Case: 11-60057 Document: 00511932873 Page: 1 Date Filed: 07/25/2012
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
July 25, 2012
No. 11-60057 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
NEW ORLEANS DEPOT SERVICES, INCORPORATED,
Petitioner
v.
DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WORKER’S COMPENSATION PROGRAMS, U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR; NEW ORLEANS MARINE CONTRACTORS;
SIGNAL MUTUAL INDEMNITY ASSOCIATION LIMITED,
Respondents
Petition for Review of an Order of the
Benefits Review Board
Before STEWART, CLEMENT, and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.
CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:
Before the court is a petition for review from a decision of the Benefits
Review Board (“BRB”) affirming an award of workers’ compensation benefits for
which Petitioner New Orleans Depot Services, Incorporated (“NODSI”) was
found liable. As there is substantial evidence to support the factual findings of
the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), we deny the petition for review.
I.
Claimant Juan Zepeda was employed by NODSI as a container repair
mechanic from 1996 until 2002, when he quit because of a bone spur injury.
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Prior to his employment with NODSI, Zepeda performed container and chassis1
maintenance for Respondent New Orleans Marine Contractors (“NOMC”) for
approximately five months. During his employment with both NODSI and
NOMC, Zepeda was exposed to loud noises on a continuous basis and did not use
hearing protection. Zepeda now suffers from an 11.3 percent binaural hearing
impairment, for which he sought permanent partial disability benefits under the
Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA” or “the Act”).2
At his formal hearing before the ALJ, Zepeda testified that he performed
work for NODSI at two separate yards: the Chef Yard, which is approximately
300 yards from the Industrial Canal, and the Terminal Yard, which is
approximately 100 yards from the waterfront. These yards do not have any
docks, piers, or wharfs. At the Chef Yard, Zepeda worked predominately on
Evergreen containers. Zepeda testified that he was never informed where the
containers and chassis had been prior to having been brought to the yard for
maintenance. Zepeda was a member of the International Longshoremen’s
Association (“ILA”) throughout his employment with NOMC. He was also a
member of ILA during his time with NODSI, but switched to non-union
employment at some point while so employed.
Kirk Williams, the owner of NODSI, testified that he started the company
1
“[A] chassis is what most lay persons would call the ‘trailer’ portion of a tractor/trailer
rig, while the container is the load-carrying metal box that sits upon it.” Atl. Container Serv.,
Inc. v. Coleman, 904 F.2d 611, 612 (11th Cir. 1990).
2
It is undisputed that Zepeda was an employee covered under the Act while working
for NOMC. Pursuant to the “last employer rule” which applies to claims involving noise-
induced hearing loss, the employer during the last covered employment in which the claimant
was exposed to injurious stimuli is liable for the full amount of the benefits award. Avondale
Indus., Inc. v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs, 977 F.2d 186, 189 (5th Cir. 1992).
Accordingly, if it is established that Zepeda was covered under the LHWCA during his
subsequent employment with NODSI, NODSI will be liable for the full amount of his benefits
although Zepeda was exposed to injurious stimuli during his months of employment with
NOMC.
2
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in 1996. NODSI was initiated primarily to serve the container needs of
Evergreen, a company specializing in the transportation of oceangoing cargo in
a fully containerized atmosphere. NODSI serviced Evergreen exclusively until
2002, when it also contracted with Mitsui O.S.K. for similar services. Williams
testified that Evergreen did not request that NODSI be set up in a specific
location. Williams further testified that he selected the location for the Chef
Yard because of the hard land, and did not consider access to a waterway. The
Terminal Yard was acquired through a lease with the Board of Commissioners
for the Port of New Orleans. Williams testified that access to a waterway was
not a consideration in the selection of the Terminal Yard site.
Zepeda’s son, a terminal supervisor for NODSI, testified in his deposition
that the containers to be repaired are rarely labeled to identify which customer
owns the containers. He stated that he would not know whether the containers
came into the Port of New Orleans by ship. He also testified that Zepeda
performed most of his work in the Chef Yard, which had more than 1,000
containers going in and out of the yard each year.
Thomas Brooks, a claims adjuster hired by Ports America, the successor
of NOMC, testified regarding the composition of the area surrounding both
yards. By his account, there are several trucking and industrial yards, a coffee
roasting plant, several marine facilities, and terminals near the Chef Yard.
Near the Terminal Yard, there are tank storage facilities and a trucking facility
with large marine containers.
Dominic Obrigkeit, senior vice-president of the international business
division of Evergreen, was deposed. He testified that Evergreen’s oceangoing
containers would enter and exit the Port of New Orleans on ships owned by
Lykes, pursuant to a share-space agreement. Evergreen maintained an office
in New Orleans to allow for oversight of the day-to-day transfer of containers
through the Port of New Orleans. Damaged containers would be sent to local
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contractors near the offload site for repairs. Pursuant to a master contract with
the ILA, local contractors were required to have ILA labor employees at their
facilities to make repairs to Evergreen containers. Obrigkeit was not aware of
any division of ship and rail containers at local contractors.
The ALJ determined that NODSI was liable for Zepeda’s benefits as his
last maritime employer. The ALJ found that Zepeda, an ILA union employee,
worked exclusively on Evergreen containers until 2002. He further found that
Evergreen employed local contractors for repairs of containers used in both rail
and marine shipping. Accordingly, as Zepeda solely repaired Evergreen
containers, the ALJ concluded that he repaired marine containers at least some
of the time during his employment with NODSI, thus satisfying the maritime
status requirement. Additionally, the ALJ determined that both the Chef Yard
and Terminal Yard satisfy the geographical nexus of the situs requirement. The
ALJ also determined that the Chef Yard satisfies the functional nexus
component of the maritime situs requirement. Therfore, the ALJ determined
that Zepeda’s injury occasioned during his employment with NODSI was covered
by the LHWCA.
On December 3, 2010, the BRB affirmed the ALJ’s decision. Thereafter,
NODSI brought the instant petition for review of the BRB’s decision.
II.
“Our review of Review Board decisions is limited to considering errors of
law and ensuring that the Review Board adhered to its statutory standard of
review, that is, whether the ALJ’s findings of fact are supported by substantial
evidence and are consistent with the law.” Sisson v. Davis & Sons, Inc., 131
F.3d 555, 557 (5th Cir. 1998). “Substantial evidence is that relevant evidence-
more than a scintilla but less than a preponderance- that would cause a
reasonable person to accept the fact finding.” Coastal Prod. Servs. Inc. v.
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Hudson, 555 F.3d 426, 430 (5th Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
We review the BRB’s legal conclusions de novo. Id.
“Although perhaps somewhat quizzical in light of the typical
understanding of the difference between conclusions of law and findings of fact,
we decided in Texports Stevedore Co. v. Winchester that the determination of
situs by the ALJ is one of fact.” Id. (citing 632 F.2d 504, 515 (5th Cir. 1980) (en
banc)). “Status determinations are also findings of fact, unless made under an
erroneous legal standard.” Id. at 430-31. “[T]he ALJ’s selection of reasonable
conflicting factual inferences is conclusive . . . if supported by the evidence and
not inconsistent with the law.” Hullinghorst Indus., Inc. v. Carroll, 650 F.2d
750, 753 (5th Cir. 1981). “This Court may not substitute our judgment for that
of the ALJ, nor reweigh or reappraise the evidence, but may only determine
whether evidence exists to support the ALJ’s findings.” Cooper/T. Smith
Stevedoring Co. v. Liuzza, 293 F.3d 741, 745 (5th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation
marks omitted).3
III.
The LHWCA is a federal workers’ compensation scheme for the benefit of
maritime workers. “Prior to 1972, the Act applied only to injuries occurring on
navigable waters. Longshoremen loading or unloading a ship were covered on
the ship and the gangplank but not shoreward, even though they were
performing the same functions whether on or off the ship.” Chesapeake & Ohio
Ry. Co. v. Schwalb, 493 U.S. 40, 46 (1989). To obviate this inequitable result,
Congress broadened the coverage to embrace maritime activities on land near
the water.
3
We note that the dissenting opinion, while concluding that the ALJ’s decision should
be overturned, ignores the deferential standard of review for factual findings required by our
precedents and instead seeks to frame the dispositive issues in this case as legal rather than
factual ones.
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“The Supreme Court has cautioned that we must ‘take an expansive view
of the extended coverage’ of the LHWCA.” Sisson, 131 F.3d at 557 (quoting Ne.
Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo, 432 U.S. 249, 268 (1977)) (emphasis added).
“The Act should be liberally construed in favor of injured workers, ‘in
conformance with its purpose, and in a way that avoids harsh and incongruous
results.’” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 515 (quoting Voris v. Eikel, 346 U.S. 328, 333
(1953)). There is a “presumption of coverage.” Id. at 508.
“For a claimant to be eligible for benefits under the LHWCA (1) his injury
must occur on a maritime situs, and (2) his status must be that of a maritime
employee. Both requirements must be met for the claimant to receive benefits
under the Act.” Hudson, 555 F.3d at 431.
The situs requirement derives from 33 U.S.C. § 903, which states:
Except as otherwise provided in this section, compensation shall be
payable under this chapter in respect of disability or death of an
employee, but only if the disability or death results from an injury
occurring upon the navigable waters of the United States (including
any adjoining pier, wharf, dry dock, terminal, building way, marine
railway, or other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in
loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel).
33 U.S.C. § 903(a).
The status requirement derives from 33 U.S.C. § 902, which provides that
“[t]he term ‘employee’ means any person engaged in maritime employment,
including any longshoreman or other person engaged in longshoring operations,
and any harbor-worker including a ship repairman, shipbuilder, and
ship-breaker . . . .” 33 U.S.C. § 902(3).
In this case, NODSI objects to the ALJ’s factual findings that the Chef
Yard is a maritime situs and that Zepeda is a maritime employee for purposes
of the LHWCA.
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A. Situs
As Zepeda’s injury from his employment with NODSI was not incurred on
navigable waters, liability may be imposed on NODSI only if its facility
constitutes an “other adjoining area,” pursuant to 33 U.S.C. § 903(a). In this
circuit, when deciding whether a location satisfies the situs component of
LHWCA coverage, courts consider both the geographic proximity to the water’s
edge and the functional relationship of the location to maritime activity.
Winchester, 632 F.2d at 514-15 (“So long as the site is close to or in the vicinity
of navigable waters, or in a neighboring area, an employee’s injury can come
within the LHW[C]A. . . . The perimeter of an area is defined by function.”).
NODSI has conceded that the Chef Yard satisfies the geographic proximity
requirement of the situs inquiry; accordingly, its sole challenge to the ALJ’s
finding that the Chef Yard is a covered situs is that the location lacks the
functional relationship to maritime activity required by the LHWCA.
“The statute does not require that the area’s exclusive use be for maritime
purposes so long as it is customarily used for significant maritime activity.” Id.
at 515. “The situs need not be used . . . even primarily for maritime purposes .
. . .” Hudson, 555 F.3d at 433.
[S]imply because a vessel cannot dock for loading and unloading at
a particular area does not mean that the area is not a covered situs.
. . . [I]f a particular area is associated with items used as part of the
loading process, the area need not itself be directly involved in
loading or unloading a vessel or physically connected to the point of
loading or unloading.
Id. at 434 (emphasis added). “The character of surrounding properties is but one
factor to be considered in determining whether a site is an ‘adjoining area’ under
the LHW[C]A.” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 513.
“[T]he LHWCA is to be construed liberally in favor of compensation.”
Hudson, 555 F.3d at 437. “A broad interpretation of the maritime situs
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requirement reduces the number of workers walking in and out of coverage and
promotes uniformity.” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 516. “If the situs determination
is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole, it will not be set
aside by this court.” Id. at 515.
In this case, the ALJ relied on several items of evidence in reaching his
determination that the Chef Yard is a maritime situs. The ALJ found that,
regardless of NODSI’s employees’ awareness of such, some of the Evergreen
containers repaired by NODSI were used for marine transportation and were
offloaded at the Port of New Orleans. NODSI initially only serviced Evergreen
containers, and was required, pursuant to Evergreen’s labor contract, to hire
unionized maritime workers, including Zepeda. Accordingly, the ALJ
determined that the functional nexus requirement was satisfied because
Evergreen’s marine containers, which were used for marine transportation or
had previously been used in marine transportation, were stored and repaired at
the Chef Yard. In addition to the evidence explicitly relied upon by the ALJ as
the basis for his decision, our independent review of the record has identified
other evidence supportive of the maritime situs determination, notably the
testimony of Brooks, a claims adjustor, acknowledging the presence of marine
facilities in the area surrounding the Chef yard. Applying the deferential
standard of review required by Winchester, it is clear that the ALJ’s situs
determination is supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.4
4
The dissent asserts that the functional nexus test cannot be satisfied in this case
because marine shipping containers, which were stored and repaired at the Chef Yard, are
“loaded” and, therefore, categorically are not “items used as part of the loading process.” This
narrow distinction finds no support in the language of the LHWCA, is contrary to the broad
construction of the statute required by our applicable precedents, and ignores our fundamental
deferential review of the ALJ’s factual determinations. The question before us is not whether
we would have reached the same factual conclusion in the first instance; rather, we must
determine whether there is more than a scintilla of evidence in the record to support the ALJ’s
factual finding. For all of the reasons enumerated above, it is clear that there is sufficient
evidence establishing that the Chef Yard is “associated with items used as part of the loading
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In opposition, NODSI relies in large part on the Ninth Circuit’s decision
in Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co. v. Herron, 568 F.2d 137 (9th Cir. 1978), which
has subsequently been interpreted in that circuit as having set out specific
factors to be considered when determining whether an adjoining area bears a
sufficient functional relationship to a waterway so as to be rendered a maritime
situs. See Motoviloff v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs, 692 F.2d 87, 89
(9th Cir. 1982) (“Among factors to be considered in determining such
relationship are (1) the particular suitability of the site for maritime uses; (2)
whether adjoining properties are devoted primarily to uses in maritime
commerce; (3) the proximity to the waterway; and (4) whether the adjoining site
is as close to the waterway as feasible.”).
For a couple of reasons, the analogous cases from the Ninth Circuit do not
determine our result here. First, in Winchester, an en banc decision, this court
rejected the application of a formulaic factor test for resolving situs issues under
the LHWCA. See Winchester, 632 F.2d at 513-14 (“Just as we disapprove of a
test that disposes of the question based totally on the presence or absence of
intervening or surrounding maritime facilities, we also reject the idea that
Congress intended to substitute for the shoreline another hard line. . . . All
circumstances must be examined.”). Additionally, though it appears that the
Ninth Circuit applies the same deferential standard of review mandated in this
circuit by Winchester,5 the posture of Motiviloff, the single Ninth Circuit case
cited by NODSI holding that an employer’s facility is not a maritime situs, is
appreciably different from that of the present case in one notable respect: in
Motoviloff, the ALJ denied the claim for benefits and the BRB affirmed the
process . . . .” Hudson, 555 F.3d at 434 (emphasis added). Accordingly, the ALJ’s situs
determination must be affirmed.
5
See Herron, 568 F.2d at 140 n.2 (“[T]he[] findings [of the ALJ] are controlling if
supported by substantial evidence in the record considered as a whole.”).
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denial; whereas, in the present case, the ALJ held NODSI liable for Zepeda’s
benefits and the BRB affirmed this decision.
Given this circuit’s deferential review of an ALJ’s factual situs
determination, we conclude that there is substantial evidence in the record to
support the ALJ’s factual determination that the Chef Yard is a maritime situs
under the LHWCA.
B. Status
The second part of the coverage analysis asks whether the claimant is a
maritime employee as defined by the LHWCA.
Although the Act does not define “maritime employment,” the
Supreme Court has instructed that occupations in addition to those
enumerated in the statute will be covered as maritime employment
if the occupation entails activities that are an integral or essential
part of the loading, unloading, building, or repairing of a vessel. In
addition, the employee’s maritime activities must be more than
episodic, momentary, or incidental to his non-maritime work.
Hudson, 555 F.3d at 439.
In Schwalb, the Supreme Court ruled that workers who performed
maintenance and repairs on land to a mechanical conveyor-belt system which
transported coal to a loading tower from which it is poured into the hold of a ship
were maritime employees pursuant to the LHWCA. The Court stated the
following:
[E]mployees who are injured while maintaining or repairing
equipment essential to the loading or unloading process are covered
by the Act. Such employees are engaged in activity that is an
integral part of and essential to those overall processes. . . .
Someone who repairs or maintains a piece of loading equipment is
just as vital to and an integral part of the loading process as the
operator of the equipment.
Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 47 (emphasis added). Likewise, “[t]his court has made it
clear that the maintenance and repair of tools, equipment, and facilities used in
indisputably maritime activities lies within the scope of ‘maritime employment’
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as that term is used in the Act.” Carroll, 650 F.2d at 755. “We have . . . upheld
maritime status for an employee who spent only 2.5-5% of his employment
engaged in maritime activities when those activities were part of his regularly
assigned duties . . . .” Hudson, 555 F.3d at 441.
“That the skills utilized by [the claimant] were ‘essentially nonmaritime’
in character is immaterial. It is the purpose of the work that is the key;
‘nonmaritime’ skills applied to a maritime project are maritime for purposes of
the ‘maritime employment’ test of the Act.” Carroll, 650 F.2d at 756,
Although this court has not previously addressed the scope of maritime
employment under the LHWCA in the context of container repair, the Eleventh
Circuit addressed this scenario in Atlantic Container Service, Inc. v. Coleman,
904 F.2d 611 (11th Cir. 1990), which ruled that an employer was liable under the
Act for a claimant’s back injury incurred while working on chassis and
containers owned by a shipping company. The court reasoned that, as in
Schwalb, container repair was an integral part of the loading process. See
Coleman, 904 F.2d at 618 (“[C]ontainers, . . . which [the claimant] worked on
periodically, are essential to the loading and unloading process.”).6
6
We note that the dissent’s interpretation of the LHWCA, according to which the repair
of shipping containers used in maritime transport is not maritime activity within the purview
of the statute, would create a circuit split. See Alfaro v. Commissioner, 349 F.3d 225, 229 (5th
Cir. 2003) (“We are always chary to create a circuit split.”). According to our precedents,
circuit splits should be avoided unless persuasive reasons exists for creating them. See United
States v. Adam, 296 F.3d 327, 332 (5th Cir. 2002); Carranza-De Salinas v. Gonzales, 477 F.3d
200, 208 (5th Cir. 2000). In our view, the dissent’s attempt to distinguish a carpenter’s
construction of scaffolding, to be used by others, beneath a pier, which we concluded was
maritime employment in Carroll, from the employment at issue in the present case is
unpersuasive. It is clear that the repair of marine shipping containers constitutes the “repair
of tools, equipment, and facilities used in indisputably maritime activities . . . .” Carroll, 650
F.2d at 755 (emphasis added). This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that Evergreen, an
international shipping company, once employed NODSI as its sole contractor for the repair of
oceangoing containers which had entered the Port of New Orleans.
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In the present case, the ALJ determined that Zepeda engaged in maritime
employment because, as an ILA employee, he worked on Evergreen marine
shipping containers. Testimony revealed that the containers came into the Port
of New Orleans aboard ships, and were sent to local contractors for repair.
Zepeda worked a portion of his employment with NODSI solely on Evergreen
containers and, therefore, repaired marine shipping containers at least some of
the time. The ALJ considered marine container repair an essential function of
the loading and unloading process.
The ALJ’s reasoning in this case is consistent with our case law.
Accordingly, the ALJ’s factual determination with respect to maritime status is
entitled to deferential review for substantial evidence in the record. We conclude
that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the ALJ’s factual finding
that Zepeda, while employed by NODSI, was a maritime employee for purposes
of the LHWCA.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we determine that there is substantial evidence
in the record to support the ALJ’s factual determinations and the BRB’s decision
to affirm. Accordingly, the petition for review is DENIED.
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EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
The majority’s analysis expansively applies precedent that had already
expanded the controlling statute to its limits. The result is an outcome that is
not only entirely divorced from the plain language of the statute, but that also
lacks any connection to the realities of maritime industry and creates needless
uncertainty for employers with operations anywhere in the vicinity of a
waterway.
The following facts provide the context for understanding the majority’s
errors: Within the scope of his employment with NODSI, Zepeda never loaded
or unloaded a vessel, never assisted anyone else who was loading or unloading
a vessel, never so much as witnessed a vessel being loaded or unloaded; he never
set foot on a ship, dock, pier, or wharf; he never worked at a job site that was
used to load or unload vessels; and the Chef Yard, Zepeda’s primary workplace
while employed by NODSI and the only work site at issue, is not connected to or
even surrounded by areas used to load or unload vessels, and, critically, is not
used to repair or maintain equipment that is used to load or unload ships.
Despite these facts, the majority still concludes that NODSI can be held liable
under a statute that should apply to him only if Zepeda played an “integral or
essential part of loading or unloading a vessel,” Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v.
Schwalb, 493 U.S. 40, 45 (1989), and was injured at a maritime situs, 33 U.S.C.
§ 903(a). Because this conclusion is contrary to law and common sense, I
respectfully dissent.
I. Situs
“For a claimant to be eligible for benefits under the LHWCA (1) his injury
must occur on a maritime situs, and (2) his status must be that of a maritime
employee.” Coastal Prod. Servs. Inc. v. Hudson, 555 F.3d 426, 431 (5th Cir.
2009). Because the Zepeda’s injury clearly did not occur “upon the navigable
waters of the United States” or on an “adjoining pier, wharf, dry dock, terminal,
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building way, [or] marine railway,” he is eligible for benefits only if the Chef
Yard constitutes an “other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in
loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.” 33 U.S.C. §
903(a). The respondents concede the Chef Yard has no connection to repairing,
dismantling, or building vessels, so the decisive question is whether the Chef
Yard is an “adjoining area” that is “customarily used . . . in loading [or]
unloading.” Even under the framework of our already-expansive precedents, the
answer to this question is, quite clearly, no.
Our cases break this “other adjoining area” question into two inquiries: (1)
whether the situs in question is sufficiently close to the waterfront (geographic
nexus) (2) and whether it has a functional nexus to maritime activity. See
Hudson, 555 F.3d at 432. The ALJ defined the relevant “area” as the Chef Yard
itself. NODSI concedes that, under our caselaw, the Chef Yard satisfies the
geographic nexus prong. The relevant inquiry is therefore whether the work
done at the Chef Yard, storing and repairing cargo containers, is customarily
part of the loading or unloading process.
“Loading and unloading” is the work customarily done by longshoremen
or stevedores. Precedent requires us to construe the “loading and unloading”
broadly to include not only the physical movement of cargo on and off ships but
also those additional related functions that contribute to the overall loading or
unloading process by making the physical loading and unloading possible. Even
construing the loading process exceptionally broadly, however, it still does not
encompass container repair, a function that, both customarily and on these
specific facts, is operationally separate and distinct. “Loading and unloading”
cannot reasonably be interpreted to encompass every step in the overall supply
chain surrounding marine shipping. Those conducting loading operations are not
customarily involved with the prior step of containering or packaging the ocean-
going cargo that they load. In most instances, including this one, marine cargo
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is packaged well before it is delivered to be loaded. From the point of view of
stevedores, then, the container (whatever may be inside it) is simply part of the
cargo: it is the thing to be loaded. Moreover, container repair is an additional
step removed from the loading process because it happens either before such
containers are filled with cargo or after they are empty. It is undisputed that the
containers Zepeda repaired arrived at and departed from the Chef Yard
completely empty. His work was therefore twice removed from the ship-loading
process.
Because there are no facts indicating that the container repair work done
at the Chef Yard is part of any loading or unloading process, the yard lacks a
functional nexus to maritime activity. To return to the language of the
controlling statute, the Chef Yard is emphatically not “customarily used . . . in
loading [or] unloading.”
Our cases are not to the contrary. In Texports Stevedore Co. v. Winchester,
on which the respondents heavily rely, the situs in question was a “gear room”
used by a stevedore company to store, repair, and maintain “the equipment used
by stevedores to perform the loading operation.” 632 F.2d 504, 506 & n.1 (5th
Cir. 1980) (en banc). In upholding the ALJ’s situs determination, the en banc
court credited the ALJ’s finding that the functional nexus requirement was
satisfied because “the gear room operations were part of the on-going overall
loading process.” Id. at 515. The gear room was therefore critically different from
the Chef Yard.
Unlike the Chef Yard, the gear room in Winchester was used by a
stevedore company as an indispensable part of its loading operations, and was
therefore part of the same “overall loading process.” Operating a gear room or
similar facility is essential to the work of stevedores because they must
continually store, maintain, and repair their own equipment in order to provide
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loading and unloading services.1 The Chef Yard was not integrated into any
loading process because the work done there—container repair—is not part of
the work that must be done by those who are charged with loading vessels.
For the same reason, the language from Hudson on which the majority
relies is inapplicable. In Hudson, we stated that “if a particular area is
associated with items used as part of the loading process, the area need not itself
be directly involved in loading or unloading a vessel or physically connected to
the point of loading or unloading.” Hudson, 555 F.3d at 434 (emphasis added).
As broad as this language is, it still does not apply to the Chef Yard because
shipping containers are not “items used as part of the loading process.” Marine
containers are not used to load; they are loaded. This distinction will seem
insignificant only if one fails to appreciate the division of labor customarily
observed in marine shipping. From the point of view of those actually involved
in the industry, the difference between “items used as part of the loading
process” and “items that are loaded” is both clear and highly important—for
stevedores, it is the difference between “my tools” and “my customer’s property.”2
The container repair work performed by Zepeda and others at the Chef
Yard is not part of a loading or unloading process. Of course, one could
artificially define the loading or unloading process as broadly as suits his
purposes. But the statute, quite understandably, ties maritime functions to
custom, and the work performed at the Chef Yard is not integral to the
customarily-defined process of loading or unloading ships—it falls entirely
1
A stevedore company, of course, could hire a subcontractor to operate a gear room, but
whether conducted “in-house” or by third-parties, such operations are the responsibility of
stevedores. A marine shipper does not repair the equipment stevedores use to load the
shipper’s cargo.
2
The majority’s analysis essentially equates an area “associated with items used as
part of the loading process” with an area “associated with items associated with the loading
process,” which greatly extends the reach of this already expansive language.
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outside the parameters of what a longshoring company must do or provide in
order to load or unload a ship successfully. Accordingly, the Chef Yard is not a
maritime situs under the LHWCA.
That the Chef Yard was not part of any “overall loading process” is
highlighted by the fact that NODSI’s only customer was not a stevedore
company but Evergreen, a shipping company that conducts no loading or
unloading operations. This means that whoever was hired to load Evergreen’s
containers onto its ships had no connection to or responsibility for repairing
containers. Of course, a single employer could conduct both shipping and loading
operations, but the separate actors involved illustrate what should have been
clear anyway: container repair is functionally separate from the loading process.
The ALJ therefore erred in concluding that the functional nexus requirement
was satisfied because Evergreen’s containers were stored and repaired at the
Chef Yard.
The majority relies on the testimony of a claims adjustor “acknowledging
the presence of marine facilities in the area surrounding the Chef yard.”
Majority Op. at 8. But this is misleading. The record shows that the Chef Yard
was surrounded primarily by non-maritime businesses including a car wash,
automotive shops, a warehouse, and manufacturing plants. Even more
problematic is that the “presence of marine facilities” would do nothing to
demonstrate that the Chef Yard, or anything near it, was an area customarily
used in loading, which is what the evidence must show in order to support the
award of benefits. Implicit in the majority’s reasoning is a decision to define the
relevant “area” as something larger than merely the Chef Yard, but this means
that the adjacent buildings form part of the same “area” for purposes of the situs
determination. The consequence of this analysis is that the neighboring car wash
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would also constitute a maritime situs. The ALJ’s situs determination was not
supported by substantial evidence.3
The majority cites the principle that the LHWCA should be “liberally
construed,” but fails to appreciate that our construction of the statute must still
“conform[] with its purpose.” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 515 (quoting Voris v. Eikel,
346 U.S. 328, 333 (1953)). One purpose of the 1972 amendments to the LHWCA
emphasized in our past decisions was to “reduc[e] the number of employees
walking in and out of coverage.” Id. at 511.
Prior to 1972, the [LHWCA] applied only to injuries occurring on
navigable waters. Longshoremen loading or unloading a ship were
covered on the ship and the gangplank but not shoreward, even
though they were performing the same functions whether on or off
the ship. Congress acted to obviate this anomaly: § 903(a) extended
coverage to the area adjacent to the ship that is normally used for
loading and unloading, but restricted the covered activity within
that area to maritime employment.
Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 46. But unlike the gear man in Winchester and the janitors
and machinist in Schwalb, neither Zepeda nor his coworkers at the Chef Yard
performed any portion of their work on the docks or aboard ships, and treating
the Chef Yard as a maritime situs is therefore unrelated to “reducing the
number of employees walking in and out of coverage.” The majority has not
pointed to another purpose of the act that its exceptionally expansive
3
The majority, understandably, relies heavily on the deferential standard of review,
but its approach exemplifies a troubling pattern that has developed in our case law. Rather
than analyzing whether there is substantial evidence that the Chef Yard is “used in loading
or unloading,” the majority merely concludes that the AJL’s situs determination is only a
minor expansion of what has previously been accepted as a maritime situs, and therefore
approves the expansion. The problem with this approach is that, as the majority essentially
concedes, it results in an ever-shifting baseline for evaluating the reasonableness of the BRB’s
decisions. So long as each case is only incrementally more expansive than the last, it is bound
to be upheld. Accordingly, the LHWCA is gradually swallowing every employer in the vicinity
of a port.
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interpretation of the situs requirement promotes, leaving the ever-growing reach
of the LHWCA unchecked by any discernible limiting principle.
II. Status
For similar reasons, Zepeda is not a maritime employee under the
LHWCA.4 “[A]side from the [occupations specified in the LHWCA], land-based
activity . . . will be deemed maritime only if it is an integral or essential part of
loading or unloading a vessel.” Id. at 45.5 As explained, the container repair work
performed by Zepeda for NODSI was not integral to shiploading.
Container repair cannot possibly be “integral” to loading because the two
processes happen separately and neither is dependent on the other. Customarily,
container repair and ship loading are not conducted, organized, coordinated,
overseen, or commissioned by the same person or entity. See Winchester, 632
F.2d at 511 (“The inquiry is whether the claimant is engaged in or spends some
of his time in activities traditionally performed by longshoremen.”). Unlike the
equipment repair and maintenance work the Supreme Court considered
maritime in Schwalb, Zepeda’s work was never necessary to keep any loading
process going. Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 48 (“The determinative consideration is that
the ship loading process could not continue unless the retarder that [respondent]
worked on was operating properly. It is notable that the loading actually was
stopped while [respondent] made the repairs . . . .” (emphasis added)).
The respondents rely on our decision in Hullinghorst Indus., Inc. v.
Carroll, 650 F.2d 750 (5th Cir. 1981), in which we upheld a BRB determination
4
Although the “situs” and “status” inquiries are distinct, the functional nexus
component of the situs test will naturally converge with the status test where a claimant’s
injury is sustained during the ordinary course of his employment at his regular workplace.
5
The majority repeats that Zepeda was, during some of his employment by NODSI, a
member of a longshoremen union, but this is of no import because this court has already held,
en banc, that “[u]nion jurisdiction and the employer’s whim are not definitive on whether
activities are ‘maritime employment.’” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 511.
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that Carroll, a carpenter injured while building scaffolding beneath a pier, was
a maritime employee for purposes of the LHWCA. Carroll was an employee of
a scaffolding contractor hired by the owner of the pier, whose business included
the loading and unloading of ships. The loading company planned to use the
scaffolding built by Carroll to “repair . . . a turntable (affixed to the pier) used by
[its] longshoremen in the loading and unloading of ships,” but Carroll did not
repair the turntable itself or otherwise participate in the physical loading of
cargo. Id. at 756. Although Carroll had no direct involvement in loading or
unloading, the critical fact was that his scaffolding work “directly furthered
. . . the loading and unloading of ships” by enabling the owner of the pier to
perform its core longshoring operations. Id.
Zepeda, on the contrary, was not similarly a part of loading or unloading
operations because his work was not something that a loading company would
have to arrange or commission in order to load ships. The relevant question is
whether the work at issue is within the purview of what a loading company
would have to accomplish in order to successfully carry out its shiploading work.
Because a loading company must provide for (whether with its own employees
or independent contractors)6 the repair of its piers and loading equipment, but
is not responsible for packaging its customers’ cargo, Carroll is readily
distinguishable. Zepeda was not “an integral part” of shiploading or any other
maritime project and therefore is not a maritime employee within the meaning
of the LHWCA.
6
Carroll made it clear that it does not matter whether the claimant’s employer also has
employees directly involved in loading and unloading operations, but that decision did nothing
to change the requirement that the claimant must perform work that is “an integral or
essential part of loading or unloading a vessel.”
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III. Conclusion
The majority’s reasoning sweeps so broadly that it threatens to swallow
every employer with even a tangential relation to the maritime industry. If a
worker whose sole responsibility is to repair containers is covered by the
LHWCA, why not a factory worker who manufactures those same containers?
And if container manufacturing has a sufficient connection to loading, so also
will the manufacture of countless other products that have some potential use
in maritime activities. For example, a machinist working on an assembly line
making cranes, some of which will eventually be used in shiploading by the
manufacturer’s stevedore customers, has just as close a connection to loading
and unloading operations as did Zepeda during his employment with NODSI,
assuming only that the crane factory is located in an industrial district in the
general vicinity of a port or harbor. But it does not end there. On the majority’s
reasoning, it is not at all clear why a cobbler’s apprentice who repairs shoes for
stevedores would not be covered by the LHWCA. The repaired shoes are, unlike
repaired containers, “items used as part of the loading process,” and the cobbler’s
shop is therefore a better candidate for maritime situs than is the Chef Yard.
Many non-maritime employers, including NODSI, prefer to locate their
businesses in industrial districts close to waterways for reasons that have little
to do with their proximity to the water. For example, property is relatively
affordable and industrial uses are often permitted in such locations. But such
businesses will now be pushed to move their operations inland because the only
remaining way to ensure that they are not unintentionally subjecting themselves
to LHWCA liability is to move far enough away from the waterfront to defeat the
“geographic nexus” requirement. Unfortunately, even this strategy is fraught
with uncertainty because our previous cases have implicitly eliminated any
meaningful, independent proximity-based requirement from the statute’s situs
provisions. See Winchester, 632 F.2d at 520 (Tjoflat, J., dissenting) (“To approach
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the situs question as one determined solely by function is effectively to read the
situs requirement out of the [LHWCA] . . . .”). Just how far inland does one need
to go?
Employers should be able to ascertain their potential liability under the
LHWCA, and the majority’s opinion will make that more difficult than ever. In
this vein, it is important to note that NODSI consulted two separate insurance
brokers, who both advised that the company did not need LHWCA insurance.
Industry expectations cannot be controlling of our decisions, but we have
previously stated that “Congress intended that liability should be imposed only
where the employer had real or constructive notice of the likelihood of coverage.”
Carroll, 650 F.2d at 757.
I respectfully dissent.
22