Judgment For Employer Affirmed Where Seaman Failed To Request Assistance In Lifting Line From Water
KENTRELL DORSEY VERSUS J. RAY MCDERMOTT, INC.
2003 CA 2264
COURT OF APPEAL OF LOUISIANA, FIRST CIRCUIT
2003 2264 (La.App. 1 Cir, 06/25/04);
2004 La. App. LEXIS 1634
June 25, 2004, Judgment Rendered
PROCEDURAL POSTURE: In plaintiff claimant's suit against appellee employer for injuries sustained offshore, the 23rd Judicial District Court, in and for the Parish of Assumption (Louisiana), dismissed his unseaworthiness and Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.S. ยง 688, negligence claims, but ordered the employer to pay his maintenance and cure until he reached maximum medical cure. The trial court then entered a judgment establishing the amount of cure owed. Both parties appealed.
OVERVIEW: Much of the claimant's complaint was grounded in the allegation that the material barge was mis-rigged. Specifically, the claimant challenged the placement of the eye of the rope, or line, on the material barge rather than on the lay barge. However, the overwhelming evidence supported the conclusion that having the eye of the line on the material barge was not indicative of the line being mis-rigged. Additionally, handling lines was "manual work," and the fact that the claimant's duties as a rigger required physical straining did not equate to a negligent or unseaworthy condition. Furthermore, although the claimant maintained that his injury was caused by there being insufficient personnel on board and because his supervisors failed to recognize his need for assistance in lifting the polypropylene line from the water, the claimant admitted that he did not request assistance from anyone. Thus, the record clearly supported the trial court's conclusion that (1) the employer was not negligent in causing the claimant's injury and (2) the vessel was seaworthy. Therefore, the claimant was not entitled to damages under the Jones Act or the doctrine of unseaworthiness.
OUTCOME: The appellate court affirmed the trial court's judgment.

