Nos. 39, 134, Docket 85-7318, 85-7350.United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.Argued September 17, 1985.
Decided February 18, 1986.
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John T. Kochendorfer, New York City (Bigham Englar Jones
Houston, New York City, on brief), for plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee.
MacDonald Deming, New York City (Robert J. Rosoff, Haight, Gardner, Poor Havens, New York City, on brief), for defendant-appellee-cross-appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.
Before LUMBARD, OAKES, and NEWMAN, Circuit Judges.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
[1] Federal Insurance Company (“Federal”), the subrogee of Commonwealth Oil Refining Co., Inc. (“CORCO”), appeals from a judgment of the District Court, for the Southern District of New York (Richard Owen, Judge) awarding Federal $38,610.10, plus prejudgment interest. 587 F.Supp. 518 Federal recovered for damage to a portion of a cargo of orthoxylene loaded in June 1977 onto the M.T. Sabine, a vessel belonging to Sabine Towing[2] Background[3] A. The Cargo
[4] The dispute concerns a cargo of a liquid petroleum product called orthoxylene that was discovered, after loading was completed, to have been contaminated by lead. Orthoxylene is an aromatic hydrocarbon that is used, in its pure form, as a raw material for other chemical products such as insecticides. It is a sophisticated compound, produced according to rigid specifications. CORCO had standard specifications for all customers; among other things, its orthoxylene was required to be a minimum of + 25 on the Saybolt color scale,[1] to limit non-aromatics to a maximum of .5% of total weight, and to limit the combination of non-aromatics and C9 aromatics to a maximum of 1% of total weight. The cargo’s adherence to these specifications was tested before, during, and after loading by analysis of samples. The analyses were performed by E.W. Saybolt and Chas. Martin, both companies licensed to inspect petroleum products.
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and thereby greatly diminishing its value. Orthoxylene contaminated with lead is still saleable, though at a greatly reduced price, as a high octane additive for gasoline. Contamination by certain other substances has less dire (and less costly) consequences. A cargo contaminated beyond the specification limit for non-aromatics would be unsuitable for buyers requiring pure orthoxylene, but that cargo could be blended with a sufficient quantity of uncontaminated orthoxylene to bring the mixture within specifications and thus saleable at a premium price. No one contends that blending could be used to bring lead-contaminated orthoxylene back within specifications.
[6] B. The Loading of the SabinePage 350
tanks. At this point, it was decided that the orthoxylene was unfit for its premium use because of lead contamination. The cargo was discharged from the vessel and placed in storage tanks for future sale as a high octane additive for gasoline.
[11] Federal paid CORCO $265,995.65, the difference between the entire cargo’s value in its pure form and its reduced value as a gasoline additive. As subrogee of CORCO’s claim, Federal then brought suit against the Sabine and her owners for this sum, alleging their responsibility for the contamination of the entire cargo. [12] The District Court found that Federal was entitled to damages only for the loss caused by contamination of the quantity of orthoxylene loaded up to the four-foot level (1,926 bbls.) and not for the entire cargo (13,468.28 bbls.). In reaching its decision, the Court found that both the discovery of new contaminants and the lack of improvement in color at the four-foot level should have led Oaks to stop loading any more cargo.[13] Discussion
[14] Federal’s claim is essentially that Sabine, through its negligence, allowed leaded gasoline to leak from tanks adjacent to those receiving the orthoxylene and should therefore be liable for damage to the entire cargo. Sabine responds that, notwithstanding its own initial negligence, Oaks at some point had information that should have caused him to stop loading; any damage to cargo loaded thereafter became CORCO’s responsibility rather than Sabine’s.[3] That point, Sabine contends, was the moment Oaks learned the results of the four-foot analyses.
[A] tort defendant is not liable for consequences preventable by action that reason requires the plaintiff to take. . . . [T]he community’s notions of fair compensation to an injured plaintiff do not include wounds which in a practical sense are self-inflicted.[16] Ellerman Lines, Ltd. v. The Steamship President Harding, 288 F.2d 288, 290 (2d Cir. 1961). Unlike the doctrine of contributory negligence, which traditionally provides a defense to a negligence action, the rule of avoidable consequences is not a defense; it applies “only to the diminution of damages and not to the existence of a cause of action.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 918 comment a. Whereas contributory negligence relates to the use of due care to avoid the event that gives rise to the initial harm, the doctrine of avoidable consequences comes into play at a later stage, denying recovery to the plaintiff for that portion of his loss that could have been avoided by his reasonable efforts. Southport Transit Co. v. Avondale Marine Ways, Inc., 234 F.2d 947, 951-54 (5th Cir. 1956). [17] “[I]n order to prove that a plaintiff’s adherence to an initially proper decision how to mitigate damages has become unreasonable, the defendant must show that such adherence had become not merely erroneous but palpably so. . . . ” Ellerman Lines, supra, 288 F.2d at 291. The burden of showing that a plaintiff unreasonably failed to minimize damages rests with the wrongdoer. Id. at 290-91; Tennessee Valley Sand Gravel Co. v. M/V Delta, 598 F.2d 930, 933 (5th Cir. 1979). However, if the course of action chosen by the plaintiff was reasonable, the plaintiff can recover despite the existence of another reasonable course of action that would have avoided further damage Ellerman Lines, supra, 288 F.2d at 290. Therefore, the question in the present case is not whether Oaks chose the path most likely to prevent further damage to the cargo, but whether
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his decision to continue loading was reasonable under the circumstances.
[18] Upon discovering that the orthoxylene in the port and starboard tanks deviated from the specification as to color, Oaks acted reasonably in deciding to load an additional two feet of cargo in an attempt to dilute the unidentified contaminant. This decision was based on Oaks’ past success in using this dilution method to cure initial contaminations and on the fact that it was not unusual for the first portion of a cargo to be somewhat out of specifications because of some foreign substance in the vessel’s tanks. Since this initial decision was reasonable, the issue becomes whether Sabine sustained its burden of showing that Oaks’ decision to continue loading after receiving the four-foot test results was “not merely erroneous but palpably so.” The District Court’s decision that Oaks “blundered” by continuing loading beyond the four-foot level was well supported by the evidence. [19] Oaks’ dilution plan could have worked only if the amount of the contaminating substance was fixed. If this were the case, loading more pure orthoxylene would cause a proportionate decrease in the degree of contamination. The results of the fourfoot tests, however, revealed that just the opposite was the case. Despite a doubling of the volume of cargo, the color Saybolt readings in the port and starboard tanks were unchanged, indicating that the amount of contaminant was increasing rather than fixed. Moreover, non-aromatic and C9 aromatic contaminants not present at the two-foot level were discovered in the four-foot analyses, again indicating that the contaminants were not fixed but rather were leaking in as the orthoxylene was loaded. The four-foot results demonstrated the futility of any further attempt to bring the cargo within specifications by dilution. [20] Moreover, the results of the four-foot tests should have convinced Oaks of the need to ascertain the source of contamination before loading more cargo. Federal seems to concede this: “When the cargo was tested, the presence of either a non-aromatic or an aromatic content other than the orthoxylene would alert, warn, and guide those loading . . . to determination of the source of contaminent [sic]” (emphasis added). Appellant’s Brief at 4. Although certain contaminants were identified in the four-foot tests, the contaminant causing the out-of-specification color analysis was unidentified and was not being reduced as more pure product was added. There was no claim that cyclohexane or mercury could have caused the low color readings, and the evidence established that excessive amounts of lead could have been the cause. The District Court was entitled to accept the view of Sabine’s expert witness and find that the reasonable course of action for Oaks would have been to discontinue loading until the precise cause of the contamination was discovered. [21] Although Oaks could not reasonably be required to test for all possible contaminants, the record reveals that, had he acted reasonably, he would have tested for lead. Despite the fact that orthoxylene has no standard specification for lead, a sample taken from the dock line prior to loading was tested for lead. And just as Oaks apparently considered the possibility that one contaminant might be cyclohexane because that product was being carried in an adjacent tank (the four-foot tests showed this to be the case), when faced with a contaminant unidentified by either the two- or four-foot tests and not reduced by dilution, he could easily have determined the contents of other adjacent tanks and tested for contamination leaking from them. Oaks clearly should have done so after receiving the test results from the four-foot sample. Such additional testing would have revealed the lead contamination and would have prevented the damage to the rest of the cargo. In fact, this was exactly the reasoning that led Oaks ultimately to test for lead: After loading was concluded, CORCO determined the contents of adjacent tanks and tested the orthoxylene for lead.Page 352
[22] Although the contamination of the cargo began because of the ship’s negligence in permitting fluid containing lead to leak from an adjacent tank, the ship was not liable for further damage that would have been avoided if the shipper, acting through its agent, had not followed an unreasonable course of conduct. The District Court properly limited recovery to the diminished value of the portion of cargo loaded to the four-foot level, the point at which it became unreasonable for the shipper to load additional cargo without determining whether lead was the source of the contamination. [23] The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.[4]Page 17
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