Delaware River & Bay Authority v. Kopacz
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
In this appeal from the District Courtâs award of declaratory judgment in favor of defendant Jan Kopacz, and against plaintiff Delaware River & Bay Authority (âDRBAâ), we are called upon to decide two issues of admiralty law: (1) whether commuter seamen, who eat and sleep on land, are entitled to âmaintenance and cureâ â payment from a shipowner to a seaman to cover medical, food, and lodging expenses during the seamanâs recovery
DRBAâs central contention on appeal is that payment of maintenance would produce a âdouble recovery,â because Kopaczâs wages already enabled him to procure food and housing on land, and because Social Security disability and long-term disability payments made to Kopacz adequately covered his living expenses. DRBA argues, further, that the award of prejudgment interest was punitive and thus impermissible. The sole argument advanced in Kopaczâs cross-appeal is that consequential damages were improperly denied. Finding no error in the District Courtâs thoughtful resolution of these issues, we will affirm its order.
I. Background
Maintenance is the payment by a shipowner to a sailor for the sailorâs food and lodging costs incurred while he is ashore as a result of illness or accident. Barnes, 900 F.2d at 631. A common law remedy, maintenance, derived from medieval maritime codes, was incorporated into American jurisprudence nearly two centuries ago. Harden v. Gordon, 11 F.Cas. 480, 482-83 (C.C.D.Me.1823) (No. 6,047); see The Osceola, 189 U.S. 158, 175, 23 S.Ct. 483, 47 L.Ed. 760 (1903). Its original purpose was clear and compelling â to ensure injured seamen funds adequate to cover basic living expenses during their recovery. The imposition of such a duty, it was felt, would benefit both shipowners and seamen, by encouraging shipowners to implement appropriate safeguards to protect sailors, and by encouraging seamen to undertake hazardous voyages:
Seamen are by the peculiarity of their lives liable to sudden sickness from change of climate, exposure to perils, and exhausting labour. They are generally poor and friendless, and acquire habits of gross indulgence, carelessness, and improvidence. If some provision be not made for them in sickness at the expense of the ship, they must often in foreign ports suffer the accumulated evils of disease, and poverty, and sometimes perish from the want of suitable nourishment.... If these expenses are a charge upon the ship, the interest of the owner will be immediately connected with that of the seamen. The master will watch over their health with vigilance and fidelity.... Even the merchant himself derives an ultimate benefit from what may seem at first an onerous charge. It encourages seamen to engage in perilous voyages with more promptitude, and at lower wages. It diminishes the temptation to plunderage upon the approach of sickness; and urges the seamen to encounter hazards in the shipâs service, from which they might otherwise be disposed to withdraw.
Barnes, 900 F.2d at 633 (quoting Harden, 11 F.Cas. at 483).
Since Harden was decided almost 200 years ago, the lot of the âpoor and friend
DRBA guarantees many of the benefits discussed above to its seamen. The interaction of these benefits and the maintenance obligation lies at the heart of this appeal.
A permanent full-time employee of DRBA who suffers an injury on the job is entitled to full wages for the first 90 days of disability. Thereafter, the employee is entitled to benefits equivalent to 60% of his wages, which are paid through a long-term disability (âLTDâ) policy funded wholly by DRBA, and administered by Hartford Insurance Company (âHartfordâ).
The duty to provide LTD benefits stems from a provision in the collective bargaining agreement between DRBA and its marine employees, providing that, âEmployer agrees to continue to provide all permanent full-time employees long-term disability plans that are offered to ... employees generally.â A. 7. The agreement makes no mention of maintenance payments, and DRBA does not maintain an insurance policy specifically to cover its maintenance obligation to seamen.
In the event of a delay in the payment of LTD benefits, an injured sailor also receives the value of his sick and annual leave. According to DRBAâs risk manager, Bonnie Miller, the payment of annual leave is distinct from maintenance and is merely a stop-gap to enable an injured seaman to cover his living expenses during the pendency of his LTD application.
Kopacz suffered a debilitating back injury in December 2004 and was subsequently deemed unfit to return to duty by DRBA. As a full-time permanent employee, Kopacz received his full wages for 90 days following the date of his disability, equivalent to approximately $9,900. Ko-pacz also received the value of his sick and annual leave, equivalent to approximately $4,600. Thereafter, Hartford paid Kopacz monthly LTD benefits of $2,192 for 17 months, beginning in April 2005 and ending in September 2006.
Because Hartford also required injured seamen to apply for Social Security disability (âSSDâ) benefits, which, if approved, would be deducted from monthly LTD benefits, Kopacz submitted an application for SSD benefits in October 2006. After approval of Kopaczâs application, the Social Security Administration transmitted a check to him in the amount of $17,142.00, representing his total benefits retroactive to July 2005, and thereafter provided monthly payments of $1,167.00.
Upon discovering the payment of $17,142.00, Hartford demanded reimbursement of slightly less than this sum
DRBA sued Kopacz in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, seeking a declaratory judgment that DRBA did not owe Kopacz maintenance and cure. After a one-day bench trial, the District Court concluded that Kopacz was entitled to maintenance in the amount of $50,790.00, plus prejudgment interest of $2,204.29. However, the District Court denied Kopaczâs claim for consequential damages, including lost wages, pain and suffering, and attorneyâs fees and costs.
DRBA contends that commuter seamen, who eat and sleep ashore, are ineligible for maintenance. It also argues, in the alternative, that the District Court should have deducted other payments made to Kopacz, including LTD and SSD, from the amount of maintenance owed to Kopacz â a result that, DRBA maintains, is necessary to avoid double recovery. Further, DRBA contends that the award of prejudgment was punitive, rather than compensatory, and thus, impermissible. Kopaczâs cross-appeal urges that the District Court improperly denied his claim for consequential damages.
II. Discussion
A. Commuter Seamen
DRBA asks the Court to adopt a per se rule denying maintenance to commuter seamen. DRBA observes that the ratio
Our inquiry begins with Barnes. There, we considered whether a blue water seaman, who maintained a home ashore, was entitled to include in his calculation of maintenance expenses incurred in connection with his permanent lodging, or whether he was solely permitted to recover the incremental costs attributable to his presence on land, including food, laundry, and gas. In approving Barnesâs recovery of costs associated with his permanent lodging, we cited precedents awarding maintenance to commuter seamen:
Many of the reasons given by the courts for awarding maintenance to land-based seamen who, by definition, ordinarily incur their own expenses for food and lodging are also applicable to inclusion in maintenance of the prorated costs of permanent lodging by a blue water seaman: the status of seamen as wards of the admiralty, Weiss, 235 F.2d at 313; DuPlantis, 298 F.Supp. at 14-15 & n. 3; consistency with maritime tradition, Weiss, 235 F.2d at 313; DuPlantis, 298 F.Supp. at 14-15[;] and the need to provide support to those who are ineligible for workmanâs compensation or other means of support. Weiss, 235 F.2d at 313.
Id. at 642.
Despite our reliance on these precedents in Barnes, DRBA insists, âThis Circuit has left open the question of whether a commuter seaman, such as Kopacz, is even entitled to maintenance in the first place.â Appellantâs Br. at 14. Although Barnes acknowledged that there was âsome logicâ in denying maintenance to shore-based seamen, the court stressed that the âlife of the lawâ is âexperience,â not âlogic.â Id. at 643. Barnes then reiterated Congress and the Supreme Courtâs âlong-established solicitudeâ to seamen, the âliberal attitudeâ regarding the scope of maintenance, and the interpretative canon requiring that ambiguities in regard to maintenance be âresolved in favor of the seamanâ â all considerations that, Barnes concluded, supported an expansive understanding of the right to maintenance. Id. at 637, 643 (citing Vaughan v. Atkinson, 369 U.S. 527, 532-33, 82 S.Ct. 997, 8 L.Ed.2d 88 (1962)). Barnes also quoted at length from an opinion rejecting a position identical to that urged by DRBA:
To deny [maintenance to a seaman] because he does not receive lodging and meals aboard ship raises problems that would distort the simple lines of the maintenance remedy.... Indeed, the rationale that maintenance is allowable only when meals would have been served aboard challenges the now well settled doctrine that the disabled seaman is entitled to be paid maintenance beyond the end of his voyage, for were maintenance to be allowed only for those days during which the ship would have served him meals, it would end when the voyage was over.
Id. at 642 (quoting Hudspeth v. Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores, Inc., 266 F.Supp. 937, 943 (E.D.La.1967)); see Smith v. Del. Bay Launch Serv., Inc., 972 F.Supp. 836, 849 (D.C.Del.1997); see also Crooks v. United States, 459 F.2d 631, 634-35 (9th Cir.1972) (â[T]he maintenance remedy should be
Today, we make explicit what was implicit in Barnes: commuter seamen enjoy the same right to maintenance as their blue water counterparts. Although DRBAâs concerns relating to other payments have merit, we do not write on a blank slate. Id. at 637 (noting the Courtâs âclear and frequent pronouncementsâ that seamen remain wards of the admiralty). Rather, our analysis is informed by nearly two centuries of jurisprudence âconsistently expanding] the scope of the right [to maintenance].â Id. at 633. In Vaughan, decided over one hundred years after the introduction of maintenance into admiralty law, the Supreme Court stressed the continued status of seamen as âwardsâ of admiralty and the need for âliberalâ interpretation of the maintenance obligation. 369 U.S. at 532, 82 S.Ct. 997.
Notwithstanding our dissenting colleagueâs vigorous argument that the maintenance and cure obligation does not arise when the seaman is a commuter, we find no such limiting principle â or inclination to curtail this historic remedy â in the applicable jurisprudence.
Admiralty courts have been liberal in interpreting this duty âfor the benefit and protection of seamen who are its wards.â We noted in Aguilar v. Standard Oil Co., that the shipownerâs liability for maintenance and cure was among âthe most pervasiveâ of all and that it was not to be defeated by restrictive distinctions nor ânarrowly confined.â When there are ambiguities or doubts, they are resolved in favor of the seaman.
Id. at 531-32, 82 S.Ct. 997 (internal citations omitted). And, in fact, DRBA cites no authority supporting withholding maintenance from commuter seamen. See id. at 642 (quoting Weiss v. Central R.R. Co. of N.J., 235 F.2d 309, 313 (2d Cir.1956) (âWe know of no authority ... for holding that a seaman is not entitled to the traditional privileges of his status merely because his voyages are short, because he sleeps ashore, or for other reasons his lot is more pleasant than that of most of his brethren.â)); Bailey v. City of N.Y., 55 F.Supp. 699, 701 (S.D.N.Y.1944), aff., 153 F.2d 427 (2d Cir.1946) (awarding maintenance to land-based seaman after finding no authority for narrow construction of the right); see also Crooks, 459 F.2d at 633 (âThus we find the obligation of maintenance enforced even where maritime compensation did not include board and lodging-where the seaman was expected to pay for his meals out of his wages. No matter what the terms of his maritime employment were, during the period of his disability he was entitled to be provided with maintenance as well as cure.â); The City of Avalon, 156 F.2d 500, 501 (9th Cir.1946) (holding that seaman could recover cost of food as element of maintenance, even where shipowner had not paid for his meals).
B. Long-Term Disability Benefits
Having established Kopaczâs general eligibility for maintenance, we turn to DRBAâs alternative contention â that LTD payments satisfied its maintenance obligation. Shaw v. Ohio River Company governs when other payments received by an injured seamen satisfy a shipownerâs maintenance obligation. 526 F.2d at 200. There, we considered whether benefits paid to a seaman under a disability policy funded by the shipowner, and administered by Prudential Insurance Company (âPrudentialâ), relieved the shipowner of its maintenance duty. Id. We attached primary importance to the âcharacterâ of the benefit conferred. Id. We explained that where a benefit is part of the seamanâs wage package, it will be deemed separate and independent of the shipownerâs maintenance obligation; accordingly, payment of the benefit will not relieve the shipowner of its maintenance duty. Considerations supporting characterization of a benefit as âwagesâ rather than maintenance include that: (1) the benefit is mandated under a wage agreement between the employer and the seaman; (2) the absence of any contractual provision indicating that the benefit is in lieu of, or in satisfaction of, the employerâs maintenance obligation; (3) the purpose of the benefit is to replace lost wages; and (4) the benefit is recoverable, even where the seaman does not satisfy the maintenance requirements. Id. In Shaw, all four factors supported classification of disability benefits as a substitute for wages: (1) the benefits were guaranteed in a collective bargaining agreement governing employee compensation; (2) the shipowner did not specify that disability payments were in lieu of maintenance; (3) employees were entitled to the benefits, even if they did not satisfy the conditions required to recover maintenance; and (4) the benefits, designed to replace lost wages, were not narrowly tailored to cover food and lodging expenses. Id. Accordingly, we concluded that the payment of disability benefits did not relieve the shipowner of its maintenance obligation.
On the other hand, we concluded in Shaw that health benefits provided to the seaman did satisfy the shipownerâs duty to provide âcureâ â the payment of a seamanâs medical expenses during his convalescence. Under the relevant policy, which was fully funded by the shipowner and administered by Blue Cross-Blue Shield, all of the injured seamanâs medical expenses were covered. Because the benefits were narrowly tailored to satisfy the shipownerâs âcureâ duties, we concluded that additional payments to the seaman were not required.
Here, the District Court, applying the considerations discussed in Shaw, found that the LTD benefits were part and parcel of Kopaczâs wage package. It specifically noted that: (1) DRBA extended LTD benefits to all permanent full-time employees, including personnel ineligible for maintenance at common law; (2) the employee manual characterized LTD benefits as âcontinuing income,â not as payment for food and lodging; (3) the collective bargaining agreement did not expressly indicate that LTD benefits were in lieu of maintenance; and (4) disability benefits were awarded, even when the maintenance
DRBA attempts to distinguish the Prudential payments in Shaw from the LTD benefits paid here. DRBA insists that the collective bargaining agreement here is silent on LTD benefits. To the contrary, the document expressly provides, âEmployer agrees to continue to provide all permanent full-time employees long-term disability plans that are offered to ... employees generally.â A. 7, 553, 563-64. The inclusion of this guarantee in the collective bargaining agreement thus supports classification of LTD benefits as a substitute for wages, not maintenance.
In Shaw, we scrutinized the record for clear written evidence that the shipowner intended disability benefits to satisfy its maintenance duty. We stated, â[T]he collective bargaining agreement in this case contained no provision specifying that payments from the insurance company under the benefits plan would be in lieu of maintenance. Undoubtedly a vessel owner could insure against his maintenance obligation by a benefits program tailored to that end but there is no indication in the collective bargaining agreement before us that this was done.â 526 F.2d at 200 (emphasis added); see also id. at 199 (âIt is clear that in the absence of an explicit contractual provision specifying that accumulated leave time pay or other wages is to be deemed a substitute for maintenance, there is no basis for crediting such earned wages against the vessel ownerâs maintenance obligation.â) (emphasis added). Conceding that no such written evidence exists here, DRBA asserts that, instead, its evidentiary burden is satisfied by the existence of a âtacit and longstanding understandingâ between the DRBA and its seaman that LTD benefits were in lieu of maintenance. Appellantâs Br. at 20. DRBA relies on testimony offered by its risk manager, Bonnie Miller, that no employee had previously sued DRBA to recover both maintenance and disability benefits. This absence of suit, however, is readily explained â the prior plan administrator, Pennsylvania Manufacturerâs Association, paid injured seamen âmaintenance wagesâ of $15 daily. The absence of suit, therefore, is not indicative of a âtacitâ understanding that LTD benefits would be provided in lieu of maintenance. In any event, speculation about why other DRBA employees refrained from suit is just that â speculation-âand such circumstantial evidence is especially unpersuasive here, where all of the considerations identified as significant in Shaw support classification of the LTD payments as a wage substitute, not maintenance, and where LTD payments were not narrowly tailored to the essential purpose of maintenance-to cover food and lodging expenses during the seamanâs recovery.
Unable to demonstrate that LTD payments were intended as maintenance, DRBA focuses on the underlying rationale for this right. DRBA contends that the historic purpose of maintenance â to provide an injured seaman funds adequate to cover basic living expenses â was met by the payment of LTD benefits, and that an additional award would produce an unjustified windfall for Kopacz. We consideredâ and rejected â a similar argument in Barms, where we approved an award of
Andover is persuasive in arguing that today those seamen who are unionized are neither friendless nor improvident. The record in this case shows that the Seafarers International Union, to which Barnes belongs, has obtained for its members overtime and premium pay, vacation allowances, disability pensions, and amenities. Furthermore, the adjectives friendless and helpless were generally used to describe sailors in foreign ports. Now, under union contracts ill or injured seamen are quickly repatriated. The changed circumstances of the unionized seaman may undercut the rationale supporting the traditional right to maintenance and cure, at least for unionized seamen. However, the Supreme Court has shown no inclination to depart from its long-established solicitude for seamen. Until it does so, we see no basis to assume the emergence of powerful seamenâs unions, a development concerning which the Court has full knowledge, justifies our ignoring the Courtâs clear and frequent pronouncements that seamen remain wards of the admiralty.
Barnes, 900 F.2d at 636-37 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added); see also Vaughan, 369 U.S. at 533, 82 S.Ct. 997 (rejecting double recovery argument and finding that income earned by an injured seaman at non-maritime position during his recovery did not offset the amount of maintenance due).
Hence, we conclude that the LTD payments do not offset the amount of maintenance owed to Kopacz, a duty that is independent of DRBAâs contractual obligations. See Barnes, 900 F.2d at 636; see also Vaughan, 369 U.S. at 532, 82 S.Ct. 997 (âMaintenance and cure differs from rights normally classified as contractual.â).
C. Social Security Disability Benefits
Alternatively, DRBA maintains that Kopaczâs receipt of SSD benefits satisfied its maintenance obligation, at least in part. For its position, DRBA relies on our statement in Shaw that a âvessel owner has no obligation to provide maintenance and cure if it is furnished by others at no expense to the seaman.â 526 F.2d at 201.
In Shaw, discussed earlier, we held that Blue Cross-Blue Shield benefits satisfied the shipownerâs cure obligation. We reasoned that these benefits, which covered the costs of the seamanâs medical care and hospitalization, were the âexact[] equivalentâ of âcure.â Shaw, 526 F.2d at 201. Accordingly, we concluded that the parties intended the Blue Cross-Blue Shield payments be in lieu of, rather than in addition to, the âcureâ owed to the injured sailor. However, we reached the opposite conclusion with respect to the Prudential disability benefits, which the record indicated were intended as a substitute for lost wages â not as payment for food and lodging â and which were owed to the seaman, independent of his eligibility for maintenance and cure. On that basis, we held that the Prudential payments did not offset the maintenance owed to the seaman. Distinguishing the Blue Cross-Blue Shield benefits from the Prudential payments, we explained,
*632 [I]t is also true that the vessel owner has no obligation to provide maintenance and cure if it is furnished by others at no expense to the seaman.... The essential difference between the Blue Cross-Blue Shield and the Prudential payments [which do not satisfy the maintenance obligation] is that the former provides the exact equivalent of maintenance and cure whereas the latter, at least under this collective bargaining agreement, constitutes a substitute for lost wages which are owed to a seaman even if he is ineligible for maintenance and cure.
Id. at 201 (emphasis added). The disposi-tive issue here, therefore, is whether SSD benefits provide the âexact equivalentâ of maintenance, or whether the two differ in their scope, purpose, and conditions of eligibility. Id.
SSD benefits and maintenance are distinguishable in several important respects. First, distinct policy aims underlie maintenance and SSD payments. Whereas maintenance is âintended to provide for the cost of food and lodging comparable in quality to that the seaman is entitled to at sea,â Barnes, 900 F.2d at 634-35, SSD benefits âaim[ ] to replace the income of beneficiaries when that income is reduced on account of retirement and disability.â Temple Univ. v. United States, 769 F.2d 126, 130 (3d Cir.1985); see Barnes, 900 F.2d at 634 (noting that maintenance does not entitle a seaman to a pension or a lump-sum payment to compensate for disability or lost earning capacity). Hence, SSD benefits are more closely analogous to LTD payments, which aim to replace lost wages, than to maintenance.
Second, the conditions of eligibility for maintenance and SSD payments differ substantially. Maintenance is available solely when a seaman: (1) is injured during the course of his employment or at a place where he is âsubject to the call of duty,â Barnes, 900 F.2d at 633 (citing Aguilar v. Standard Oil Co., 318 U.S. 724, 732, 63 S.Ct. 930, 87 L.Ed. 1107 (1943)); (2) is incapable of performing âseamanâs work,â Vaughan, 369 U.S. at 531, 82 S.Ct. 997; and (3) has âactually incurredâ food and lodging expenses during his recovery. Barnes, 900 F.2d at 642; see Vaughan, 369 U.S. at 531, 82 S.Ct. 997 (noting that maintenance is limited to food and lodging expenses incurred); Gypsum Carrier, Inc. v. Handelsman, 307 F.2d 525, 535 (9th Cir.1962) (âMaintenance and cure is based upon need,â and the seaman is under a duty to minimize expenditures). Maintenance, moreover, is available immediately upon the seamanâs incapacitation, but ceases once the seaman attains âmaximum cure,â defined as the point at which he is either cured or his condition is diagnosed as permanent and incurable. Barnes, 900 F.2d at 633-34; see Vella v. Ford Motor Co., 421 U.S. 1, 5, 95 S.Ct. 1381, 43 L.Ed.2d 682 (1975); Crooks, 459 F.2d at 635 (âPayments must be promptly made, at a time contemporaneous to the illness or injury.â) (internal citation omitted).
The conditions of eligibility for SSD benefits, by contrast, are both more â and less â stringent than those required to obtain maintenance. On the one hand, the SSD requirements are more onerous: a claimant must demonstrate that he has suffered a disability for a minimum period of five months, Gaines v. Amalgamated Ins. Fund, 753 F.2d 288, 290 (3d Cir.1985); that his disability is permanent, having lasted, or been expected to last, for a continuous period of 12 months, id.; 20 C.F.R. § 416.909; and that his impairment precludes performance not only of his former job but also of any work âexisting in significant numbers in the national economy,â including âbasic work activities.â McCrea v. Commâr of Social Sec., 370 F.3d
On the other hand, the conditions of eligibility for SSD benefits are, in certain other respects, less burdensome than those required to receive maintenance. Claimants with nonoccupational injuries may recover SSD benefits, 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(1)(A),
These important differences support classification of maintenance and SSD payments as different, rather than âexact[ly] equivalent,â benefits. Shaw, 526 F.2d at 201; see Handelsman, 307 F.2d at 537 (holding that payments received by sailor under state disability program do not offset amount owed under maintenance duty); see also Barnes, 900 F.2d at 637 (upholding seamanâs right to maintenance, despite possibility of double recovery from his receipt of disability pensions, overtime and premium pay, and vacation allowances).
Nonetheless, DRBA attempts to analogize SSD payments to Medicare benefits, which at least one court of appeals has concluded may satisfy a shipownerâs âcureâ obligation. Moran Towing & Transportation Co. v. Lombas, 58 F.3d 24, 26-27 (2d Cir.1995). In Moran, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that a seamanâs receipt of Medicare-funded treatment relieved the shipowner of its duty to provide âcure.â The court relied on our pronouncement in Shaw that âa vessel owner has no obligation to provide maintenance and cure if it is furnished by others at no expense to the seaman.â Id. at 27 (quoting Shaw, 526 F.2d at 201). Significantly, Moran did not analyze a consideration that we identified as critical in determining whether âoffsetâ was appropriate in Shaw â whether the payments received are the âexact equivalentâ of cure. Shaw, 526 F.2d at 201. Because Moran omitted an aspect of the offset analysis that we deemed âessentialâ in Shaw, its holding lacks persuasive force.
Even if Moran were binding on this Court, Moranâs core holding â that Medicare benefits may satisfy a shipownerâs âcureâ obligation â comports with the reasoning in Shaw. There, as discussed, we held that Blue Cross-Blue Shield benefits, which covered all of the seamanâs medical expenses during his recovery, provided the âexact equivalentâ of âcure.â Likewise, the Medicare benefits in Moran, which covered the seamanâs hospital bills during his convalescence, provided the equivalent of âcure.â SSD benefits, by contrast, differ in scope and purpose from maintenance. Hence, Moranâs conclusions with respect to Medicare benefits do not govern our analysis of SSD payments made to Kopacz.
Hence, we conclude that Kopaczâs receipt of SSD benefits did not relieve DRBA of its maintenance obligation.
D. Prejudgment Interest
Next, DRBA contends that the District Court erred in granting Kopacz
DRBA does not identify an exceptional circumstance justifying withholding prejudgment interest. Rather, DRBAâs sole contention on appeal is that other payments to Kopacz, including LTD benefits and the value of his sick and annual leave, adequately compensated him, and that the award of prejudgment interest was thus punitive. However, we earlier rejected this argument, concluding that other payments made to Kopacz did not satisfy DRBAâs maintenance obligation. Having held that Kopacz has a separate and independent right to maintenance, we conclude that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in compensating Ko-pacz for losses stemming from DRBAâs tardy discharge of its duty. See Matter of Bankers Trust Co., 658 F.2d at 108 (âIts [prejudgment interestâs] purpose is to reimburse the claimant for the loss of use of its investment or its funds from the time of such loss until judgment is entered.â); Skretvedt, 372 F.3d at 208 (âAs a general rule, prejudgment interest is to be awarded when the amount of the underlying liability is reasonably capable of ascertainment and the relief granted would otherwise fall short of making the claimant whole because he or she has been denied the use of the money which was legally due.â (quoting Anthuis v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 971 F.2d 999, 1010 (3d Cir.1992))); see also Deisler, 54 F.3d at 1087 (âThe Supreme Court has repeatedly held that prejudgment interest is merely an element of a plaintiffs complete compensation.â).
E. Consequential Damages
In his cross-appeal, Kopacz argues that the District Court erred in denying his claim for consequential damages. In Deisler, we held that consequential dam
The sole type of consequential damages that Kopacz expressly seeksâ attorneyâs fees and costs â was properly denied by the District Court. Attorneyâs fees and costs are recoverable solely where a shipownerâs refusal to pay maintenance and cure is unreasonable. See Atlantic Sounding Co., Inc. v. Townsend, â U.S. â, 129 S.Ct. 2561, 2571, 174 L.Ed.2d 382 (2009) (noting that award of attorneyâs fees is permissible for shipownerâs âcallousâ and âwillful and persistentâ refusal to pay maintenance and cure); Vaughan, 369 U.S. at 530-31, 82 S.Ct. 997 (noting that attorneyâs fees are recoverable where shipownerâs refusal to pay maintenance stemmed from a âwanton and intentional disregardâ of the legal rights of the seaman); Deisler, 54 F.3d at 1087 (âAttorneyâs fees and costs differ from interest, lost wages and damages for pain and suffering because attorneyâs fees and costs cannot be recovered unless plaintiff can first establish defendantâs bad faith or recalcitrance.â). Here, DRBA, providing Kopacz almost $40,000 in wages, sick and annual leave, and long-term disability benefits, did not exhibit the requisite callousness. Further, Kopacz did not seek maintenance until over one year after his date of injury, when Hartford demanded reimbursement for the amount of SSD payments made to him. Although DRBA declined to pay maintenance, its decision, premised on a colorable legal theory, did not reflect a wanton and intentional disregard of Kopaczâs rights. See Deisler, 54 F.3d at 1087 (requiring proof that denial of maintenance was âarbitrary or capriciousâ to recover attorneyâs fees and costs).
Accordingly, we conclude that the District Court properly exercised its discretion to deny Kopacz attorneyâs fees and costs.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we will AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
. Hartford calculates an employeeâs monthly LTD benefit by: (1) multiplying the monthly income loss by the benefit percentage; (2) comparing the result with the maximum benefit; and (3) deducting other income benefits, including Social Security disability payments, from the lesser amount.
. DRBA also mistakenly transmitted three checks, totaling $1,770.00, to Kopacz. Miller explained that this was done because the pri- or plan administrator required DRBA to pay seamen "maintenance wagesâ in the amount of $450 per month, or $15 daily â payments which were then deducted from the LTD benefit paid to seamen. Accustomed to making these payments, DRBA inadvertently sent Ko-pacz checks with notes indicating that the payments constituted "maintenance wagesâ for the period between April 2005 and July
. The amount of reimbursement requestedâ $16,607.92 â was slightly less than the lump sum amount received from the Social Security Administration due to differences in the eligibility dates under the Hartford policy and the Social Security disability program.
. The parties stipulated that Kopaczâs monthly living expenses were $2,190.00 in the time period beginning in January 2005 and ending in April 2007, that Kopacz attained his point of maximum medical improvement on the latter date, and that the monthly SSD benefits of $1,167.00 represented Kopaczâs sole source of income since October 2006, with the excep-lion of interest earned on a money market account. All of Kopacz's documented medical expenses have been paid, and Kopacz has made no claim for cure.
.The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction over this admiralty action under 28 U.S.C. § 1333. We have appellate jurisdiction over the final judgment of the District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the District Court's findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard. See Sheet Metal Workers Local 19 v. 2300 Group, Inc., 949 F.2d 1274, 1278 (3d Cir.1991). However, our review of the District Courtâs application of the law to these facts is plenary. See Tudor Dev. Group v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co., 968 F.2d 357, 359 (3d Cir.1992).
. Kopaczâs claim rests upon the age-old common law doctrine of maintenance and cure, not the Shipownersâ Liability Convention. Nothing in that Convention purports to alter the right Kopacz here asserts.
. It is also worth noting that neither a seaman's actual nor his projected expenditures on food and lodging are factors in the computation of LTD payments and, therefore, LTD payments are not narrowly tailored to satisfy the shipowner's maintenance obligation.
. DRBA also contends that requiring shipowners to pay maintenance, in addition to disability benefits, would discourage employers from offering such benefits. We disagree, and conclude, as the District Court did, that a shipowner may avoid âdoubleâ liability by specifying that disability benefits are intended to cover, in whole or in part, its maintenance obligation. See Shaw, 526 F.2d at 200.
. The federal statute defines "disabilityâ as: "inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months.â 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(1)(A).
. Kopacz sought â and was awarded â prejudgment interest from October 2006, when Hartford ceased payment of LTD benefits, to the date of judgment.