This admiralty suit was commenced by the administrator of Janet Barbe’s estate to recover for her pain and suffering following the sinking of a motorboat owned and operated by defendant Drummond in which she was a passen *796 ger. In a non jury trial the court concluded that Drummond had been negligent and awarded the plaintiff $15,000 plus interest for her conscious pain and suffering and $1,500 plus interest for her funeral expenses. The defendant’s appeal raises three issues: whether the evidence warranted a finding of negligence, whether damages for conscious suffering can be awarded under the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA) or under general maritime law, and whether funeral expenses can be awarded under DOHSA or the general maritime law.
I
In considering the first issue the standard of review in this court is clear. “In reviewing a judgment of a trial court, sitting without a jury in admiralty, the Court of Appeals may not set aside the judgment below unless it is clearly еrroneous.” McAllister v. United States,
On Friday, May 16, 1969, the defendant took possession of a used 26-foot Owens Sea Skiff named “Diane D” which he had purchased from Boston Boat Sales, Inc. Late in the afternoon of the next day, with Miss Barbe as his guest, he set out from Marshfield, Massachusetts, intending to arrive at Sesuit Harbor in East Dennis, Massachusetts, around 10 o’clock that evening. This course required the craft to go out the North River to Massachusetts Bay and then across to Sesuit Harbor. In passing under the bridge that carries Route 3A across the North River, the defendant hit the bridge pilings. The testimony conflicted as to how many times contact was made and whether both sides of the boat hit the bridge. Two witnesses testified that the boat did not follow the course of the river from that point, but instead cz'ossed over some mussel beds and proceeded erratically outside the channel and foz'ced two other boats to seek safety outside the path of the Diane D. One witness testified that near the mussel beds there were cement blocks that had once been moorings. The defendant stated that he inspected the Diane D for damage both after his passage under the bridge and when he reached the mouth of the river. Near sunset, when the boat was about five miles off Manomet Point, the defendant observed a small quantity of water slopping up over the flooring in the cabin. Recognizing that the boat was flooding, he started the bilge pump, but confused the air vent pipe with the bilge pump and tried to make the air vent pipe reach the water by adding an extension to it. When the engine died аlmost immediately, he tried to restart it. When that failed, he tried to radio for help, but could get no answer. Since sinking seemed imminent, defendant fashioned a makeshift raft from floatable cushions and an inner tube and launched this with Miss Barbe on it. She died of exposure one to three hours later, but defendant was rescued the next morning.
Examination of the Diane D, which was recovered fz'om the bay, disclosed that it flooded because of a long opening along а seam between two pieces of plywood planking under the hull on the starboard side. Testimony from marine suzweyors showed that the opening must have resulted from striking an object such as a lobster buoy or a log. The impact had broken a frame in the area, and the seam could have gradually opened up from driving the boat into the sea. The defendant had heard over the boat z-adio before leaving the marina that small craft warnings were posted until sunset, and he acknowledged that the Diane D had pounded against the water and banked on the waves. Small craft warnings, in the opinion of one witness, would pertain to any boat under 65 feet long.
*797 There was testimony from the defendant that he had experience racing sailing boats and running small motor boats, but had never previously owned a power boat. The defendant admitted that he had never used the boat radio to call anyone, and thus hаd no personal knowledge whether it transmitted. Other testimony indicated that there are increased risks in operating boats at night. The only navigational aids are those buoys which are lighted. Objects floating in the water are more likely to be hit than to be seen and avoided. Rescue is more difficult if trouble develops, and operation of the boat in heavy weather is more difficult when you cannot see the wave formation.
Viewing this and other evidence, the court concluded that negligence and proximate cause were both established:
“Mr. Drummond had no business going out when he did under the conditions that he did, in the light of his inexperience with this type of boat and in the light of his lack of knowledge of the condition of various of its safety devices. .
“I find that he was negligent in other respects, each of which were [sic], under the combination of circumstances, proximate causes [:] . his disinclination to take аdditional instructions and a test drive from the Boston Boat Sales people . ; his confusion as to the method of operation of the bilge pump; his lack of knowledge whether there was or was not a proper grounding of the radio; his poor driving of the craft as it went under the tunnel
. . I consider that it was negligent on his part not to have discovered the water sooner than he did. He discovered the water when there was a film of water on the floor оf the craft. The craft had to get a solid smash of which any person aboard would have been very much aware.
[T]here was a positive smash such that should have made him inspect the water condition of that hull more often than he did.
“I consider, furthermore, that had he sooner discovered the water, the radio, whether or not it was grounded, could in all probability have been employed to have summoned [sic] help.”
After carefully examining the entirе transcript, we conclude there was evidence to support each finding of negligence made by the trial court. Not only was there some evidence, but the weight of the evidence supported the trial court’s findings. Hence they were definitely not clearly erroneous and must stand.
II
We turn now to appellant’s claim that damages for conscious pain and suffering cannot be awarded to the plaintiff under either DOHSA or the general maritime law. The recovery DOHSA provides is “a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary loss sustained . . . .”46 U.S.C. § 762 (1970). This language has been held to exclude pain and suffering as an element of damages. Dennis v. Central Gulf S. S. Corp.,
But plaintiff advances three possible theories based on the general maritime law to support his recovery of damages for pain and suffering. The first theory is to look to statе law for a survival statute and use that to supplement federal maritime law.
See
Romero v. International Terminal Operating Co.,
The advantage of this theory — and the reason it was accepted in a recent ease, Dugas v. National Aircraft Corp.,
The second theory for sustaining the plaintiff’s recovery depends on
Moragne, supra.
In that case, the Supreme Court overruled The Harrisburg,
Moragne left the exact dimensions of the maritime action for wrongful death to further litigation in the courts:
“We do not determine this issue [the proper schedule of beneficiaries for the newly recognized claim] now, for we think its final resolution should await further sifting through the lower courts in future litigation. . If still other subsidiary issues should requirе resolution, such as particular questions of the measure of damages, the courts will not be without persuasive analogy for guidance. Both the Death on the High Seas Act and the numerous state wrongful-death acts have been implemented with success for decades. . . .”
We find the third theory presented by plaintiff to be the most persuasive. This theory follows a middle course between the difficulties presented by the two prior theories. Specifically, we believe that the policy enunciated by the Supreme Court in
Moragne
provides ample support for us to hold that there is a federal maritime survival action, created by decisional law, for pain and suffering prior to death. This conclusion comports well with the philosophy of
Moragne,
in that it remedies the non-existence of a feder
*800
al cause of action and thereby avoids the problem of making plaintiff’s recovery turn on the existence of a state survival statute, as under the
Dugas
theory. It also avoids a conflict with DOHSA, since survival and wrongful death actions havе long been recognized as distinct causes of action.
See
Sea-Land Services, Inc. v. Gaudet,
It may be objected that Congress could have placed a survival provision in DOHSA if it had wanted one, and thus a conflict with DOHSA is not really avoided. However, this argument proves too much. Congress could well have extended the wrongful death action provided by DOHSA for the high seas all the way to the shore, thus remedying legislatively the vacuum which
Moragne
filled decisionally. Yet this was not accepted by the Supreme Court in
Moragne
as a reason for declining to fill the legislative void. Similarly, we decline to accept it in the context of filling the void created by the absence of a survival provision. We are supported in this result by Spiller v. Thomas M. Lowe, Jr. & Associates, Inc.,
Ill
We turn now to the issue of funeral expenses. 7 A number of recent cases applying the Moragne doctrine have allowed awards of funeral expenses in wrongful death actions. The most recent and important case to do so is Sea-Land Services, supra. In that case the United States Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision, held that a longshoreman’s wife could bring a Moragne wrongful death action even though her husband had recovered damages for his injuries in his lifetime. Justice Brennan’s opinion for the Coui’t made these observations about funeral expenses as an item of damаges:
“[Djamages for funeral expenses may be awarded under the maritime wrongful death remedy in circumstances where the decedent’s dependents have either paid for the funeral or are liable for its payment. A majority of States provided for such recovery under their wrongful death statutes. Furthermore, although there is a conflict over whether funeral expenses are compensable under the Death on the High Seas Act, compаre The Culberson,61 F.2d 194 (CA3 1932), with Moore v. The O. S. Fram,226 F.Supp. 816 , aff’d,328 F.2d 868 (CA5 1963), it is clear that funeral expenses were permitted under the general maritime law prior to The Harrisburg, see e. g., Hollyday v. The David Reeves,12 F.Cas. 386 (No. 6,625) (D.C.Md.1879). We therefore find no persuasive reason for not following the earlier admiralty rule and thus hold that funeral expenses are compensable.”
It does not undermine our holding to argue that if the Supreme Court had intended pecuniary loss to be the sole measure of damages in maritime wrongful death actions, it would have restricted the courts to federal statutes, and not have allowed reliance on state wrongful death acts in devising the measure of damages under
Moragne.
Even if this argument is persuasive within the compass of
Moragne
actions,
11
we do not find it persuasive in this case. Nor is it relevant that the general maritime law prior to The Harrisburg,
e. g.,
Hollyday v. The David Reeves,
The Supreme Court in
Sea-Land
intimates that the meaning of “pecuniary loss” may be broad enough to include funeral expenses. The only case which оur research has disclosed where funeral expenses were allowed under DOHSA is Moore v. The O. S. Fram,
Arrayed against the single reported district court case allowing funeral expenses are a number of cases: Cities Service Oil Co. v. Launey,
supra
(Jones Act and by implication DOHSA) ; The Culberson,
The award of the district court is modified to reduce the damages from $16,500 to $15,000 plus interest, and is affirmed as modified. Costs are awarded to the plaintiff.
Notes
. “State remedies for wrongful death and state statutes providing for the survival of actions, both historically absent from the relief offered by the admiralty, have been up
*798
held when applied to maritime causes of action.”
. Two problems in applying
Just
should be noted. First,
Just
spoke of supplementing federal maritime law with the state survival statutе to maintain the claim against the estate of the deceased tortfeasor, not to maintain the claim for the benefit of the estate of the deceased victim, as in this case. This distinction does not dictate a different result, however. O’Leary v. United States Lines Co.,
The second, and more significant problem, is that
Just
supplemented federal maritime law in a case where the tort occurred in state territorial waters, where DOHSA does not apply, 46 U.S.O. §§ 761, 767 (1970) (DOHSA applies “beyond a marine league from the shore”), but in this case the tort occurred where DOHSA applies, thus precluding recovery for pain and suffering after the death of the tort victim. Decker v. Moore-McCormack Lines, Inc.,
. The pertinent part of this statute reads:
“In addition to the actions which survive by the common law, the following survive:
(2) Actions of tort (a) for assault, battery, imprisonment or other damage to the person . . . .”
This statute keeps a nеgligence action for pain and suffering viable despite the death of the tort victim. Gaudette v. Webb, 1972 Mass.Adv.Sh. 1131,
. Other cases adopting this route to award damages for pain and suffering to an admiralty plaintiff in cases like this one are In re Farrell Lines, Inc.,
.
But see
Sennett v. Shell Oil Co.,
. AVe believe the dictum in Cortes v. Baltimore Insular Line, Inc.,
. The issuе of funeral expenses was not separately treated in tlie brief of either party in this court. The issue, as raised in the briefs, was “AVhetlier damages for conscious suffering and for funeral expenses can be awarded under the Death on the High Seas Act or under general maritime law.” The discussion of this Quoted question was devoted solely to the pain and suffering aspect. AVe infer that the parties thought that however the pain and suffering issue was disposed оf, the funeral expenses issue would be decided similarly. Though we disagree with this assumption, we regard the award of damages for funeral expenses as properly before us for review.
. Greene v. Vantage S.S. Corp., supra; Dennis v. Central Gulf S.S. Corp.,
supra;
Nye v. A/S D/S Svendborg,
supra-,
Mascuilli v. United States,
. Greene v. Vantage S.S. Corp., supra; Dennis v. Central Gulf S.S. Corp., supra.
. Section 7 of DOHSA, 46 U.S.C. § 767 (1970), provides that “[t]he provisions of any State statute giving or regulating rights of action or remedies for death shall not be affected by this chapter.” It would be possible to interpret this section to allоw a state wrongful death statute to operate where the death occurs on the high seas, but the better authority rejects this view, Jennings v. Goodyear Aircraft Corp.,
. Even in that arena the argument seems to assume that the Supreme Court actually answered the questions it explicitly stated it did not need to determine.
See
. This distinction provides no help for plaintiff here. Under Massachusetts law the estate of the decedent is primarily liable for the decedent’s funeral expenses.
See
Magrath v. Sheehan,
