Trigleth v. Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00065
StatusUnknown

This text of Trigleth v. Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc. (Trigleth v. Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc.) 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
Trigleth v. Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc., (E.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

JOSEPH TRIGLETH CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO. 23-65

OCEAN BELT MARITIME, INC., et al. SECTION M (4)

ORDER & REASONS Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc. and Ocean Longevity Shipping & Management Company, Ltd. (together, “Defendants”).1 Plaintiff Joseph Trigleth responds in opposition.2 Defendants reply in further support of their motion,3 and Trigleth files a surreply.4 Having considered the parties’ memoranda, the record, and the applicable law, the Court denies the motion in part and grants it in part. I. BACKGROUND This longshoreman-personal-injury suit arises out of an incident on the Defendants’ vessel, the M/V Ocean Belt (the “Vessel”).5 Trigleth was employed as a ship superintendent by non-party Cooper Consolidated LLC (“Cooper”), which was contracted to unload cargo from the Vessel at Cooper’s terminal on the Mississippi River in LaPlace, Louisiana, in January 2021.6 Trigleth alleges that, while he was overseeing cargo unloading operations on the night of January 29, 2021, he “sustain[ed] severe and disabling injuries when he tripped and fell over a dolly of safety rail pipes which were in [his] path as he crossed [some] steps” on the deck of the Vessel.7 Trigleth

1 R. Doc. 37. 2 R. Doc. 38. 3 R. Doc. 41. 4 R. Doc. 45. 5 R. Doc. 20 at 2. 6 Id.; R. Docs. 37-1 at 3; 38 at 10. 7 R. Doc. 20 at 3. The steps led to an equipment-crossover walkway. brought this action on January 6, 2023, asserting negligence claims against Defendants under § 905 of the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA”), 33 U.S.C. § 905.8 Defendants now move for summary judgment.9 II. PENDING MOTION In their motion for summary judgment, Defendants argue that they “did not breach any of

the three narrow ‘Scindia duties’” owed by vessel owners to longshoremen, and that Trigleth has no evidence to support his negligence claims.10 Defendants first contend that the turnover duty under Scindia is not at issue in this case because Trigleth admits that the pipe-laden dolly was not present in the area of the accident in the days between January 25, 2021, when Defendants turned the Vessel over to Cooper, and Trigleth’s accident on January 29, 2021, and thus, Defendants could not have known of their location at the time of turnover.11 Defendants further argue that “a 3-4’ tall rolling dolly with pipes on the deck” would have been an open-and-obvious condition of which they would have had no duty to warn the stevedore crew.12 Defendants next argue that they did not have active control over the area where the accident occurred because none of the Vessel’s crew was in that area during Cooper’s cargo operations that night.13 Defendants then contend that

they did not violate their duty to intervene under Scindia because they lacked actual knowledge of the alleged location of the dolly and pipes at the time of the accident or that their presence there created a hazard.14 Lastly, Defendants assert that Trigleth has no evidence to support his allegation that any dolly loaded with pipes was positioned near the steps at the time of the accident,15 and

8 R. Doc. 1. 9 R. Doc. 37. 10 R. Doc. 37-1 at 1-2 (quote at 1) (referencing Scindia Steam Navigation Co. v. De Los Santos, 451 U.S. 156 (1981)). These duties are discussed at § III(B), infra. 11 Id. at 10-11. 12 Id. at 11. 13 Id. at 11-15. 14 Id. at 15-19. 15 Id. at 19-23. point out that, although Trigleth was responsible for photographing cargo operations as acting surveyor on January 29, 2021, he “did not take a single picture of the dolly or pipes that night.”16 In his opposition, Trigleth first contends that “there are two issues of contract, positive law or custom which suggest that Scindia’s limitations upon the shipowners’ duties do not apply in this case,”17 namely, Cooper’s “Ship Mooring Terminal Tariff for Locations on the Lower

Mississippi River” (the “Tariff”)18 – by which, says Trigleth, Defendants “contractually modified the limited duties set forth in Scindia”19 – and the International Safety Management Code (“ISM Code”) which Trigleth asserts applies to Defendants as vessel owners.20 Trigleth then argues that, “[i]nsofar as Scindia may apply to this matter,” Defendants breached the turnover and active- control duties.21 He contends that the Vessel was turned over to Cooper with insufficient lighting for him to safely perform his duties on the deck, in breach of Defendants’ turnover duty.22 As to the active-control duty, Trigleth argues that the dolly and pipes he allegedly tripped on were “under the exclusive control of the [V]essel” at the time of his accident.23 He asserts that, because the dolly and pipes were part of the Vessel’s equipment, had not been moved by anyone on the

stevedore crew, and were not present in the area prior to his accident, only the Vessel crew, who were supposed to be making rounds on the Vessel that evening, “could have moved the dolly into the position it was in at the time of the accident.”24

16 Id. at 21 (emphasis omitted). 17 R. Doc. 38 at 7. 18 R. Doc. 38-11. 19 R. Doc. 38 at 8-12 (quote at 11). 20 Id. at 12-15. 21 Id. at 15. 22 Id. at 15-17. 23 Id. at 18. 24 Id. at 18-24 (quote at 19). In their surreply, Defendants first argue that § 905(b) is Trigleth’s exclusive remedy against Defendants and that neither the Tariff nor the ISM Code modify their duties under Scindia.25 Defendants assert that the Tariff provision Trigleth cites is meant to be read as an indemnity clause and “[s]imilar arguments, under much more specific and tailored contracts and charter party agreements, have been rejected by courts again and again.”26 Defendants also contend that case

law does not support Trigleth’s argument that the ISM Code affects their duties under Scindia and § 905(b).27 Defendants then argue that Trigleth has not identified an issue of material fact as to whether they breached their Scindia duties. As to Trigleth’s turnover-duty argument, Defendants contend that Trigleth’s March 25, 2025 affidavit, submitted with his opposition, in which he asserts that the area of the Vessel where he was injured was “not illuminated” is a sham affidavit because it is “in direct conflict with his sworn deposition testimony that the lighting was ‘adequate that night for what he was doing on the ship’” and that he had no “‘issues walking around the [V]essel because it wasn’t well-lit that night.’”28 With respect to Trigleth’s argument that Defendants had active control of the dolly and pipes at the time of the accident, Defendants assert that, even

accepting the statements in the affidavit as true, Trigleth’s theory of the case requires the Court to draw “inferences upon inferences,” which “is not proper or appropriate to create an issue of fact.”29 In his surreply, Trigleth contends that he “only asked the Court to draw one inference: that ‘the overwhelming weight of the evidence makes it reasonable to make the inference that only the crew of the [Vessel] could have moved the dolly and had access to the dolly and the pipes/stanchions which hung over the step on the cross-over and caused [his] accident.’”30 Trigleth

25 R. Doc. 41 at 1. 26 Id. at 2-3 (quote at 3). 27 Id. at 3-4. 28 Id. at 4-5 (quote at 5) (alteration omitted) (quoting R. Doc. 37-5 at 188-89). 29 Id. at 9-10 (quote at 9). 30 R. Doc. 45 at 2-3. also denies that his March 25 affidavit is a sham affidavit because it “merely supplements his testimony and also addresses facts he was not asked about,” and the discrepancies between his statements during his deposition and in the affidavit are reconcilable.31

III. LAW & ANALYSIS A.

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Trigleth v. Ocean Belt Maritime, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trigleth-v-ocean-belt-maritime-inc-laed-2025.