Case: 11-60057 Document: 00512223616 Page: 1 Date Filed: 04/29/2013
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
April 29, 2013
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
Appeal from the Benefits Review Board
BRB No. 10-0221
Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and KING, JOLLY, DAVIS, JONES, SMITH,
DENNIS, CLEMENT, PRADO, OWEN, ELROD, SOUTHWICK, HAYNES,
GRAVES, and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges.
W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
In this case, we review the determination of the Benefits Review Board
(“BRB”) that the claimant, Juan Zepeda, was entitled to compensation benefits
under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA” or “the
Act”), from Petitioner New Orleans Depot Services, Inc. (“NODSI”).
In particular, the BRB found that the claimant’s employment activities
with NODSI took place in an area or location “adjoining” navigable waters
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“customarily used by an employer in loading [or] unloading . . . a vessel”1 and
therefore NODSI’s facility met the situs requirement of the Act. We conclude
that because the NODSI facility where Mr. Zepeda worked did not border on
navigable waters, it was not a covered situs and Mr. Zepeda is entitled to no
benefits under the Act from Petitioner NODSI. We therefore vacate the award
of the BRB as against NODSI and remand for further proceedings.
I. Facts
The claimant, Mr. Zepeda, filed a claim for LHWCA benefits against one
of his prior employers, New Orleans Marine Contractors (“NOMC”), to recover
benefits for his hearing loss due to continuous exposure to loud noises. As a
defense, NOMC contended that NODSI was a subsequent maritime employer
and that NODSI rather than NOMC was therefore the responsible party.2 The
issue then presented to the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) and BRB was
whether NODSI was responsible as a subsequent employer for benefits under
the LHWCA. NOMC then, in effect, prosecuted Mr. Zepeda’s claim against
NODSI so that NOMC would avoid its liability to him.
Following his employment with NOMC, Mr. Zepeda was employed by the
Petitioner, NODSI, at its “Chef Yard” facility on the Chef Menteur Highway in
New Orleans. NODSI and its employees were engaged in the repair,
1
33 U.S.C. § 903(a) provides:
[C]ompensation 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).
2
“When the disability arises from an ‘occupational injury’ incurred while working for
different employers, the last employer who exposes the claimant to the injury-causing
condition may be responsible for all of the benefits.” FRANK L. MARAIST ET AL., ADMIRALTY IN
A NUTSHELL 291 (6th ed. 2010) (citing Avondale Indus., Inc. v. DOWCP, 977 F.2d 186 (5th Cir.
1992)).
2
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maintenance, and storage of shipping containers and chassis.3 Some of the
containers had been used to transport ocean cargo. NODSI had more than one
facility, but the Chef Yard facility is the only facility relevant to this appeal. The
Chef Yard, with access to the Chef Menteur Highway and rail transportation,
can best be described as a small industrial park. The Chef Yard is located
approximately 300 yards from the Intracoastal Canal and is surrounded by a
carwash, a radiator shop, an automobile repair shop, a bottling company, and a
company that manufactures boxes. The bottling company’s facility is located
between the Intracoastal Waterway and the Chef Yard.
NODSI employees worked only within NODSI’s facility as they repaired
or performed maintenance on containers and chassis. They had no access to the
Intracoastal Canal and all of the equipment NODSI serviced was delivered to
the Chef Yard by truck. Once NODSI completed repairs to the equipment, it was
picked up by truck or rail, and no containers were loaded with cargo while in
NODSI’s custody.
II. Procedural Background
The ALJ, after conducting a hearing in this case, found that some of the
containers repaired and maintained by NODSI employees had been used for
marine transportation and off-loaded at the port of New Orleans.
Representatives of Evergreen, NODSI’s customer, also stated that at least some
of the containers would be returned to service as marine containers. The ALJ
concluded that the NODSI Chef Yard employees’ work repairing ocean
containers was “a process which was a significant maritime activity” necessary
to loading and unloading cargo. In addition, the ALJ concluded that the location
of the NODSI Chef Yard located some 300 yards from the Intracoastal Canal
3
A chassis is what we ordinarily consider the trailer portion of the 18-wheeler unit on
which shipping containers are loaded and transported by truck.
3
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satisfied the situs requirement that the injury occur in an area “adjoining
navigable waters.” Also, the ALJ found that the repair work and maintenance
Mr. Zepeda performed on these containers was closely related to loading or
unloading vessels and constituted “maritime employment” which satisfied the
status test under the Act.
The BRB affirmed the ALJ’s order and a divided panel of this court
affirmed the BRB. We then voted this case en banc, primarily to consider the
BRB’s determination that Mr. Zepeda was injured in an area “adjoining
navigable waters” so as to satisfy the Act’s situs test.
III. Standard of Review
Because the LHWCA situs inquiry requires the application of a statutory
standard to case-specific facts, it is ordinarily a mixed question of law and fact.
However, where, as in this case, the facts are not in dispute, “[LHWCA] coverage
is an issue of statutory construction and legislative intent,” and should be
reviewed as a pure question of law. See DOWCP v. Perini North River Associates,
459 U.S. 297, 300, 305 (1983). We therefore review the BRB’s determination of
coverage under the LHWCA in this case de novo. Equitable Equip. Co. v.
DOWCP, 191 F.3d 630, 631 (5th Cir. 1999) (citation omitted).
IV. Analysis
A.
Before turning to the merits of this appeal, we first consider a preliminary
objection the Respondent raises. The Director argues that NODSI has waived
the argument that Mr. Zepeda failed to establish that he met the situs
requirement of the Act—i.e., that his injury occurred in an area “adjoining
navigable waters”—by failing to raise it before the BRB or the panel of this court
that heard the appeal. Specifically, the Director argues that NODSI cannot
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argue that this en banc Court should adopt a new interpretation of “adjoining”
when it failed to make the argument before two previous tribunals.
Generally, we do not consider issues on appeal that were not presented
and argued before the lower court. See Lampton v. Diaz, 639 F.3d 223, 227 n.14
(5th Cir. 2011). “The waiver rule exists to prevent an appellate court from
‘[analyzing] the facts of a particular [issue] without the benefit of a full record
or lower court determination.’” Id.4 In its opening brief to the panel of this court
that initially heard the appeal, NODSI only challenged the functional
component5 of the situs requirement and acknowledged that our caselaw
foreclosed consideration of the geographic component.6 However, this is not a
case in which a party has wholly ignored a major issue. The issue of LHWCA
situs has been contested throughout the case’s history, with the proper
application of “adjoining area” being squarely addressed by both the ALJ and the
BRB. NODSI’s recognition of the fact that it was bound by this Court’s current
interpretation of “adjoining” does not deprive us of the right to visit the issue.
Moreover, a well-settled discretionary exception to the waiver rule exists
where a disputed issue concerns “a pure question of law.” Texas v. United States,
730 F.2d 339, 358 n.35 (5th Cir. 1984); see also Atl. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Truck Ins.
Exch., 797 F.2d 1288, 1293 (5th Cir. 1986). In this case, the ALJ, after a full
hearing, resolved the factual disputes presented by the parties. At the hearing,
witnesses testified about the nature of the industrial park where NODSI’s
operations were conducted, the nature of NODSI’s work, and the relationship of
4
(Alterations in original) (quoting 19 JAMES W. MOORE ET AL., MOORE’S FEDERAL
PRACTICE § 205.05[1], at 205–57 (3d ed. 2011) (quoting Yee v. City of Escondido, 503 U.S. 519,
538 (1992))).
5
The injury must occur in an area “customarily used by an employer in loading,
unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.” See 33 U.S.C. § 903(a).
6
The injury must occur “upon the navigable waters of the United States . . . or other
adjoining area.” See 33 U.S.C. § 903(a).
5
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the work to maritime activities. The evidence was undisputed that NODSI’s
Chef Yard is located about 300 yards from the Intracoastal Canal, and that a
bottling plant is located on the tract of land between the Canal and NODSI’s
yard.
Because the legal issue of whether the location of the claimant’s injury
“adjoined” navigable waters was presented to the ALJ and the facts involving
this issue were fully litigated before the ALJ, we are left with a pure question of
law to decide. Moreover, every party was provided an adequate opportunity to
brief and argue the issue before the en banc court. Therefore, notwithstanding
NODSI’s failure to challenge our governing precedent before the BRB or our
panel, we exercise our discretion to decide this legal issue: whether, under these
undisputed facts, claimant was injured in an area adjoining navigable waters so
as to satisfy the LHWCA situs requirement. We now turn to the merits of the
appeal.
B.
Before 1972, coverage under the LHWCA was provided only if the injury
occurred on navigable waters. This “situs” requirement was strictly enforced.7
However, by its nature, loading and unloading a vessel required a longshoreman
to continuously go from ship to wharf and back again, and a longshoreman might
work part of the day aboard the ship and the rest of the day on the pier.8 Similar
movement by workers from vessel to dock also occurred in vessel repair work.
When Congress made extensive amendments to the Act in 1972, it expressed
7
See, e.g., Victory Carriers, Inc. v. Law, 404 U.S. 202, 209–12 (1971) (longshoreman
injured on pier while operating cargo forklift not in covered situs); Nacirema Operating Co. v.
Johnson, 396 U.S. 212, 223 (1969) (longshoremen injured on pier while attaching cargo to
ship’s cranes not in covered situs).
8
See Ne. Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo, 432 U.S. 249, 272–74 (1977).
6
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concern about longshoremen walking in and out of coverage and, to meet this
concern, broadened coverage by amending LHWCA § 903(a).9
Congress made another change in the 1972 amendments by adding a
status requirement, thus limiting LHWCA coverage to traditional maritime
occupations. This was accomplished by defining a covered “employee” as “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).
The Supreme Court has made it clear that “situs” and “status” are
separate, independent elements and that a claimant must establish both
elements to recover benefits.10
C.
The LHWCA only extends coverage to “injur[ies] occurring upon the
navigable waters of the United States (including any adjoining pier, wharf . . .
or other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in loading, unloading,
repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel).” 33 U.S.C. § 903(a) (emphasis
added).
Most courts addressing this issue understand that an “other adjoining
area” must satisfy two distinct situs components: (1) a geographic component
(the area must adjoin navigable waters) and (2) a functional component (the area
must be “customarily used by an employer in loading [or] unloading . . . a
9
Section 903 was amended, in part, to provide compensation “if the disability or death
results from an injury occurring upon the navigable waters of the United States (including any
adjoining pier, wharf . . . or other adjoining area customarily used by an employer in loading,
unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel).” 33 U.S.C. § 903(a) (emphasis added).
10
See Herb’s Welding, Inc. v. Gray, 470 U.S. 414, 415–16 (1985); P.C. Pfeiffer Co. v.
Ford, 444 U.S. 69, 73–74 (1979); see also King v. Universal Elec. Constr., 799 F.2d 1073,
1073–74 (5th Cir. 1986); Valladolid v. Pac. Operations Offshore, LLP, 604 F.3d 1126, 1140 (9th
Cir. 2010); Jonathan Corp. v. Brickhouse, 142 F.3d 217, 220 (4th Cir. 1998).
7
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vessel”).11 We took this case en banc primarily to decide whether the claimant
was injured in an area “adjoining” navigable waters.
In 1980, our en banc court interpreted the geographic component of situs
in Texports Stevedore Co. v. Winchester, 632 F.2d 504 (5th Cir. 1980) (en banc).
In that case, Mr. Winchester was injured when he fell in his employer’s gear
room. He and others at that facility were engaged in repairing and maintaining
gear used by longshoremen in loading and unloading vessels. The gear room in
question was located five blocks from the gate of the nearest Houston port dock.
In holding that the employee met the situs requirement and was entitled to
benefits, the court stated:
Although “adjoin” can be defined as “contiguous to” or “to border
upon,” it also is defined as “to be close to” or “to be near.”
“Adjoining” can mean “neighboring.” To instill in the term its
broader meanings is in keeping with the spirit of the congressional
purposes. 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 LHWA. To require absolute contiguity would be to
reenact the hard lines that caused longshoremen to move
continually in and out of coverage.
Id. at 514 (footnotes omitted).
The Winchester court stressed the desirability of avoiding any hard line for
defining what is “adjoining.” Rather, “[t]he situs requirement compels a factual
determination that cannot be hedged by the labels placed on an area.” Id. at
513. “The best way to effectuate the congressional purposes is to determine the
situs question by looking at all the circumstances.” Id. Other than these vague
instructions, the court provided little guidance to other courts or future litigants
on how to determine from “the circumstances” whether a claimant satisfies the
11
See, e.g., Coastal Prod. Servs. Inc. v. Hudson, 555 F.3d 426, 432 (5th Cir. 2009);
Sidwell v. Express Container Servs., Inc., 71 F.3d 1134, 1139 (4th Cir. 1995); Hurston v.
DOWCP, 989 F.2d 1547, 1549 (9th Cir. 1993).
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situs test. This is apparent from the court’s statement: “[O]uter limits of the
maritime area will not be extended to extremes. We would not extend coverage
in this case to downtown Houston. The site must have some nexus with the
waterfront.”12 Id. at 514. The court then concluded that the injured employee
was within a situs protected by the LHWCA. Id. at 516. We have followed the
Winchester analysis in a number of cases.13
Our sister circuits have taken varying positions on the interpretation of
“other adjoining areas.”
In Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co. v. Herron, 568 F.2d 137, 139 (9th Cir.
1978), an employee was injured while unloading steel plates from a truck parked
at the employer’s gear locker, located some 2,600 feet north of the Columbia
River and outside the entrance gate of the port of Longview. The Ninth Circuit
concluded:
[T]he phrase “adjoining area” should be read to describe a functional
relationship that does not in all cases depend upon physical
contiguity. Consideration should be given to the following factors,
among others, in determining whether or not a site is an “adjoining
area” under section 903(a): the particular suitability of the site for
the maritime uses referred to in the statute; whether adjoining
properties are devoted primarily to uses in maritime commerce; the
proximity of the site to the waterway; and whether the site is as
close to the waterway as is feasible given all of the circumstances in
the case.
12
At oral argument, we learned that the port of Houston is approximately 5 miles from
downtown Houston. Counsel for the Director was unable to tell us how the claimant or the
employer would determine—short of trial—whether, in Winchester, if the injury had occurred
1 mile or 2 miles from the port of Houston, the claimant would have been injured in an area
adjoining navigable waters.
13
See Coastal Prod. Servs. Inc., 555 F.3d at 432–37; Reynolds v. Ingalls Shipbuilding
Div., Litton Sys., Inc., 788 F.2d 264, 272 (5th Cir. 1986), overruled on other grounds by Stewart
v. Dutra Const. Co., 543 U.S. 481, 496 (2005); Alford v. Am. Bridge Div. U.S. Steel Corp., 642
F.2d 807, 814 (5th Cir. 1981), vacated in part on reh’g, 655 F.2d 86.
9
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Id. at 141.14
In Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. DOWCP, 540 F.2d 629 (3d Cir. 1976), an
employee was using a truck to move cargo that had been unloaded from a vessel
to a building, so it could be further transported to a more permanent location.
The employee was injured on a public street in an area outside the terminal that
was not under the employer’s control. Id. at 632. The court held that the
restriction on coverage to an “other adjoining area” did not preclude coverage to
this employee. The court found situs had been established and stated, “[t]he key
is the functional relationship of the employee’s activity to maritime
transportation, as distinguished from such land-based activities as trucking,
railroading or warehousing.”15 Id. at 638.
In contrast, the Fourth Circuit has taken a much different approach—an
approach that adheres more faithfully to the plain language of the statute. In
Sidwell v. Express Container Services, Inc., 71 F.3d 1134 (4th Cir. 1995), the
facts were almost identical to the facts in the instant case. The plaintiff was a
shipping container mechanic who sought to recover benefits under the Act after
he was injured while repairing a container. Id. at 1135. His injury occurred at
his employer’s facility located approximately .8 miles from the closest ship
terminal in an area with diverse, non-maritime commercial and residential
facilities. Id.
14
In Cunningham v. DOWCP, 377 F.3d 98, 101 (1st Cir. 2004), the First Circuit
considered coverage for an injury to a pipe fitter who worked at the manufacturing facility of
his employer located some 3.5 miles from the employer’s shipyards where pipe units were
installed on ships. The court held that it had not determined a methodology for approaching
the question of “adjoining area,” but assumed the correctness of the Ninth Circuit’s broad
approach because it was clear that LHWCA coverage was foreclosed in any case. Id. at 105.
15
The Supreme Court, in Northeast Marine, criticized this opinion when it stated:
“The [Third] Circuit appears to have essentially discarded the situs test, holding that only ‘(an)
employment nexus (status) with marine activity is (necessary)’ and that the situs of the
maritime employee at the time of injury is irrelevant.” 432 U.S. at 278 n.40 (quoting Sea-Land
Servs., Inc., 540 F.2d at 638) (citations omitted).
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In deciding whether the employer’s container repair facility was an
“adjoining area,” the Fourth Circuit recognized that the Supreme Court had not
defined the term, but that the Third, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits had each adopted
expansive, yet differing approaches. Id. at 1136–37. After reviewing these
cases, the Sidwell court stated, “Because none of these proffered tests even
purports to follow the language of the statute—indeed, for the most part they all
openly disavow the statutory text—we decline to adopt any of these tests.” Id.
at 1138. The court held:
The plain language of the LHWCA requires that covered situses
actually “adjoin” navigable waters, not . . . that they merely be in
“the general geographic proximity” of the waterfront. Because
Congress did not specify a more technical definition of the word
“adjoining” (if that is even possible), we must accord that word its
ordinary meaning, as, incidentally, the legislative history confirms
Congress intended. To be sure, dictionaries do include “neighboring”
and “in the vicinity of” as possible definitions of “adjoining,” but
such is not the ordinary meaning of the word; rather, the ordinary
meaning of “adjoin” is “to lie next to,” to “be in contact with,” to
“abut upon,” or to be “touching or bounding at some point.”
Id. (footnotes omitted) (citations omitted).
The Sidwell court found support for its interpretation from the House
Report on the 1972 amendments: “The bill also expands the coverage of this Act
to cover injuries occurring in the contiguous dock area related to longshore and
ship repair work.”16
Responding to the argument that the word “adjoining” should be given a
broad meaning so as to accommodate Congress’s concerns about workers moving
in and out of coverage, the Sidwell court stated:
The LHWCA was enacted to address a specific problem, and the
actual language that Congress chose does just that. The problem,
as we have explained, was that longshorem[e]n loading and
16
S. Rep. No.92-1125, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 2 (1972) (emphasis added).
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unloading ships walked in and out of LHWCA coverage as they
walked the gangplank from ship to shore. In response, Congress
extended coverage to both navigable waters and “the adjoining land
area,” S. Rep. 92-1125, 92d Cong., 2d Sess. 13 (1972), so that the
longshoremen at both ends of the gangplank would be covered
equally by the LHWCA. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly
stated, “Congress intended that a worker’s eligibility for federal
benefits would not depend upon whether he was injured while
walking down a gangway or while taking his first step onto the
land”, P.C. Pfeiffer, 444 U.S. at 75; rather, coverage would extend to
“the waterfront areas where the overall loading and unloading
process occurs.” Northeast Marine, 432 U.S. at 272; see also Herb’s
Welding, 470 U.S. at 423 (explaining that Congress expanded
coverage to include “rather large shoreside areas” (emphasis
added)). The definition we adopt today ensures coverage for all
maritime employees injured in the waterfront areas where the
loading, unloading, and repair of vessels occurs, as Congress plainly
intended and as the Supreme Court has directed.
Id. at 1140.
The court made clear that its literal definition of adjoining could not be
circumvented by a broad interpretation of “area.”
Thus, an “other adjoining area” as to which coverage extends must
be like a “pier,” “wharf,” “dry dock,” “terminal,” “building way,” or
“marine railway.” Each of these enumerated “areas” is a discrete
structure or facility, the very raison d’etre of which is its use in
connection with navigable waters. Therefore, in order for an area
to constitute an “other area” under the statute, it must be a discrete
shoreside structure or facility.
Id. at 1139 (emphasis in original) (footnote omitted).
The court also indicated that it is the parcel of land underlying the
employer’s facility that must adjoin navigable waters, not the particular part of
that parcel upon which a claimant is injured. The court quoted our language in
Alabama Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Co. v. Kininess to demonstrate this point:
[The back lot upon which a crane was located by which claimant
was injured was somewhere] from 150 to 2,000 feet from the water’s
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edge. In any event, the physical distance is not decisive here. The
test is whether the situs is within a contiguous shipbuilding area
which adjoins the water. Alabama Dry Dock’s shipyard adjoins the
water. The lot was part of the shipyard, and was not separated from
the waters by facilities not used for shipbuilding.
Id. at 1140 n.11 (alteration in original) (quoting Ala. Dry Dock, 554 F.2d 176, 178
(5th Cir. 1977)).
Finally, the Sidwell court determined that Congress further restricted the
definition of “situs” by requiring the area to be: “customarily used by an
employer in loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.” 33
U.S.C. § 903(a). An “other adjoining area” seeking coverage as an LHWCA-
covered situs must therefore satisfy both a geographic and a functional
component. The court criticized other circuit courts such as the Third Circuit
Sea-Land court, which suggested that the functional component (an area
customarily used for designated maritime purposes) should be dispositive of the
situs inquiry. The court stated:
This language, however, is a further restriction upon “other
adjoining areas”—implying that there are areas adjoining navigable
waters that nonetheless do not meet the situs requirement because
they are not customarily so used—not an implicit elimination of the
requirement that the area first be adjoining navigable waters.[17]
In any event, reading the language in the manner proposed by the
Director collapses the separate status and situs requirements into
a single inquiry into status, in contravention of the Supreme Court’s
injunctions in Herb’s Welding and P.C. Pfeiffer that we not read the
status and situs requirements as one and the same.
Sidwell, 71 F.3d at 1139–40 n.10 (citations omitted).
17
We disagree with Winchester’s holding that even an injury that occurred in a facility
that did not border on navigable waters nevertheless satisfied the situs test if the “area” was
customarily used for loading and unloading or some other designated maritime purpose. See
Winchester, 632 F.2d at 515.
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In response to Sidwell’s reasoning, the Director has advanced two primary
arguments for avoiding the plain meaning of “adjoining.” First, the Director
argues that a broad definition of “adjoin” furthers the congressional goal of
preventing longshoremen from walking in and out of coverage. By reading
“adjoining” broadly, longshoremen would less frequently exit and enter the
perimeters of LHWCA coverage. However, as the Sidwell court explained,
Congress’s primary concern was that longshoremen constantly walked the
gangplank between the ship and the dock so that the worker injured on the dock
was not covered under the LHWCA and his co-worker injured on the ship was
covered. This loss of coverage when a longshoreman crossed the ship’s
gangplank was the inequity Congress sought to cure.18
Moreover, by adopting a situs requirement, Congress obviously recognized
that a longshoreman could still leave and re-enter the geographic bounds of
LHWCA coverage. As the Court in Herb’s Welding stated: “[T]here will always
be a boundary to coverage, and there will always be people who cross it during
their employment. If that phenomenon was enough to require coverage, the Act
would have to reach much further than anyone argues that it does or should.”
470 U.S. at 426–27 (citation omitted).
The Director also argues that as a compensation statute, the LHWCA
should be construed liberally in favor of coverage. See Ne. Marine, 432 U.S. at
268. However, the first rule of statutory construction is that we may not ignore
the plain language of a statute. See Matter of Appletree Markets, Inc., 19 F.3d
969, 974 (5th Cir. 1994) (“[T]o ignore the plain language of the statute would be
to substitute improperly our own policy predilections for the express intent of
18
See P.C. Pfeiffer Co., 444 U.S. at 75 (“By enlarging the covered situs . . . , Congress
intended that a worker’s eligibility for federal benefits would not depend on whether he was
injured while walking down a gangway or while taking his first step onto the land.”); see also
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Schwalb, 493 U.S. 40, 46 (1989).
14
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Congress.”). The LHWCA dictates that a covered situs actually adjoin navigable
waters, and we may not ignore this limitation.
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we adopt the Sidwell definition of
“adjoining” navigable water to mean “border on” or “be contiguous with”
navigable waters.19 We, therefore, overrule the contrary definition and analysis
of Winchester and its progeny inconsistent with this opinion. We adopt this
definition primarily because it is more faithful to the plain language of the
statute. We are also influenced by the fact that the vague definition of
“adjoining” we adopted thirty years ago in Winchester provides litigants and
courts, in cases such as this one, with little guidance in determining whether
coverage is provided by the Act.20 More than perhaps any other statutory
scheme, a worker’s compensation statute should be “geared toward a
nonlitigious, speedy, sure resolution of the compensation claims of injured
workers.” Winchester, 632 F.2d at 518 (Tjoflat, J., dissenting). One could hardly
imagine an area where predictability is more important.
Applying the Sidwell definition of “adjoining” to the instant case, there is
no dispute that the Chef Yard where Mr. Zepeda’s injury occurred did not adjoin
navigable waters. Because the Chef Yard did not border upon and was not
contiguous with navigable waters, it is not an LHWCA-covered situs.21
19
See also BRYAN GARNER, GARNER’S DICTIONARY OF LEGAL USAGE 25 (3d ed. 2011)
(“Etymologically, adjoining means ‘directly abutting; contiguous’ . . . .”).
20
Also, as demonstrated by this case, our former vague definition of “adjoining area”
makes it difficult for an employer to know whether it should purchase insurance coverage for
injuries under the Act.
21
Because we determine that the Act’s situs requirement is not satisfied in this case,
we need not address the question of whether Mr. Zepeda’s employment activities would satisfy
the Act’s status requirement.
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For these reasons we VACATE the award of the BRB against NODSI and
REMAND for further proceedings as necessary against the alternate employer,
New Orleans Marine Contractors.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
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No. 11-60057
EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge, with whom JOLLY, JONES,
SMITH, PRADO, OWEN, and ELROD, Circuit Judges, join, concurring:
I fully concur in the majority’s formulation of the situs inquiry, finding it
to be a faithful application of the plain text of the LHWCA. I write separately
to explain why the status requirement is not met in this case, even under the
generous precedent established by this circuit and the Supreme Court.
This en banc decision to return the situs inquiry to its textual roots will
certainly impose a natural limitation on the status of employees who are eligible
under the LHWCA. But both Congress and the Supreme Court have
acknowledged that the situs and status inquiries are separate and distinct, and
that a claimant must establish both before he can recover under the LHWCA.
See, e.g., 33 U.S.C. §§ 903(a), 902(3); Herb’s Welding, Inc. v. Gray, 470 U.S. 414,
415–16 (1985). It is important to clarify the status test to ensure that this
circuit’s application of the LHWCA as a whole remains true to its proper
purpose. As the status inquiry provides an alternative ground to vacate the
decision of the Benefits Review Board, this discussion is not dictum. U.S. v.
Potts, 644 F.3d 233, 237 n.3 (5th Cir. 2011) (explaining that an alternative
holding is binding precedent).1
I. Controlling Precedent
An individual located on a proper situs will qualify as a covered employee
under the LHWCA only if he is also “engaged in maritime employment.” 33
U.S.C. § 902(3). This statute provides that, for example, “any longshoreman or
other person engaged in longshoring operations, and any harbor-worker
including a ship repairman, shipbuilder, and ship-breaker,” has the status of a
maritime employee. Id. The Supreme Court has acknowledged that the Act also
1
Prior to this en banc decision, the situs inquiry was often used to bolster and provide
context for the status inquiry. The change in the nature of the situs inquiry provides an
additional reason to clarify the proper formulation of the status inquiry.
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extends to cover workers other than those in the delineated occupations,
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Schwalb, 493 U.S. 40, 45 (1989), as long as the
worker is “engaged in loading, unloading, repairing, or building a vessel.” P.C.
Pfeiffer Co. v. Ford, 444 U.S. 69, 79 (1979) (quoting S. Rep. No. 92-1125 (1972)
and H.R.Rep. No. 92-1441 (1972)).
As acknowledged in Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Schwalb, “the
maritime employment requirement as applied to land-based work other than
longshoring and the other occupations named in § 902(3) is an occupational test
focusing on loading and unloading. Those not involved in those functions do not
have the benefit of the Act.” 493 U.S. at 46 (citing Herb’s Welding, 470 U.S. at
424). In the context of the LHWCA, loading and unloading includes those tasks
incident to the process of “handling of cargo as it moves between sea and land
transportation,” Ne. Marine Terminal Co., Inc. v. Caputo, 432 U.S. 249, 267,
273–74 (1977), because such tasks are of the sort traditionally performed by
longshoremen, see Ford, 444 U.S. at 74, 81–82. Thus, “land-based activity
occurring within the § 903 situs will be deemed maritime . . . if it is an integral
or essential part of loading or unloading a vessel,” viewed from the position of a
longshoreman or harborworker. Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 45 (emphasis added).
Maritime employment does not extend to workers “beyond those actually
involved in moving cargo between ship and land transportation.” Herb’s
Welding, 470 U.S. at 424.
In Schwalb, the Supreme Court recognized that “employees who are
injured while maintaining or repairing equipment essential to the loading or
unloading process,” in addition to longshoremen who physically handle cargo,
are covered by the LHWCA. 493 U.S. at 47. It premised this conclusion on the
fact that the process of loading and unloading vessels would stop if the
machinery used by the longshoremen became broken, clogged, or fouled. An
individual who either fixed that machinery or ensured that such a breakdown
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did not occur was “just as vital to and an integral part of the loading process as
the operator of the equipment,” id., sufficient to trigger application of the
LHWCA.
This circuit applied a version of this test in Hullinghorst Indus., Inc. v.
Carroll, 650 F.2d 750, 754–58 (5th Cir. 1981), to hold that a carpenter injured
while building scaffolding beneath a pier was a maritime employee for purposes
of the LHWCA. Although the carpenter had no direct involvement in loading or
unloading, his scaffolding work “was an integral step in a maritime project of the
type that could be performed by a typical harborworker,” and “directly furthered
. . . the loading and unloading of ships” by enabling the owner of the pier to
perform its core longshoring operations. Id. at 756. Because a loading company
would have otherwise had to provide for the repair of its piers, an employee
engaged in that activity was covered under the LHWCA even if he was employed
as an independent contractor. See id. at 757–58.
II. Discussion
Juan Zepeda was not involved in the process of moving cargo between ship
and land transportation. His task was to repair empty containers, some of which
may have been used in maritime shipping. The now-vacated panel opinion
nevertheless concluded that, because containers themselves are “integral” or
“essential” to the loading process, the repair of such containers triggered
application of the LHWCA. See Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 45 (“[L]and-based activity
occurring within the § 903 situs will be deemed maritime only if it is an integral
or essential part of loading or unloading a vessel.”).
Although this conclusion is not an unreasonable interpretation of
“integral” and “essential” as those words are understood on their own, the panel
opinion as a whole divorces Schwalb and its predecessors from their roots.
Schwalb stands for the proposition that employees who repair equipment used
by longshoremen to load or unload vessels are just as essential to the loading
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process as the individuals who load or unload the cargo, because the actual
process, once begun, would be arrested in the absence of their contributions. See
id. at 48 (noting the “determinative consideration” was that the “ship loading
process could not continue” in the absence of the repair). Because these workers
repair the tools and instrumentalities that longshoremen rely on to execute their
tasks, they are “engaged in the type of duties that longshoremen perform in
transferring goods between ship and land transportation,” Ford, 444 U.S. at 81,
and covered by the LHWCA.
On its own terms and against the backdrop of Caputo, Ford, and Herb’s
Welding, Schwalb does not create a rule under which all employees who repair
any equipment that may be used in the loading process are similarly integral.
If this were the inquiry, it would only be a short step to the conclusion that a
manufacturer of shoes or walkie talkies should be covered, because, arguably,
the modern loading process cannot be accomplished without those items. But
the LHWCA does not provide a but-for test for determining coverage. Instead,
the statute looks to the customary maritime functions of dockworkers, albeit
without an eye toward who is actually performing those functions. See Schwalb,
493 U.S. at 46; Ford, 444 U.S. at 81–82; Caputo, 432 U.S. at 273–74. With this
understanding, the proper question when defining the status of an employee
under the LHWCA is whether the task that the employee engages in is the type
of customary maritime work that a dockworker or longshoreman would have to
perform in order to successfully transfer cargo between ship and land
transportation. See Ford, 444 U.S. at 81.
This inquiry distinguishes tasks necessary to execute a loading process
from the perspective of a longshoreman—such as repair of a longshoreman’s
tools and facilities—from tasks that are only tangentially connected to the
loading process. Construed broadly, the first category may capture a person
whose sole responsibility is to sweep clear a loading ramp. It may even include
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someone who repairs broken dollies in between loading jobs. But it does not
include, for example, a manufacturer of cardboard boxes. The way that cargo
arrives at port may determine how the loading and unloading process is
executed, but nothing about the production of the container is the customary job
of a harborworker or longshoreman.2
Although container repair is not customarily the task of longshoremen,
courts have recognized that container repair satisfies the status test in some
instances. For example, the Eleventh Circuit has held that container repair is
“integral” or “essential” to the loading process when it “consist[s] of making . . .
outbound, loaded chassis road worthy” and when, “[w]ithout the essential
maintenance necessary to make the outbound rigs road worthy, the unloading
process would stop indefinitely at the Port Authority.” Atl. Container Serv., Inc.
v. Coleman, 904 F.2d 611, 613, 618 (11th Cir. 1990). In other words, container
repair satisfies the status inquiry when it is one step in the direct chain of
unloading a ship, and when “the maintenance men would [halt] the entire
loading process” if they were not available for the repair. Sea-Land Serv., Inc.
v. Rock, 953 F.2d 56, 67 (3d Cir. 1992) (citing Coloma v. Dir., Office of Workers’
Comp. Programs, 897 F.2d 394, 400 (9th Cir. 1990)); accord Schwalb, 493 U.S.
at 48 (“The determinative consideration is that the ship loading process could
not continue unless the retarder that Goode worked on was operating properly.
It is notable that the loading actually was stopped while Goode made the repairs
and that one of his supervisors apparently expressed the desire that Goode hurry
up so that the loading could continue.”); Sidwell v. Va. Int’l Terminals, Inc., 372
F.3d 238, 243 (4th Cir. 2004) (“This standard makes the capacity to interrupt
ongoing longshoring activities paramount.”).
2
So stated, this distinction also avoids the red herring argument that what is “integral”
to the loading or unloading process depends on the size and financial capabilities of the entity
supplying that product or service.
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However, container repair does not satisfy this standard when it is not of
the sort that is, or would have been, traditionally performed by longshoremen
or harborworkers. Zepeda’s work—the repair of empty containers that were
neither headed for delivery nor toward a ship for transport, and indeed may well
have been destined for a truck or train rather than a vessel—is clearly of this
second character. This was not an instance in which the containers came off of
a ship needing repair, and Zepeda was on hand to perform such repairs essential
or necessary to ensure that the containers made it to their final destination.
Nothing about Zepeda’s work was done with the purpose of assisting a
longshoreman or harborworker execute his task, and nothing about the maritime
nature of the location at which Zepeda worked, even if it was to be considered a
proper situs, was functionally related to his repair work. In short, Zepeda’s work
was not “essential” or “integral” to a longshoreman’s task of loading or unloading
a vessel, because nothing about Zepeda’s work was part of the process of “moving
cargo between ship and land transportation.” Herb’s Welding, 470 U.S. at 424.
III. Conclusion
The LHWCA is to be “liberally construed in conformance with its purpose,
and in a way which avoids harsh and incongruous results.” Caputo, 432 U.S. at
266 (quoting Voris v. Eikel, 346 U.S. 328, 333 (1953)). But incongruity is a two-
sided inquiry. Zepeda, an individual who never loaded or unloaded a vessel,
never assisted anyone else load or unload a vessel, and never witnessed a vessel
being loaded or unloaded, is “a far cry from the paradigmatic longshoreman who
walked in and out of coverage during his workday and spent substantial
amounts of his time ‘on navigable waters.’” Herb’s Welding, 470 U.S. at 427 n.13.
Constructing the status inquiry so as to include Zepeda would make application
of the Act unwieldy as to those who should be covered, and create a lack of
uniformity between individuals such as Zepeda and similarly situated non-
maritime employees who are limited to state compensation schemes. Under the
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precedent defining status established by this circuit and the Supreme Court, I
would hold that Zepeda was not a maritime employee for purposes of the
LHWCA while employed by NODSI.
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HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
Farsightedly or fortuitously, Congress in 1972 amended the Longshore and
Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (Longshore Act), 33 U.S.C. §§ 901–50,
legislation that this Court applied in Textports Stevedore Co. v. Winchester, 632
F.2d 504 (5th Cir. 1980) (en banc), setting forth a two-part rule that extended
benefits coverage to injuries not just on navigable waters, but also at specific
“adjoining” facilities (“pier, wharf, dry dock, terminal, building way, marine
railway”), as well as any “other adjoining area customarily used by an employer
in loading, unloading, repairing, dismantling, or building a vessel.” 33 U.S.C.
§ 903(a). Congress sought to be comprehensive of common shipping facilities,
such as piers, docks, and wharfs, as well as other “adjoining” property provided
that the property is “used by an employer in loading, unloading, repairing,
dismantling, or building a vessel.” Id. Not to restrict coverage to nomenclature,
Congress in § 903(a) extended coverage to “other adjoining areas,” but again,
only if such areas are used for vessel-related activities.
In my view, this necessity of proximity to a navigable waterway as well as
with the functional requirement that the area is “customarily used for loading,
unloading, repairing . . . a vessel” (emphasis added), requires reversal in the case
before us because the Chef Yard area was not used to load or unload or repair
vessels. Its use, like many current and under-construction container terminals
(some even named “inland ports”) was container repair, storage, and
transshipment by ground, air, or sea. These container yards do exist to support
port, air, and rail gateways, but they have emerged since Congress’ amendments
to the Longshore Act and we cannot declare that just because of their recent
essentiality, they have become areas that load, unload or repair vessels.
This short plain language analysis necessitates reversal in this case
because the Benefits Review Board, utilizing dicta from our decision in Coastal
Production Services, Inc. v. Hudson, 555 F.3d 426 (5th Cir. 2009), that Longshore
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Act coverage could extend beyond vessel work to more general work “associated
with items used as part of the loading process,” id. at 434, goes beyond Congress’
legislation and its purpose, indeed, beyond the reality of cargo shipping
prevalent fifty years ago. It may be that Congress will determine that
containers have become the functional equivalent of vessel-loading equipment,
like cranes, or are becoming even the functional equivalent of the holds of vessels
themselves. But I do not think that we enlarge the commonsense meaning of
the word “vessel” ourselves.
Consequently, I would reverse the Benefits Review Board decision and
clarify that the clause “associated with items used as part of the loading process”
in Hudson cannot be understood to expand Longshore Act coverage beyond areas
that operate to load and repair vessels to areas that operate to store and repair
the cargo containers that go onto vessels and trains and trucks.
Deciding this case on the word “vessel,” I would not reach whether we
would answer differently what the word “adjoin” meant to Congress half a
century ago. Contemporaneous with that syntactical choice, our court, then also
sitting en banc, gave its reasoned answer, not withholding Longshore Act
coverage when the area of injury was a dock equipment room that, unlike two
other gear rooms, was not “on the docks” abutting the water because “the docks
had insufficient space for an additional gear room,” so it had to be located five
blocks away. Winchester, 632 F.2d at 507.
I would not disturb our decision in Winchester because it is time-settled,
cf. Dickerson v. United States, 530 U.S. 428 (2000); because it was authored by
a majority of judges who were contemporaries with the statute they were
interpreting; because that decision, defining “adjoin” as adjacent, is as faithful
to Congress’ literal instruction as the majority’s decision today assigning a strict
contiguity meaning; and because the rule propounded by Congress, applied by
us in Winchester, announced a layered approach which has proven fair and
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workable over fifty years of change that always will be the circumstance of
longshoreman work.
Even etymologically, I do not think we are in a position to say there is
certainty that “adjoin” means contiguousness, not adjacency. Shakespeare spoke
of the hills “adjoining” Alexandria. From the standpoint of persons, industry,
and legislators, unbroken contiguity to navigable water is impractical for
reasons that our court identified in Winchester and that are even more pressing
today: land abutting water is finite and expensive, yet ship size and cargo
capacity, total shipping volume, and loading and offloading equipment are ever-
increasing. See Winchester, 632 F.2d at 513–14.
Neither the record in this case, nor in any case drawn to our attention,
suggests that Congress’ layered approach, applied in Winchester, has proven
unworkable.1 Indeed, if impracticality or uncertainty or injustice has occurred,
Congress would receive and test that proposition in hearings and tighten the
interpretation of § 903(a) that we have applied for almost half a century. But no
reference to a proposal for legislative action has been drawn to our attention. By
contrast, this court in Winchester, at the time presiding over port, shipping and
longshoreman activity from Florida to Texas, pointed out that a strict abutment
rule could exacerbate the very gangplank benefits coverage problem Congress
sought to alleviate. 632 F.2d at 514–15. Employers could relocate obvious
longshoreman’s work across a property break. This in fact was the circumstance
in Winchester, compelled not by a desire to withhold benefits but simply because
there was no more dock space. Id. at 507.2
1
During oral argument, the Hudson case was identified as proof of unpredictability.
But in Hudson, there was no contiguity problem because the platform where the injury
occurred was located entirely at sea. See 555 F.3d at 428.
2
Unsurprisingly, during oral argument to us, the answer candidly was given that
rescinding Winchester would mean coverage would cease. There is no reason to criticize or call
into question that answer. A property break could mean substantial cost savings which would
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For the above reasons, I concur in the judgment of the court.
be sensible, though the rule behind it would not be.
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CARL E. STEWART, Chief Judge, dissenting, joined by DENNIS and GRAVES,
Circuit Judges:
Over thirty years ago, our en banc court confronted the same issue we
confront today: how to interpret the geographic component of the situs test in the
Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act (“LHWCA” or “the Act”) and
specifically, how to define “adjoining area” under the Act.1 Texports Stevedore
Co. v. Winchester, 632 F.2d 504 (5th Cir. 1980) (en banc), cert denied, 452 U.S.
905 (1981). The Winchester majority adopted a broad definition of “adjoining
area” that was in keeping with the plain meaning of the words, as well as “the
spirit of the congressional purposes.” Id. at 514. The decades since Winchester
was decided have revealed no catastrophic consequences of that decision.
Nonetheless, the majority now overrules this precedent and adopts the Fourth
Circuit’s more restrictive definition of “adjoining area,” thereby enhancing an
existing circuit split. As I find no compelling reason to alter the LHWCA legal
landscape in this circuit, I respectfully dissent.
I.
To support its adoption of the Fourth Circuit’s test, Sidwell v. Express
Container Servs., Inc., 71 F.3d 1134 (4th Cir. 1995), the majority advances two
arguments critical of Winchester: (1) the court provided only vague instructions
as to how to analyze the totality of the circumstances; and (2) that the court’s
interpretation of “adjoining area” is not faithful to the plain language of the
LHWCA. I address each argument in turn.
1
Under the Act, compensation is owed for the disability or death of an employee where
the injury causing such death or disability occurs “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) (emphasis added).
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A.
The majority criticizes Winchester for dispensing “vague instructions [that]
provided little guidance to other courts or future litigants on how to determine
from ‘the circumstances’ whether a claimant satisfies the situs test.” Slip Op.
at 7. However, in the thirty-three years since it was passed, Winchester has not
proven to be overly vague or unworkable. Indeed, the standard is clear enough
that since 1980, there have been only nine cases in this circuit where the
meaning of “adjoining area” was contested. Moreover, few of these cases
challenged the application of Winchester to land-based operations. Coastal Prod.
Servs., Inc. v. Hudson, 555 F.3d 426 (5th Cir. 2009) (deciding that fixed loading
platform was a maritime situs); Thibodeaux v. Grasso Prod. Mgmt. Inc., 370 F.3d
486 (5th Cir. 2004) (holding that a fixed oil production platform was not a
covered situs); Boomtown Belle Casino v. Bazor, 313 F.3d 300 (5th Cir. 2002)
(holding that floating casino was not a covered situs); E. J. Fields Mach. Works
Inc v. Guidry, 54 F. App’x 793 (5th Cir. 2002) (per curiam) (unpublished)
(affirming LHWCA situs status for job shop specializing in the repair and
construction of marine parts where shop was one-hundred feet from river and
located in area customarily used for maritime activity); Mobil Mining &
Minerals v. Nixson, 209 F.3d 719 (5th Cir. 2000) (per curiam) (unpublished)
(holding injury at premises adjacent to the Houston Ship Channel occurred on
a covered situs); Sisson v. Davis & Sons, Inc., 131 F.3d 555 (5th Cir. 1998) (per
curiam) (holding that injury in a parking lot did not occur on a covered situs);
Universal Fabricators, Inc. v. Smith, 878 F.2d 843 (5th Cir. 1989) (upholding
ALJ’s situs determination where employer’s yard adjoined navigable waters);
Reynolds v. Ingalls Shipbldg. Div., Litton Sys., Inc., 788 F.2d 264 (5th Cir. 1986)
(discussing coverage for seaman injured at sea); Alford v. Am. Bridge Div., U.S.
Steel Corp., 642 F.2d 807 (5th Cir. Apr. 1981), modified in part, 668 F.2d 791
(5th Cir. Sept. 1981) (holding employer’s location on the Sabine River fell within
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the situs requirement). Additionally, Petitioners have presented no industry
reports, data, hearings, or related information to support any alleged negative
effects Winchester has had on the maritime industry.
In the absence of any compelling evidence of Winchester’s dysfunction or
change in the maritime industry, I decline to join the majority in overruling well-
reasoned precedent of this en banc court that involves carefully-considered
statutory interpretation. “[S]tare decisis in respect to statutory interpretation
has ‘special force,’ for ‘Congress remains free to alter what we have done.’” John
R. Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States, 552 U.S. 130, 139 (2008) (quoting
Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 491 U.S. 164, 172-73 (1989)).
B.
The majority also reasons that the Fourth Circuit’s interpretation of
“adjoining area” is more faithful to the plain language of the statute. The
Winchester Court observed that “adjoin” could be defined as “contiguous to or to
border upon,” as well as “to be close to or to be near.” 632 F.2d at 514 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted). The Winchester court chose to adopt the
second set of definitions in accordance with its interpretation of congressional
intent. Id. In repudiating this interpretation, the majority here cites with
approval Sidwell’s comment that while “dictionaries do include ‘neighboring’ and
‘in the vicinity of’ as possible definitions of ‘adjoining,’ . . . such is not the
ordinary meaning of the word.” 71 F.3d 1134, 1138.
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary defines “adjoining” as
“touching or bounding at some point or on some line: near in space.” Webster’s
Third New Int’l Dictionary 27 (1993). Other dictionaries define adjoining
similarly—that is, with more than one definition, one of which does not require
contiguity. See, e.g., Am. Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 22 (1992)
(“neighboring; contiguous”); but see Black’s Law Dictionary 62 (1968) (“The word
in its etymological sense means touching or contiguous, as distinguished from
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lying near to or adjacent.”). The majority refuses to construe “adjoining area”
liberally because “the first rule of statutory construction is that we may not
ignore the plain language of the statute.” However, this argument does not
recognize the multiple ordinary meanings of “adjoining” nor the ambiguity
intrinsic in defining how far from shore an “adjacent area” extends. Such
ambiguities as these may be resolved by applying canons of statutory
interpretation, including an analysis of legislative history. See Perrone v. Gen.
Motors Acceptance Corp., 232 F.3d 433, 440 (5th Cir. 2000).
Accordingly, the Winchester court reasonably—and properly, in my
opinion—sought to resolve the issue by looking to congressional intent and
Supreme Court precedent. See, e.g., Winchester, 632 F.2d at 514-15; see also Ne.
Marine Terminal Co. v. Caputo, 432 U.S. 249, 261-65 (1977) (describing
expansion of LHWCA coverage under 1972 amendments). The Winchester
court’s broad reading of the complete clause,“adjoining area,” also was consistent
with “[o]ne of the primary motivations for Congress’ decision to extend [LHWCA]
coverage shoreward,” which was the “recognition that the advent of modern
cargo-handling techniques had moved much of the longshoreman’s work off the
vessel and onto land.” Caputo, 432 U.S. at 269-70. Attendant to this recognition
is the practical reality that the amount of land contiguous to the water is
limited. Consider the following scenario: A company maintains three gear
rooms, all of which are supervised by the same shop foreman. Two of those gear
rooms are on the docks, but the third is located a few blocks away from the docks
because there was insufficient space for an additional gear room on the docks,
and the company could find no space closer to the docks.2 Under the majority’s
2
This is the factual background presented by Winchester, 632 F.2d at 506-07. See also
Parker v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs, 75 F.3d 929 (4th Cir. 1996), rejected on
other grounds by Ingalls Shipbldg., Inc. v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs, 519 U.S.
248 (1997) (concluding facility was not a covered situs where state had terminated employer’s
lease for part of the terminal, forcing employer to locate part of its facility one mile from
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strict interpretation of the Act, a worker injured in the gear room on the docks
will be covered under the LHWCA, but an identical worker injured under the
same circumstances at the off-dock location will not be covered. While I
acknowledge that “there will always be a boundary to coverage,” Herb’s Welding,
Inc. v. Gray, 470 U.S. 414, 426-27 (1985), I am not convinced Congress intended
this type of “harsh and incongruous” result. Caputo, 432 U.S. at 268 (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted).
Moreover, as Petitioner conceded at oral argument, adopting a narrow
definition of “adjoining area” would allow maritime employers to circumvent
LHWCA coverage by purchasing land with a narrow gap separating it from the
water. See, e.g., Walker v. Metro Mach. Corp., 50 F. App’x 104 (4th Cir. 2002)
(per curiam) (unpublished) (declining to disturb ALJ’s decision finding facility
was not a covered situs because employer’s waterfront facility was divided into
two areas separated by a fenced-off path owned by the city, and employee was
injured in area not contiguous to navigable waters).
II.
Although the majority discusses the circuit split that exists between the
Fourth and Ninth Circuits3, it fails to observe the extent to which the Fourth
Circuit’s test is an outlier among circuits that have addressed this issue. No
other circuit has adopted Sidwell’s restrictive test. Instead, the trend is to adopt
a more expansive view of coverage. See Consolidation Coal Co. v. Benefits
Review Bd., 629 F.3d 322, 330-31 (3d Cir. 2010) (adopting a liberal reading of
“adjoining area” after looking to Winchester and the Ninth Circuit, and
specifically rejecting the Sidwell approach); Cunningham v. Dir., Office of
navigable waters, even though maritime employees traveled between the terminal facility and
the off-site facility).
3
Brady-Hamilton Stevedore Co. v. Herron, 568 F.2d 137, 139 (9th Cir. 1978).
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Workers’ Comp. Programs, 377 F.3d 98, 105 (1st Cir. 2004) (assuming without
deciding that ALJ and Benefits Review Board were correct to apply Ninth
Circuit’s approach); Garvey Grain Co. v. Dir., Office of Workers’ Comp. Programs,
639 F.2d 366, 369-71 (7th Cir. 1981) (applying a “liberal” test following Caputo).
Additionally, the majority’s decision creates a split with the Eleventh Circuit,
which continues to apply Winchester. See, e.g., Ramos v. Dir., OWCP, 486 F.
App’x 775 (11th Cir. 2012) (per curiam) (unpublished). Given the importance of
maintaining uniformity in maritime law, I disagree with the majority’s decision
to move away from the more liberal interpretation favored by the majority of
circuits that have addressed the issue.
III.
As I also disagree with Judge Clement’s concurrence, I briefly address the
key difficulties with her separate opinion.
In addition to the situs requirement already discussed, an injured
claimant must also satisfy the status requirement. See 33 U.S.C. § 902(3) (“The
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 . . . .”).
The Act does not define “maritime employment,” but the Supreme Court has
explained that “employees who are injured while maintaining or repairing
equipment essential to the loading or unloading process are covered by the
Act. . . . 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.” Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Schwalb, 493 U.S. 40, 47 (1989).
The concurrence argues that “container repair is not customarily the task
of longshoremen . . . .” Concurrence Slip Op. at 5. Respectfully, I disagree.
While this statement may have been true many years ago, it does not
acknowledge the changes in the maritime industry in the twentieth century that
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were reflected in the 1972 amendments to the LHWCA and subsequent Supreme
Court precedent. As the Supreme Court recognized thirty-five years ago, “the
container is the modern substitute for the hold of the vessel.” Caputo, 432 U.S.
at 270. Moreover, I find it persuasive that the Benefits Review Board decided
over thirty years ago that container repair mechanics are engaged in maritime
employment. See, e.g., Cabezas, 11 Ben. Rev. Bd. Serv. (MB) 279 (1979), Parker,
8 Ben. Rev. Bd. Serv. (MB) 321 (1978).
The concurrence then distinguishes between two types of container repair:
(1) repair that is “one step in the direct chain of unloading a ship and when ‘the
maintenance men would [halt] the entire loading process’ if they were not
available for the repair” and (2) repair “not of the sort that is, or would have
been, traditionally performed by longshoremen or harborworkers.” Concurrence
Slip Op. at 5-6. I find this distinction problematic. The concurrence does not lay
out a clear test for this distinction but relies on four characteristics of Zepeda’s
work to find that he falls into the second category—the containers Zepeda
repaired were (1) empty, (2) not headed for delivery, (3) not headed toward a ship
for transport, and (4) “may well have been destined for a truck or train rather
than a vessel.” Concurrence Slip Op. at 6. The concurrence has cited no
authority, nor am I aware of any such authority, that would support the
adoption of tests requiring a quantitative assessment of a container’s contents
or a requirement that each individual container an employee works on be
tracked from its origin to its ultimate destination. Furthermore, the
concurrence’s assertions contradict the ALJ’s findings, which are “conclusive if
supported by substantial evidence in the record considered as a whole.” 33
U.S.C. § 921(b)(3). The ALJ found, based on the weight of the evidence, that
Zepeda worked on Evergreen marine containers while he was a NODSI
employee. There is substantial evidence in the record to support this conclusion,
including testimony that (1) some of the Evergreen containers repaired by
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NODSI were used for marine transportation; (2) some of the containers were
offloaded at the Port of New Orleans; (3) it was common for empty containers to
be loaded onto and unloaded from ships; (4) NODSI initially only serviced
Evergreen containers and was required under Evergreen’s labor contract to hire
unionized maritime workers who were the only workers permitted to work on
marine containers; and (5) when Zepeda began working for NODSI, he was a
unionized maritime worker. Repair of marine containers lies within the scope
of maritime employment, and the proper functioning of these containers,
including maintenance and repair when damage is discovered, is essential to the
loading and unloading process. “It is irrelevant that an employee’s contribution
to the loading process is not continuous or that repair or maintenance is not
always needed.” Schwalb, 493 U.S. at 47.
Finally, the concurrence appears to disregard the need for companies to
engage in maintenance and repair before the container condition becomes so
degraded as to render it unusable and a physical impediment to the loading or
unloading process. The Supreme Court recognized the necessity of continuously
maintaining equipment with the goal toward preventing machinery breakage.
See id. (“When machinery breaks down or becomes clogged or fouled because of
the lack of cleaning, the loading process stops until the difficulty is cured.”).
Thus, an individual who prevents that stoppage is covered under the LHWCA
because his work is integral to maintaining a smooth loading and unloading
process. The concurrence turns this objective—to prevent stoppages in loading
and unloading—on its head by essentially requiring the process to stop before
an employee’s work is integral. Certainly, if Evergreen repaired none of their
containers until they were so broken as to spill cargo during the loading or
unloading process, that process would stop. That Evergreen has made the
prudent business decision to prevent such occurrences should not deprive its
contracted workers of LHWCA coverage.
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IV.
The Winchester en banc court adopted an approach that gave effect to each
part of the statute, relied on definitions of the statutory terms that are
consistent with congressional intent, and abided by the Supreme Court’s
guidance to take an expansive view of the post-1972 coverage provisions.
Beyond Petitioner’s obvious disenchantment with the ALJ’s granting relief to
Zepeda, I see no reason to overrule our precedent. Similarly, the ALJ’s finding
that Zepeda was a covered maritime worker was well supported by precedent.
For the reasons above, I am satisfied that no changes to the maritime industry
or other societal forces compel the conclusion that our precedent as to situs
should be overturned or that we should construct a new test for determining
status.
36