This libel
in personam against the United States under
the Suits in Admiralty Act was brought by an employee of a
stevedoring company to recover damages for injuries sustained while
unloading grain from a government-owned ship at a pier. The ship
had been deactivated, "mothballed" and rendered unfit for
navigation, and was being used solely for the storage of grain
owned by the Government. Without being prepared or relicensed for
navigation, it had been towed to a grain elevator, loaded with
grain, towed back to its anchorage, and then towed again to the
grain elevator for unloading when the grain was sold. The trial
court dismissed the libel, holding that, since the vessel was not
in navigation, there was no warranty of seaworthiness. The Court of
Appeals affirmed.
Held: the existence of the warranty of seaworthiness
depends on whether the vessel is in navigation, which is a question
of fact; on the record in this case, this Court cannot hold that
the finding of the trial court in this regard was clearly
erroneous. Pp. 20-24.
282 F.2d 413, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, a longshoreman, brought this libel
in
personam against the United States pursuant to the Suits in
Admiralty Act, § 2, 41 Stat. 525, 46 U.S.C. § 742.
[
Footnote 1] Claiming injuries
suffered while aboard a government ship removing grain to an
elevator, petitioner sought recovery
Page 368 U. S. 21
on the grounds of unseaworthiness and negligence. The District
Court dismissed the libel after finding that there was no
negligence, and that, since the ship in fact was not in navigation,
there was no warranty of seaworthiness. 170 F. Supp. 763. This
dismissal was affirmed by a divided Court of Appeals, 282 F.2d 413,
and a petition for certiorari requesting review of the
seaworthiness issue was granted. 365 U.S. 802. We now affirm the
judgment below.
The S.S.
Harry Lane was a liberty ship of World War II
origin, which was deactivated from service and "mothballed" in
1945. In this process, her supplies, stores, nautical instruments,
cargo gear and tackle were removed; her pipes and machinery were
drained and prepared for storage; and her rudder, tail shaft and
propeller were secured. As a result of such action, the ship lost
her Coast Guard safety certification as well as her license to
operate, both of which were requisite to a vessel in navigation.
Indeed, the trial court found that "admittedly" reactivation of the
ship would have required a major overhaul.
In 1954, the Government was confronted with an urgent need of
storage facilities for the country's surplus grain, and a decision
was made to utilize as warehouse space the holds of some of the
deactivated liberty ships. The ships were not reactivated for
navigation nor used for transportation purposes, but were utilized
solely as granaries for the storage of the Government's grain.
Pursuant thereto, the use of the S.S.
Harry Lane was
covered by a general storage agreement between the Continental
Grain Company and the Commodity Credit Corporation, and it was
towed to loading facilities, filled with grain, and returned to the
"dead fleet" of some 360 vessels, where it remained for two
years.
In September, 1956, a sale was made of the grain stored in this
ship, and she was towed back to the grain elevator for the
unloading operation. As in the earlier movement,
Page 368 U. S. 22
no repairs or structural changes preparatory to activating the
ship were made; nor was there any attempt to obtain a safety
certificate or a license to operate as a vessel in navigation, and
none was issued. The movement was by tug, with a licensed riding
master and six linemen stationed aboard the dead vessel. The
linemen were discharged from the vessel after she was secured to
her berth at the grain elevator, the riding master alone remaining
to guard the vessel. The line handlers did not sign on as seamen
for the vessel, and the tugboat captain was "in charge of the move
from the Fleet down to the berth" with the riding master "subject
to the orders of the tugboat captain."
The unloading operation was carried out by Continental Grain
Company. The grain was removed by a "marine leg," a large
shore-based mechanism containing a conveyor belt which lifts grain
from the ship's hold into the adjacent grain elevator leased by
Continental. The marine leg was owned and maintained by
Continental, and their employee operated it from a control house in
response to signals from longshoremen in the hold. When the grain
level dropped to a certain depth, the balance was drawn onto the
belt by "grain shovels" -- plow-like devices attached by rope to
winches in the leg. These shovels were operated by longshoremen
employed by a stevedoring company, which had contracted with
Continental to aid in the unloading. Petitioner, the foreman of the
longshoreman crew, was injured when a latently defective part of
the marine leg (a block through which one of the shovel ropes ran)
broke and struck him. The entire unloading operation was directed
and controlled by Continental and the stevedoring company, and the
riding master was without power to supervise the work or inspect
the equipment.
The test for determining whether a vessel is in navigation is
the "status of the ship,"
West v. United
States,
Page 368 U. S. 23
361 U. S. 118,
361 U. S. 122
(1959). This is a question of fact,
Butler v. Whiteman,
356 U. S. 271
(1958), and consequently reversible only upon a showing of clear
error. Admittedly the S.S.
Harry Lane was withdrawn from
navigation in 1945. The issue presented is therefore whether events
subsequent to 1945 altered this status. In 1954, the function of
the ship was modified. However, she was not converted to a
self-propelled, self-directed cargo vessel. Nor was she even
prepared for use as a barge to transport cargo from one location to
another. In point of fact, it would be more accurate to note that
the ship itself was not converted to any navigational use. While
its hold was utilized as a granary or warehouse, the vessel
ipso facto was not reactivated for service in
navigation.
A second aspect of the ship's history since 1954 is the movement
between the dead fleet and the grain elevator. This movement was by
tug, without assistance from the ship's motive or directional
equipment which, indeed, was not in the least usable. The men
aboard were not signed on as seamen, and the entire operation was
directed and controlled by the tug captain. Unlike a barge, the
S.S.
Harry Lane was not moved in order to transport
commodities from one location to another. It served as a mobile
warehouse which was filled and then moved out of the way to perform
its function of storing grain until needed at which time it was
returned and unloaded.
In light of the above circumstances, we cannot say as a matter
of law that the S.S.
Harry Lane had been converted into a
vessel in navigation, and that the findings of the trial court were
clearly erroneous. [
Footnote
2]
Since we are unwilling to upset the trial court's factual
determination that the S.S.
Harry Lane was not a
vessel
Page 368 U. S. 24
in navigation, it follows that there was no warranty of the
ship's seaworthiness.
West v. United States, supra; Kissinger
v. United States, 176 F.
Supp. 828 (1959). [
Footnote
3] This limitation is analogous to that applied in libels under
the Jones Act, where it has long been held that recovery is
precluded if the ship involved is not a vessel in navigation.
Desper v. Starved Rock Ferry Co., 342 U.
S. 187 (1952);
Hawn v. American S.S. Co., 107
F.2d 999 (1939).
This disposition of the case makes it unnecessary for us to pass
upon the remaining question,
i.e., whether a shore-based
marine leg is within the warranty of seaworthiness in the
circumstances here disclosed.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Other parties, not concerned with our disposition, were
impleaded.
[
Footnote 2]
For cases involving similar facts and to the same effect,
see Hawn v. American S.S. Co., 1939, 107 F.2d 999;
Kissinger v. United States, 176 F.
Supp. 828 (D.C.E.D.N.Y. 1959);
Krolczyk v. Waterways
Navigation Co., 151 F.
Supp. 873 (D.C.E.D.Mich. 1957).
Lawlor v. Socony-Vacuum Oil
Co., 275 F.2d 599 (1960), is not
contra. There, minor
repairs were underway on an active ship with a full crew
aboard.
[
Footnote 3]
The view that a vessel not in navigation extends no warranty has
often been expressed in the more familiar context of to whom does
the warranty extend.
E.g., Union Carbide Corp. v. Goett,
256 F.2d 449 (1958). Implicit within such cases is the reasoning
that those working on vessels not in navigation are not seamen (or
doing seamen's work) and consequently not among those employees
protected by the warranty of seaworthiness.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
BLACK concur, dissenting.
For the reasons stated by Judge Sobeloff in the Court of
Appeals, I believe this ship at the time of the accident was not a
"dead ship," but "a vessel in navigation," because it was "being
actually used as a barge, and transporting a cargo." 282 F.2d 413,
419.