Steven Smith v. Crounse Corporation

72 F. 4th 799
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 2023
Docket22-1303
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 72 F. 4th 799 (Steven Smith v. Crounse Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Smith v. Crounse Corporation, 72 F. 4th 799 (7th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-1303 STEVEN R. SMITH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

CROUNSE CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, New Albany Division. No. 4:20-cv-00090-TWP-DML — Tanya Walton Pratt, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 23, 2022 — DECIDED JULY 6, 2023 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, ROVNER, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Steven R. Smith sued Crounse Cor- poration for injuries he sustained while unloading coal from a barge owned by Crounse. The district court granted sum- mary judgment in favor of Crounse, and we affirm. I. Smith worked for Mulzer Crushed Stone (“Mulzer”) as a Bobcat skid steer operator. Crounse had a contract with 2 No. 22-1303

Mulzer to provide barges for Mulzer to transport its crushed stone product. Crounse would deliver the barges to Mulzer, which would then clean the barges to its satisfaction, load the barges with Mulzer’s crushed stone, deliver the stone prod- uct, clean the barges again to a “broom swept” state, and then release the barges back to Crounse. Crounse’s barges were used by other companies to haul other materials, including coal. Barges carrying coal were sometimes released back to Crounse with as much as a foot of coal remaining in the bot- tom of the hopper. Mulzer and Crounse agreed that Mulzer would clear any remaining coal from the barges and sell it for Mulzer’s own profit. This relieved Crounse of the duty of cleaning the barges before delivering them to Mulzer and benefited Mulzer with the sale of the reclaimed coal. On April 24, 2017, Smith was tasked with clearing out the last foot of coal from Crounse barge #128 so that it could be loaded with Mulzer’s crushed stone. To accomplish this task, Smith was operating a skid steer with a “blade” attached and positioned at its lowest height. Smith planned to use the blade to push coal from the back of the hopper to the front for re- moval, and then complete the job by removing any remaining coal with a push broom. While operating his skid steer at ap- proximately five to eight miles per hour, the blade ran into an obstruction on the steel floor of the hopper. The skid steer came to an abrupt stop, propelling Smith forward. Smith’s seatbelt failed and he was injured when he hit a safety bar on the skid steer. The obstruction on the hopper floor turned out to be a “scab.” The floor of the hopper is composed of strips of steel that are welded together at the seams. As a barge ages, the seams are subjected to various forces during loading and No. 22-1303 3

unloading and sometimes split. At times, a piece of equip- ment catches the edge of a split seam and bends part of the steel strip upward, forming a scab. In this instance, Smith’s skid steer ran into a scab approximately twelve to fourteen inches long, and a few inches tall. R. 34-9. The barge at issue was twenty-four years old. Smith had been operating the skid steer for Mulzer for ap- proximately ten months when the accident occurred. Al- though he had driven Bobcat skid steers in the past at other jobs, Mulzer employees Jonathon Mulzer and Jason Otterbach provided additional training to Smith in the use of the skid steer. Smith had never encountered a scab when cleaning a barge with a skid steer, but he learned after the accident that Jonathon Mulzer and Jason Otterbach had encountered this type of defect in barges before. They had discovered the de- fects that same way that Smith had: by driving a skid steer into a raised portion of hopper flooring. After the accident, Smith and his co-workers pushed the coal away from the area and saw the scab that had caused the skid steer to stop ab- ruptly. Smith observed marks on the scab that he believed to have been caused by a sledgehammer. He averred that all of the damaged area appeared rusty and that there were no breaks or tears in the metal that looked “fresh.” He opined that the hammer marks and the rust meant that the damage was old, and that the defect had been hammered down but not welded into place at some point in the past. After Smith’s accident, other Mulzer employees hammered down the scab, and the coal was then cleared from the barge. A Mulzer em- ployee then sent an email to Crounse’s Traffic Department in- forming Crounse that there was “about a 12" to 14" scab stick- ing up in the middle of the floor … that will need [to be] ad- dressed sometime.” According to the email, Mulzer 4 No. 22-1303

employees “bent it back down the best we could and will be able to load the barge. Might want to get it on a maintenance list sometime.” R. 34-8. Mulzer did not inform Crounse that an employee had been injured as a result of running into the scab. Crounse had procedures for regularly inspecting and re- pairing its barges. Every time a deckhand or engineer walked across barges that they were picking up or dropping off, they were directed to look for any damage that required repair. This inspection included any damage observed inside the hopper, on the hull of the barge, the winches, the deck fittings or any other areas of the barge. They also checked the barges for water leaks. If they found no damage, they made no re- port. If they found damage, they filed a damaged barge re- port. Crounse did not require employees to go into hoppers filled with a foot of coal dust to search for problems under the coal because it would not be safe to do so. Nevertheless, it was possible to detect split seams even in a barge loaded with coal. Employees inspecting barges were trained to look for water in the hull of the barge. Any water found would be pumped out, and an employee would then crawl the hull to determine where the water came from. This allowed Crounse to detect split seams from below the hopper where cargo was stored. Split seams are common on barges more than fifteen or twenty years old. Crounse asserted that damage that required immediate attention was always fixed at the first opportunity. That would include a floor scab that was protruding enough for equipment to become caught on it, or that was so extensive that it would cause rock or stone to leak down into the hull. Approximately eighty percent of damage was reported by Crounse employees conducting routine inspections, and No. 22-1303 5

twenty percent was reported by third parties such as loading facilities. Crounse did not consider the scab reported by Mulzer to be serious because the Mulzer email reporting it did not indi- cate that it was an urgent problem and did not reveal that any- one had been hurt as a result of this defect. Although split seams and scabs are common in barges of this age, Crounse’s barge manager had never heard of anyone being injured by a split seam or scab in the eleven years he had been a barge manager. In the time period leading up to Smith’s accident, Crounse had received no reports of damage to this barge, and the barge had last required repairs in December 2015. Never- theless, after receiving the report from Mulzer, Crounse sent the barge for repairs in June 2017, and this seam, among oth- ers, was repaired within a few months of Smith’s accident. Twenty-three days before Smith’s accident, the barge had been cleaned by a blade without incident. The barge was also blade cleaned without incident only a few days before the June repairs were made. After Smith’s accident and before the repairs were completed in June, the barge was used without any reported problems. Nearly three years after the accident, Smith filed suit against Crounse for the injuries he sustained when his skid steer collided with the scab. He asserted claims for violations of section 905(b) of the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Com- pensation Act, 33 U.S.C.

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72 F. 4th 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-smith-v-crounse-corporation-ca7-2023.