Defendant-Appellant Carnival Corporation (“Carnival”) appeals the denial of its motion to dismiss. Carnival argues that the district court should have dismissed the instant wrongful death suit because the suit was filed after the expiration of a one-year contractual limitation period. The district court, however, in a particularly well-reasoned order, held that the limitation period was subject to equitable tolling during the pendency of the plaintiffs parallel suit in a state court of competent jurisdiction. In reaching its conclusion, the district court emphasized that although the state court eventually dismissed the state case for improper venue, the state court had concurrent subject matter jurisdiction over the wrongful death claim.
Notwithstanding its ultimate decision to reject Carnival’s motion to dismiss, the district court noted an absence of directly controlling Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent and acknowledged that whether equitable tolling is appropriate under the circumstances of this case presents a close question. Accordingly, the district court certified this interlocutory appeal. With the understanding that “[t]he question of whether equitable tolling applies is a legal one subject to
de novo
review,”
Cabello v. Femandez-Larios,
I. BACKGROUND
The parties do not dispute the relevant facts. This wrongful death action stems from a fatal scuba diving accident that occurred on July 20, 2004, in the territorial waters of the U.S. Virgin Islands. The decedent, Steve Booth (“Steve” or “the decedent”), was a Carnival cruise ship passenger at the time of the accident, and he embarked on the ill-fated scuba excursion with the assistance of Carnival and Carnival’s agent, a Virgin Islands scuba instruction company.
The decedent’s cruise ticket from Carnival contains several provisions that govern his estate’s right to sue the company. According to the ticket, Steve’s estate must give Carnival written notice of any claim within 185 days of his injury or death. In addition, the ticket establishes a one-year limitation period within which any suit must be commenced. Finally, the ticket contains a forum selection clause, which specifies that the District Court for the Southern District of Florida shall serve as the appropriate venue, assuming that this federal district court has subject matter jurisdiction. In situations where the District Court for the Southern District of Florida lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the ticket identifies the state courts in Miami-Dade County, Florida, as the appropriate alternative forum.
After timely giving Carnival written notice, Plaintiff-Appellee Victor Booth (“Booth”), as representative of Steve’s estate, filed a wrongful death action in the state courts of Miami-Dade County
1
on July 5, 2005, sixteen days before the running of the contractual limitation period. On December 29, 2005, while the state
II. DISCUSSION
Because the state court possessed subject matter jurisdiction over Booth’s claim, and because the state court dismissed the claim merely on grounds of improper venue, we hold that Booth’s filing and diligent prosecution of his state-court suit suffices to equitably toll the contractual limitation period in his identical federal suit. At the outset, we acknowledge that “[t]he burden is on the plaintiff to show that equitable tolling is warranted.”
Justice v. United States,
Two cases in particular, one from the Supreme Court and one from the Eleventh Circuit, inform our analysis in this case.
2
Although both cases are distinguishable from the instant case, they nonetheless frame the issue with which we are faced. In the first case,
Burnett v. New York Central Railroad Co.,
the Supreme Court held that “when a plaintiff begins a timely FELA
3
action in a state court having jurisdiction, ... and plaintiffs case is dismissed for improper venue, the FELA limitation is tolled during the pendency of the state suit.”
In the second pertinent case,
Bailey v. Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc.,
our circuit held that the filing of a suit under the Death on the High Seas Act (“DOHSA”), 46 U.S.C. § 761
et
seg., in state court will not toll the running of a contractual time bar.
We decline to limit Burnett to FELA cases, because Burnett’s reasoning, when combined with Bailey’s reasoning, leads us to conclude that equitable tolling is appropriate in the instant case. Our conclusion does not conflict with Bailey, which merely applied our circuit’s well-settled principle that filing in a court without competent jurisdiction does not toll the statute of limitation. Unlike the plaintiff in Bailey, Booth initially timely filed suit in a state court of competent jurisdiction. Despite the state courts’ eventual ruling that venue was improper, which ruling resulted in dismissal, Booth in no way slept on his claims against Carnival. Even though Booth filed the instant federal suit after the contractual limitation period had run, Carnival was aware within the limitation period that Booth was actively pursuing his cause of action. The underlying policy of repose, reflected in the agreed-upon limitation period, and designed to assure fairness to Carnival, is not violated by equitable tolling in this case. To the contrary, the interests of justice are best served here, as in Burnett, by allowing the parties to resolve Booth’s claims on the merits.
In reaching our conclusion, we reject Carnival’s suggestion that Booth’s attorney’s filing in an improper venue constitutes the type of “mere negligence” for which equitable tolling is inappropriate. Carnival bases its argument on the Supreme Court’s holding that “the principles of equitable tolling ... do not extend to what is at best a garden variety claim of excusable neglect.”
Irwin v. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs,
Finally, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that Booth pursued his claim with proper diligence. Carnival first raised its venue defense in an amended pleading on September 14, 2005, and Booth filed his federal suit on December 29, 2005, despite Booth’s reasonable (though eventually erroneous) belief that Carnival had waived this defense. As noted above, Booth in no way slept on his claim, and Carnival was on notice within the limitation period of the wrongful death suit. Because Booth filed his wrongful death claim in a state court that possessed subject matter jurisdiction concurrently with the federal courts, and because the state suit was dismissed solely on grounds of improper venue, and because Booth diligently pursued his claim, we hold that the federal district court properly equitably tolled the parallel federal action during the pendency of the state suit.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Importantly, the district court implicitly found that this state court had subject matter jurisdiction over the claim although venue was ultimately improper, and Carnival has not argued otherwise on appeal.
. The parties assume without argument that federal law governs the issue of whether equitable tolling is appropriate in the instant case. Therefore, without expressing an opinion about whether we believe this assumption is correct, we will proceed to analyze the relevant federal law.
. Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. § 51 ei seq.
. Carnival argues otherwise, claiming that
Burnett's
analysis was FELA-specific and therefore sheds no light on this lawsuit. For support, Carnival cites a case out of the Southern District of Florida,
Levick v. Steiner Transocean Ltd.,
