Taylor v. Packer Diving and Salvage Company

342 F. Supp. 365, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13175
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 21, 1971
DocketCiv. A. 69-956
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 342 F. Supp. 365 (Taylor v. Packer Diving and Salvage Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Packer Diving and Salvage Company, 342 F. Supp. 365, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13175 (E.D. La. 1971).

Opinion

COMISKEY, District Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

1.

On February 6, 1969 Darrell Taylor was employed by Packer Diving and Salvage Co. as a diver.

2.

At that time he had been so employed for approximately a year in the capacity of a diver.

3.

Taylor was injured on February 6, 1969 when an elevator-cable on a partially constructed diving tank in the yard of Packer Diving and Salvage Co. broke dropping the elevator with Taylor aboard to the ground.

4.

Darrell Taylor was a well-known underwater welder prior to his employment.

5.

Packer Diving and Salvage Co. is a diving company which specializes in burying underwater pipelines in the Gulf of Mexico between production platforms. The company has consistently sought to be considered experts and specialists in this field in the oil industry.

6.

The work of burying underwater pipelines inevitably requires the use of special-purpose vessels, either barges or boats, which are specially designed and outfitted for burying underwater pipelines. The work cannot be done without *367 vessels whose specific purpose is burying underwater pipelines.

7.

In underwater pipe burying, a diver doing the type of work the plaintiff did is an integral and indispensible member of the crew of the vessel. The diver must position the jet line for digging the trench and in certain circumstances the diver stays below during the entire burying operation.

8.

When not below the surface, the plaintiff as a diver operates cranes on the vessels, handles the jetting and diving equipment, and generally acts in a capacity which contributes to the general mission of the vessel.

9.

During a substantial portion of Darrell Taylor’s employ, Packer Diving and Salvage Company leased for its own work a barge, the Packer No. 1, which it specially outfitted as a pipe burying barge. The lease terminated prior to Taylor’s accident, but subsequent thereto another similar barge was acquired for pipe-burying use.

10.

In addition to pipe burying work, Packer Diving and Salvage Company did underwater welding work in the Gulf of Mexico, practically all of which work, insofar as Darrell Taylor was concerned, was from vessels.

11.

Darrell Taylor was hired in August of 1969 by Packer Diving and Salvage Company.

12.

Approximately the first three months of Taylor’s work was on a pipe burying barge for Aquatic Marine Co. Some portion of this three months may have been spent on two other Aquatic pipe burying barges.

13.

Packer Diving and Salvage Company provided a crew of divers, tenders, and a diving foreman for the Aquatic pipe burying barges. This crew did the indispensible diving work, handled the jetting and diving equipment and supplemented the work of the other barge crew members.

14.

These barges had living quarters and food facilities aboard and Darrell Taylor lived on and was assigned to these barges during his work tour. Mr. Taylor was a member of the crew of these barges and did all of his work either on or from these barges.

15.

Darrell Taylor’s next tour of duty was aboard the pipe-burying barge Packer No. 1. This barge was leased by Packer Diving and Salvage Co. for its exclusive use in its pipe burying work. Taylor spent approximately two months on the Packer No. 1.

16.

The entire crew of the Packer No. 1 was employed by Packer Diving and Salvage Co. Taylor was a member of the crew of the Packer No. 1 and spent all of his work time on those particular jobs on the Packer No. 1.

17.

Packer Diving and Salvage Company leased a jack-up barge which was a vessel from Arthur J. Levy and Co. for underwater welding work. Arthur J. Levy provided only a barge operator and the balance of the entire crew were employees of Packer.

18.

Darrell Taylor took part in all the crew functions including diving, welding and on-deck machinery operator which was the purpose of the vessel. Darrell Taylor was a member of the crew of that barge and spent all of his working time on this job working on or from the Arthur J. Levy barge. Taylor spent approximately one month on this barge.

19.

Darrell Taylor was employed by Packer Diving and Salvage Company as a *368 seaman and he performed substantially all of his work aboard vessels for Packer which was a company specially working in vessel-oriented diving activity.

20.

Just prior to his employment, Darrell Taylor sold to Packer Diving and Salvage Co. a large tank some 30 feet in length.

21.

In the latter part of 1968 or the early part of 1969, officers of Packer Diving and Salvage Company decided to convert the tank into a diving training tank for training in underwater welding.

22.

The design for the tank and a personnel elevator on the side of the tank was prepared by the President, Operations Manager and engineer for Packer.

23.

Since Darrell Taylor was an expert underwater welder, he was instructed to assist in the building of the tank by specifying where certain pipes and valves were to be placed.

24.

Darrell Taylor was never permanently reassigned to the yard to build the tank. His profession was diving.

25.

It was understood that the work on the tank was temporary fill-in work for divers and tenders. It was understood that Taylor would return to his usual duties as a diver after the tank was finished and when diving work was available. Taylor was not removed from diving work during work on the tank. The work on the tank only lasted from January 29, 1969 to February 6, 1969.

26.

During the work on the tank, Taylor made as many as three diving jobs, all off of vessels.

27.

Two days before the accident in suit, Taylor was the diver on a vessel and his mission for the vessel was to find a ship’s wheel which had been dropped to the bottom of a river.

28.

Darrell Taylor did not cease to be a seaman during his work on the tank as the work was merely fill-in work and at most a temporary land-based assignment. At the time of the accident in suit, Taylor was a seaman acting in the course and scope of his employment for Packer Diving and Salvage Company.

29.

The plaintiff’s supervisor in charge of building the elevator was Bob Norman, the diving supervisor and Operations Manager for Packer Diving and Salvage Company.

30.

The tank was to stand upright with interior facilities for training divers.

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342 F. Supp. 365, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-packer-diving-and-salvage-company-laed-1971.