Plaintiff, a carpenter employed by an independent contractor,
was injured while working on a ship berthed on navigable waters in
Pennsylvania. Basing jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship, he
brought a civil action for damages against the shipowner in a
federal district court in Pennsylvania, alleging negligence and the
ship's unseaworthiness. The shipowner pleaded contributory
negligence as a defense, and brought in the contractor as a
third-party defendant, alleging that the injury resulted from the
contractor's negligence and claiming recovery against the
contractor by way of contribution or indemnity. A jury found that
the ship was unseaworthy, that both the shipowner and the
contractor were negligent, and that the plaintiff's own negligence
had contributed to his damages.
Held: Plaintiff's judgment against the shipowner is
affirmed, and the shipowner is not entitled to a judgment against
the contractor for contribution. Pp.
346 U. S.
407-414.
1. Plaintiff's contributory negligence was not a complete bar to
his recovery. Pp.
346 U. S.
408-411.
(a) In admiralty, contributory negligence may mitigate, but does
not bar, recovery for personal injuries. Pp.
346 U. S.
408-409.
(b) Since plaintiff was injured on navigable waters while
working on a ship, the basis of his action is a maritime tort, and
his rights are not determined by Pennsylvania law. Pp.
346 U. S.
409-411.
(c)
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S.
64, does not require a different result. Pp.
346 U. S.
410-411.
2. Plaintiff's judgment against the shipowner should not be
reduced by the amount of compensation payments plaintiff has
received from his employer under the Longshoremen's and Harbor
Workers' Compensation Act. Pp.
346 U. S.
411-412.
3. This Court declines to overrule or distinguish
Seas
Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 328 U. S. 85. Pp.
346 U. S.
412-413.
4. The plaintiff, not being a seaman, is not barred by
The
Osceola, 189 U. S. 158,
from maintaining a negligence action against the shipowner. Pp.
346 U. S.
413-414.
Page 346 U. S. 407
5. A judgment for the shipowner against the contractor for
contribution is barred by
Halcyon Lines v. Haenn Ship Ceiling
& Refitting Corp., 342 U. S. 282. P.
346 U. S.
408.
198 F.2d 800 affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondent Charles Hawn sustained severe physical injuries
when he slipped and fell through an uncovered hatch hole on the
petitioner Pope & Talbot's vessel. The ship was then berthed at
a pier located in Pennsylvania waters of the Delaware River.
Loading of the vessel with grain for a voyage had been temporarily
interrupted to make minor repairs on the grain loading equipment.
Hawn was doing carpentry work on this equipment to make it spread
to grain evenly, and thereby balance the ship's load to make the
coming voyage safer. He was not an employee of Pope & Talbot,
but of the respondent Haenn Ship Ceiling and Refitting Company,
which had been hired to make these repairs. Hawn brought this civil
action in a United States District Court to recover damages for his
injuries. His complaint charged that his injuries resulted from the
vessel's unseaworthiness and from Pope & Talbot's negligence.
In answering, Pope & Talbot denied both charges and set up
contributory negligence as a defense to each. In addition, Pope
& Talbot brought in Hawn's employer Haenn as a third party
defendant, alleging that Haenn's negligence had caused Hawn's
injury and claiming recovery over against
Page 346 U. S. 408
Haenn by way of contribution or indemnity. A jury found that the
ship was unseaworthy, that Pope & Talbot had been negligent,
that Haenn had been negligent, and that Hawn's own negligence had
contributed 17 1/2% of his damages. On this basis, the court
entered judgment for Hawn against Pope & Talbot for $29,700, 17
1/2% less than the $36,000 at which the jury had fixed his damages.
A judgment for contribution by Haenn to Pope & Talbot was also
entered.
99 F. Supp.
226, 100 F. Supp. 338. The Court of Appeals affirmed Hawn's
judgment against Pope & Talbot. It reversed the judgment of
contribution against Haenn. 198 F.2d 800. This Court granted
certiorari.
The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment for contribution by
Haenn on the basis of our holding in
Halcyon Lines v. Haenn
Ship Ceiling & Refitting Corp., 342 U.
S. 282. In that case, we held that contribution could
not be exacted under circumstances like those here involved. For
that reason, we affirm the Court of Appeals' reversal of the
District Court's judgment against Haenn and proceed to a
consideration of the several questions presented by Pope &
Talbot as grounds for attack on Hawn's judgment.
First. Petitioner urges that the jury finding of
contributory negligence should have been accepted as a complete bar
to Hawn's recovery. The contention appears to rest on two separate
bases: (a) admiralty has not developed any definite rule as to the
effect of contributory negligence, and therefore the common law
rule under which contributory negligence bars recovery should
govern in admiralty, (b) Pennsylvania law controls this case, and,
under that state's law, any contributory negligence of an injured
person is an insuperable bar to his recovery.
(a) The harsh rule of the common law under which contributory
negligence wholly barred an injured person
Page 346 U. S. 409
from recovery is completely incompatible with modern admiralty
policy and practice. Exercising its traditional discretion,
admiralty has developed, and now follows, its own fairer and more
flexible rule, which allows such consideration of contributory
negligence in mitigation of damages as justice requires. [
Footnote 1] Petitioner presents no
persuasive arguments that admiralty should now adopt a discredited
doctrine which automatically destroys all claims of injured persons
who have contributed to their injuries in any degree, however
slight.
(b) Nor can we agree that Hawn's rights must be determined by
the law of Pennsylvania, under which, it is said, any contributory
negligence would bar all recovery in this personal injury action.
True, Hawn was hurt inside Pennsylvania, and, ordinarily, his
rights would be determined by Pennsylvania law. But he was injured
on navigable waters while working on a ship to enable it to
complete its loading for safer transportation of its cargo by
water. Consequently, the basis of Hawn's action is a maritime tort,
[
Footnote 2] a type of action
which the Constitution had placed under national power to control
in "its substantive, as well as its procedural, features. . . ."
Panama R. Co. v. Johnson, 264 U.
S. 375,
264 U. S. 386.
And Hawn's complaint asserted no claim created by or arising out of
Pennsylvania law. His right to recovery for unseaworthiness and
negligence is rooted in federal maritime law. Even if Hawn were
seeking to enforce a state-reated remedy for this right, federal
maritime law would be controlling. While states may sometimes
supplement
Page 346 U. S. 410
federal maritime policies, [
Footnote 3] a state may not deprive a person of any
substantial admiralty rights as defined in controlling acts of
Congress or by interpretative decisions of this Court. These
principles have been frequently declared, and we adhere to them.
See e.g., Garrett v. Moore-cCormack Co., 317 U.
S. 239,
317 U. S.
243-246, and cases there cited.
Caldarola v.
Eckert, 332 U. S. 155,
does not support the contention that a state which undertakes to
enforce federally created maritime rights can dilute claims
fashioned by federal power, which is dominant in this field.
Another argument is that Pennsylvania law must govern here
because the District Court's jurisdiction was rested on diversity
of citizenship under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. [
Footnote 4] For this contention, the principle established
in
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S.
64, is invoked. That case decided that federal district
diversity courts must try state created causes of action in
accordance with state laws. This ended a longstanding federal court
practice under which the outcome of lawsuits to enforce state
created causes of action often depended on whether they were tried
in a state courthouse or a federal courthouse.
Erie R. Co. v.
Tompkins was thus designed to ensure that litigants with the
same kind of case would have their rights measured by the same
legal standards of liability.
Page 346 U. S. 411
It appears to be contended here, however, that one injured on
navigable waters who sues in federal court under diversity
jurisdiction somehow jeopardizes his right to have as full a
recovery as he otherwise would. It is certainly contended that one
who sues on the "law side" of the docket has much less chance to
recover than one who sues on the "admiralty side." Thus, we are
asked to use the
Erie-ompkins case to bring about the same
kind of unfairness it was designed to end. Once again, the
substantial rights of parties would depend on which courthouse, or
even on which"side" of the same courthouse, a lawyer might guess to
be in the best interests of his client. We decline to depart from
the principle of equal justice embodied in the
Erie-ompkins doctrine. Of course, the substantial rights
of an injured person are not to be determined differently whether
his case is labelled "law side" or "admiralty side" on a district
court's docket.
Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
328 U. S. 85,
328 U. S. 88-89.
[
Footnote 5] The District Court
and Court of Appeals correctly refused to deny Hawn's federal right
of recovery by applying the Pennsylvania contributory negligence
rule.
Second. Haenn has been making compensation payments to
Hawn because of obligations imposed by the Longshoremen's and
Harbor Workers' Compensation Act. 44 Stat. 1424, 33 U.S.C. § 901
et seq. Hawn has agreed to refund these payments to his
employer out of his Pope & Talbot recovery. Pope & Talbot
contends that the judgment against it should be reduced by this
amount.
Page 346 U. S. 412
It points out that Hawn's verdict includes sums for past loss of
wages and medical expenses, which it is argued were the very items
on account of which Hawn's employer paid him. Consequently, Pope
& Talbot says that, if Hawn keeps the money, he will have a
double recovery, and that to allow him to repay Haenn would give an
unconscionable reward to an employer whose negligence contributed
to the injury. A weakness in this ingenious argument is that § 3 of
the Act has specific provisions to permit an employer to recoup his
compensation payments out of any recovery from a third person
negligently causing such injuries. Pope & Talbot's contention
if accepted would frustrate this purpose to protect employers who
are subjected to absolute liability by the Act. Moreover, reduction
of Pope & Talbot's liability at the expense of Haenn would be
the substantial equivalent of contribution which we declined to
require in the
Halcyon case.
Third. We are asked to reverse this judgment by
overruling our holding in
Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
328 U. S. 85.
Sieracki, an employee of an independent stevedoring company, was
injured on a ship while working as a stevedore loading the cargo.
We held that he could recover from the shipowner because of
unseaworthiness of the ship or its appliances. We decided this over
strong protest that such a holding would be an unwarranted
extension of the doctrine of seaworthiness to workers other than
seamen. That identical argument is repeated here. We reject it
again and adhere to
Sieracki. We are asked, however, to
distinguish this case from our holding there. It is pointed out
that Sieracki was a"stevedore." Hawn was not. And Hawn was not
loading the vessel. On these grounds, we are asked to deny Hawn the
protection we held the law gave Sieracki. These slight differences
in fact cannot fairly justify the distinction urged as between the
two cases. Sieracki's
Page 346 U. S. 413
legal protection was not based on the name"stevedore," but on
the type of work he did and its relationship to the ship and to the
historic doctrine of seaworthiness. The ship on which Hawn was hurt
was being loaded when the grain loading equipment developed a
slight defect. Hawn was put to work on it so that the loading could
go on at once. There, he was hurt. His need for protection from
unseaworthiness was neither more nor less than that of the
stevedores then working with him on the ship, or of seamen who had
been or were about to go on a voyage. All were subjected to the
same danger. All were entitled to like treatment under law.
Fourth. A concurring opinion here raises a question
concerning the right of Hawn to recover for negligence -- a
question neither presented nor urged by Pope & Talbot. It
argues that the
Sieracki case, by sustaining the right of
persons like Hawn to sue for unseaworthiness, placed them in the
category of"seamen" who cannot, under
The Osceola,
189 U. S. 158,
maintain a negligence action against the shipowner.
The
Osceola held that a crew member employed by the ship could not
recover from his employer for negligence of the master or the crew
member's "fellow servants." Recoveries of crew members were limited
to actions for unseaworthiness and maintenance and cure. But Hawn
was not a crew member. He was not employed by the ship. The ship's
crew were not his fellow servants. Having no contract of employment
with the shipowner, he was not entitled to maintenance and cure.
The fact that
Sieracki upheld the right of workers like
Hawn to recover for unseaworthiness does not justify an argument
that the Court thereby blotted out their long recognized right to
recover in admiralty for negligence. [
Footnote 6]
Page 346 U. S. 414
Neither the holding nor what was said in
Sieracki could
support such a contention. In fact, the dissent in
Sieracki appears to have been predicated on an objection
to adding unseaworthiness to the existing right to recover for
negligence. It would be strange indeed to hold now that a decision
which over the dissent recognized unseaworthiness as an additional
right of persons injured on shipboard had unwittingly deprived them
of all right to maintain actions for negligence.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
E.g., The Max Morris v. Curry, 137 U. S.
1;
The Arizona v. Anelich, 298 U.
S. 110,
298 U. S. 122,
and cases cited;
Socony-acuum Oil Co. v. Smith,
305 U. S. 424,
305 U. S.
428-429;
Jacob v. New York City, 315 U.
S. 752,
315 U. S. 755,
and compare Garrett v. Moore McCormack Co., 317 U.
S. 239,
317 U. S.
244-245,
with Belden v. Chase, 150 U.
S. 674.
[
Footnote 2]
Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U. S.
52,
234 U. S.
61-63.
[
Footnote 3]
See e.g., Just Chambers, 312 U.
S. 383,
312 U. S.
387-392;
Kelly v. Washington, 302 U. S.
1,
302 U. S. 13.
[
Footnote 4]
The complaint shows diversity which is sufficient to support
jurisdiction of the District Court. The complaint also shows that
the claim rests on a maritime tort, which, under the Constitution
is subject to dominant control of the Federal Government. In this
situation, we need not decide whether the District Court's
jurisdiction can be rested on 28 U.S.C. § 1331 as arising "under
the Constitution, laws or treaties of the United States."
See
Doucette v. Vincent, 194 F.2d 834, and
Janesson v. Swedish
American Lines, 185 F.2d 212.
Cf. Jordine v. Walling,
185 F.2d 662.
[
Footnote 5]
Of a somewhat similar contention, this Court said that it did
not regard certain words in the Jones Act, 41 Stat. 1007, 46 U.S.C.
§ 688,
"as meaning that the seaman may have the benefit of the new
rules if he sues on the law side of the court, but not if he sues
on the admiralty side. Such a distinction would be so unreasonable
that we are unwilling to attribute to Congress a purpose to make
it."
Panama R. Co. v. Johnson, 264 U.
S. 375,
264 U. S.
391.
[
Footnote 6]
Illustrative of the unbroken line of federal cases holding that
persons working on ships for independent contractors or persons
rightfully transacting business on ships can recover for damages
due to shipowners' negligence are:
Leathers v. Blessing,
105 U. S. 626
(1882);
The Max Morris, 137 U. S. 1 (1890);
Gerrity v. The Kate Cann, 2 F. 241 (1880);
The
Helios, 12 F. 732 (1882), decision by Judge Addison Brown;
Grays Harbor Stevedore Co. v. Fountain, 5 F.2d 385 (1925);
Tide Water Associated Oil Co. v. Richardson, 169 F.2d 802
(1948);
Brady v. Roosevelt S.S. Co., 317 U.
S. 575 (1943),
317 U. S. 577.
See also cases collected in 44 A.L.R. 1025-1034.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
We are told that Hawn's "right of recovery for unseaworthiness
and negligence is rooted in federal maritime law." No case or
student of admiralty is cited in support of this statement.
In 1903, this Court, in
The Osceola, 189 U.
S. 158, recognized for the first time the right of crew
members to recover for the unseaworthy condition of their ship and
denied a right of recovery against the shipowner for negligence.
Not until 1920, and then by Act of Congress, 46 U.S.C. § 688, were
seamen given the alternatives of suing for negligence or
unseaworthiness.
See Pacific S.S. Co. v. Peterson,
278 U. S. 130,
278 U. S. 138.
As for longshoremen, they could sue their own employer for
negligence in not providing safe conditions of work. And, in 1926,
this Court extended to them the additional benefits of the Jones
Act by construing "seaman" to include a longshoreman.
Page 346 U. S. 415
International Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty, 272 U. S.
50. Congress, preferring a different mode of recovery
for longshoremen than for seamen, displaced their right to sue
their employer for negligence by a workmen's compensation act
applicable solely to longshoremen. 33 U.S.C. § 901
et seq.
Like other business invitees, such as passengers and freight
consignees, longshoremen could also sue the shipowner for
negligence. Then, on April 22, 1946, this Court, in
Seas
Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 328 U. S. 85, for
the first time extended to longshoremen the right to recover for
unseaworthiness from the owner of the ship. The decision was based
on the fact that longshoremen were doing seamen's work, and that
therefore they should be entitled to a seamen's remedy. Until
today, this Court has never held that longshoremen have the
alternative rights of action for negligence or unseaworthiness
which the Jones Act gave to crew members. This summary history
hardly shows such deep roots of the alternative rights of recovery
that this Court should needlessly decide that such rights
exist.
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals because the
separate finding that the ship was unseaworthy supports recovery.
[
Footnote 2/1] This, of course,
assumes Hawn was the kind of worker who we held in
Sieracki could recover for unseaworthiness.
The right of seamen to recover for unseaworthiness is peculiarly
a cause of "admiralty and maritime jurisdiction," 1 Stat. 73, 77.
The right is in the nature of liability without fault, for which
contributory negligence is not a bar to recovery, although it may
be relevant in assessing the damages.
Seas Shipping Co. v.
Sieracki, supra. Erie
Page 346 U. S. 416
R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S. 64, is
irrelevant in that unseaworthiness is a federally created right, so
state law on a state cause of action is not an issue. We should not
commingle federal admiralty and state common law, and should not
engraft onto the federally created right to recover for
unseaworthiness a common law defense foreign to that right.
If negligence were the only count in the complaint and the jury
found it, or if the jury had found the ship seaworthy, but
sustained the negligence claim, different considerations would come
into play not now before us. The opinion below indicates that the
application of Pennsylvania law would have completely barred
recovery, since the plaintiff was contributorily negligent.
Therefore, to recover solely on the basis of Pope and Talbot's
negligence, Hawn would have to rely on a federal maritime cause of
action for negligence to which contributory negligence is not a
bar. Whether such a cause of action would be available in this case
is a difficult question which should not be decided here, since its
disposition is unnecessary in view of the separate finding of
unseaworthiness.
Both before and after this Court's decision in
The
Osceola, recognizing the right of crew members to recover for
unseaworthiness, longshoremen recovered for negligence -- often
described as "negligence of the ship" -- as did other business
invitees.
Compare Leathers v. Blessing, 105 U.
S. 626,
with The Max Morris, 137 U. S.
1. Although these were cases where the elements of
unseaworthiness were probably present, courts rarely used that
term. The plaintiff's default in such cases did not bar recovery
altogether, however, but rather served to reduce the damages to be
awarded.
In
Sieracki, this Court assimilated longshoremen to
seamen, and held that they could recover for unseaworthiness. That
decision inevitably raises doubts whether longshoremen are still
entitled to recover against a shipowner for
Page 346 U. S. 417
negligence, except insofar as a state right of action for
negligence, to which the state rule on contributory negligence
would be applicable, is enforceable.
Cf. The Hamilton,
207 U. S. 398. For
The Osceola, in recognizing crew members' right of action
for unseaworthiness, also held that they had no such right against
the shipowner for negligence. [
Footnote
2/2] Did
Sieracki, in holding that longshoremen,
laboring like seamen of old in the"service of the ship," were
entitled to recover for unseaworthiness, leave them also with the
negligence cause of action which
The Osceola denied to
seamen? [
Footnote 2/3]
On the one hand, it may be urged that
Sieracki
broadened the rights of shore workers; it gave them a seaman's
status without depriving them of the right of action they had
before they attained that status. On the other, it may be urged
with equal reason that a longshoreman should not be able to "play
it both ways:" be entitled, that is, to a seaman's remedy for
unseaworthiness and also enjoy recovery from the shipowner for
negligence which, prior to the Jones Act, was denied to a seaman.
He would thus have available two nonstatutory remedies to recover
damages for his injuries, while the crew member,
Page 346 U. S. 418
the true "ward of admiralty," has only one. And the fact that
Congress, in the Jones Act, has given crew members a statutory
cause of action for negligence hardly justifies this Court's
according longshoremen alternative remedies any more than we should
now define the crew members' rights as including compensation under
the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act.
Since unseaworthiness affords longshoremen recovery without
fault, and has been broadly construed by the courts,
e.g.,
Mahnich v. Southern S.S. Co., 346
U.S. 406fn2/2|>note 2,
supra, it will be rare that
the circumstances of an injury will constitute negligence, but not
unseaworthiness. Even if such a case should arise, the
longshoreman, were he barred from suing the shipowner for
negligence, has available the statutory remedy against his employer
which Congress has given him in the Longshoremen's and Harbor
Workers' Compensation Act.
But the practical importance of the question is no measure of
its difficulty. It raises subtle issues of such judicial lawmaking
as is the main source of maritime law. We ought not to embarrass
future answers to such a question by premature pronouncements,
especially without the benefit of mature submissions by
counsel.
Since the
Erie problem is not here, it is also
irrelevant to decide what remedy a state court could give or
decline to give. We should not even imply that, if suit had been
brought in a state court and the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania had
held that its law prevented a contributorily negligent plaintiff
from recovering in Pennsylvania courts, we would overrule that
judgment and require the state courts to provide a remedy.
Of course, when state courts purport to enforce federally
created rights, they must apply the contents of those rights as
determined by this Court.
Garrett v. Moore-cCormack Co.,
317 U. S. 239. But
whether it is federal law that a state court is enforcing or the
state fails
Page 346 U. S. 419
to afford a remedy in its courts is too complicated a question
to be passed upon when not before us. The answer depends much too
much on what the state court decides.
E.g., Caldarola v.
Eckert, 332 U. S. 155.
[
Footnote 2/1]
No objection was raised at any point in this case to the trial
by jury, so the question is not before us whether the plaintiff was
entitled to a jury in a suit based on both maritime and common law
causes of action.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Although this holding was based in part on the fellow servant
rule, it went further. For it stated that, while it was doubtful
whether the master of the ship was a fellow servant, the crew
member could not recover against the owner for the master's
negligence.
The Osceola's holding that negligence is not
available as a cause of action against the shipowner has been
reaffirmed by this Court in
Mahnich v. Southern S.S. Co.,
321 U. S. 96, and
Chelentis v. Luckenbach S.S. Co., 247 U.
S. 372.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The
Sieracki case itself was wholly unconcerned with a
stevedore's right to recover for negligence of the shipowner and
also hold him for unseaworthiness. There is not the remotest
intimation in either the majority or the minority opinion that any
thought was given to the question whether the stevedore was to have
these two rights, although a member of the crew was denied them
prior to the Jones Act and the Jones Act does not apply to
longshoremen.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE
BURTON join, dissenting.
It may be conducive to a dispassionate consideration of the law
of this case to remind ourselves that the plaintiff below
unquestionably was covered by the Longshoremen's and Harbor
Workers' Compensation Act. Nobody questions his right to all that
other injured harbor workers usually receive for like injury or to
what this plaintiff would receive for the same injuries if suffered
under slightly different circumstances. What is in issue here is a
bonus recovery over and above the statutory scale of compensation
that Congress has established for injured harbor workers in
general, which this plaintiff claims only because of special
circumstances said to create a liability by a third party, a
bareboat charterer we will refer to as the shipowner.
This decision seems to me to so confuse maritime law with common
and statutory tort law as to destroy the integrity of the former as
a separate system based on the peculiarities and risks of seagoing
labor.
1. DIVERSITY OF CITIZENSHIP AND PENNSYLVANIA STATE
LAW
This case was instituted on the law side of federal district
court, the complaint specifically alleging that "jurisdiction is
based on diversity of citizenship" and pleading the other
requisites of that jurisdiction. After amendment, the complaint
alleged both ordinary common law negligence and lack of
seaworthiness against the shipowner. As I shall presently point
out, the allegations of negligence could not have been an
invocation of the
Page 346 U. S. 420
Federal Jones Act, which affords to seamen a federal remedy for
negligence. It appears to have been an invocation of the negligence
law of the Pennsylvania, in the territorial waters of which the
injury was sustained. This may have been permissible because § 9 of
the Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 76-77, gave the District Courts
of the United States
"exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty
and maritime jurisdiction . . . saving to suitors, in all cases,
the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent
to give it. . . ."
Under this reservation, it would appear that there is
considerable room for application of state law, although I do not
undertake to guess how much.
Cf. Caldarola v. Eckert,
332 U. S. 155.
This being the form of action, the plaintiff had a jury trial.
The court's instructions scrambled common law negligence doctrines
with admiralty principles of indemnity for unseaworthiness.
But, as a diversity action based on the tort law of
Pennsylvania, plaintiff's case must fail because the jury, in
answer to special interrogatories, reported that the plaintiff
himself was guilty of negligence which contributed 17 1/2% to his
injuries. Under
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S.
64, the law of the state of injury would apply to the
case and, under Pennsylvania law, contributory negligence defeats
recovery. Therefore, some other basis must be found to sustain the
verdict.
2. ACTION FOR NEGLIGENCE
The failure of maritime law to afford a remedy for negligence,
The Osceola, 189 U. S. 158, was
overcome by the Federal Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 688, which provides
an action for negligence with jury trial. But this plaintiff's
difficulties under this Act were so formidable that his counsel
makes no claim that the recovery can rest upon it. Notwithstanding
this, case after case
Page 346 U. S. 421
which was decided under the Jones Act is cited by the Court
today, which implies that the Court relies on the Jones Act to help
out in some way toward supporting the recovery here. But that Act
gives a right of action only against the employer, and this
plaintiff was not employed by the shipowner. Moreover, the Jones
Act gives its right of action only to seamen, and this claimant is
not a seaman.
It is clear that Congress provided the compensation remedy, not
the Jones Act remedy, for such a case as this. In
International
Stevedoring Co. v. Haverty, 272 U. S. 50, this
Court attempted to allow recovery by a longshoreman against his
employer under the Jones Act. Immediately, Congress passed the
Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, which made
exclusive, as against the employer, the compensation remedy it
conferred on longshoremen and harbor workers. So the Jones Act is
not available to support a recovery against this plaintiff's
employer because of provisions of the compensation Act, nor against
the shipowner because the Jones Act makes no one liable who is not
an employer. Therefore, as a tort action this case cannot be
sustained under the Federal Act.
If plaintiff was invoking Pennsylvania negligence law -- the
ordinary law of the business invitee -- he cannot recover, because
he was contributorily negligent. The only possible basis for
recovery is a maritime tort. The question is a tricky and difficult
one, resurrecting old cases which involved many aspects of maritime
law no longer in force. In any event, the charge below so scrambled
two theories of recovery that the jury could not possibly have had
a fair understanding of the law of the case. The jury was
instructed, on the one hand, that negligence was not necessary to
recovery because of the unseaworthiness theory, and, on the other,
that negligence itself was a basis for recovery. The least
petitioner was entitled
Page 346 U. S. 422
to was a submission which would eliminate the confusing doctrine
of liability without fault not applicable to the
3. INDEMNITY FOR UNSEAWORTHINESS
Along with the claim of common law negligence, there was
submitted to the jury in this case, as an alternative basis of
liability, the claim that the ship was unseaworthy. It is true that
a seaman has a right to indemnity or compensatory damages where he
can show injury from unseaworthiness of the ship.
As was explained in
The Osceola, supra, 189 U.S. at
189 U. S. 171,
this was adopted into our maritime law from British legislation
wherein,
"in every contract of service, express or implied, between an
owner of a ship and the master or any seaman thereof, there is an
obligation implied that all reasonable means shall be used to
insure the seaworthiness of the ship before and during the
voyage."
This obligation was adopted into American admiralty law as a
warranty of seaworthiness, of which the owner is not relieved by
exercise of due diligence and which rests on wholly different
principles from those of negligence.
Mahnich v. Southern S.S.
Co., 321 U. S. 96,
321 U. S. 100.
But this case was begun, tried, submitted, and decided as a
negligence action, while it is sustained here on an admiralty
doctrine of liability for breach of warranty which does not at all
depend upon negligence.
The principal reliance of the Court is on
Seas Shipping Co.
v. Sieracki,
328 U. S. 85. That
decision advanced a novel holding that the traditional warranty of
seaworthiness extended not only to seamen, but also to
longshoremen. This was a virtual repetition of the Court's earlier
effort in the
International Stevedoring Co. case,
supra, to give seamen's remedies to longshoremen, an
effort which was promptly rebuffed by Congress when it enacted the
Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act
Page 346 U. S. 423
to preserve the traditional distinction. But a much greater
departure than that which Congress rejected must be taken here if
the warranty of seaworthiness is to be further expanded to sustain
this recovery. There may be some logic in saying that, when a
longshoreman or stevedore is brought aboard to load a ship, the
ship should be fit for sailing. But it seems to me that the
extension of this implied warranty to a repair crew which works for
an independent contractor is unjustified. The Court can cite no
authority for such a holding, and I think there is no logic in
it.
This claimant was a carpenter in the employ of a ship repairing
company. That company had a contract to make certain repairs aboard
this ship, and the claimant was sent aboard by his employer, under
whose direction he worked. It does not seem to me that one who
hires a contracting firm to put his ship in seaworthy condition
guarantees that it is in seaworthy condition before the work
starts. If everything were ship-hape, he would not need the
services of the repairmen.
I think that the expansion of the warranty of seaworthiness from
a seaman to a repairman is illogical, contrary to any decisional
law, and not consistent with the scheme of Congress to maintain a
sharp distinction between the seafaring man and the harbor
worker.
From ancient times, admiralty has given to seamen rights which
the common law did not give to landsmen, because the conditions of
sea service were different from conditions of any other service,
even harbor service. The seaman on board a merchant ship ties his
fate to that of the ship, and joins its separate community for the
voyage. Under earlier conditions, seagoing labor was extremely
hard. Voyages were long, tedious and treacherous. Shipwreck,
stranding, capture by pirates, fire, and other eventualities
threatened. Scurvy was common, and the ships were little prepared
to combat disease. Discipline
Page 346 U. S. 424
was harsh and cruel, and savage punishments were inflicted. Poor
food, cramped quarters, long hours, and complete subjection to the
will of the master was the rule. While his lot has been
ameliorated, even under modern conditions, the seagoing laborer
suffers an entirely different discipline and risk than does the
harbor worker. His fate is still tied to that of the ship. His
freedom is restricted. He is under an unusual discipline, and is
dependent for his food, medicine, care, and welfare upon the
supplies of the ship. Contrast the lot of this plaintiff, who lived
at home, was free to leave his employment, took no risks of the
sea, and had no different condition or hazard attached to his
employment than would have attached to a carpentry job in a
building ashore.
That the sharp differentiation Congress made in the rights of a
seamen, as contrasted with harbor workers, has a basis in
differences in risk and working conditions will be apparent from a
study of 46 U.S.C. c. 18, which governs merchant seamen. I point
out some of the most obvious respects in which this claimant's
position as a land-ased laborer, free to bargain, strike or quit,
and subject to no extraordinary hazards, differed from that of most
seamen (there are certain exceptions) who are employed as a part of
the ship's crew.
The Government superintends the engagement and discharge of
seamen and apprentices and the terms and execution of their
contract, and provides for their presence on board at the proper
time. §§ 545, 561, 565. A master and the vessel are subject to
penalties for taking on a seaman as one of the crew except by
virtue of an agreement under such supervision. §§ 567-568, 575. But
the penalties are not all on the master and the vessel. Every
contract must provide the day and hour when the seaman shall render
himself on board the ship. If the seaman shall neglect to be on
board at the time mentioned without giving twenty-our hours' notice
of his inability, he may
Page 346 U. S. 425
forfeit for every hour which he shall so neglect to render
himself one-alf of one day's pay. If he wholly neglects to appear
or deserts, he shall forfeit all of his wages and emoluments. §
576. Unlike the land laborer, the seaman may forfeit his wages if
he has not "exerted himself to the utmost to save the vessel,
cargo, and stores. . . ." § 592. The seaman may not be paid any
wages in advance of the time he has earned the same, and his
assignment or allotment to dependents of his wages is restricted. §
599. The seaman is deprived of credit, for no sum exceeding one
dollar shall be recoverable from him by any one person for any debt
contracted during his service. § 602.
It is so important to the seaman that the ship be seaworthy that
a majority of the crew may complain that the vessel is unseaworthy
or unfit in crew, body, tackle, apparel, furniture, provisions, or
stores to proceed on an intended voyage, and thereupon require an
inquiry and a determination, and, if the charge is not sustained
and the seamen refuse to proceed, they shall forfeit any wages due
them. §§ 653, 655. So dependent are they that the Government
provides inspection of the crew quarters, which must comply with
standards, §§ 660-1, 660a, and the seamen may complain as to the
provisions or water, and obtain an examination. § 662.
More importantly, the seaman is not a free man. He may not, as
the longshoreman or harbor worker may, protect himself by striking
or quitting the job. Desertion, refusing without reasonable cause
to join his vessel, absence without leave at any time within
twenty-our hours of the vessel's sailing from any port, or absence
from his vessel and from his duty at any time without leave and
without sufficient reason, or quitting the vessel without leave
after arrival at port and before she is in security, are all
punishable by certain forfeitures of his wages. Moreover, at the
option of the master, willful
Page 346 U. S. 426
disobedience to any lawful command at sea is punishable by being
placed in irons until such disobedience shall cease, and, for
continued willful disobedience to such command or neglect of duty,
the seaman may be placed in irons and four days out of five on
bread and water until such disobedience shall cease. To these
penalties are added certain other forfeitures. § 701. There is
more, but this is enough to demonstrate that Congress knew and
respected the difference between the seaman, to whom it preserved
admiralty remedies plus the remedies of the Jones Act, and harbor
workers, such as this claimant, who are given the remedies of the
compensation Act, like most other shore workers.
I cannot bring myself to believe that it is either the
congressional will or the tradition of maritime law or common sense
to mingle the two wholly separate types of labor in their remedies,
as is being done in this case. There are other questions in the
case as to division of the damages which I need not discuss in view
of my conclusion that there is no basis for recovery. I would
reverse the judgment below.