Defendant has moved for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c), Fed. Rules Civ.Proc., 28 U.S.C.A., claiming that certain of plaintiff’s claims are either time barred or legally insufficient. The action is brought by a seaman’s administratrix who sets forth what at first glance appears to be two but is actually four causes of action. All rest upon the same alleged facts: while plaintiff’s intestate was a crewman aboard defendant’s vessel, the “Marine Trader,” he was served and ate poisonous barracuda meat •en July 25, 1955, which caused serious .injury, required his hospitalization and ■eventually brought about his death on .March 5, 1958.
The “first” cause of action is for plaintiff’s intestate’s pain and suffering prior to death (“pain and suffering action”) and the “second” is for damages for his death (“wrongful death action”). Each “cause of action,” however, is based on two distinct theories, negligence under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.A. § 688, and unseaworthiness, which have been commingled. Plaintiff has consequently set forth a pain and suffering action and a wrongful death action based both on negligence under the Jones Act and unseaworthiness, making four in all, and her complaint and defendant’s motion will be considered from the perspective of this analysis. 1 For reasons set forth below, two of these are dismissed — the pain and suffering action under the Jones Act and the wrongful death action based on unseaworthiness.
I
Defendant claims that the “first cause of action for personal injuries” is barred by a three-year limitation period. 45 U.S.C.A. § 56. 2 As stated above, the “first” cause of action sets forth both Jones Act and unseaworthiness pain and suffering actions. Defendant’s contention will first be considered as to the Jones Act pain and suffering action.
The Jones Act, by incorporating provisions of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, creates two causes of action for negligence — -“One is for the wrong to the injured person and is confined to his personal loss and suffering before he died, while the other is for the wrong to the beneficiaries and is confined to their pecuniary loss through his death.”
3
The action for decedent’s pain and suffering accrues at the time of injury, while the wrongful death action accrues at death. Reading Co. v. Koons,
II
There remains for consideration, however, the timeliness of so much of the “first” (pain and suffering) cause of action as is based on unseaworthiness. The unseaworthiness action was not created by the Jones Act, and was known to the general maritime law prior to the enactment of that statute, The Osceola,
In McAllister v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.,
There is compelling authority in this Circuit for applying the doctrine of laches to unseaworthiness actions and state statutes of limitations as convincing but not inflexible guides when the laches doctrine is used. In LeGate v. The Panamolga,
After LeGate, the same Court, in Oroz v. American President Lines, Ltd.,
On the bare record before me, it is not clear what state statute of limitations might appropriately be considered as an analogy in applying the doctrine of laches. 7 The decisions referred to above make clear that if New York law is to be looked to, then the six-year period of N.Y.C.P.A. § 48(3) furnishes the appropriate analogous measure of timeliness. 8 Defendant has not raised the issue of laches on this motion, although laches is pleaded in its answer. On this record, then, I deny so much of defendant’s motion based on the three-year Jones Act statute of limitations as applied to the pain and suffering claim based upon unseaworthiness. This denial, however, is without prejudice to defendant’s right to raise at an appropriate time the issue of laches or the issue of which state’s survival statute applies. 9
No contention is made that the wrongful death claim based upon unseaworthiness is untimely. However, defendant does argue that this cause of action is defective and should be dismissed because *280 a wrongful death action based upon unseaworthiness does not exist under general maritime law and, therefore, fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendant does not make this contention with regard to the pain and suffering action based upon unseaworthiness and confines itself there to the argument, already discussed, that that action is untimely. Therefore, it is necessary now to consider whether the wrongful death action based upon unseaworthiness fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
Ill
Two principal sources suggest that there cannot be a wrongful death action based upon unseaworthiness: one is the old, and frequently cited, general maritime rule that death ends the right to sue;
10
the other is Lindgren v. United States,
The Supreme Court held in Lindgren that an action under the Jones Act for the negligently caused death of a seaman may be brought by no representative of the decedent other than one specifically named in the statute; in the absence of such a beneficiary, a death action for negligence could not be brought under the general maritime law or a state wrongful death statute. The Court held that the Jones Act, Congress’ attempt to fashion remedies for seamen and certain of their beneficiaries for injuries or death caused by negligence, had to be deemed the “paramount and exclusive” source of such remedies, one which “supersedes the operation of all state statutes dealing with that subject.” Lindgren v. United States, supra,
“ * * * the right of action given the personal representative by the second clause of § 33 to recover damages for the seaman’s death when caused by negligence, for and on behalf of designated beneficiaries, is necessarily exclusive and precludes the right of recovery of indemnity for his death by reason of unseaworthiness of the vessel, irrespective of negligence, which cannot be eked out by resort to the death statute of the State in which the injury was received.” (emphasis supplied).
Therefore, consideration of defendant’s motion, to the extent that it is directed to plaintiff’s wrongful death claim based upon unseaworthiness, would stop with the citation of Lindgren, if development of the law pertaining to seamen’s rights to recover for injury had also stopped with Lindgren. However, in the years since that case was decided, the unseaworthiness doctrine has been expanded so that it, and not the Jones Act, “has become the principal vehicle for personal injury recovery.” Gilmore and Black, Admiralty 315 (1957). As unseaworthiness has expanded, so too has the application of state survival and wrongful death statutes, which have often been construed to allow survivors of shore-based maritime workers to sue under the unseaworthiness doctrine for. injuries to, and the death of, their decedents. The implacable effect of death on causes of action under the general maritime law has been blunted by recent decisions.
Prior to the enactment of the Jones Act, suit under state wrongful death statutes could be brought in admiralty when the cause of death was a maritime tort occurring within the navigable waters of a state, Western Fuel Co. v. Gar
*281
cia,
In Holland v. Steag,
Notably, Holland has been cited with approval by the Supreme Court in Hernan v. American Dredging Co.,
This court has followed Holland v. Steag on at least one occasion. In McLaughlin v. Blidberg Rothchild Co.,
However, while the courts have been applying state survival and wrongful death statutes to maritime torts to an extent that has caused one commentator to note in recent decisions “a discernible drift towards increased application of state substantive law in maritime tort situations”, Harolds, Maritime Death Claims and the Applicability of State Law, 35 Tul.L.Rev. 85, 86 (1960), they have not applied state statutes to permit seamen’s representatives to sue for wrongful death based upon unseaworthiness. As already indicated, despite its express assumption that a pain and suffering action might be brought under a state statute after a seaman’s death, the Supreme Court in Kernan made no parallel allusion to a wrongful death action based upon unseaworthiness despite petitioner’s express contention that such an action could be brought. Instead, the Court referred to the Death on the High Seas Act. Other courts have affirmatively refused to permit wrongful death actions for unseaworthiness. Some of the decisions permitting suit under survival statutes for pain and suffering actions based on unseaworthiness simultaneously dismissed causes of action purporting to state wrongful death actions for unseaworthiness under the general maritime law, Holland v. Steag, supra, McLaughlin v. Blidberg Rothchild, supra. 13
Moreover, two prior decisions of this Court are directly in point. In Bath v. Sargent Line Corp.,
“There is no escape from this conclusion unless Lindgren v. United States * * * is no longer authoritative.
******
“ * * * Since the Jones Act withholds any right of action for death due to unseaworthiness and prevents the assertion of any such right of action under state law, no means of recovery for death due to unseaworthiness is available to the seaman’s representative under either federal or state law.”
In Robbins v. Esso Shipping Co.,
“Since Lindgren v. United States, * * * it has been clear that in an action to recover for the death of a seaman caused by the negligence of his employer, the remedy under the Jones Act is paramount and exclusive and precludes any right to recovery for negligence under the New Jersey death statute, or for unseaworthiness under federal or state law.”
Accord, de Hyman v. M/V Montego,
The post-Lindgren authorities indicate that the lower courts have permitted pain and suffering actions based upon unseaworthiness while refusing to permit wrongful death actions based on the same theory. In the light of the important developments in maritime law since 1930, reexamination may be called for of Lindgren 14 and the entire relationship between the Jones Act and the unseaworthiness doctrine. 15 But on the present state of the law I feel that so much of plaintiff’s wrongful death claim as is based upon unseaworthiness must be dismissed. As indicated above, defendant’s only objection to the pain and suffering claim based on unseaworthiness is its alleged untimeliness. This contention is rejected for the reasons set forth in Point II above.
Defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings is granted as to so much of the first cause of action as asserts a claim under the Jones Act for plaintiff’s intestate’s pain and suffering, and as to so much of the second cause of action as asserts a claim under the unseaworthiness doctrine for plaintiff’s intestate’s wrongful death.
Settle order on notice.
Notes
. Negligence and unseaworthiness need not be separately pleaded in the complaint. Kelley v. Midland S.S. Line, Inc.,
. This is the statute of limitations under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act which the Jones Act incorporates by reference. 46 U.S.C.A. § 688.
. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. v. Craft,
. Plaintiff’s brief argues only that the pain and suffering action based upon unseaworthiness is timely and does not defend the timeliness of her Jones Act pain and suffering action. Plaintiff has not, therefore, contended that the timeliness of the unseaworthiness pain and suffering action (which is discussed in Point II, below) can “save” the similar Jones Act action. Cf. Campanile v. Societa G. Malvicini,
. Since plaintiff’s decedent’s death occurred less than three years after the original injury, there is no need to consider whether the representative’s wrongful death action is barred if the decedent’s action under the Jones Act was already barred at the time of his death. Compare Dusek v. Pennsylvania R. R.,
. Three Justices dissented, on the theory-that absent a federal limitations period, the state courts could apply any relevant state limitations period, even a shorter-one. Only one Justice, concurring, took the view that the Jones Act period' should apply (
. It may be that the statute of limitations of a state other than New York is applicable as appropriate analogy. Presumably, the law of the place of injury would apply if the injury occurred within the territorial waters of a state. If the cause of action arose on the high seas, alternative choices of law might also be considered: the law of the flag, or, if the vessel is American, of the owner’s domicile or state of incorporation; the decedent’s domicile; the law of the forum; under certain circumstances, the law of the state to which the shipowner owes allegiance and the law of the place where the seaman signed his employment contract may assume importance. See note 9 below.
. Even if New York law furnishes the analogy, the six-year period is not inflexibly applied. Evan v. American Export Lines, Inc.,
. Plaintiff suggests as applicable survival statutes of two states: Delaware and New York, tbe former apparently on the assumption that Delaware is the state of incorporation of defendant (although this is not admitted on the record before me). See generally on the problem of which survival statute would furnish the source of plaintiff’s right to sue, if such right there be, Comment, 60 Colum. L.Rev. 534, 543-551 (1960) and the authorities cited therein; see also, Lauritzen v. Larsen,
. “Death is a composer of strife by the general law of the sea as it was for many centuries by the common law of the land.” Cortes v. Baltimore Insular Line, Inc.,
. The court,
inter alia,
relied on The Hamilton,
. The Supreme Court in Lindgren specifically refused to address itself to the relationship between the Jones Act and the Death on the High Seas Act,
. Accord, Fall v. Esso Standard Oil Co.,
. Judge Learned Hand has expressed doubt whether Lindgren would have been decided the same way in 1950. See Gill v. United States,
. See, e. g., concurring opinion of Judge Lumbard in Bartholomew v. Universe Tanksbips, Inc.,
