What are the facts?
Ira S. Bushey & Sons, Inc. operated a shipyard and drydock in Brooklyn, New York. A United States Coast Guard cutter was undergoing work while positioned on blocks in Bushey's drydock. Late at night, a Coast Guard seaman—off duty and returning to his ship from shore leave in an intoxicated condition—walked through the drydock area and, for reasons unrelated to his official duties, turned one or more large hand wheels controlling the drydock's flood valves. The valves opened and the drydock began to fill with water. As the dock flooded prematurely, the vessel shifted off its blocks and struck the drydock structure, causing extensive damage to Bushey's drydock (the ship itself suffered minimal harm). Bushey sued the United States in admiralty to recover for property damage on a respondeat superior theory, contending the government was vicariously liable for the seaman's tort. The district court denied recovery, holding the seaman acted entirely from personal motives and outside the scope of his employment. Bushey appealed.
What is the legal issue?
Whether, in admiralty, the United States is vicariously liable under respondeat superior for property damage caused by a drunken Coast Guard seaman who, while returning to his vessel in drydock, intentionally tampered with the drydock's controls, even though his act was not motivated by any purpose to serve his employer.
What rule applies?
Under maritime law, an employer is vicariously liable for an employee's torts when the employee's conduct is within the scope of employment understood in enterprise-risk terms: the question is whether the employee's act was a foreseeable, characteristic, or broadly incidental risk of the enterprise—not whether the act was motivated by a purpose to serve the employer. Scope of employment in admiralty encompasses conduct occurring in authorized time and space limits and arising from risks fairly attributable to the business, so long as the conduct is not so unforeseeable or extraordinary that holding the employer liable would be unjust.
What did the court hold?
Yes. The United States is vicariously liable. The risk that a seaman, returning to his vessel while it is in a private drydock, might become intoxicated and tamper with the drydock or vessel in a way that causes damage is a foreseeable incident of operating a vessel in that setting. The district court's judgment for the United States was reversed.
What is the reasoning?
The court rejected a narrow, motive-to-serve test for scope of employment. It reasoned that respondeat superior is grounded in risk allocation: losses caused by employee torts that are certain, as a practical matter, to occur in the operation of the enterprise should be borne by the enterprise. Here, the government placed a Coast Guard vessel in a private drydock and required its crew to live and move about the premises; the foreseeable risks of that arrangement include the possibility that a returning, intoxicated seaman might act carelessly or mischievously and cause damage. The seaman's return to the ship placed him in the time and space of his employment setting, and the harm flowed from risks characteristic of maritime service and shipyard operations. It is not necessary that the seaman's act be actuated by a purpose to further the employer's business. Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether the conduct is so unforeseeable as to make liability unfair. Given the common and predictable problem of seamen's intoxication and the ready access to drydock mechanisms, the harm was not so unexpectable as to preclude vicarious liability. The court emphasized that the yard owner was comparatively ill-positioned to control the government's crew, whereas the government could internalize and manage these risks through supervision, training, and insurance. Accordingly, the United States, as the enterprise best able to control and distribute the risk, should bear the loss.
Why is this case significant?
Bushey is a foundational case for the modern, foreseeability-based conception of scope of employment. It teaches that motivation to serve the employer is neither necessary nor sufficient for vicarious liability; instead, courts focus on whether the risk is fairly attributable to the enterprise. The case is central in torts and agency courses for its articulation of enterprise liability, its pragmatic treatment of foreseeability, and its bridging of common-law and admiralty principles. It is frequently cited for the proposition that employers may be liable for intentional or reckless acts that, while not serving the employer, are nonetheless a foreseeable byproduct of placing employees in particular settings.
Does Bushey require that the employee be motivated to serve the employer for vicarious liability to attach?
No. Bushey explicitly de-emphasizes motive. The court held that liability may attach even when the employee acts from purely personal motives, so long as the conduct and resulting harm are within the foreseeable, characteristic risks of the employer's enterprise and occur in the time/space setting associated with the employment.
How does Bushey use foreseeability in the scope-of-employment analysis?
Foreseeability in Bushey is not about predicting the precise act but about assessing whether the type of harm is a fair incident of the enterprise. If the risk is one the business can reasonably anticipate and manage—like seamen returning intoxicated and potentially causing mishaps—then the employer should bear the loss as a cost of doing business.
Why is Bushey significant in admiralty specifically?
Admiralty law often seeks uniform, practical rules for maritime commerce. Bushey adopts an enterprise-risk approach attuned to maritime realities—crew living aboard, shipyard operations, and known perils like intoxication—thereby allocating losses to the party best able to supervise and insure (the vessel owner/employer) rather than to third parties like dock owners.
Did the employee's intoxication absolve the employer of liability?
No. The court viewed intoxication not as a superseding cause but as part of the foreseeable risk environment of seafaring employment. Because such behavior is a predictable incident of the enterprise, intoxication did not break the scope-of-employment chain for vicarious liability.
What happened procedurally in Bushey?
The district court denied recovery, finding the seaman acted outside the scope of employment due to purely personal motives. The Second Circuit reversed, holding the United States vicariously liable under admiralty principles because the harm was a foreseeable incident of the enterprise.
How does Bushey differ from a strict 'frolic and detour' analysis?
Traditional 'frolic' analysis focuses on employee deviation and subjective purpose. Bushey reframes the analysis to emphasize objective, enterprise-related foreseeability and risk allocation, recognizing liability even when the employee's subjective purpose was unrelated to work, provided the risk was characteristic of the enterprise and arose in a work-related setting.