An American seaman sued a shipowner in a Federal District Court
to recover for injuries inflicted upon him by a fellow seaman who
while drunk attacked him aboard the ship. On the facts of the case,
the District Court found that the assailant was "a person of
dangerous propensities and proclivities" at the time of the
assault; that he was "a person of violent character, belligerent
disposition, excessive drinking habits, disposed to fighting and
making threats and assaults," and that he was not "equal in
disposition and seamanship to the ordinary men in the calling."
Held: the warranty of seaworthiness extends to the crew
as well as to the ship and the gear, the record sustains the
District Court's findings, and the findings warrant recovery for
breach of the warranty of seaworthiness. Pp.
348 U. S.
336-340.
211 F.2d 618 reversed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by an American seaman against the owner and
operator of an ocean freighter, the
Mason Lykes, on which
he was formerly employed. He based his claim for recovery both on
negligence and on breach of the warranty of seaworthiness. The case
was tried by the
Page 348 U. S. 337
court upon waiver of jury. The District Court found for the
plaintiff, holding that the shipowner breached its warranty of
seaworthiness and that its officers were negligent.
112 F.
Supp. 177. The Court of Appeals reversed, 211 F.2d 618. We
granted certiorari to resolve a seeming conflict between that
opinion and
Keen v. Overseas Tankship Corp., 194 F.2d 515,
decided by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. 348 U.S.
814.
Plaintiff was employed in the engine department as an oiler. The
ship had a deck maintenance man named Manuel Gonzales. Plaintiff's
injury was inflicted by Gonzales who, during the course of a
night's drinking party, went to plaintiff's room and took a bottle
of brandy from under plaintiff's bed. Plaintiff awoke, startled,
and Gonzales attacked him with the bottle, causing severe
injuries.
The District Court placed liability for breach of the warranty
of seaworthiness on the holding of the
Keen case, where
Judge Learned Hand wrote:
"The warranty of seaworthiness as to hull and gear has never
meant that the ship shall withstand every violence of wind and
weather; all it means is that she shall be reasonably fit for the
voyage in question. Applied to a seaman, such a warranty is not
that the seaman is competent to meet all contingencies, but that he
is equal in disposition and seamanship to the ordinary men in the
calling."
194 F.2d 518.
The District Court found that Gonzales was not "equal in
disposition and seamanship to the ordinary men in the calling." 112
F. Supp. 180.
The assault by Gonzales on plaintiff occurred in the early
morning of November 25, 1949. This happened during the course of a
drinking party on board in which much liquor was consumed, Gonzales
drinking nearly a fifth. Gonzales was indeed drunk when he
assaulted plaintiff. The evidence is disputed, but the District
Page 348 U. S. 338
Court found that, shortly after Gonzales struck plaintiff with
the bottle, he returned with a large knife which he also intended
to use on him. When plaintiff was taken to the ship's hospital,
Gonzales created a disturbance outside -- threatening the mate,
trying to enter the sick-bay, and offering to give blood to
plaintiff for a transfusion. Those events followed on the heels of
the assault.
About six hours after the assault, Gonzales was ordered to the
master's cabin, where he refused to make any statement about the
assault. Later, he was ordered to clean the ship's hospital.
Instead of doing that, he left the ship against orders. Early in
the afternoon, Gonzales returned to the ship with bottles of
liquor, at which time the captain apprehended him, took the bottles
away, and placed him in irons -- a step which the captain testified
he seldom used.
The next day, November 26, Gonzales left the vessel without
leave, and did not return until the morning of November 28, when he
was logged for disobedience of orders and fined for being absent
without leave. On return of the
Mason Lykes to the United
States, Gonzales was discharged by the captain, though, since that
time, he has served on respondent's vessels.
On the basis of these facts, the District Court found that
Gonzales was "a person of dangerous propensities and proclivities"
at the time of his assault on plaintiff; that Gonzales was "a
person of violent character, belligerent disposition, excessive
drinking habits, disposed to fighting and making threats and
assaults."
We think the record does not warrant rejection of the District
Court's findings, and that the findings warrant recovery for breach
of the warranty of seaworthiness.
The warranty of seaworthiness is a species of liability without
fault.
The Osceola, 189 U. S. 158;
Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 328 U. S.
85,
328 U. S. 90-94.
Yet it does not
Page 348 U. S. 339
mean that the shipowner is liable for injuries "resulting from
every sailor's brawl," as Judge Learned Hand put it in
Jones v.
Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., 204 F.2d 815, 816. It does not mean
that the owner is liable every time a seaman gets drunk and does
damage to a member of the crew. It does not mean that the owner is
liable for injuries from all the fisticuffs on shipboard.
"All men are to some degree irascible; every workman is apt to
be angry when a fellow complains of his work to their common
superior; and some will harbor their resentment and provoke a
quarrel over it even after the lapse of several hours. Sailors lead
a rough life, and are more apt to use their fists than office
employees; what will seem to sedentary and protected persons an
insufficient provocation for a personal encounter is not the
measure of the 'disposition' of 'the ordinary men in the
calling.'"
Jones v. Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., supra, 204 F.2d
817.
The warranty of seaworthiness does not mean that the ship can
weather all storms. It merely means that "the vessel is reasonably
fit to carry the cargo."
The Silvia, 171 U.
S. 462,
171 U. S. 464;
The Southwark, 191 U. S. 1,
191 U. S. 9. If it
is not, the owner is liable, irrespective of any fault on his part.
The Osceola, supra; Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki,
supra.
We see no reason to draw a line between the ship and the gear,
on the one hand, and the ship's personnel, on the other.
* A seaman with a
proclivity for assaulting people
Page 348 U. S. 340
may indeed be a more deadly risk than a rope with a weak strand
or a hull with a latent defect. The problem, as with many aspects
of the law, is one of degree. Was the assault within the usual and
customary standards of the calling? Or is it a case of a seaman
with a wicked disposition, a propensity to evil conduct, a savage
and vicious nature? If it is the former, it is one of the risks of
the sea that every crew takes. If the seaman has a savage and
vicious nature, then the ship becomes a perilous place. A vessel
bursting at the seams might well be a safer place than one with a
homicidal maniac as a crew member.
We do not intimate that Gonzales is a maniac, nor that that
extreme need be reached before liability for unseaworthiness
arises. We do think that there was sufficient evidence to justify
the District Court in holding that Gonzales had crossed the line,
that he had such savage disposition as to endanger the others who
worked on the ship. We think the District Court was justified in
concluding that Gonzales was not equal in disposition to the
ordinary men of that calling, and that the crew, with Gonzales as a
member, was not competent to meet the contingencies of the voyage.
We conclude that there was evidence to support the cause of action
for breach of the warranty of seaworthiness. Therefore, we do not
reach the question of negligence.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE REED concurs in the result on the ground of the
negligence of the ship's officers.
* Situations involving breach of warranty of seaworthiness by
reason of the disposition of a crew member have been presented in
several recent decisions. Recovery was allowed in
Thompson v.
Coastal Oil Co., 119 F.
Supp. 838,
reversed on other grounds, 221 F.2d 559.
The court followed the
Keen case in holding that a crewman
who tried to murder one of his fellows with a meat cleaver was not
equal in disposition to those of his calling.
In
Stankiewicz v. United Fruit S.S. Corp., 123 F. Supp.
714, the court directed a verdict for defendant on a cause of
action for breach of warranty of seaworthiness on the ground that
there was no evidence that the assailant was not equal in
disposition to men of his calling. As noted, the same result
followed in the
Jones case,
supra, where the
court held the test of unseaworthiness had not been met where a
crewman assaulted one of his fellows following an earlier argument.
And see Kelcey v. Tankers Co., 217 F.2d 541.