Court Opinion

ID: 9443693
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 19:27:44.942759+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:29:34.475909
License: Public Domain

FRANK, Circuit Judge.
1. The first cause of action.
There was sufficient testimony to show that defendant provided food of inferior quality. Plaintiff testified that the meat was “moldy” and “greenish whitish,” and had a “tainty taste” ; that the flour was infested with weevils, and the dried fruit with worms. His description of the meat and the flour was corroborated by testimony of three of his shipmates, one of whom was second cook and baker. Two of the three bore out his description of the fruit. Although the witnesses for plaintiff were his own shipmates who had also contracted diarrhea on the voyage, the jury had the choice of belief or disbelief, and chose to credit this testimony.
There was a sufficient showing of causal relationship between the food of inferior quality and the disorder which befell the plaintiff: A doctor testified that food so described would be a “competent producing cause” of plaintiff’s condition.
2. The second cause of action.
This was for failure to provide medical attention, and for aggravation of plaintiff’s condition by forcing him to work while sick. We feel that the judge erred in setting aside the verdict and dismissing the cause. From the plaintiff’s testimony, the jury could reasonably find the following: Before the ship reached China, plaintiff suffered from diarrhea. After they left Shanghai, the disease was complicated by rectal bleeding, stomach pains and vomiting; after leaving Hong Kong for Manila, plaintiff had a forty-hour siege of diarrhea and was unable to hold food down for five days. He was given paregoric and aluminum hydroxide by the purser, and confined to his bunk until the ship reached Manila. There he was examined by a doctor, who gave the purser some pills which he, in turn, gave to plaintiff, telling plaintiff to go back to the ship. His condition did not improve. After three days the captain ordered him back to work under threat of “logging” (a fine). The condition had subsided to diarrhea and stomach pains. As the ship made port in Siam, Singapore, Bombay and Aden, plaintiff asked to be sent to a doctor but the request was not granted. In Genoa, “a couple of months after leaving Manila,” a doctor was called aboard, examined plaintiff and others, and prescribed medicine which plaintiff never received.
Aggravation is not synonymous with deterioration. Though plaintiff’s condition grew no worse, failure to provide medical care would constitute aggravation, since with proper treatment he might have improved and been cured. Here again, the causal chain was cast by the testimony of plaintiff’s expert witness. The evidence indicates that what should have been done was not, and what was done should not have been.
3. The third cause of action.
The third count, concerning maintenance and cure, was decided separately by the judge as an admiralty issue, pursuant to agreement of the parties. We find no *516basis for the judgment in this respect in plaintiff’s favor. • The first count presumably covered lost wages, since there was testimony on this subject which the jury was told to consider. And as far as is shown, the plaintiff has had no out-of-pocket medical expenses to date. On the contrary, he was to continue receiving the free clinical treatment available-to him as a seaman.
Accordingly,, we hold that the verdict on the first cause of action should stand; that the verdict on the second should be reinstated; and that judgment on the third should be vacated.