead. The Coast Guard report lists the causes of death as drowning, with hypothermia a contributing factor due to the 56-degree water temperature.

The Robalo 236

Plaintiffs’ strict liability arguments require a fairly extensive discussion of the design, manufacture and marketing of the Robalo 236 (“R-236”). The R-236, which went on the market in 1974, was the first “Robalo” designed, manufactured and marketed by AMF. However, the “Robalo” name already enjoyed a wide and excellent reputation: previous “Robalo” models had been made and marketed by the Robalo Company, an individually-owned Florida concern engaged in the manufacture of pleasure boats for deep sea fishing. The Robalo boats made by the Florida concern had acquired a reputation for safety arising from the boats’ “fully-foamed” construction, meaning that all of the void spaces in the hull were filled with foam flotation material so that the boats had no void bilge space. This made these Robalos virtually “unsinkable.” All models made by the Ro-balo Company had drain holes in the stern side of the boat designed to allow water which accidentally entered the cockpit or engine well to run out when the boat was slowly moving forward, thus “self-bailing” the boat. Although one of these drain holes, the “sump” hole, was below the waterline, no drain holes on any Robalo made by the Florida concern led into void bilge space.

AMF acquired the Robalo Company in the early 1970s, shortly after it had acquired the Slickeraft Company, a Michigan-based manufacturer engaged in making boats for fishing on the Great Lakes. The Slickeraft line was not fully-foamed; in these boats the bilge space was wholly or partly void.

AMF merged the corporate structures of Robalo and Slickeraft, but since the two lines sold to distinct markets, AMF continued to market “AMF Robalo” boats and “AMF Slickeraft” boats. However, in response to the request of a fishermen’s association that AMF build a 23-foot boat for Michigan lake fishing, AMF decided to market a new model which would resemble the Robalo 230 (a 23-foot, fully-foamed boat) with the addition of a cutty cabin.

The resulting design, which AMF marketed both under the name “Robalo 236” and under the name “Slickeraft 236”, was not a fully-foamed boat, but rather had a large void space in the bilge with a through-hull bilge drain in the rear of the bilge below the waterline. The bilge drain could be plugged either from the inside, by reaching in through the bilge access port to the bottom of the bilge (a distance of about three feet), or from the outside, by reaching down between the engines. If the plug was inserted from the inside, it was not visible from the outside, and vice versa.

The void bilge space in the R-236 meant that, unlike all other Robalos, the R-236 was not completely self-bailing. 5 Water which entered the bilge — through the bilge drain or in any other manner — could only be removed normally by operating the bilge pump. 6 The R-236 was not equipped with *335 an automatic bilge pump that would commence bailing when water reached a certain level in the bilge, nor was it equipped with any warning device to notify occupants of the presence of water in the bilge. 7

Tests conducted by plaintiffs’ expert on Pavlides’ R-236 after the accident showed that when the bilge drain plug was removed, the covered, enclosed bilge space would fill with water in about 11 minutes, at which time water would first be visible on deck. Experts on both sides testified that the only way an operator of the R-236 would be aware of water in the bilge before it appeared on deck was that when the boat was underway, it would feel heavy to an experienced sailor.

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Bluebook (online)
727 F.2d 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mrs-katrina-pavlides-v-galveston-yacht-basin-inc-amf-slickcraft-boat-ca5-1984.