Watson ex rel. Watson v. Massman Construction Co.

850 F.2d 219, 1989 A.M.C. 73, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 25, 1988
DocketNo. 87-3485
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 850 F.2d 219 (Watson ex rel. Watson v. Massman Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson ex rel. Watson v. Massman Construction Co., 850 F.2d 219, 1989 A.M.C. 73, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

This case comes to us on appeal from an order of the District Court dismissing the suit for lack of admiralty jurisdiction. Because this suit by the survivors of a bridge construction worker who fell to his death in the Mississippi River does not fall within the traditional purview of the admiralty court, we affirm.

The Laborer, The Labor in Non-Maritime Work

Donald White was a laborer employed by Massman Construction Company. Mass-man was engaged in constructing the piers for the new Mississippi River Bridge in New Orleans. The employees of Massman were working on work barges as well as on the forms which were used to shape the concrete and steel making up the pier. As the concrete was poured into the forms, the builders used air from compressors on a nearby construction barge to drive a vibrating device to help settle the concrete. The compressors were connected to the vibrators by means of a high pressure compressor hose running from the barge to the pier. The compressor hose was attached to a steel manifold, located on the pier, which then distributed the compressed air to the vibrating device by way of a parallel group of smaller hoses. One of the sections of the high pressure hose1 failed, and the workers lowered the manifold assembly from the pier to the work barge moored at the base of the pier. A new length of hose was then attached to the manifold.

The trouble came when the manifold (with its hoses) and the compressor hose were being hoisted back to the top of the concrete pier. White was assigned the job of grabbing the heavy compressor hose and tying it to the side of the steel forms. Working from the pier, White, without a lifeline, crawled outside a safety railing to reach out to grab the compressor hose. The compressor hose separated from the device coupling it to the manifold, and the heavy coupling and manifold fell, hit White and sent him tumbling into the Mississippi River. He is lost and presumed dead.

Litigation Sets In

White’s survivors brought this suit, initially against Massman, alleging violations of various duties under the maritime law by Massman and others. The present ap-pellees, Dixon Valve & Coupling Company and C.V. Harold Rubber Company, added as defendants some time later by way of maritime products liability claims, manufactured and assembled the hose and coupling.2

Shortly before trial, these defendants moved to dismiss for want of admiralty jurisdiction. The district court granted the motion. We are now asked to review it.

“Perverse and Casuistic Borderline Situations”: A Reprise of Admiralty Jurisdiction

Federal admiralty courts have jurisdiction over a tort dispute if either the injured party or the alleged tortfeasor is a traditional maritime actor, or at least if [221]*221either of these parties3 is performing the same function in a traditional maritime activity. Under Executive Jet4 and Kelly v. Smith,5 it is clear that maritime locality alone is insufficient to sustain maritime jurisdiction. The wrong must bear a significant relationship to maritime activity.6

Executive Jet Seagulls Not Causing Seafaring Damage

We begin with Executive Jet7 which held that admiralty jurisdiction depends on “the relationship of the wrong to traditional maritime activity,”8 which arises when “the wrong bear[s] a significant relationship to traditional maritime activity.” 9 Executive Jet was a suit by an airplane owner against a city and various federal officials for negligently failing to keep seagulls off an airport runway. While the seagulls caused the airplane to crash in navigable waters where it ultimately sank, the Court held there was no federal admiralty jurisdiction over aviation tort claims arising out of flights by land-based aircraft between points within the continental United States.10

Executive Jet rejected the traditional strict locality test for maritime jurisdiction. The fortuitous circumstance that an injured party or property somehow ended up in navigable waters11 was simply not sufficient to support admiralty jurisdiction.12 “It is far more consistent with the history and purpose of admiralty to require also that the wrong bear a significant relationship to traditional maritime activity.”13

Kelly — Amphibious Warfare

We begin our analysis with a discussion of Kelly, the Fifth Circuit’s Plimsoll Line on admiralty jurisdiction. In Kelly, this court found admiralty jurisdiction existed over a ship-to-shore gun battle which occurred in the Mississippi River. The Kel-lys, poachers, deer hunting without permission, were on an island located in the Mississippi River. They were discovered by the island’s caretaker, an active member of the hunting club which held the exclusive license to hunt on the island. As the Kel-lys attempted to flee the island in their 15-foot boat, shots were exchanged striking Allen Kelly, the man at the tiller, and one of his sons. Both were injured.

Under Kelly, the first inquiry is into the functions and roles of the operational actors. In Kelly, the most seriously injured person was the man at the tiller, whom the maritime law would generously characterize as the pilot. His role, like the Master of the S/S QUEEN MARY, was to ensure safe navigation on the river. The craft [222]*222involved was a boat, whose sole function was transportation on navigable waters. The other instrumentalities involved, the rifles, are not so inherently land-based, nor are the injuries they caused, to preclude any maritime connection. Finally, it did not require any great stretch of traditional maritime law to uphold jurisdiction, because admiralty was traditionally concerned with furnishing remedies for those injured while traveling on navigable waters.14

The rule of Kelly is simple enough: we must consider (i) “the functions and roles of the parties; (ii) the types of vehicles and instrumentalities involved; (iii) the causation and the type of injury; and (iv) the traditional concepts of the role of admiralty law.”15 But the imprecise fluidity of this “test” is neatly illustrated by the Kelly case itself; Judge Morgan, accepting the majority’s test, dissented from their conclusion that admiralty jurisdiction was present!

Not Like Kelly No Maritime Relationship

The case presented here is quite different from Kelly. White was neither a near-pilot nor a seaman. He was a construction worker who fortuitously found himself employed on a construction site in the middle of the Mississippi River. While a work barge was involved, it was so only indirectly and in no way was the barge the cause of the injury. This was neither a collision case or one in which the movement of the barge played any part in the injuries.16 The injury resulted in part because a coupling failed and partly because White was not wearing a safety line. The coupling was not inherently a maritime instrument.17

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Related

Elaine Watson v. Massman Construction Co.
850 F.2d 219 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
850 F.2d 219, 1989 A.M.C. 73, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-ex-rel-watson-v-massman-construction-co-ca5-1988.