Victory Carriers, Inc., a Corporation v. Stockton Stevedoring Co.

388 F.2d 955, 1968 A.M.C. 344, 33 Cal. Comp. Cases 809, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 871, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 8427
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1968
Docket21326
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 388 F.2d 955 (Victory Carriers, Inc., a Corporation v. Stockton Stevedoring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victory Carriers, Inc., a Corporation v. Stockton Stevedoring Co., 388 F.2d 955, 1968 A.M.C. 344, 33 Cal. Comp. Cases 809, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 871, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 8427 (9th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

ELY, Circuit Judge:

A longshoreman was injured while engaged in his work aboard the vessel SS COE VICTORY, owned and operated by the appellant. He instituted suit against appellant, and the appellant, by inter-pleader, sought to be indemnified by the longshoreman’s employer, the appellee, in the event of a determination of its, the shipowner’s, liability to the longshoreman. The trial resulted in the conclusion of the District Court, sitting in admiralty, that the shipowner should re *957 spond in damages to the longshoreman and that it was not entitled to indemnity from the stevedore. From both aspects of the judgment, the shipowner appealed. Following a compromise, it dismissed its appeal from the judgment in favor of the longshoreman, and the appeal now before us pertains only to the judgment in favor of the remaining appellee, the stevedore. The District Court’s jurisdiction properly rested upon 28 U.S.C. § 1333 and Admiralty Rule 56. Our power of review is conferred by 28 U.S.C. § 1291.

At the time of the accident from which the suit arose, the appellant’s vessel was berthed at Pier No. 8 in the Port of Stockton, California. It arrived there without cargo at 3 o’clock during the afternoon of January 7, 1963. Fifteen hours before that time, while the vessel was at sea, the chief officer had removed a rung of one of the ship’s ladders, after having observed a crack in the weld of the rung. The rung was one of a number of rods welded to the sides of a channel extending into the after, lower portion of the vessel’s Number One hold. The longshoreman’s injury was found to have been caused solely by the missing rung. He undertook to descend the ladder in question at approximately 8 o’clock in the morning of January 8, 1963, 1 and fell a distance of seven or eight feet from the point of the missing rung to the deck of the lower hold.

The appellant’s broad contention here is that controlling authority, as applied to the facts, required that it be indemnified by the stevedoring company. Specifically, it contends that the stevedore breached its warranty to perform its stevedoring contract in a workmanlike manner, safely and properly. During the trial, it undertook to support its contention by evidence, including the testimony of a gang boss of the stevedoring company itself, to the effect that the stevedoring company, prior to the accident, had been made aware of the fact of the missing rung. 2

The “Opinion, Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” of the District Court are contained in twenty-six pages. Specific and relevant Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, those not pertaining to the longshore *958 man’s individual suit, are set forth in the margin. 3 In its opinion, the court carefully analyzed portions of the testimony, including that presented by the appellant’s chief officer. Any debatable issue as to the credibility of witnesses was, of course, one to be exclusively resolved by the trial court. Conceding that it was free to reject, as it did, oral testimony to the effect that the stevedor-ing company had generally been informed of ladder defects and the testimony of the stevedore’s gang boss that at least two of the stevedore’s employees had been informed by one of the vessel’s crewmen of the fact of the missing rung, the record does not indicate that sufficient weight was given to an important consideration. Prior to the trial, the appellant, pursuant to Federal Admiralty Rule 31, propounded written interrogatories to the stevedore. In its interrogatory No. 10, it inquired: “On January 7, 1963, were you or your representatives aware of any defects in the aft ladder of No. 1 Hatch on the SS COE VICTORY?” In answer thereto, the stevedore replied: “No one to our knowledge was aware of any specific defects in the after ladder of Hatch No. 1 of the SS COE VICTORY on January 7, 1963. We were advised that some of the ladders on the vessel were known to he defective * * 4 (Emphasis added.) The stevedore here strives to weaken the impact of the answer by stating in its brief: “This admission was prepared not by the appellee, but by its attorney.” This excuse cannot be accepted. At no time did the ap-pellee or its attorney seek to withdraw or modify the answer which was given. The orderly process of justice would be seriously impaired if representations made *959 by attorneys could be easily disregarded. At the same time, the statement that the stevedore had been informed of ladder defects was contained in an unsworn answer to an interrogatory. That there was subsequent equivocation is indicated not only by the stevedore’s answer, heretofore quoted in our footnote 4, supra, to the shipowner’s Request for Admissions, but also by the court’s Pre-trial Order, signed by all counsel, reciting that “the stevedore * * * may have been advised that some of the ladders on the vessel were defective * * (Emphasis added.)

An answer to an interrogatory is comparable to answers, which may be mistaken, given in deposition testimony or during the course of the trial itself. Answers to interrogatories must often be supplied before investigation is completed and can rest only upon knowledge which is available at the time. When there is conflict between answers supplied in response to interrogatories and answers obtained through other questioning, either in deposition or trial, the finder of fact must weigh all of the answers and resolve the conflict. Cf. Austin v. Gallaher, 417 S.W.2d 363 (Tex.Civ.App.1967). On the other hand, if a party makes a crucial admission in his formal pleading, or in response to a formal request for admissions, then the admitted fact is to be taken as established, absent a timely request for, and the granting of, relief therefrom. We therefore conclude that the District Court was not required to accept, as established fact, that the stevedore had, on January 7, 1963, the day before the accident, been “advised that some of the ladders on the vessel were known to be defective.” We do believe, however, that the District Court should make a specific factual determination of this issue. 5 In the light of the contents of the court’s opinion, it cannot be implied that there was a determination adverse to the position taken by the shipowner. The District Court rested its denial of indemnity upon only one asserted proposition, stating that “[i]f recovery against the stevedoring company would be warranted, as indemnity or otherwise, it would be only for the reason that the stevedoring company, having knowledge of the missing rung, did not inform libelant of same or take any precaution to protect him from injury due to the missing rung.” (Emphasis added.) We cannot accept the quoted conclusion as a statement of correct principle. Under the emphasized language, the stevedore would be relieved, as it was, unless found to have had specific, actual knowledge that a rung was missing from the ladder in question. This is hardly proper.

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388 F.2d 955, 1968 A.M.C. 344, 33 Cal. Comp. Cases 809, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 871, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 8427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victory-carriers-inc-a-corporation-v-stockton-stevedoring-co-ca9-1968.