William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater, Intervening v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc., William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc.

660 F.2d 933
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 1, 1981
Docket79-1540
StatusPublished

This text of 660 F.2d 933 (William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater, Intervening v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc., William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater, Intervening v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc., William H. Duty, Jr., and Raymond International, Inc. And Peter Kiewitt Sons Company and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint Venture D/B/A Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater v. East Coast Tender Service, Inc., 660 F.2d 933 (4th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

660 F.2d 933

William H. DUTY, Jr., Appellant,
and
Raymond International, Inc. and Peter Kiewitt Sons Company
and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a joint
venture d/b/a Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater,
Intervening Plaintiffs,
v.
EAST COAST TENDER SERVICE, INC., Appellee.
William H. DUTY, Jr., Plaintiff,
and
Raymond International, Inc. and Peter Kiewitt Sons Company
and Tidewater Construction Corporation, a Joint
Venture d/b/a Raymond-Kiewitt-Tidewater,
Appellants,
v.
EAST COAST TENDER SERVICE, INC., Appellee.

Nos. 79-1540, 79-1541.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued Aug. 25, 1980.
Decided Jan. 23, 1981.
On Rehearing In Banc Sept. 1, 1981.

Paul D. Bekman, Baltimore, Md. (William H. Engelman, Harriett E. Cooperman, Kaplan, Heyman, Greenberg, Engelman & Belgrad, P. A., Baltimore, Md., on brief), for appellant in 79-1540; (James W. Bartlett, III, Francis J. Gorman, David R. Owen, Semmes, Bowen & Semmes, Baltimore, Md., on brief), for appellant in 79-1541.

George J. Koelzer, Red Bank, N. J. (Thomas D. Monte, Jr., Red Bank, N. J., George Beall, Baltimore, Md., Evans, Koelzer, Marriott, Osborne & Kreizman, Red Bank, N. J., Miles & Stockbridge, Baltimore, Md., on brief), for appellee.

Before HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge, and WINTER and MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judges.

MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:

The case involves two mistakes, one by counsel for the plaintiff, one by the district judge. The mistakes relate to the language of a jury instruction. Are we to reverse for judicial error or should we affirm because of counsel's failure to draw pertinent authority to the court's attention which would have readily alerted him to his error, and permitted him to correct it? That is the question.1

THE FACTS

Plaintiff William H. Duty, a carpenter foreman, was employed by the contractor in charge of construction of a liquified natural gas (LNG) port facility located on the navigable waters of the Chesapeake Bay, approximately one mile off the Western Shore of the Bay, near Cove Point, Maryland. Access to and from the job site was provided by East Coast Tender Service, Inc.

Among the vessels utilized by East Coast for such work crew ferrying purposes was the M/V Chandeleur. A certificate of inspection for the Chandeleur,2 issued by the United States Coast Guard, required operation by a Coast Guard licensed ocean operator, with a deckhand as crew.

On April 26, 1976, the work crew engaged in constructing the LNG port facility of which the plaintiff was the foreman arrived at the LNG platform in the early morning hours. However, the weather deteriorated, leading to high waters and rough seas. East Coast sent the M/V Chandeleur to retrieve Duty's crew.

Robert Jarvis, who was in possession of a valid Coast Guard ocean operator's license, normally commanded the Chandeleur. Douglas Kohlhoff, who served as a deck hand, did not possess a valid Coast Guard ocean operator's license, motor vessel operator's license, or motorboat license. Robert Jarvis was on vacation during the week of April 26, 1976, and Kohlhoff was assigned to operate the Chandeleur for the pick-up on April 26, 1976 of Duty's crew.

Kohlhoff attempted a stern approach to the landing platform at the LNG facility. Upon reversal of the Chandeleur's engines, the stern of the vessel went under the loading platform, the pitch of the vessel in the rough seas causing it to strike the wooden loading platform, thereby separating from its fastenings a vertical ladder used by embarking and disembarking personnel. Duty, who was descending the vertical ladder in the course of preparing to board the Chandeleur was thrown and suffered the injuries which were the subject of the law suit.3

Duty received Longshoremen and Harbor Workers' Compensation from his employer. The present action against East Coast charging negligence then was filed alleging diversity of citizenship. The complaint was cast in traditional negligence terminology. It did, however, contain a statement that the "cause of action arises under the General Maritime Law of the United States as hereinafter more fully appears." The sole additional "maritime" allegations (1) alluded to operation of the Chandeleur "on navigable waters of the United States;" and (2) asserted "negligent failure of the Defendant to provide and maintain a safe and seaworthy vessel." The jury returned a general verdict in East Coast's favor.

The appeal concentrates on the role to be assigned operation of the Chandeleur by a person without the required Coast Guard ocean operator's license. Plaintiff presented a requested jury instruction to the effect that the absence of a licensed ocean operator for the Chandeleur constituted negligence per se.4 The district judge, however, in denying the requested instruction, concluded that, inasmuch as the action arose on a diversity claim, without Duty's including a separate admiralty claim, state law should apply. Consequently, he instructed that the failure to provide a Coast Guard licensed operator was "evidence of negligence."5 Such was the proper standard, if the negligence law of Maryland governed. New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Novick Transfer Co., 274 F.2d 916, 923 (4th Cir. 1960).6 Plaintiff's counsel excepted to the failure to grant the "negligence per se " instruction laconically, inadequately, and indeed wrongly by simply stating:

Your Honor, we have one exception and that would be with respect to the failure to grant what has been marked as Plaintiff's request for Instruction No. 12. The basis for the exception is that it is the Plaintiff's position that, although in the complaint no specific reference was made to Rule (9)(h), that the Plaintiff has provided in the first cause of action a diversity claim based upon the savings to suiters (sic) clause and that it is a maritime claim, which would make the maritime law applicable. The incident occurred on navigable waters and it's our position that the maritime law would apply.

Accordingly, the Provenza and Venable cases which have been cited, along with the Kernan case, would require an instruction that a violation of the Coast Guard regulation would be negligence per se as opposed to being evidence of negligence and that if the jury were to find that as a proximate result of that violation, the Plaintiff was injured, then it is negligence in and of itself. That would be

THE LAW

The status of the plaintiff as someone already compensated by his employer, under the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, was manifest. A companion case had been consolidated under which the employer asserted a lien for reimbursement of LHWCA benefits paid against any recovery by the plaintiff in the third-party negligence action against the owner of the vessel.

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