James P. Merchant v. Philip Henry Ruhle, 740 F.2d 86, 1st Cir. (1984)
James P. Merchant v. Philip Henry Ruhle, 740 F.2d 86, 1st Cir. (1984)
James P. Merchant v. Philip Henry Ruhle, 740 F.2d 86, 1st Cir. (1984)
2d 86
39 Fed.R.Serv.2d 971
Frank H. Handy Jr., Boston, Mass., with whom Kneeland Kydd & Handy,
Boston, Mass., was on brief, for defendant, appellant.
Joseph M. Orlando, Gloucester, Mass., with whom Orlando & White,
Gloucester, Mass., was on brief, for plaintiff, appellee.
Before COFFIN, Circuit Judge, STEWART,* Associate Justice (Retired),
and BREYER, Circuit Judge.
COFFIN, Circuit Judge.
This case began as a seaman's claim for damages arising from a back injury
suffered as the result of the shipowner's alleged negligence under the Jones Act
and alleged maintenance of an unseaworthy vessel. What takes it out of the
ordinary is that the jury rendered arguably inconsistent verdicts on negligence
and seaworthiness. It answered "yes" to the question: "Did the plaintiff's
injuries result in whole or in part from the negligence of the defendant?" It
answered "no" to the question: "Did the plaintiff's injuries result in whole or in
part from an unseaworthy condition of the defendant's vessel?"
The facts, viewed favorably to the plaintiff-appellee, follow. Plaintiff, who was
a member of the crew of a fishing vessel, was loading boxes of frozen mackerel
to serve as bait for swordfish when he was injured. His job was to stand on a
platform composed of "penboards". Penboards are planks designed to be
On the day the plaintiff was injured, his assignment was to stand on this
platform, which was painted with latex paint, and to reach up to the deck to
receive a fifty to seventy-five pound box of bait, which had been carried by a
chute from a truck to the deck. A deckhand would take the box from the chute
and hand it to the plaintiff who then had to swivel, crouch, and hand it to a
crewman in the hold for stowage in a pen. For an hour plaintiff performed this
work, occasionally kicking away accumulations of ice which had been spewed
onto the platform by two ice machines located on the deck. Finally, plaintiff
fell, complaining of pain in his back, but he continued to work for another hour.
Plaintiff's witnesses testified that other and better loading methods were
feasible: use of a chute to avoid the stage of operations performed by plaintiff;
covering the penboards with a less slippery surface such as asphalt tile;
constructing the platform of grates with raised edges; lowering the boxes of bait
into the hold by winch.
At the end of the three day trial the district court gave its instructions. It began
by saying that the jury could find that plaintiff's injuries had been caused "by
either the negligence or by the unseaworthiness of the vessel, or by both". It
concluded with the same thought. In between, it wrestled with the definitions of
negligence and unseaworthiness. Addressing negligence, the court urged the
jury to consider the "whole picture" and gave the example of the differing
requirements of care for one driving through a busy shopping district during the
Christmas rush and for one using the same street when the shops are closed. It
wound up its discussion by characterizing the alleged negligence as permitting
or causing plaintiff to use a platform of penboards made slippery by ice. The
court added that the jury had heard the evidence and its recollection was to
govern.
After the charge, appellant objected only to the court's refusal to give requested
charges on contributory negligence and on prejudgment interest. The jury, after
approximately two hours, requested another explanation of unseaworthiness.
The court repeated its earlier instruction. Upon ascertaining that the jury was
not yet satisfied, the court undertook a third explanation, saying that the
question was whether use of the penboard platform onto which ice had
allegedly fallen was a reasonably fit way to take the boxes of bait into the hold.
The court added that this was "in addition to negligence. Negligence has
nothing to do about this." An hour later the jury reported, finding the defendant
negligent but the vessel seaworthy. The court asked if there were any questions.
Counsel for defendant said, "No, your Honor."
Several days later defendant moved for a new trial, charging that there had been
insufficient evidence of both negligence and unseaworthiness and that the
verdicts were "irreconcilably inconsistent". We need spend no time on the
challenge to the sufficiency of evidence of unseaworthiness; defendant, after
all, has a jury verdict in his favor. Little more effort need be spent on the
sufficiency of evidence of negligence. The use of the smooth, painted
penboards, the spraying of ice on the platform, the failure to employ a longer
chute, or grates, or asphalt tiling, or to lower the boxes by winch--any of these
factors would have been sufficient to support a finding of unreasonableness in
the bait loading operation.
Nor need we tarry in dealing with the alleged error of the court in refusing to
instruct the jury to determine whether plaintiff was solely or contributorily
negligent. There was no testimony that plaintiff acted other than with
reasonable care. Counsel's only basis for his requests was that plaintiff had
himself to blame for finding himself working where and as defendant had
ordered. The district court aptly cited Ballwanz v. Isthmian Lines, Inc., 319
F.2d 457, 462 (4th Cir.1963), for the proposition that a worker is not "obligated
to protest against the method of operation which he had been instructed to
follow or to devise a safer method, nor was he obligated to call for additional or
different equipment."
369 U.S. 355, 82 S.Ct. 780, 7 L.Ed.2d 798 (1962). If we are dealing with
general verdicts, we do not have the compulsion of a procedural rule to
determine such inconsistency.
10
What the court did was to submit to the jury a "Verdict Sheet" asking the two
questions noted at the outset of this opinion, each question embracing both the
existence of fault (whether negligence or unseaworthiness) and causality. These
were followed by three other questions, asking for a figure for damages,
prejudgment interest, and interest rate. The jury said "yes" to the negligence
question, "no" to unseaworthiness, "$85,000" for damages, and "no" to
prejudgment interest, leaving blank any response on interest rate. The court
then issued an order for judgment for the plaintiff "in accordance with the
verdict dated July 22, 1983". There was no other verdict document than the
"Verdict Sheet" we have described.
11
12
13
In Parker v. Gordon, 178 F.2d 888 (1st Cir.1949), we dealt with the issue of
inconsistent verdicts on two counts in a civil case, so interpreting them that we
found no facial inconsistency. In that case Chief Judge Magruder wrote that,
"we have no occasion to consider how far the doctrine of Dunn v. United States
... as to really inconsistent verdicts, is law today, and how far it applies also to
civil cases." Id. at 895. It was perhaps this case that led the Chief Judge's law
clerk at the time, Alexander M. Bickel, to write an article entitled Judge and
Jury--Inconsistent Verdicts in the Federal Courts, 63 Harv.L.Rev. 649 (1950).3
Bickel drew a distinction between a verdict reflecting "confusion and manifest
misapprehension by the jury of the issues", id. at 654, and inconsistent verdicts.
14
15
An example cited by Bickel is Fairmount Glass Works v. Coal Co., 287 U.S.
474, 53 S.Ct. 252, 77 L.Ed. 439 (1933), in which a plaintiff, suing for breach of
a contract to purchase 17,500 tons of coal, won a verdict of one dollar. The
Court, through Justice Brandeis, reasoned that the jury may have found
substantively for the defendant but nevertheless wanted the costs to be taxed
against it, and stated:
16
"Appellate
courts should be slow to impute to juries a disregard of their duties, and
to trial courts a want of diligence or perspicacity in appraising the jury's conduct.
Compare Union Pacific R. Co. v. Hadley, 246 U.S. 330, 334 [38 S.Ct. 318, 319, 62
L.Ed.2d 751 (1918) ]; Dunn v. United States, 284 U.S. 390, 394 [52 S.Ct. 189, 191,
76 L.Ed. 356 (1932) ]." 287 U.S. at 485, 53 S.Ct. 255.
17
We deem significant the fact that in this civil case, the Court saw fit to refer to
Dunn.
18
A line of cases in the Second Circuit follows suit. In Jayne v. Mason & Dixon
Lines, 124 F.2d 317 (2d Cir.1941), after indicating that a jury's finding of a
driver's contributory negligence was consistent with a verdict for the driver's
wife, a passenger, the court, through L. Hand, J., added:
19
"We do not mean to imply, however, that we should have thought it fatal to the
21
"Inconsistent
jury verdicts upon different counts or claims are not an anomaly in the
law, which at times recognizes a jury's right to an idiosyncratic position provided the
challenged verdict is based on the evidence and the law." 269 F.Supp. at 731-32
(footnotes omitted).
22
And, in Henry v. A/S Ocean, 512 F.2d 401 (2d Cir.1975), the court, after
attempting to reconcile jury verdicts of seaworthiness and negligence by
referring to the narrowness of the instruction on seaworthiness, said that it
would hesitate to set aside the verdict even if there had been a broader
definition, adding, "[v]erdicts finding negligence but no unseaworthiness have
been accepted despite an apparent conflict in the findings." Id. at 405 See also
Siebrand v. Gossnell, 234 F.2d 81, 89 (9th Cir.1956).
23
Finally, in Harris v. Rivera, 454 U.S. 339, 102 S.Ct. 460, 70 L.Ed.2d 530
(1981), the Court, in applying the holding in Dunn, permitting inconsistency in
a jury verdict in a criminal case, to a similar inconsistency in a state bench trial,
stressed "the unreviewable power of a jury to return a verdict of not guilty for
impermissible reasons." Id. at 345, 102 S.Ct. at 464. It suggested no distinction
between the powers of juries in civil and criminal cases.
24
appeal the court held that the jury could therefore have concluded that the
negligence issue could embrace a wider consideration, i.e., how the equipment
was used. So, too, here, the jury could have felt that the penboards, not being
defective or generally dangerous, did not constitute unseaworthiness, but that to
require the crew to use them while they were being sprayed with ice was
negligence. In short, the jury's efforts to apply the instructions were
understandable and had some basis.
25
Capping our determination that the verdicts in this case must stand is the fact
that defendant actively signified its agreement with the instructions as given-even though on two occasions the court noted that the jury could find either
unseaworthiness or negligence. In addition it made no effort to obtain
clarification or reconsideration when the jury rendered its verdicts. In cases
where the instructions do not foreshadow inconsistency, there is no basis for
requiring contemporary objection. But this defendant could have sensed trouble
ahead. In view of the close similarity, indeed, substantial identity of the court's
definitions of unseaworthiness and negligence, defendant should have observed
that there could be no "either-or".
26
27
"This charge was given without objection on the part of either of the
defendants.... To move for a new trial on the basis of inconsistency of the
verdict when an unobjected to instruction permitted the alleged inconsistency,
falls within the prohibition of Rule 51."
28
And, as we said in Mashpee Tribe v. New Seabury Corp., 592 F.2d 575, 592
(1st Cir.1979), "plaintiff did not point out the possible ambiguity during its
objections to the instructions at the close of the charge. That was the
appropriate time ... any ambiguity was discoverable on the face of the charge,
and was not created by the verdict."
29
Pointing out the latent inconsistency in the charge was not the last point at
which confusion could have been cured. When the jury returned its verdicts,
the problem could have been pointed out and both judge and jury given a
chance to correct any misunderstanding.4
30
31
Affirmed.
We recognize that although the early cases interpreted the "issues of fact"
language of Rule 49(b) literally, Carpenter v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co.,
109 F.2d 375 (6th Cir.1940), and Feldmann v. Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
142 F.2d 628, 634 (8th Cir.1944), more recent authority, including our own,
recognizes the propriety of submitting interrogatories asking mixed questions of
law and fact, Kissell v. Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Elevator Div., 367
F.2d 375, 376 (1st Cir.1966); Sperberg v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 519
F.2d 708, 715 (6th Cir.1975). But neither view, it seems to us, would go so far
as to hold that if two inconsistent jury dispositions of separate counts could
stand if cast as verdicts, they cannot if shown as answers, however
determinative of the ultimate legal issues they might be
We do feel that comment on one pertinent case cited by appellant is called for,
Turner v. The Cabins, 327 F.Supp. 515 (D.C.Del.1971). In that case the district
court granted the defendant's motion for a new trial because there seemed to be
no possibility of construing the instructions as to negligence and
unseaworthiness as other than identical. But wholly apart from any possible
factual differences, there was no consideration of whether inconsistent general
verdicts in civil cases were permissible, or of whether challenges could be
entertained despite failure to object to the charge or failure to call for
clarification of the verdicts when rendered. We do not find it persuasive
authority for the instant case