Manson Gulf, L.L.C. v. Modern American Recycling Service, Inc. ( 2017 )


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  •       Case: 17-30007          Document: 00514276601              Page: 1      Date Filed: 12/18/2017
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fif h Circuit
    No. 17-30007                                      FILED
    December 18, 2017
    Lyle W. Cayce
    MANSON GULF, L.L.C,                                                                           Clerk
    Plaintiff
    v
    MODERN AMERICAN RECYCLING SERVICE, INCORPORATED
    Defendant
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In re: In the Matter of Complaint of Manson Gulf, L.L.C., as Bareboat
    Charterer of the Barge Marmac 262, for Exoneration from or Limitation of
    Liability
    MANSON GULF, L.L.C., as bareboat charterer of the barge Marmac 262,
    Petitioner - Appellee
    v.
    JAMES LAFLEUR, Estate of; ANGIE LAFLEUR, Widow of James LaFleur
    and on behalf of minor children L.L., D.L., and B.L.,
    Claimants - Appellants
    Case: 17-30007     Document: 00514276601     Page: 2    Date Filed: 12/18/2017
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    Before REAVLEY, ELROD, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:
    Longshoreman James “J.J.” LaFleur fell 50 feet to his death after
    stepping through a hole in a decommissioned oil platform. The platform sat
    atop a barge chartered by Manson Gulf, L.L.C., who ordered the hole’s creation
    but did not cover the hole or warn J.J. of its existence.
    J.J.’s spouse alleged negligence on the part of Manson and sought
    damages. The district court, however, granted summary judgment for Manson,
    finding no liability under any of the three Scindia duties—the duties a vessel
    owner owes to a longshoreman. Because we conclude a fact issue precluded
    summary judgment with respect to the duty to warn of hidden dangers, we
    reverse.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Manson Gulf, L.L.C. is in the business of decommissioning oil-drilling
    platforms in the Gulf of Mexico. In 2015, Manson acquired one such platform,
    the BA A-23-A, from Freeport-McMoRan Oil & Gas. Manson extracted the 50-
    foot-tall, four-leg platform and placed the structure on a chartered barge. To
    lift the structure, Manson ordered four holes cut in the platform’s grating
    adjacent to each of the support legs. Rigging chains could then be passed
    through the holes and around the legs to take hold of the platform. Each hole
    was approximately two feet by two feet. Manson left the holes uncovered and
    unmarked.
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    Modern American Recycling Service (MARS) is in the business of
    dismantling steel structures and selling the metal for scrap. MARS agreed to
    purchase and scrap the BA A-23-A platform, and Manson delivered the
    structure to MARS’s dock, located on Bayou Black, Louisiana.
    On the morning of June 16, 2015, a Manson project engineer, Dustin
    Clement, warned MARS of oil in the platform’s pipes but not of the unmarked
    holes. Afterwards, Clement left MARS’s dock and no Manson personnel
    remained. Jeff Smith, a MARS foreman in charge of riggers and cutters, then
    boarded the platform (still atop the barge) to locate the presence of oil. After
    Smith investigated for ten minutes, J.J. LaFleur joined Smith aboard the
    platform to lend a hand. J.J. was an independent contractor, employed by
    MARS to take inventories, do inspections, and perform other miscellaneous
    tasks.
    As Smith and J.J. walked across the platform, they discussed the oil
    dilemma and looked at the pipes that ran overhead. While turning, J.J. stepped
    through an unmarked hole. Smith, then eight feet behind, attempted to
    intervene, but it was too late—J.J. fell 50 feet to the barge’s deck and died from
    his injuries. Pictures of the structure and hole in the grating are attached. See
    Appendix, figs. 1–3.
    Following J.J.’s death, Manson filed a complaint seeking exoneration or
    limitation from liability. MARS answered the complaint and asserted various
    claims and defenses. And Angie LaFleur, J.J.’s surviving spouse, filed claims
    for damages against Manson and MARS, alleging negligence under both
    maritime and Louisiana law. Manson and MARS then moved for summary
    judgment, and the district court granted both parties’ motions, finding neither
    liable under § 905 of the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act
    (LHWCA). The LaFleur claimants appealed only from the summary judgment
    with respect to Manson.
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    II.    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    We review a “district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo
    applying the same standards as the district court.” DePree v. Saunders, 
    588 F.3d 282
    , 286 (5th Cir. 2009). Summary judgment is appropriate if “the movant
    shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a).
    The decision-making process is tweaked slightly when the case is to be
    tried before the court and not a jury. See Nunez v. Superior Oil Co., 
    572 F.2d 1119
    , 1123–24 (5th Cir. 1978). In that circumstance, “the court may conclude
    on the basis of the affidavits, depositions, and stipulations before it, that there
    are no genuine issues of material fact, even though [the] decision may depend
    on inferences to be drawn from what has been incontrovertibly proved.” 
    Id. However, the
    court may exercise this inference-drawing function only when
    “the evidentiary facts are not disputed” and “there are no issues of witness
    credibility.” 
    Id. B. The
    Scindia Duties
    Section 905(b) of the LHWCA governs the present suit and supplies the
    relevant tort-based duties owed by vessel owners to longshoremen. 33 U.S.C.
    § 905(b); see also Kirksey v. Tonghai Mar., 
    535 F.3d 388
    , 391 (5th Cir. 2008).
    Decades ago, those duties were open-ended, premised in part on a nondelegable
    warranty of seaworthiness that required no proof of fault. Scindia Steam
    Navigation Co. v. De Los Santos, 
    451 U.S. 156
    , 164 (1981). But following the
    1972 amendment to § 905(b), the Supreme Court clarified in Scindia that
    vessel-owner liability sounds only in negligence. 
    Id. at 165.
    To that end,
    Scindia articulated three “narrow duties” owed by the vessel owner: “(1) a
    turnover duty, (2) a duty to exercise reasonable care in the areas of the ship
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    under the active control of the vessel, and (3) a duty to intervene.” 
    Kirksey, 535 F.3d at 391
    .
    The turnover duty encompasses two distinct-but-related obligations.
    First, the vessel owner “owes a duty to exercise ordinary care under the
    circumstances to turn over the ship and its equipment in such condition that
    an expert stevedore can carry on stevedoring operations with reasonable
    safety.” 
    Id. at 392.
    And second, the vessel owner “owes a duty to warn the
    stevedore of latent or hidden dangers which are known to the vessel owner or
    should have been known to it.” 
    Id. However, a
    vessel owner need not warn of
    “dangers which are either: (1) open and obvious or (2) dangers a reasonably
    competent stevedore should anticipate encountering.” 
    Id. The active
    control duty requires that the vessel owner “exercise due care
    to avoid exposing longshoremen to harm from hazards that they may encounter
    in areas, or from equipment, under the active control of the vessel during the
    stevedoring operation.” 
    Scindia, 451 U.S. at 167
    .
    Finally, the duty to intervene imposes liability “if the vessel owner fails
    to intervene in the stevedore’s operations when he has actual knowledge both
    of the hazards and that the stevedore, in the exercise of ‘obviously improvident’
    judgment means to work on in the face of it and therefore cannot be relied on
    to remedy it.” Burchett v. Cargill, Inc., 
    48 F.3d 173
    , 178 (5th Cir. 1995) (quoting
    Pimental v. LTD Canadian Pac. Bul, 
    965 F.2d 13
    , 15 (5th Cir. 1992)).
    C. The Active Control Duty and the Duty to Intervene
    As a preliminary matter, we agree with the district court that neither
    the active control duty nor the duty to intervene apply to this case. Both
    liability theories fail for the same reason: it is undisputed that all Manson
    personnel departed the barge prior to J.J.’s fall.
    Though the mere presence of vessel employees is not necessarily
    indicative of active control, we have twice cited the complete absence of such
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    personnel as evidence of the opposite—a lack of vessel control. See Fontenot v.
    United States, 
    89 F.3d 205
    , 208 (5th Cir. 1996); 
    Burchett, 48 F.3d at 179
    . The
    LaFleur claimants point to testimony that Manson had not yet transferred
    ownership of the platform when J.J. fell. But our cases speak in terms of
    control, not legal ownership. 1 Without evidence that Manson continued to
    exercise control over the platform, liability cannot rest on the second Scindia
    duty.
    As for the duty to intervene, the absence of Manson personnel is
    similarly dispositive. Assuming Manson had actual knowledge of the hole, the
    LaFleur claimants still needed to prove Manson had actual knowledge of
    “obviously improvident judgment” on the part of MARS (the stevedore).
    
    Burchett, 48 F.3d at 178
    . Because no Manson personnel remained when Smith
    and J.J. boarded the platform, the LaFleur claimants offered no evidence that
    Manson observed MARS employees interacting with the hazard, let alone in
    an obviously improvident manner. See 
    id. (affirming summary
    judgment on
    the duty-to-intervene issue because the vessel owner “had no personnel present
    at the job site who could have had knowledge of any peculiar dangers related
    to [the stevedore’s] operations”). As a consequence, the duty to intervene is
    inapplicable.
    D. The Turnover Duty
    We disagree, however, with the district court’s decision to grant
    summary judgment with respect to Manson’s turnover duty. The parties frame
    the turnover duty in terms of the duty-to-warn component, several elements of
    which are undisputed. First, the hole was, needless to say, a “danger”—it was
    Indeed, if mere ownership of a hazardous condition was sufficient to create control,
    1
    would not every vessel owner automatically control hazards appurtenant to its vessel? Our
    cases say otherwise. See, e.g., 
    Fontenot, 89 F.3d at 208
    (a vessel’s hatch cover was not under
    the vessel owner’s control).
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    at such a height to make death or grievous injury a near certainty for anyone
    who fell through it. Second, Manson had actual knowledge of the hole, or is at
    least charged with knowledge, because Manson orchestrated the cutting before
    delivering the platform. See Hernandez v. M/V Rajaan, 
    841 F.2d 582
    , 586 (5th
    Cir. 1988) (“If the condition existed from the outset, the shipowner is charged
    with actual knowledge of the dangerous condition . . . .”). And finally, Manson
    warned MARS only of explosive fluids, not holes.
    Therefore, the validity of the LaFleur claimants’ turnover-duty claim
    hinges on whether the hole was hidden or was instead (1) open and obvious or
    (2) a danger “a reasonably competent stevedore” should have anticipated.
    
    Kirksey, 535 F.3d at 392
    . The district court concluded the hole was both open
    and obvious and to be anticipated by a competent stevedore, and on that basis,
    granted summary judgment for Manson. Sure enough, some evidence in the
    record supports that finding. Jeff Smith testified that nothing would have
    obstructed J.J.’s view of the hole. Smith testified also that if J.J. had looked at
    the hole from four or eight feet away, he would have seen the hole. And Smith
    opined that, were he in J.J.’s shoes, he would not have fallen because he
    “double-check[s] were [he] go[es].” On the general foreseeability of holes, Smith
    testified that he would expect a decommissioned structure (like the platform
    at issue) to contain holes. Dwight Caton, the owner of MARS, likewise stated
    that holes are a common occurrence on decommissioned platforms.
    But so too did record evidence provide a contrasting account, supporting
    instead the notion that the hole was a hidden hazard, one a stevedore would
    not anticipate. Smith, the only witness to view the hole from J.J.’s vantage
    point, 2 provided the contradiction (indeed, a self-contradiction of the testimony
    2 A panel of this court once observed that an open-and-obvious inquiry should take
    place from the perspective of the injured longshoreman. See McCuller v. Nautical Ventures,
    L.L.C., 434 F. App’x 408, 412 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam) (explaining that a defective ladder’s
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    cited above). On the visibility of the hole, Smith explained that the platform’s
    “grating can play tricks on your eyes,” the hole was not easily seen until one
    was right on top of it, and the hole “look[ed] like a solid floor.” Moreover, Smith
    did not see the hole until J.J. began to fall through it. The hole’s size (or lack
    thereof) is also relevant; Caton testified the hole was approximately the size of
    two legal pads and he “still [did not] know how a person fit through” it. Finally,
    we have reviewed the pictures of the hole and its surroundings, and those
    pictures cement further the conclusion that the hole’s obviousness is subject to
    live dispute. True, the pictures taken directly over the hole, as one might
    expect, depict a visible opening. See, e.g., Appendix, fig. 2. But the pictures
    taken from an angle—similar to the point of view of a person approaching the
    hole—depict the way in which the platform’s grating, in Smith’s words, can
    “play tricks on your eyes” and make the opening difficult to see. See, e.g.,
    Appendix, fig. 3. As for the hole’s foreseeability, Smith clarified that, though
    he expected holes to be present, those holes are “typically covered” by replacing
    the grating or marked by “cables going all the way around.” More pointedly,
    Smith explained that an uncovered, unmarked hole—the very danger that
    befell J.J.—was “just not common at all.” And Caton echoed that sentiment:
    “usually everything is roped off.”
    The district court did not acknowledge this testimonial conflict in its
    summary-judgment opinion. Instead, the court appeared to place great weight
    on the procedural nuance we mentioned earlier—that of summary judgment in
    a bench-trial case—when it remarked, “proceeding to trial would not enhance
    the Court’s ability to draw inferences and conclusions.” The court was quite
    right that the Nunez rule allows a judge to sometimes draw inferences in
    obviousness should not be gauged by what would be revealed if “the ladder was laid out flat
    and the rungs could be examined from several angles” but rather by what would be apparent
    “to a longshoreman climbing up and down the ladder”). We agree.
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    rendering summary judgment. 
    See 572 F.2d at 1123
    –24. But neither Nunez
    nor any other case permits the court to do so when a factual dispute exists. 
    Id. at 1124.
    Smith’s divergent testimony created such a dispute here, and on the
    key issues no less. By adopting one side of Smith’s story as “[t]he most
    convincing evidence” while neglecting Smith’s contrary account, the court, in
    essence, found one version more credible than the other. And Nunez forbids
    credibility determinations on a cold summary-judgment record. 
    Id. at 1123.
          Judicial efficiency is a noble goal, to be sure. But when an evidentiary
    record contains a material factual dispute (as this one does), we simply cannot
    bypass the role of the fact-finder, whoever that may be. Summary judgment
    was improper.
    E. The West Caveat and Manson’s Alternative Basis for Affirmance
    We pause to consider Manson’s final ground for affirmance, one premised
    on a little-explored exception to vessel-owner liability. In a pre-Scindia case,
    West v. United States, 
    361 U.S. 118
    , 119 (1959), the United States hired a
    contractor to overhaul a deactivated vessel. A shore-based employee of the
    contractor suffered a repair-related injury. 
    Id. at 120.
    The Supreme Court
    denied recovery because, among other things, the defect was not hidden and
    the vessel owner was “under no duty to protect [the employee] from risks that
    were inherent in the carrying out of the contract.” 
    Id. at 123.
    This circuit has
    applied the West rationale under similar circumstances. See Hess v. Upper
    Miss. Towing Corp., 
    559 F.2d 1030
    , 1035–36 (5th Cir. 1977) (no liability when
    gasoline was obvious and “the danger inherent in removing gasoline . . . from
    a barge was well known” to the independent contractor hired to do just that);
    Hill v. Texaco, Inc., 
    674 F.2d 447
    , 451 (5th Cir. 1982) (no liability when rust on
    a tank’s walls—the precise condition an independent contractor was retained
    to inspect—injured an employee of the contractor). Manson argues the West
    rule should apply here because J.J.’s role (vis-à-vis his stevedore) was to check
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    the platform for hazards, including holes. The LaFleur claimants reply that
    the record reveals J.J.’s responsibility was to investigate for oil, not holes.
    Setting aside whether the evidence actually supports Manson’s
    characterization of J.J.’s role, we decline Manson’s request to affirm because
    we find no authority for extending the West exception to situations beyond
    (1) an open and obvious defect that (2) an independent contractor is retained
    by the vessel owner to repair or inspect. West itself acknowledged the limits of
    its holding. 
    See 361 U.S. at 124
    (“[T]here might be instances of hidden or
    inherent defects, sometimes called ‘latent,’ that would make the owner guilty
    of negligence, even though he had no control of the repairs . . . .”).
    This case is different. When control of the structure was turned over, a
    warning was given about oil but not holes—and this is more than a hole in the
    grating. Unseen is a hole in the platform underneath, and if a man slips or
    steps over the edge of the hole, he will fall to a terribly painful death. Surely,
    this danger could be found to constitute a latent hazard. And, moreover, this
    case involves a stevedore retained by the vessel owner to remove a structure
    for scrap, not to repair or inspect for particular known dangers. It is thus
    outside West’s narrow liability bar.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
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    Appendix
    Fig. 1
    Fig. 2
    Fig. 3