Paul Daniel Landry, Cross v. Offshore Logistics, Inc., Cross Odom Offshore Survey, Inc., Third Party Cross v. Bollinger and Boyd, Inc., Third Party

544 F.2d 757, 1977 A.M.C. 2640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1977
Docket75-1450
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 544 F.2d 757 (Paul Daniel Landry, Cross v. Offshore Logistics, Inc., Cross Odom Offshore Survey, Inc., Third Party Cross v. Bollinger and Boyd, Inc., Third Party) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Daniel Landry, Cross v. Offshore Logistics, Inc., Cross Odom Offshore Survey, Inc., Third Party Cross v. Bollinger and Boyd, Inc., Third Party, 544 F.2d 757, 1977 A.M.C. 2640 (3d Cir. 1977).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Circuit Judge:

This case has been tried twice in the District Court. At the first trial, plaintiff recovered a judgment for $350,000. At the second, plaintiff recovered judgment for $238,998. Both sides are unhappy. The plaintiff appeals the grant of a new trial, which set aside his $350,000 verdict. The defendant cross appeals, attacking the second recovery. We affirm altogether.

The plaintiff, Paul Landry, 43 years old in 1972, quite deaf, a marine engineer, was a seaman and a member of the crew on a work boat, the P.G.T. BEAUREGARD. According to his testimony, on November 10, 1972, the captain ordered him to crank the engines, that the boat had to move. The seas were at 8-10 feet and Landry told the captain that it was too rough to move. On the captain’s orders, he untied from the stationary platform, went down to the engine room and returned to the starboard bow of the vessel. While Landry was trying to attach a line from the BEAUREGARD to the stand-by boat, the captain reversed the engines. Landry was thrown from the railing, to which he had been holding, and into the uncoiling rope, which hung his foot, injuring his right leg at or near the ankle. His shoe came off and the rope slipped from his foot. He declined transfer to a service boat on account of the high seas. Three days later, the BEAUREGARD docked. Landry’s foot was hurting so intensely that he went to a doctor. He remained ten days in the Abraham Kaplan Hospital and soon afterwards went back for a skin graft to his right ankle. He claimed that if he walks or “stayed too much on it” the ankle swells, that he cannot walk straight on his foot because he had pain underneath it, and “cannot walk straight on my ankle”, has “to walk kind of sideways”. He said that two years after the accident the ankle was still giving him a lot of trouble. Landry had not worked since the accident, said he was unable to walk or *759 stand for any length of time, and had not sought work.

At the time of the second trial he was seeing Doctor Trahan once a month, the only doctor who had treated him.

Plaintiff’s hospital records were introduced into evidence, with no objection. The diagnosis upon admission was:

Working diagnosis: After physical ex amination—
Avulsion of the skin over the median and lateral malleolar, multiple severe ligamental tears ankle joint, cellulitis foot, ankle, and lower leg.
EXTREMITIES: The right foot and ankle is (sic) extremely swollen and red. There are patch avulsion and brush burns of approximately 4x6 cm. areas of skin over the medial and lateral malleoli. The ankle is diffusely swollen with ecchymotic discoloration. There is obvious edema and erythema of the lower leg, ankle and foot.
The diagnosis at discharge was:
Patient was admitted with trauma to the right foot, which was an abrasive type of trauma, and did severe damage to the skin and subcutaneous tissue with tissue necrosis. The patient also had a severe cellulitis upon admission. He was treated with antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement. The patient’s thrombophlebitis as well as the cellulitis have now become better, however, there is a raw area where the skin underwent necrosis and he may require a graft at a later date. Will continue attempts at granulation.

Later on, he stayed in the hospital for four or five days for a skin graft.

At the request of defendants and by arrangement with plaintiff’s counsel, Dr. Claude S. Williams, an orthopedic surgeon, recognized as an expert in the field, examined Landry in his office in New Orleans on July 2, 1973. Dr. Williams took Landry’s case history, which substantially coincided with Trahan’s testimony. He testified that Landry did not appear to be in distress, that there was no detectable atrophy of the lower extremities, when Landry walked he would occasionally hold the right foot inward and walk on the lateral aspect of the foot, but on other occasions he was seen to walk normally without a detectable limp. Dr. Williams found no callouses, no thickening of the skin along the lateral or medial portion of the foot, and no detectable swelling of the ankle. Landry had a healed, diamond-shaped skin graft approximately 2 inches in diameter. There were 3 superficial scars about the back and inner aspect of the right leg in the vicinity of the ankle. The right ankle had normal range of motion, no detectable instability. Tendon function about the ankle and foot was intact. The pulses in the foot were normal. Landry was able to stand on his toes and walk on his heels. When he squatted down in a knee squat he complained of pain in the ankle. X-rays of the foot and ankle were normal. Dr. Williams was unable to explain the subjective symptoms or why Landry had been numb distally, since the alleged numbness was not in an area supplied by the nerves that would have been affected by the injury. Dr. Williams thought that Landry had approximately 5% impairment of function of the right leg, that no further treatment was indicated, and that Landry could return to any occupation he desired. Incidentally, however, his examination required only 15-20 minutes time.

Dr. Marion Joseph Trahan testified by deposition. He is a general surgeon. He is Board qualified, but not Board certified. He said Landry “had sustained a brush burn”, third degree, through the entire skin, considered severe. There were no broken bones, no dislocation of the ankle. He removed all the dead tissue down to a good viable tissue. He did the skin graft on December 18. He saw Landry four times in January, 1973, and once in February. He did not see him again until September 26, 1973. He saw Landry in October, when he complained of his ankle and foot swelling, his ankle being unstable, stiff and painful. He did not see him again until April, 1974. He had no record of medications prescribed for Landry. On this scant foundation, Trahan offered the opinion that Landry had *760 not improved notably and that he could not return to work on boats or do any type of manual labor.

Here, we have the classic conflict. One doctor says that Landry has only a 5% disability and can go back to work. Another doctor, and Landry, say that he cannot. We must resist the temptation to say what we would have done had we been sitting on the jury, for the issue was for it to determine, Pellegrin v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., Inc., 5 Cir. 1974, 504 F.2d 884.

Other considerations control the outcome of this appeal.

The suit was against Offshore Industries under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C., Section 688, and against Odom Offshore Surveys, Inc., for negligence under general maritime law.

The Direct Appeal

At the conclusion of the first trial the District Court awarded a new trial on the ground that one juror had not answered questions on the voir dire which might have caused him to be excused, either peremptorily or for cause, but added that he was also ordering a new trial because the amount of the verdict was so excessive as to shock the conscience of the court.

Under the facts and circumstances of this case the shock need not long delay us.

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544 F.2d 757, 1977 A.M.C. 2640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-daniel-landry-cross-v-offshore-logistics-inc-cross-odom-offshore-ca3-1977.