OPINION
We address the availability of punitive damages for unseaworthiness.
This case comes to us on a
Facts
The case comes to us on the pleadings and nothing else. The district court denied a motion to strike .the portion of the prayer seeking punitive damages for unseaworthiness. We therefore take our facts from the complaint. They are not proved, and we intimate no view as to whether punitive damages may ultimately turn out to be appropriate.
The plaintiff, Christopher Batterton, was a deckhand on a vessel owned and operated by the defendant, Dutra Group. While Batterton was working on the vessel in navigable waters, a. hatch cover blew open and crushed his left hand. Pressur
Analysis
The only question before us is whether punitive damages are an available remedy for unseaworthiness claims. We answered it in Evich v. Morris.
In Evich we squarely held that “[punitive damages are available under general maritime law for claims of unseaworthiness, and for failure to pay maintenance and cure.”
Evich was a wrongful death case, not an injury case.
Under Miller v. Gammie,
The Supreme Court’s more recent decision in Atlantic Sounding Co. v. Townsend
Arguably, Townsend leaves room for a distinction between maintenance and cure claims and unseaworthiness claims. The Court recognizes that “remedies for negligence, unseaworthiness, and maintenance and cure have different origins and may on occasion call for application of slightly different principles and procedures.”
So far our discussion suggests that Miles does not overturn Evich, that Evich remains in force as controlling circuit law, and that Evich’s holding that punitive damages are available as a remedy for unseaworthiness claims is undisturbed and binding. Appellant’s arguments to the contrary, though, are given force by McBride v. Estis Well Service.
McBride, a sharply divided Fifth Circuit en banc decision, holds that “punitive damages are non-pecuniary losses”
Well before our decision in Evich, the Supreme Court addressed in Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc.
Moragne holds that the denial of a wrongful death remedy “had little justification except in primitive English legal history.”
Three years after our decision in Evich, the Supreme Court decided Miles v. Apex Marine Corp,
Miles declined to limit Moragne to its facts.
But it is not apparent why barring damages for loss of society should also bar punitive damages. Miles itself suggests no such broad interpretation of “pecuniary loss”—it' expressly notes that the Jones Act “evinces no general hostility to recovery under maritime law” and “does not disturb seamen’s general maritime claims for injuries resulting from unseaworthiness.”
That a widow may not recover damages for loss of the companionship and society of her husband has nothing to do with whether a ship or its owners and operators deserve punishment for callously disregarding the safety of seamen. One might reasonably argue that loss of society is more important than such punishment, or that such punishment is more important than loss of society. However, it cannot reasonably be argued that they are both compensation for “loss,” If they were, they would fall within the rubric of compensatory damages, not punitive damages.
Following Miles, we held in Smith v. Trinidad Corp. that loss of consortium damages are unavailable to the wives of injured mariners in their own.actions under the Jones Act or general admiralty law.
Whatever room might be left to support broadening Miles to cover punitive damages was cut off by the Supreme Court’s decision in Atlantic Sounding Co. v. Townsend.
It is true, as Dutra contends, that Miles, taken alone, might arguably be read to suggest that the available damages for a general maritime unseaworthiness claim by an injured seaman should be limited to those damages permissible under the Jones Act for wrongful death. But that is a stretch. The remark upon which Dutra relies is Miles’s justification for its narrower conclusion: “that there is no recovery for loss of society in a general maritime action for the wrongful death of a Jones Act seaman.”
It is also true, as Dutra argues, that if we were to interpret Miles broadly and Townsend narrowly, as the Fifth. Circuit has in McBride, then we might infer that Miles implicitly overruled Evich. But we would then have to disregard Miles’s statement that the Jones Act “does not disturb
Starting with Lord Campbell’s Act, and continuing through the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, the Death on the High Seas Act, and the Jones Act, wrongful death is a statutory cause of action.
Conclusion
The district court correctly denied Du-tra’s motion to strike the prayer for punitive damages. They are indeed awardable to seamen for their own injuries in general maritime unseaworthiness actions. Under Miller v. Gammie,
AFFIRMED.
. Compare, e.g., Rowe v. Hornblower Fleet, No. C-11-4979 JCS,
. Compare Evich v. Morris,
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. See McBride,
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. Id. at 258.
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. Miles,
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. See
. Townsend,
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. Id. at 379,
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. Id. at 33,
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. See Pecuniary and Pecuniary Damages, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
. Charles T. McCormick, Handbook on the Law of Damages 105 (West 1935).
. See, e.g,, Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker,
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. See
. Miles,
. Miles states:
The Jones Act also precludes recovery for loss of society in this case. The Jones Act applies when a seaman has been killed as a result of negligence, and it limits recovery to pecuniary loss. The general maritime claim here alleged that Torregano had been killed as a result of the unseaworthiness of the vessel. It would be inconsistent with our place in the constitutional scheme were we to sanction more expansive remedies in a judicially created cause of action in which liability is without fault than Congress has allowed in cases of death resulting from negligence. We must conclude that there is no recovery for loss of society in a general maritime action for the wrongful death of a Jones Act seaman.
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. See Exxon Shipping Co.,
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