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[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 15-12953
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:11-cv-23841-RLR
SEABOARD SPIRIT LTD,
As Owner and Seaboard Marine LTD. as Owner
Pro Hac Vice of the M/V Seaboard Spirit,
its engines, tackle, appurtenances, equipments, etc.
in a cause of Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability,
SEABOARD SHIP MANAGEMENT, INC.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants
Cross Appellees,
SEABOARD MARINE OF FLORIDA, INC.,
Plaintiff,
versus
ANTWON HYMAN,
SIESHIA REID,
Claimants-Appellees
Cross Appellants.
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________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(December 5, 2016)
Before HULL, MARTIN, and BALDOCK, ∗ Circuit Judges.
MARTIN, Circuit Judge:
This case arises from a fatal accident aboard a cargo ship called the M/V
Seaboard Spirit. Ossie Hyman was a 47-year-old longshoreman who worked for a
stevedore, which is a company that employs longshoremen to load and unload
ships. Mr. Hyman was helping to unload the Seaboard Spirit when a shipping
container slid sideways. Tragically, the container crushed Mr. Hyman to death.
The owners of the Seaboard Spirit brought an action seeking exoneration from
liability arising out of this accident. On the other hand, the personal
representatives of Mr. Hyman’s estate filed a negligence claim against the owners
of the Seaboard Spirit under the Longshoremen and Harbor Worker’s
Compensation Act (“LHWCA”).
The issue on appeal concerns the owners’ liability under the LHWCA. We
must decide whether the District Court correctly limited the effect of its judgment
to allow Mr. Hyman’s personal representatives to bring a new set of negligence
∗
Honorable Bobby R. Baldock, United States Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit Court of
Appeals, sitting by designation.
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claims against the ship owners. After careful consideration, and with the benefit of
oral argument, we conclude that the District Court erred in holding that its ruling
had no effect on the ship owners’ liability as a stevedore.
I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. SEABOARD SPIRIT IS LOADED
The Seaboard Spirit is a “roll-on/roll-off” vessel. This means that it carries
cargo containers secured on wheeled chassis that facilitate loading and unloading.
On May 3, 2011, the Seaboard Spirit was loaded in Nassau, Bahamas for a voyage
to Miami, Florida. A third-party stevedore brought the cargo aboard in Nassau.
But once the cargo was aboard, the Seaboard Spirit’s crew secured it.
The relevant piece of cargo in this case is a blue eight-by-twenty foot
container-and-chassis combination (similar to what a tractor-trailer tows). This
“trailer,” as it’s known in the industry, was secured on an internal ramp connecting
two parts of the ship. It was held in place by lashing chains and a “mule” (a tractor
used to move the trailer). One of the lashing chains may have been too tight.
B. THE ACCIDENT
On May 4, 2011, the Seaboard Spirit arrived in the Port of Miami, and a
stevedoring company, Eller-ITO, took over unloading operations. Mr. Hyman was
a longshoreman employed by Eller-ITO. When Eller-ITO’s longshoremen were
attempting to remove the blue trailer from the internal ramp, Mr. Hyman was
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acting as a “striker.” This means that he was in charge of safety, and his
responsibilities included checking the cargo, ensuring that all securing gear had
been removed, and telling the mule driver when to drive.
Mr. Hyman walked up the ramp next to the trailer and entered a “pinch
point,” which is a space between a fixed object (in this case, the bulkhead, which is
the wall of the ship) and a moving object (here, the trailer). Several witnesses said
Mr. Hyman didn’t need to enter that pinch point and disagreed with his decision to
do so. When he entered the pinch point, the tight lashing chain was still attached
to the trailer. Mr. Hyman removed the wheel chocks and then gave a hand signal
to the mule driver that the driver interpreted as an “okay” to drive. Two witnesses
also testified that Mr. Hyman verbally told the mule driver to drive.
Because the trailer was still lashed down when the mule drove forward, it
shifted to its side and pinned Mr. Hyman against the bulkhead. Mr. Hyman was
crushed to death.
C. THE CURRENT CASE
After the accident, the owners of the Seaboard Spirit—Seaboard Spirit Ltd.,
Seaboard Marine Ltd., and Seaboard Ship Management, Inc. (collectively,
“Seaboard”)—filed a petition under the Limitation of Liability Act, 46 U.S.C.
§ 30501 et seq., asking for exoneration from or limitation of liability. They argued
that they were not at fault for Mr. Hyman’s death. The personal representatives of
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Mr. Hyman’s estate—Antwon Hyman and Sieshia Neshay Reid (collectively, “the
Claimants”)—responded by arguing against exoneration and bringing claims
against Seaboard under § 905(b) and § 933 of the LHWCA. 33 U.S.C. §§ 905(b),
933. Specifically, the Claimants alleged that Seaboard breached the three duties
that § 905(b) imposes on vessel owners.
The parties both filed motions for summary judgment. In Claimants’
motion, they argued for the first time that Seaboard was subject to duties beyond
the three § 905(b) duties that apply to vessel owners. They asserted that because
the Seaboard Spirit’s crew secured cargo in the Bahamas, Seaboard also acted as,
and assumed the duties of, an onloading stevedore. The District Court granted
Seaboard’s motion and denied the Claimants’ motion. In doing so, the District
Court rejected the Claimants’ argument that Seaboard had duties beyond the three
owner-specific duties imposed by § 905(b) and concluded that Seaboard had not
breached any of those three duties as a matter of law.
The Claimants then filed a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend the summary
judgment order, arguing again that Seaboard should be subject to more than the
three owner-specific § 905(b) duties. The court reversed its earlier position and
accepted this argument in a May 8, 2014 order partially granting the Claimants’
Rule 59(e) motion. It found that Seaboard “acted as both onloading stevedore and
the vessel owner,” and held that Seaboard should not be allowed to escape liability
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for its actions as an onloading stevedore merely because of its status as vessel
owner. It noted that stevedores are best-situated to prevent injuries. The District
Court then held that the Limitation of Liability Act could limit Seaboard’s liability
for its actions as vessel owner only, so “any ruling” in this case “does not limit any
causes of action that Claimants may bring against [Seaboard] in their roles as
onloading stevedores.” It also allowed one of the Claimants’ three § 905(b) claims
to go to trial.
After a three-day bench trial, the District Court ruled against the Claimants
on their only § 905(b) claim. The court rejected each of the Claimants’ theories of
liability, finding, as fact, that none of Seaboard’s challenged actions—stowing the
chassis on the ramp, over-tightening the lashing chain, and failing to use wheel
chocks—proximately caused Mr. Hyman’s death. Instead, the court found that
“the proximate cause of Mr. Hyman’s death was . . . . Mr. Hyman’s decision to
position himself in the pinch point when giving [the mule driver] the order to move
forward—a decision which even his fellow longshoremen found inexplicable.”
Alternatively, the court found that if Mr. Hyman didn’t tell the mule driver to
move forward, then “it was some miscommunication between [the mule driver]
and Mr. Hyman, coupled with Mr. Hyman’s position in the pinch point, that caused
Mr. Hyman’s death.” But the District Court also reiterated its prior holding that its
ruling did not limit any future causes of action brought against Seaboard in its role
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as onloading stevedore. The District Court entered final judgment against the
Claimants on June 8, 2015. Both parties appealed.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s findings of fact after a bench trial in a
maritime case for clear error, and we review its conclusions of law de novo. Sea
Byte, Inc. v. Hudson Marine Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 565 F.3d 1293, 1298 (11th Cir.
2009).
III. DISCUSSION
A. JURISDICTIONAL ISSUE
Seaboard challenges the District Court’s ruling that its resolution of this case
did not limit any causes of action that the Claimants may bring against Seaboard in
its role as onloading stevedore. The Claimants argue that we lack jurisdiction over
this issue because Seaboard did not file its notice of appeal in time. A party must
file a notice of appeal within thirty days after the District Court enters the
judgment or order from which the party wants to appeal. Fed. R. App. P.
4(a)(1)(A). The Claimants say that Seaboard did not file its notice of appeal until
over one year after the District Court first ruled in its May 8, 2014 order.
Contrary to the Claimants’ argument, Seaboard timely filed its notice of
appeal because the District Court’s May 8, 2014 order was not a final judgment. A
trial court’s order is appealable “only if it is final or otherwise permitted by the
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Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Virgo v. Riviera Beach Assocs., Ltd., 30 F.3d
1350, 1356 (11th Cir. 1994). “A judgment is final if it disposes of all of the claims
with regard to all of the parties.” Id. The May 8, 2014 order was not a final
judgment—it did not resolve all claims against Seaboard. Rather, the order
allowed one of those claims to go to trial. The District Court did not enter a final
judgment resolving all claims against all parties until June 8, 2015, and Seaboard
filed its notice of appeal twenty-three days later, on July 1, 2015. Because
Seaboard filed its notice of appeal within thirty days of the final judgment, we have
jurisdiction to hear their arguments on appeal.
The Claimants assert that 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3) required Seaboard to file
an interlocutory appeal of the District Court’s May 8, 2014 order, even though it
wasn’t a final judgment. To the contrary, § 1292(a)(3) permits, but does not
require, interlocutory appeals in maritime cases when the court “determin[es] the
rights and liabilities of the parties.” Even assuming that the May 8, 2014 order was
such a determination, Seaboard was at liberty under § 1292(a)(3) to wait until a
final judgment to appeal. See Caradelis v. Refineria Panama, S.A., 384 F.2d 589,
591 n.1 (5th Cir. 1967) (explaining that a party that declined to appeal an
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interlocutory order can still appeal the final determination of the case because “[a]n
interlocutory appeal [under § 1292(a)(3)] is permissive rather than mandatory”). 1
B. CLAIMS AGAINST SEABOARD AS STEVEDORE
Even though the District Court ruled in favor of Seaboard as an owner, it
explicitly left open the possibility for Claimants to bring a separate set of general
maritime law negligence claims against Seaboard as an onloading stevedore under
33 U.S.C. § 933. Seaboard argues that the District Court was wrong to limit the
effect of its judgment in this way. For their part, the Claimants argue that the
District Court correctly limited the scope of its ruling, but should not have made
any sort of finding as to whether Mr. Hyman was the proximate cause of his own
death.2 The parties’ arguments highlight the tension between the District Court’s
proximate cause finding and its ruling that the Claimants may still pursue a
negligence action against Seaboard in its role as a stevedore. It is hard to imagine
what kind of negligence case the Claimants could bring if Mr. Hyman was the
proximate cause of the accident.
We are aware that the parties dispute the threshold issue of whether
Seaboard acted as an onloading stevedore by having the Seaboard Spirit’s crew
1
In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), we adopted as
binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down before October 1, 1981.
Id. at 1209.
2
To be clear, the Claimants do not critique the analysis the District Court used in arriving
at this ruling. Rather, their argument is that the District Court simply should not have reached
the issue.
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secure the cargo in the Bahamas. But we need not decide that issue here. Even
assuming Seaboard acted as both onloading stevedore and vessel owner, we
conclude that the District Court erred in holding that the Claimants could sue
Seaboard under both § 905(b) and § 933. These Claimants are limited to suing
Seaboard under § 905(b).
We rely on precedent interpreting the LHWCA, and we discuss that
precedent here. Because Seaboard prevails on its legal argument, the Claimants’
request that we reverse the District Court for reaching the issue of the proximate
cause of Mr. Hyman’s death becomes irrelevant. Our ruling (either way) on that
issue will not impact the outcome of this appeal, so we choose not to rule on it.
1. Background on the LHWCA
The LHWCA establishes a federal workers’ compensation program for
longshoremen and their families. See Howlett v. Birkdale Shipping Co., S.A., 512
U.S. 92, 96, 114 S. Ct. 2057, 2062 (1994). When a longshoreman sustains an
injury, the “longshoreman’s employer—in most instances, an independent
stevedore—must pay the statutory benefits regardless of fault, but is shielded from
any further liability to the longshoreman.” Id. (citing 33 U.S.C. §§ 904, 905(a))
(citation omitted).
In addition to receiving statutory compensation from his or her employer, an
injured longshoreman can seek damages from a third-party vessel owner under
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§ 905(b)3 of the LHWCA if that vessel owner negligently caused the injuries. See
id. at 96–97, 114 S. Ct. at 2062. This provision was enacted in 1972 to limit a
longshoreman’s right to sue a shipowner and shift more responsibility for
compensating an injured longshoreman to “the party best able to prevent injuries:
the stevedore-employer.” Id. at 97, 114 S. Ct. at 2063. So as it stands today, the
LHWCA holds an injured longshoreman’s stevedore-employer strictly liable for a
capped amount of workers’ compensation benefits, while it holds a vessel owner
liable only for injuries caused by that owner’s own negligence.
The Supreme Court has interpreted § 905(b) to impose three separate duties
on the vessel owner. See Scindia Steam Navigation Co. v. De Los Santos, 451
U.S. 156, 166–68, 101 S. Ct. 1614, 1622–23 (1981). The first, called the “turnover
duty,” “relates to the condition of the ship upon the commencement of stevedoring
operations.” Howlett, 512 U.S. at 98, 114 S. Ct. at 2063. The second, called the
“active-control duty,” “provides that a shipowner must exercise reasonable care to
prevent injuries to longshoremen in areas that remain under the ‘active control of
3
Section 905(b) provides, in relevant part, that:
In the event of injury to a person covered under this chapter caused by the
negligence of a vessel, then such person . . . may bring an action against such
vessel as a third party . . . . If such person was employed by the vessel to provide
stevedoring services, no such action shall be permitted if the injury was caused by
the negligence of persons engaged in providing stevedoring services to the vessel.
. . . The remedy provided in this subsection shall be exclusive of all other
remedies against the vessel except remedies available under this chapter.
33 U.S.C. § 905(b).
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the vessel.’” Id. (quoting Scindia, 451 U.S. at 167, 101 S. Ct. at 1622). The third,
called the “duty to intervene,” “concerns the vessel’s obligations with regard to
cargo operations in areas under the principal control of the independent stevedore.”
Id.
When it comes to suing vessel owners for negligence, “the LHWCA
expressly pre-empts all other claims, but it expressly preserves all claims against
[non-owner] third parties.” Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp. v. Garris, 532
U.S. 811, 818–19, 121 S. Ct. 1927, 1932 (2001) (citations omitted); see also 33
U.S.C. § 905(b) (“The remedy provided in this subsection shall be exclusive of all
other remedies against the vessel except remedies available under this chapter.”).
2. Crew Members Acting as Longshoremen
Seaboard argues that because § 905(b), by its own terms, provides the
exclusive means of relief against vessel owners, the District Court can’t properly
preserve general maritime law claims against Seaboard under § 933. The
Claimants counter that § 905(b) does not limit the claims that a longshoreman may
bring against a vessel owner who acts as a stevedore. Claimants say this type of
claim is allowed by § 933.
We recognize that vessel owners can act as stevedores by having their crews
handle tasks typically done by longshoremen. We will assume here that Seaboard
acted as a stevedore in this way. Even making that assumption, however, we know
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of no case that allows a vessel owner to be sued under both § 905(b), as a vessel
owner, and § 933, as a stevedore. Instead, when crew members have negligently
mishandled tasks normally performed by longshoremen, and that negligence
causes injury to other longshoremen, courts have held the vessel owners to the
heightened standard of care of a stevedore. But they have done so within the
longshoremen’s § 905(b) actions against the owners.
For example, in Ollestad v. Greenville S.S. Corp., 738 F.2d 1049 (9th Cir.
1984), the Ninth Circuit considered a § 905(b) “turnover duty” claim against a
third-party vessel owner. See id. at 1050–51. The owner’s crew had moved
equipment around on the ship before turning it over to the stevedore, and this was a
“job normally performed by longshoremen.” Id. at 1050. Later, the plaintiff
tripped over the equipment and sustained injuries. Id. On appeal, the court
reasoned that the owner should be held to the same standard of care as a stevedore,
even in the § 905(b) action, because the crew performed “work normally done by
longshoremen.” Id. at 1052.
The Second Circuit addressed a similar circumstance in Fanetti v. Hellenic
Lines Ltd., 678 F.2d 424 (2d Cir. 1982). Like in Ollestad, the shipowner in Fanetti
“acted as its own stevedore.” Id. at 426. The Fanetti panel explained that although
a shipowner is free to act as its own stevedore in order to save money, the extra
cost of hiring an independent stevedore carries with it the benefit of protection
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from liability for damages arising out of negligent stevedoring conduct. Id. at 428.
Thus, a shipowner who refuses to hire an independent stevedore “cannot save the
premium and still claim the protection.” Id. On that basis, the panel decided that
the shipowner was not entitled to a jury instruction holding it to the lower standard
of care of a shipowner. Id. at 428–30.
The Claimants here rely on Ollestad and Fanetti to support the District
Court’s decision leaving them free to bring another action against Seaboard.
However, these two cases do not stand for the proposition that Seaboard, though
victorious in the § 905(b) action, can now be subject to a new § 933 action as a
stevedore. Instead, Ollestad and Fanetti tell us that Seaboard should have been
held to the higher standard of a stevedore in the § 905(b) action.4
Because there is no precedent for subjecting a vessel owner to separate and
independent liability under both § 905(b) and § 933, we decline to do so here.
While there is case law suggesting that Seaboard should have been held to a
stevedore’s standard of care in the § 905(b) action below, the Claimants do not
4
The Claimants also argue that when a vessel owner acts as its own stevedore, the owner
is in the best position to prevent injuries arising from stevedoring operations and should therefore
bear the risk of those injuries. The Second Circuit took a similar stance in Fanetti, reasoning that
shipowners who direct their non-expert crew members to perform stevedoring tasks should not
be shielded from liability for damages arising out of their negligent stevedoring conduct. See
678 F.2d at 428. However, the Second Circuit’s solution was not to subject the shipowner to
liability under both § 905(b) and § 933. Instead, the Fanetti panel chose to hold the shipowner to
the higher standard of care of a stevedore in the longshoreman’s § 905(b) action against the
shipowner. Thus, we take the Claimants’ argument that Seaboard was in the best position to
prevent the injuries arising from their stevedoring activities as additional support for the
proposition that Seaboard should have been held to a stevedore’s standard of care in the § 905(b)
action. Again however, the Claimants did not raise this argument in this way.
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argue here that the District Court should be reversed for applying the wrong
standard of care to their § 905(b) claims. Claimants have therefore abandoned that
argument. See Timson v. Sampson, 518 F.3d 870, 874 (11th Cir. 2008) (per
curiam) (stating that issues not briefed are deemed abandoned).
3. Dual-Capacity Employment
In concluding that Seaboard could be subject to liability under both § 905(b),
as an owner, and § 933, as a stevedore, the District Court relied on so-called dual-
capacity employment cases. The Claimants also rely on these cases on appeal. In
each of these dual-capacity employment cases, the injured longshoreman suing the
vessel owner was employed not by a third-party stevedore, but directly by the
vessel owner. See, e.g., Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Pfeifer, 462 U.S. 523,
528, 103 S. Ct. 2541, 2546 (1983).
The dual-capacity employment cases provide a narrow solution to a specific
problem that comes up when a vessel owner directly employs longshoremen. As
we’ve explained, the LHWCA’s compensation scheme envisions a regime in
which an injured longshoreman’s stevedore-employer is strictly liable for workers’
compensation benefits, while the vessel owner is liable only for injuries caused by
the owner’s negligence. See id. at 528–30, 103 S. Ct. at 2546–47. But when a
vessel owner directly employs longshoremen, the vessel owner and the stevedore-
employer are the same entity. In this circumstance, the LHWCA does not clearly
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address what longshoremen should recover from their employers when accidents
occur. To prevent longshoremen from getting shortchanged simply because
they’re employed by a vessel owner and not by a third-party stevedore, the
Supreme Court interprets the LHWCA to provide that longshoremen who are
employed by vessel owners retain their full statutory rights to both workers’
compensation benefits and, if proven, negligence liability. See id. at 528–32, 103
S. Ct. at 2546–48. Thus, an injured longshoreman may recover from a vessel
owner both as an owner (for negligence) and as a stevedore-employer (for
workers’ compensation). See id.; Gravatt v. City of New York, 226 F.3d 108, 120
(2d Cir. 2000) (“Insofar as the employer-vessel is negligent in its stevedore-
employer capacity, it is immune from suit under section 905(a). However, insofar
as it is negligent in its vessel capacity, it will be liable under section 905(b) in the
same manner as a third party.”).
But this case is not a dual-capacity employment case. Mr. Hyman was
employed by a third-party stevedore (Eller-ITO), rather than a vessel owner. And
this is the standard arrangement contemplated by the LHWCA. Thus, we decline
to apply the dual-capacity employment cases to uphold the District Court’s
conclusion that Seaboard can be subject to separate, independent liability under
§ 905(b) and § 933.
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IV. CONCLUSION
We reverse the District Court’s ruling that its resolution of this case does not
foreclose causes of action that the Claimants may bring against Seaboard in its role
as an onloading stevedore. In light of this ruling, the Claimants’ cross-appeal on
the District Court’s finding that Mr. Hyman was the proximate cause of the
accident is moot, so we do not decide it.5
REVERSED.
5
The Claimants do not challenge the remaining bases for the final judgment in favor of
Seaboard, and this ruling does not disturb that judgment.
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HULL, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur in full with my colleague’s excellent opinion. I speak separately
only to one issue. After a bench trial, the district court entered a final judgment in
favor of Petitioner Seaboard on both Seaboard’s petition for exoneration from
liability and on the Claimants’ counter-claims for money damages against
Seaboard. I agree with the panel opinion that, while the district court properly
entered final judgment in favor of Seaboard in this case, the district court erred in
ruling that the resolution of this action does not foreclose causes of action that the
Claimants may bring against Seaboard as an onloading stevedore. Because this
action does foreclose such claims against Seaboard as an onloading stevedore and
as a vessel owner, I join the panel opinion’s reversal of that particular ruling by the
district court.
What I address more fully is the cross-appeal by the Claimants. Specifically,
in addition to Seaboard’s Notice of Appeal, the Claimants filed their own separate
Notice of Appeal on July 15, 2015, which cross-appealed the district court’s ruling
on proximate cause. The district court found that the proximate cause of the tragic
accident here was not the conduct of Seaboard but Mr. Hyman’s decision to
position himself in the pinch point when giving Mr. Palmer, the mule driver, the
order to move forward. The district court did not err in reaching and deciding that
proximate cause issue because it was litigated before the district court. Although
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nothing here disturbs that ruling, I write to explain further why the Claimants (as
Cross-Appellants) have shown no legal error as to the district court’s reaching and
ruling on the proximate cause issue.
I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In this case, the Claimants not only filed an Answer and Affirmative
Defenses to Seaboard’s Petition but also filed a separate pleading entitled “Claim
of Antwon Hyman and Sieshia Neshay Reid, as Personal Representatives of the
Estate of Ossie Hyman,” seeking damages for the wrongful death of Mr. Hyman.
That separate Claim alleged that Mr. Hyman “carefully, properly, and prudently,”
performed his duties and that Seaboard was negligent and breached its multiple
duties under LHWCA §§ 905, 933, and the general maritime law of the United
States. Before the district court, the parties expressly agreed to litigate the
proximate cause of the accident, and the Claimants fully litigated the issue before
the district court. Indeed, in a January 28, 2015 joint pre-trial stipulation, both
parties agreed to submit the following issue as an “Issue[] of Fact Which
Remain[s] to be Litigated at Trial . . . [:] What was the legal cause or causes of the
accident.” Under principles of negligence law, determination of the legal cause of
the accident requires a determination of whether the defendant “actually and
proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury.” Chaparro v. Carnival Corp., 693 F.3d
1333, 1336 (11th Cir. 2012) (emphasis added).
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The district court held a three-day bench trial and reviewed extensive
evidence, submitted by both parties, concerning the proximate cause of the
accident. This evidence included video of Mr. Hyman’s conduct on the ramp on
the day of the accident, as well as witness testimony concerning the factors that
caused the lateral shift of the trailer. After the trial, the district court made an
express factual finding that “the proximate cause of Mr. Hyman’s death was . . .
Mr. Hyman’s decision to position himself in the pinch point when giving [the mule
driver] the order to move forward—a decision which even his fellow
longshoremen found inexplicable.” Thus, the Claimants intended to litigate the
issue of the proximate cause of the accident, the district court gave the Claimants a
full and fair opportunity to do so, and the issue was actually litigated.
II. ARGUMENTS IN CROSS-APPEAL
In their own cross-appeal, the Claimants argue that the district court erred by
considering Mr. Hyman’s own conduct when determining the proximate cause of
the accident. According to the Claimants, the district court’s proximate cause
inquiry should focus solely on the conduct of Seaboard, and the conduct of Mr.
Hyman is “not material” to the analysis. Indeed, Claimants argue that the district
court erred by even reaching the proximate cause issue. Claimants argue that “it
was beyond the district court’s jurisdiction in a limitation proceeding to apportion
fault on parties other than the vessel owner.” The Claimants cite the decision in
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Birmingham Southeast, L.L.C. v. M/V Merchant Patriot, 124 F. Supp. 2d 1327,
1339 (S.D. Ga. 2000) (emphasis added) (“A shipowner is entitled to exoneration
from all liability for a maritime [casualty] only when it demonstrates that it is free
from any contributory fault.” (quoting American Dredging Co. v. Lambert, 81 F.3d
127, 129 (11th Cir. 1996))).
In their reply brief to the cross-appeal, Seaboard argues among other things
that Claimants’ own pleadings and the joint pre-trial stipulation raised the issue,
and Claimants received what they asked for, which was full adjudication of all of
their rights on the merits.
In this regard, I note that in similar limitation proceedings, courts have
routinely looked to the conduct of the longshoreman, as well as third parties, to
assist in determining whether the vessel owner’s conduct was a proximate cause of
the accident. Indeed, courts have held that a longshoreman’s own negligence can
be the sole proximate cause of his accident, precluding any finding that the vessel
owner’s conduct was a proximate cause. See In re Kirby Inland Marine, L.P., 241
F. Supp. 2d 721, 724-26 (S.D. Tex. 2003) (deciding, in a LHWCA § 905(b)
limitation action, that the longshoreman claimant was the proximate cause of the
accident and that the vessel interests were therefore free of fault); Trueba v. Flota
Bananera Ecuadorian Lines, Inc., 675 F. Supp. 786, 789-90 (S.D.N.Y. 1987)
(finding, in a limitation action, that the plaintiff longshoreman’s “own negligent
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failure” to keep a ship passageway clear of obstruction prevented a finding that the
vessel owner was the proximate cause of the accident). See also Sinagra v. Atl.
Ocean Shipping, Ltd., 182 F. Supp. 2d 294, 300-305 (E.D.N.Y. 2001); Sec. Barge
Line, Inc. v. Lewis, 644 F. Supp. 85, 90-92 (E.D. Mo. 1986).
In short, the district court conducted a thorough trial and factual
investigation to determine the proximate cause of Mr. Hyman’s fatal accident and
did not err in reaching and ruling on the proximate cause issue. 1 The panel opinion
already covers Claimants’ negligence claims against Seaboard as both a vessel
owner and an onloading stevedore. My discussion above is to set forth just an
additional reason why I join the panel opinion’s statement that “[i]t is hard to
imagine what kind of negligence case the Claimants could bring if Mr. Hyman was
the proximate cause of the accident.”
1
In their cross-appeal, Claimants do not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
district court’s proximate cause finding, but do contend the district court should not have
considered Mr. Hyman’s conduct.
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