Perdikouris v. The Liberian S/S Olympos

196 F. Supp. 849, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4103
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 18, 1961
DocketNo. 440
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 F. Supp. 849 (Perdikouris v. The Liberian S/S Olympos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perdikouris v. The Liberian S/S Olympos, 196 F. Supp. 849, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4103 (E.D. Va. 1961).

Opinion

WALTER E. HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The libel filed herein alleges causes of action for (1) earned wages, (2) “waiting time,” (3) a claim for injuries by reason of the negligence of the ship’s officers and crew, together with a contention of unseaworthiness, and (4) a claim for maintenance and cure.

The parties have stipulated that the sum of $200 is due under the first and second causes of action. Not included in this stipulation is a claim for sick wages.

In support of his claim for damages occasioned by injuries sustained by libellant, we are told, and the evidence supports the fact, that in 1956 libellant allegedly slipped on some oil on the floor of the engine room. While the date of occurrence is not clear from the testimony, apparently it took place on a voyage from Europe to Norfolk between June 28, 1956, and July 13, 1956. The injury resulted in a slight sprain of the right knee, but was of no consequence and libellant continued to work until his second injury in November, 1957. There is no causal relation between the injury of 1956 and the complaints as alleged in the libel.

On November 24, 1957, libellant again fell while descending a short ladder approximately four feet high. Libellant contends that the vessel was unseaworthy in that no handrails were provided. The record is devoid of any evidence tending to show that steps or a ladder of this height should be equipped with handrails. The stairway or staircase was described as being perpendicular and approximately 1.70 meters long. [851]*851The stairs went from the engine room to the tunnel, where libellant was intending to grease the bearings of the propeller shaft. Common sense dictates that ladders of this type and in this location aboard ship are not accustomed to being equipped with handrails or hand-supports. There is no description as to what may have been at the head of the ladder to enable a seaman to approach the first rung of same. The mere conclusion by libellant that the ship was unseaworthy, without credible evidence to support same, is unworthy of consideration. The third cause of action must be dismissed.

After libellant returned to Greece following his confinement in the United States Public Health Service Hospital at Norfolk from November 28, 1957, until December 12, 1957, he executed a release of his claims against the vessel and its owners. This is the subject of a prior memorandum, the details of which need not be repeated. Perdikouris v. S/S Olympos, D.C.E.D.Va., 185 F.Supp. 140.

When discharged from the hospital at Norfolk, libellant was fit for travel but not fit for duty. He was transported to Greece where he was treated from January 8, 1958, until sometime in March. Subsequent to March 12, 1958, respondents made no further payments for medical and hospital treatment. It was on this latter date that the settlement was approved by the Greek court and which, according to this court, can operate only as a credit upon the recovery, if any, in the present proceeding.

The main force of respondents’ argument on the claim for maintenance and cure lies in the proven fact that libellant had a congenital condition in both knees. In 1955 he underwent an operation for the removal of a cyst of the left outer (external) meniscus. He also complained of pain in the right knee but, according to the Greek surgeon, both knees cannot be operated on at the same time. Libellant was advised to undergo an operation on the right knee if it was giving him any pain. This he failed to do, although the testimony does not reflect that he had any particular trouble with his right knee prior to his fall on November 24, 1957, other than the minor injury in the summer of 1956. The left knee had been injured in a football game, and presumably the main complaint was remedied by the 1955 operation.

The sequence of events leads to the belief that the meniscus of the right knee was sprained or ruptured by the accident of November 24, 1957, while the vessel was at sea enroute to Newport News. Libellant remained in bed thereafter until the vessel anchored on November 26, 1957, at 8 A.M. He was taken to a doctor at 10 A.M. and returned at 2 P.M. with his leg in a cast. Again he went to bed, but was discharged on November 28 when it became apparent that he would be required to enter the hospital. The hospital record is of little value, the diagnosis being a strain of the right knee, but libellant had advised the hospital of a prior operation for a “torn ligament” of the left knee in 1955. Manifestly libellant did not know the details of any congenital condition involving the meniscus of both knees, although clinical record reflects an operation for “lateral meniscus” of the left knee in 1955. The impressions indicated a possible sprain or “possible meniscus”. A consultant, Dr. Foy Vann, reported that “the mechanics of his injury is difficult to determine,” but made a provisional diagnosis of “knee strain — no treatment suggested.” X-rays revealed nothing of significance and, as related by Dr. John Vann, a ruptured meniscus cannot be determined by X-ray. When libellant was initially taken to the same hospital, the record indicates that he was told “he had a torn medial meniscus.” Obviously there was a conflict in the views of Dr. Foy Vann and one of the hospital surgeons, as the discharge note states that Dr. Vann thought that libellant “only had strain— no meniscus involved”, whereas, the impression of at least one hospital surgeon was a “torn medial meniscus”.

Dr. John Vann, the son of Dr. Foy Vann, examined libellant on December 14, 1957, at the request of respondents. A capable orthopaedic surgeon, Dr. John [852]*852Vann stated that there was no atrophy, a full range of motion, and a superficial nodular thickening just below the kneecap. He expressed the opinion that some atrophy would be noticeable between November 24 and December 14, if the trauma had been severe. The meniscus could be activated by normal walking, and would not require a trauma to cause trouble in the knee. Dr. Vann further testified that he did not believe that libellant had a ruptured meniscus as all tests were negative and that, if a ruptured meniscus existed, some of the tests would' have been positive as it is not particularly difficult to determine if there is a torn meniscus. The fact remains that it was difficult to diagnose from the opinion of Dr. Poy Vann and the hospital surgeons, as well as from the Greek surgeons.

Libellant was examined on four or five occasions between January 8 and March 12 by Dr. Irenis in Athens, Greece. His initial impression was “hydrarthrosis at the x'ight knee joint.” Upon his discharge by Dr. Irenis shortly prior to March 12, libellant was seen by Dr. Houpis, a specialist in the diseases of the meniscuses. This visit and his subsequent treatment were at libellant’s expense. Upon taking an arthro-pneumatogram of the knee joint, the suspicion of a rupture at the internal right meniscus was confirmed in the opinion of Dr. Houpis.1 With his present impairment of the knee, Dr. Houpis, upon taking into consideration the libellant’s occupation as a seaman, estimates his disability at from 70 to 80 per cent. It should be noted, however, that this is not a true estiniate of functional disability as it is connected with libellant’s occupation as a seaman. Dr. Houpis likewise pointed out that, absent an operation, the percentage of disability may increase through the development of a degenerative osteo-arthritic disease. He further stated, somewhat contrary to the view of Dr. John Vann, that the rupture of the meniscus is always a matter of traumatic causation.2

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Bluebook (online)
196 F. Supp. 849, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perdikouris-v-the-liberian-ss-olympos-vaed-1961.