ROLAND L. BELSOME, Judge.
| ¶ Plaintiff-Appellant appeals the trial court’s grant of motion for summary judgment in favor of Defendant-Appellee. We find that Appellant is entitled to a trial on the merits regarding his Jones Act claim and reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff-Appellant, Jason Navarre, filed suit against Appellee, Kostmayer Construction Company, Inc. (“Kostmayer”), for injuries sustained on December 4, 2007, as a result of the alleged negligent operation of a crane spud barge, ORBR1. Mr. Navarre was employed hourly as a welder by Appellee. Mr. Navarre’s injury, a broken ankle, occurred while he was in a basket suspended from a crane, cutting pilings that were holding the barge in place. At the time of the accident, the barge was in the Mississippi River at Point-a-la-Hache. Appellee filed a Motion for Summary Judgment, arguing that Mr. Navarre was a land-based employee (a longshoreman) and did not satisfy the standards and criteria of a Jones Act seaman.
Mr. Navarre filed suit asserting his Jones Act claim on July 2, 2008. On December 3, 2009, the trial court granted Appellee’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
IiSTANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews a court’s disposition of a motion for summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards as the trial court.
Schroeder v. Board of Sup’rs of Louisiana State University,
591 So.2d 342, 345 (La.1991).
DISCUSSION
Appellant assigns as error the trial court’s grant of Appellee’s motion for summary judgment and the trial court’s finding that Mr. Navarre failed to satisfy the requirements of a Jones Act seaman.
Appellee submits that the trial court was correct, noting that Mr. Navarre would receive a call from a supervisor advising a location of a new job, and would then drive to the job site, perform the welding repair, either on land, docks, or spud barges that were fixed in place. If the barge needed to be moved, a tug would be used to relocate the barge. As the tug moved the barge, Appellee argues, Mr. Navarre and the other workers would exit the barge and travel to the next job site in their own
vehicles. Appellee maintains that Mr. Navarre never ate any meals nor stayed overnight on any vessel, but returned home when his shift was complete at the end of each day. Furthermore, Appellee argues that when Mr. Navarre was aboard the barges, they were used as stationary work platforms for maritime harbor work operations such as driving buoy pilings and dock construction and repair; that the barges were equipped with a crane, had no living quarters and no galley, and that the barge was unmanned.
Appellee concedes, however, that Mr. Navarre was on a moving barge when it was moved short distances at a jobsite. Appellee further concedes that as part of Mr. Navarre’s employment with Kostmayer, he rode in outboard motor boats that were used to transport the crew to and from the shore to the offshore barge.
| ^Appellant argues that, in addition to remaining on the ORBR1 when it was moved at a jobsite and routinely operating the motor boat to the offshore barge, Mr. Navarre regularly “operatfed] the vibratory hammer to drive pilings, as well as the winch which was specifically used to move or reposition the barge short distances at a work site” as well as the barge’s crane occasionally. Furthermore, Appellant submits that Mr. Navarre performed repairs to the hull of the barge itself; spent 60-70% of his work day aboard the barge; and that Mr. Navarre’s duties included tying and untying mooring lines, and spud-ding and unspudding of the barge, which Appellant maintains are traditional deckhand duties.
The well-settled two-part test for determining seaman status is: 1) whether the employee’s duties contributed to the function of the vessel or accomplishment of its mission; and 2) whether that employee had a connection to a vessel in navigation which was substantial both in terms of duration and nature.
Richard v. Mike Hooks, Inc.,
2001-0145, p. 3 (La.10/16/01), 799 So.2d 462, 465 (citing
Chandris, Inc. v. Latsis,
515 U.S. 347, 368, 115 S.Ct. 2172, 132 L.Ed.2d 314 (1995)).
We find that the record evidences that Mr. Navarre’s extensive work on the ORBR1 establishes that the first prong of the
Chandris
test is met;
accordingly, only the second prong, whether Mr. Navarre’s connection to the ORBR1 was substantial in nature and duration, is at issue. In granting Appellee’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court, in its oral reasons, indicated that it found the fact pattern in
Richard v. Mike Hooks, Inc.
to be analogous to the facts of this case.
|4In
Richard,
the Louisiana Supreme Court found that although the first prong of the
Chandris
test was met, a welder helper’s work in connection with the vessels was “not substantial in nature or duration,” and therefore, the employee was not a seaman under the Jones Act, even though the employee spent in excess of thirty percent of his time on the vessels.
Richard,
2001-0145, p. 6-7, 799 So.2d at 466-468.
In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court reversed the Third Circuit’s affirmation of the trial court’s finding that Richard had established that he was a Jones Act seaman. The Third Circuit determined that Richard qualified for seaman status because he spent approximately
thirty percent of his time performing tasks connected to the vessel, and because his employment relationship with Hooks, a dredging company, exposed him to the perils of the sea.
In reversing the appellate court, the Louisiana Supreme Court emphasized that the thirty percent rule
was simply a guideline and not a “magic number automatically rendering an individual’s connection with a vessel substantial in duration and nature.”
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 6, 799 So.2d at 466. Specifically, the Court considered the employee’s duties and his connection to the vessel, |ficoncluding that the totality of the circumstances evidenced that Richard could not establish seaman status:
Richard’s time spent aboard Hooks’s vessels and the perils he faced must be considered along with other important facts to determine whether his connection with defendant’s vessels are substantial in nature and duration.
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ROLAND L. BELSOME, Judge.
| ¶ Plaintiff-Appellant appeals the trial court’s grant of motion for summary judgment in favor of Defendant-Appellee. We find that Appellant is entitled to a trial on the merits regarding his Jones Act claim and reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff-Appellant, Jason Navarre, filed suit against Appellee, Kostmayer Construction Company, Inc. (“Kostmayer”), for injuries sustained on December 4, 2007, as a result of the alleged negligent operation of a crane spud barge, ORBR1. Mr. Navarre was employed hourly as a welder by Appellee. Mr. Navarre’s injury, a broken ankle, occurred while he was in a basket suspended from a crane, cutting pilings that were holding the barge in place. At the time of the accident, the barge was in the Mississippi River at Point-a-la-Hache. Appellee filed a Motion for Summary Judgment, arguing that Mr. Navarre was a land-based employee (a longshoreman) and did not satisfy the standards and criteria of a Jones Act seaman.
Mr. Navarre filed suit asserting his Jones Act claim on July 2, 2008. On December 3, 2009, the trial court granted Appellee’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
IiSTANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews a court’s disposition of a motion for summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards as the trial court.
Schroeder v. Board of Sup’rs of Louisiana State University,
591 So.2d 342, 345 (La.1991).
DISCUSSION
Appellant assigns as error the trial court’s grant of Appellee’s motion for summary judgment and the trial court’s finding that Mr. Navarre failed to satisfy the requirements of a Jones Act seaman.
Appellee submits that the trial court was correct, noting that Mr. Navarre would receive a call from a supervisor advising a location of a new job, and would then drive to the job site, perform the welding repair, either on land, docks, or spud barges that were fixed in place. If the barge needed to be moved, a tug would be used to relocate the barge. As the tug moved the barge, Appellee argues, Mr. Navarre and the other workers would exit the barge and travel to the next job site in their own
vehicles. Appellee maintains that Mr. Navarre never ate any meals nor stayed overnight on any vessel, but returned home when his shift was complete at the end of each day. Furthermore, Appellee argues that when Mr. Navarre was aboard the barges, they were used as stationary work platforms for maritime harbor work operations such as driving buoy pilings and dock construction and repair; that the barges were equipped with a crane, had no living quarters and no galley, and that the barge was unmanned.
Appellee concedes, however, that Mr. Navarre was on a moving barge when it was moved short distances at a jobsite. Appellee further concedes that as part of Mr. Navarre’s employment with Kostmayer, he rode in outboard motor boats that were used to transport the crew to and from the shore to the offshore barge.
| ^Appellant argues that, in addition to remaining on the ORBR1 when it was moved at a jobsite and routinely operating the motor boat to the offshore barge, Mr. Navarre regularly “operatfed] the vibratory hammer to drive pilings, as well as the winch which was specifically used to move or reposition the barge short distances at a work site” as well as the barge’s crane occasionally. Furthermore, Appellant submits that Mr. Navarre performed repairs to the hull of the barge itself; spent 60-70% of his work day aboard the barge; and that Mr. Navarre’s duties included tying and untying mooring lines, and spud-ding and unspudding of the barge, which Appellant maintains are traditional deckhand duties.
The well-settled two-part test for determining seaman status is: 1) whether the employee’s duties contributed to the function of the vessel or accomplishment of its mission; and 2) whether that employee had a connection to a vessel in navigation which was substantial both in terms of duration and nature.
Richard v. Mike Hooks, Inc.,
2001-0145, p. 3 (La.10/16/01), 799 So.2d 462, 465 (citing
Chandris, Inc. v. Latsis,
515 U.S. 347, 368, 115 S.Ct. 2172, 132 L.Ed.2d 314 (1995)).
We find that the record evidences that Mr. Navarre’s extensive work on the ORBR1 establishes that the first prong of the
Chandris
test is met;
accordingly, only the second prong, whether Mr. Navarre’s connection to the ORBR1 was substantial in nature and duration, is at issue. In granting Appellee’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court, in its oral reasons, indicated that it found the fact pattern in
Richard v. Mike Hooks, Inc.
to be analogous to the facts of this case.
|4In
Richard,
the Louisiana Supreme Court found that although the first prong of the
Chandris
test was met, a welder helper’s work in connection with the vessels was “not substantial in nature or duration,” and therefore, the employee was not a seaman under the Jones Act, even though the employee spent in excess of thirty percent of his time on the vessels.
Richard,
2001-0145, p. 6-7, 799 So.2d at 466-468.
In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court reversed the Third Circuit’s affirmation of the trial court’s finding that Richard had established that he was a Jones Act seaman. The Third Circuit determined that Richard qualified for seaman status because he spent approximately
thirty percent of his time performing tasks connected to the vessel, and because his employment relationship with Hooks, a dredging company, exposed him to the perils of the sea.
In reversing the appellate court, the Louisiana Supreme Court emphasized that the thirty percent rule
was simply a guideline and not a “magic number automatically rendering an individual’s connection with a vessel substantial in duration and nature.”
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 6, 799 So.2d at 466. Specifically, the Court considered the employee’s duties and his connection to the vessel, |ficoncluding that the totality of the circumstances evidenced that Richard could not establish seaman status:
Richard’s time spent aboard Hooks’s vessels and the perils he faced must be considered along with other important facts to determine whether his connection with defendant’s vessels are substantial in nature and duration. In this particular instance, we consider an analysis of the following: all of the vessels on which plaintiff worked were dockside; he was never more than a gangplank’s distance from shore when working on the vessels; some of the vessels were partially on land while being repaired; he never slept on the vessels; he did not eat on the vessels; he did not keep watch on vessels overnight; he was not a member of Hooks’s dredge crew that performed welding on dredges in operation; he never worked on a vessel while it was performing its primary mission; he took his orders from a land-based foreman; he was only aboard small moving vessels once every month, for short durations, where he assisted in moving dredge pipe along a canal adjacent to Hooks’s yard; and his repair duties did not take him to sea. While none of these individual facts alone prohibit an employee from attaining seaman status, a consideration of them together shows that Richard was a land-based employee, not a seaman.
Richard,
2001-0145 at pp. 6-7, 799 So.2d at 466-67 (footnote omitted). With regard to cases cited by the employee in support of his position that he established seaman status, the Court acknowledged that although the cases were arguably factually similar, nevertheless, “the totality of the circumstances [in those cases were] distinguishable.”
Id.
at p. 7, 799 So.2d at 467.
One notable distinction between
Richard
and the instant case is that the plaintiffs Jones Act claim in
Richard
was resolved by trial on the merits, and was not disposed of on a motion for summary judgment.
Bell v. Dunn,
2004-2117, p. 13 (La.App. 4 Cir. 12/21/05), 924 So.2d 224, 234.
The trial court in
Richard
originally denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that a jury could reasonably find that the plaintiff had established seaman status.
Id.
| (¡Furthermore, the record evidences numerous differences between the employee’s connection to the vessel in
Richard
and Mr. Navarre’s work with the ORBR1.
For example, the employee in
Richard
was assigned to the defendant’s dockside yard,
whereas Mr. Navarre traveled each day to the particular job site of the barge to which he was assigned.
Unlike the employee in
Richard,
Mr. Navarre was assigned to the ORBR1 continuously for approximately six months preceding the accident,
and spent sixty to seventy percent of his time performing work operations aboard the ORBR1.
“The vessels that Richard worked aboard were dockside,
he was never more than a gangplank’s distance from shore
while working, and some of the vessels being repaired were actually on land.”
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 2, 799 So.2d at 464 (emphasis added). Conversely, the ORBR1 was not always dockside; sometimes the vessel was only accessible to the crew by outboard motor boat.
Additionally, as Appel-lee concedes, Mr. Navarre also |7testified that he remained and worked on the ORBR1 while it was being moved on the water during the work day.
Furthermore, the employee in
Richard
“was not hired as part of the dredging crew that performed repairs on vessels during dredging operations.”
Id.
As previously noted herein, Mr. Navarre was assigned continuously to the ORBR1 for approximately six months before the accident, and often performed work on the ORBR1 itself.
Id.
Additionally, “Richard’s only time spent on a moving vessel was once every month or so when he was required to ride in a small boat to assist in moving dredge pipe along a canal adjacent to Hooks’s yard.”
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 2, 799 So.2d at 464. Unlike Richard, Mr. Navarre testified in his affidavit that between ten and fifteen times per month, he served as the operator of the barge’s outboard motor boat used to transport the crew to the offshore barge, and that he also operated and used the motor boat as a work platform from which he performed job assignments in areas not accessible by the ORBR1.
|8 Additionally, as previously noted, Mr. Navarre remained and worked on the barge while it was being moved.
The circumstances surrounding the injury itself also differed greatly. Richard sustained his injuries while he was unloading pipe from a truck on land; in contrast, Mr. Navarre was injured while suspended over the Mississippi River in a work basket that was raised and lowered by the barge’s crane.
Id.
Finally, the employee
in
Richard
received instructions from a land-based foreman, but Mr. Navarre took all of his orders and assignments from Bruce Busby,
who testified [ 9that he had been the ORBRl’s superintendent since early 2006.
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 6, 799 So.2d at 467. Considering the foregoing, under the totality of the circumstances in this particular case, we do not find that the fact pattern in
Richard
is analogous to the instant case.
Not only are the facts of this case distinguishable from those in
Richard,
but oth
er jurisprudence lends support for the finding that summary judgment as to seaman status was inappropriate in this case. For example,
In Re Endeavor Marine, Inc.,
234 F.3d 287 (5th Cir.2000), acknowledged the
Chandris
Court’s “status-based standard” for determining seaman status, noting that “even a ship repairman (which is traditional longshoreman work and is one of the enumerated | inoccupations under the LHWCA) may qualify for seaman status if he has the requisite employment-related connection to the vessel.”
Id.
at 291 (citing
Chandris,
515 U.S. at 364, 115 S.Ct. at 2172).
Endeavor Marine
involved a crane operator, Kevin Baye, who was struck by a mooring line while working on the vessel FRANK L. At the time of the accident, the FRANK L was on the Mississippi River while a tug boat was pushing it alongside a cargo vessel. The district court, “faced with plaintiff whose primary duties aboard the vessel were in the nature of longshore work,” granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, “concluding] that Baye’s connection to the FRANK L was not substantial in terms of its nature because his duties did not carry him to sea.”
Endeavor Marine,
234 F.3d at 289. Thus, the district court, relying upon language from
Harbor Tug and Barge Co. v. Papai,
520 U.S. 548, 117 S.Ct. 1535, 137 L.Ed.2d 800,
erroneously “concluded that because Baye’s duties d[id] not literally carry him to sea, he could ‘not satisfy the second prong of the
Chandris
test.’ ”
Id.
In reversing the district court, the Fifth Circuit held that “when read in context, the ‘going to sea’ passage in
Harbor Tug
is a shorthand way of saying that the employee’s connection to the vessel regularly exposes him ‘to the perils of the sea.’ ”
Id.
at 291 (quoting
Harbor Tug,
520 U.S. at 554-55, 117 S.Ct. at 1540). Thus, the language in
Harbor Tug
did not create a new, specific threshold for seaman status.
Id.
The Court found that, after considering
the totality of Baye’s | nemployment-relat-ed connection to the FRANK L, Baye was a Jones Act seaman as a matter of law for three reasons: 1) Baye was permanently assigned to the FRANK L, having spent nearly all of the previous eighteen months on the vessel; 2) Baye’s primary job duties were “to operate the cranes on board a vessel whose sole purpose is to load and unload cargo vessels”; and 3) Baye was routinely exposed to the perils of the
sea
during the course of his employment, as “Baye’s duties d[id] place him on the brown waters of the Mississippi River.”
Endeavor Marine,
234 F.3d at 292, n. 3.
Similarly, the Fifth Circuit rejected the argument that an employee who could have been assigned to other work locations besides the vessel upon which he sustained injury rendered his connection to the vessel insubstantial.
Manuel v. P.A.W. Drilling & Well Service, Inc.,
135 F.3d 344, 352 (5th Cir.1998). The Court noted that the “evidence established that Manuel [the employee] was assigned to and worked aboard Rig 3 the entire two months he worked for P.A.W.” and that it was “undisputed that Manuel’s duties contributed to the function of Rig 3.”
Id.
Therefore, the Court concluded that the employer’s argument that the employee did not have the requisite connection to a vessel based solely on 1 ^allegations that the employee could have been assigned to other work locations was “seriously flawed.”
Id.
Relying in part upon
Chandris,
the Court held:
At the time of his injury, Manuel was assigned to work aboard a vessel in navigation. The fact that Manuel was subject to reassignment by P.A.W. at some later time is of no moment. As the Supreme Court pointed out in
Chandris,
“[w]hen a maritime worker’s basic assignment changes, his seaman status may change as well.”
Chandris,
515 U.S. at 372, 115 S.Ct. at 2191. Manuel’s basic assignment never changed; he remained assigned to Rig 3 for the entire two months leading up to his injury. Therefore, we conclude that Manuel satisfies
Chandris’
two-prong test for seaman status as a matter of law.
Id.
(emphasis added).
The Louisiana Supreme Court recognized that “[t]he determination of seaman
status is inherently fact intensive, and each case must be decided on the facts presented therein.”
Richard,
2001-0145 at p. 7, 799 So.2d at 467 (citing
Chandris,
515 U.S. at 371, 115 S.Ct. at 2191, and
Wilander,
498 U.S. at 356, 111 S.Ct. at 818).
“The
Chandris
court poignantly stated that in defining the 1 ^prerequisites for Jones Act coverage, one should focus upon the essence of what it means to be a seaman rather than allowing jurisprudential ‘tests’ to obscure such a finding.”
Wisner v. Professional Divers of New Orleans,
98-1755, p. 5 (La.3/2/99), 731 So.2d 200, 204. Thus, “the total circumstances of an individual’s employment must be weighed to determine whether he had a sufficient relation to the navigation of the vessels and the perils attendant thereon.”
Chandris,
515 U.S. at 370, 115 S.Ct. at 2190 (quoting
Wallace v. Oceaneering Int’l,
727 F.2d 427, 432 (5th Cir.1984)). We find that, considering the totality of the circumstances surrounding Mr. Navarre’s employment, his connection to the ORBR1 was substantial in both duration and nature, and that he is entitled to a trial on the merits of his Jones Act claim. Accordingly, the lower court’s grant of Appellee’s motion for summary judgment is hereby reversed.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s judgment is reversed and the matter remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.