Rigdon Marine Corp. v. Roberts

270 S.W.3d 220, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7576, 2008 WL 4469867
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 2008
Docket06-08-00008-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 270 S.W.3d 220 (Rigdon Marine Corp. v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rigdon Marine Corp. v. Roberts, 270 S.W.3d 220, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7576, 2008 WL 4469867 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MOSELEY.

A melee which approached mutiny by an unruly crew on the coast of Angola, Africa, led to the brutal beating of Captain Bobby Roberts, Jr., the ship’s master. Roberts brought suit against his employer, Rigdon Marine Company (Rigdon), owner of the Iberville ship, for Jones Act negligence and for failure to provide a seaworthy *225 crew and vessel. 1 A jury awarded Roberts a total of $1,505,000, including $1,150,000 in lost future earning capacity. Rigdon appeals the jury’s Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness findings, as well as the lost earning capacity award, alleging both legal and factual insufficiency to support the verdict. Rigdon also challenges the trial court’s denial of its request to submit proposed “foreseeability” and “savage disposition” jury instructions. We affirm the judgment of the trial court because we find the evidence sufficient to support the jury’s verdict and the requested instructions to be potentially misleading embellishments to the well-established Fifth Circuit Pattern Jury Charges.

I. MUTINY ON THE IBERVILLE

Roberts was originally hired by Rigdon to work as master aboard the vessel Bien-ville, a sister ship of Iberville. The Bien-ville and Iberville were both stationed in Angola to supply the drilling rigs working in the offshore hydrocarbon fields of Angola; both vessels had crews comprised of a mix of Americans and Angolans. According to Rigdon personnel, the Iberville’s crew, including its then-captain, Jay Heater, had engaged in drug use while on board. Drinking and fighting, activities proscribed by company policy, had been reported by Rigdon employees as having occurred aboard the Iberville. Rodney Abshire, Rigdon’s marine superintendent in Angola and the overall supervisor of the crews of both the Bienville and the Iber-ville, asked Roberts ■ to move from the Bienville to replace Heater due to the reported violations of Rigdon policy, an act done presumably in the hope that Roberts would be able to quell the prohibited conduct. In order to better ensure Roberts’s safety in the task, Abshire promised to remove certain troublesome members of the crew from the ship.

This promise to ensure Roberts’s safety was rendered meaningless when Roberts was brutally assaulted during his first day aboard the Iberville. When Roberts first boarded the deck, he encountered Heater, who maintained to Roberts that he (Heater) was to remain in charge and that Roberts was only to assume the duties of the relief captain; after this declaration, Heater suggested that Roberts place his belongings in the relief captain’s quarters. Abshire, who arrived onboard the Iberville with Roberts, quickly corrected Heater by confirming Roberts was indeed “coming on as the lead.” As problems presented themselves throughout the day, Heater would repeatedly ask Roberts when issues arose, “Do you want me to handle this as the captain or are you going to handle it as the captain?” Heater generally appeared irritated that Roberts was relieving him of his position as captain of the Iberville.

Three major events, all occurring within twenty-four hours, establish the unruliness of the Iberville’s crew. First, an American crew member who did not have permission to go into town, left the craft and returned intoxicated and had either sat or spat on a local Angolan. The Angolan members of the crew took great umbrage at this display of disrespect toward their countryman, and a virtual riot broke out among them, during which they made the demand that the offending American crewman be immediately ejected from the ship. The immediate unrest appeared to have been assuaged by Roberts’s assurance to the Angolans that the offending American crew member would be escorted off the vessel the following morning.

*226 Roberts assumed that the tumult had fully subsided and continued to command the ship from the vessel’s bridge. Heater stuck “his head in the side door” of the bridge and once again asked, “Are you going to handle this as the captain or am I?” Roberts, attempting to discern the problem to which Heater made reference, came to the door where Heater stood and was encountered by an unidentified Angolan assailant on the deck who rambunctiously proclaimed, “You’re not the captain, you die; you die now.” The assailant drew a knife and began to pummel Roberts with his fists. Roberts managed to escape the assailant and locked himself in the ship’s “head” with Heater present on the bridge with Roberts. Shaken by the incident, Roberts called Abshire, related the occurrences and his current situation, and asked him to get to the ship as soon as possible. Roberts then secured the three doors to the bridge and called shore support for further assistance.

Irate Angolan crew members began to surround the secured doors shielding Roberts. Heater, disobeying a direct order from Roberts, opened a locked door, allowing angry Angolans to enter. Roberts testified that the Angolans hit him numerous times in the face, kicked him, and caused him to tumble down the stairs with four of the assailants atop him. At the foot of the stairs, they continued thrashing Roberts so severely that “there was blood all over the walls.” With the aid of another crew member, Roberts finally extricated himself from them and locked himself in another room. As a result of this beating, Roberts was bleeding, hurt everywhere, could not see in front of him at times, and experienced ringing in his ears. When Abshire arrived, Roberts asked to be taken to a doctor. Although Abshire testified that Roberts looked like he had been assaulted, was “banged around pretty good” (including a bloodied lip and red eye) and was in fear of his safety, Roberts claims that two days passed before a doctor was made available to him. As a result of these incidents, Roberts suffered numerous lasting injuries, including two slipped discs in his back, thoracic outlet syndrome, “concussive-type syndrome,” post-traumatic type headaches, constant muscle tension, and chronic depression, anxiety, memory loss, and confusion.

II. OVERVIEW OF APPLICABLE MARITIME LAW

A. Jones Act Negligence

By enacting the Jones Act, Congress provided “a seaman injured in the course of employment” with a cause of action against an employer. 46 U.S.C. § 30104 (2008). To enlarge protection afforded to seamen under general maritime law, the Jones Act is liberally construed. Boutte v. Cenac Towing, Inc., 346 F.Supp.2d 922 (S.D.Tex.2004). In order to prevail on a Jones Act negligence claim against his employer, a seaman must establish: (1) personal injury in the course of his employment; (2) negligence by his employer or an officer, agent, or employee; and (3) causation to the extent that his employer’s negligence was the cause “in whole or in part” of his injury. Hernandez v. Trawler Miss Vertie Mae, Inc., 187 F.3d 432

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.3d 220, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 7576, 2008 WL 4469867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigdon-marine-corp-v-roberts-texapp-2008.