Federal Circuits, 5th Cir. (April 30, 1984)
Docket number: 83-3056
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http://vlex.com/vid/raymond-webster-moolchand-sethia-liners-37041926
Id. vLex: VLEX-37041926
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James A. Wysocki, Robert W. Drouant, New Orleans, La., for plaintiff-appellant cross-appellee.
Gelpi, Sullivan, Carroll & Laborde, Gerard T. Gelpi, New Orleans, La., for Sethia Liners, Ltd.Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana.Before RUBIN, REAVLEY and GARWOOD, Circuit Judges.RUBIN, Circuit Judge:Special interrogatories to the jury have wondrous virtues.1 The court may carefully consider the exact question to be asked, the possible ambiguities in the form of the question, and the consequences of each of the possible answers. If, however, the parties do not carefully reflect on the questions and on the implications of the jury's responses, they may find that the jury's answer did not resolve the case but left room for an appeal. In this personal injury suit, as a result of the parties' failure fully to explore the implications of every possible answer to a special jury interrogatory and to clarify the question, the interrogatory was so framed that the jury's answer created a possible inconsistency with its answer to another question. Hence, the plaintiff, disappointed with the amount of the jury verdict, seeks to impugn the verdict. Not to be outdone, the defendant seeks completely to escape liability. We conclude that the trial was fair, the jury charge was a reasonably clear exposition of law, the interrogatory was not defective, and the various other points at issue were properly resolved by the trial court. Hence, we affirm.I.Raymond Webster, Jr., a longshoreman, seeks damages for injuries he sustained while loading bags of sugar on the M/V MOOLCHAND. Webster's knee was injured when a winch being used in the operation slipped, causing the load of sacks that was being lowered into the hold to pin Webster against cargo already stowed. The winch had slipped several times earlier in the day and the vessel's crew had tried to repair it. Webster contends that the crew's failure to repair the winch was negligence. The vessel owner contends that the stevedore, who employed Webster, was at fault for failing to stop work when its employees learned that the winch was defective, or that it should have substituted a shoreside crane for the vessel's defective winch. Webster, of course, is not entitled to recover if his injury was caused solely by the stevedore's fault because he cannot recover from his employer in tort. If, on the other hand, both the vessel and his employer were at fault, he is entitled to recover the entire amount of his damages from the shipowner.2After first asking the jury the usual questions about negligence of the shipowner and the plaintiff, the court, without objection by Webster, submitted this interrogatory to the jury:5. To what extent, expressed as a percentage, did the negligence of defendant cause plaintiff's injury?45%To what extent, expressed as a percentage, did the contributory negligence of the plaintiff cause his own injury?55%(NOTE: THE ANSWERS TO QUESTION 5 SHOULD TOTAL 100%)100%Webster contends that the jury was misled by the interrogatory because there was no separate blank for the stevedore's negligence; the jury may have believed that Webster was chargeable with the stevedore's fault. He asserts that there was no evidence of his having been negligent and much that pointed to stevedore fault. Hence the jury verdict, he argues, improperly charged him with fault that was attributable to his employer. Because Webster failed to object to the interrogatory, he seeks to find error in the court's refusal to charge the jury that Webster was not legally responsible for the stevedore's fault.3The court did charge the jury:In order to prevail, the plaintiff ... must prove by preponderence [sic] of the evidence that the defendant, the ship and ship owner and its crew, was negligent and that such negligence was approximate [sic] cause of the damage sustained by the plaintiff....* * *Negligence might be an approximate [sic] cause of damage, even though it operates in combination with the act or acts of another....* * *The defendant contends that the plaintiff was himself negligent and that such negligence was the approximate [sic] cause of his own injury....* * *[I]f you find that the accident was due partially to the fault of the plaintiff, then that his own negligence was, for example, 50 percent responsible for his own damage, then you will fill in that percentage as your findings on the special verdict form....The jury assessed the total damage at $51,000 and, on that basis, the court rendered judgment in Webster's favor for $22,950.The shipowner counters by urging that Webster's complaint is of no moment; there was no evidence that the ship's crew was at fault and the court should have directed a verdict in its favor. The operation was being conducted only by the stevedore's gang. While the winch had slipped earlier, the ship's crew was not made aware that the winch was slipping at the time Webster was injured and the crew had no reason to believe that the stevedore would not take appropriate action to remedy the situation if it again began to slip.The shipowner is not charged with supervising the stevedore's operations. Once the stevedore has begun to load cargo, the shipowner has no duty to discover danger.4 Here, however, there was evidence that the winch was not operating properly, that this was brought to the crew's attention, and that their repair efforts failed. Thus the jury might properly have concluded that the ship's owner had "actual knowledge of the danger and actual knowledge that he [could] not rely on the stevedore to remedy the situation," matters that make the shipowner chargeable.5 The shipowner is not relieved of responsibility by the failure of the longshoremen again to seek repair of the winch just before Webster's injury. It had adequate notice that the winch was slipping and that this created a danger to the longshoremen. It failed to correct the problem, and it knew that the stevedore was relying on the operation of the winch instead of using substitute equipment. That the longshoremen had authority to shut down the operation if they thought there was a dangerous or unsafe condition demonstrates only that both the shipowner and the stevedore's employees may have been negligent.6The shipowner's fault is not obliterated by the argument, even if proved, that the slipping of the winch would not have been dangerous unless Webster were out of position. Patently, this might demonstrate only mutual fault.Therefore, the district court properly submitted to the jury the issue of the shipowner's negligence. It was not plain error to ask only about the relative fault of the shipowner and Webster. We turn, therefore, to Webster's argument that the charge was improper, reading it as a whole, as we must and should.7The court charged the jury that, to recover, Webster must prove that the shipowner was negligent and that this negligence was a proximate cause of Webster's injury. After properly defining proximate cause, the court charged the jury that negligence may be a proximate cause "even though it operates in combination with the act or acts of another." It then instructed the jury about contributory negligence and charged that the vessel owner bore the burden of proving that Webster was himself negligent in a fashion that proximately caused his injury. It gave examples of how to calculate contributory negligence and, in doing so, stated that Webster's damages were to be reduced only by "his own negligence" or "if plaintiff was himself negligent."Taken as a whole the jury charge sufficiently informed the jury of the point sought to be made by the rejected charge. The court should have given the requested charge, for it was not only correct8 but succinct and clear. Little was to be gained by saving the few seconds needed for it. However, we cannot find that the court's failure thus to elucidate what it said elsewhere in the charge was prejudicial to Webster.That both Webster and the shipowner thought the special interrogatory clear in the light of the charge is indicated by the fact that neither objected to the interrogatory or suggested its rephrasing. Webster's own proposed interrogatory itself provided no blank for stevedore fault. The possibility that as phrased, the interrogatory allowed the jury to lay the stevedore's fault on Webster was an afterthought. We find that the error complained of did not affect Webster's "substantial rights" and should not serve as a basis for reversal. Fed.R.Civ.P. 61.II.By a pretrial ruling the court refused to hold inadmissible the fact that Webster had been convicted of assaulting a police officer, a misdemeanor, in 1975, seven years before the trial. Webster's counsel, therefore, believed it prudent as a matter of trial strategy to mention the conviction in his opening argument. No evidence concerning it was, however, elicited. We need not dwell on whether the strategy was thrust on Webster's counsel or whether he waived any error by first referring to the episode for it is much ado about nothing. This is the only mention of the incident:We understand that Sethia Liners is going to try to bring up something about a 1975 conviction where he paid a $50 fine for assault on a police officer when there was some kind of dispute in his own apartment and the police came to straighten it up, arrested him, and he paid a $50 fine.There could be no prejudice from this casual reference unless we assume that jurors are both fools and mindless of their oaths and of the instructions to decide the case on the evidence and not on counsel's argument. Antiseptic trials are neither expected nor possible. Errors are made in the best-conducted ones. Reversal is permissible only if the error affects a substantial right. Fed.R.Evid. 103, Fed.R.Civ.P. 61. Even if the court's in limine ruling was wrong and led Webster's counsel into error, the error was harmless.Webster's brief blends the 1975 episode with one that occurred in 1981, concerning which evidence was admitted--without objection. This evidence concerned a struggle with a police officer that occurred after Webster's injury on the M/V MOOLCHAND. Counsel's failure to voice the objection waived it. Lacaze v. Olendorff, 526 F.2d 1213, 1223 (5th Cir.1976); Peterson v. Weinberger, 508 F.2d 45, 54 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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