OPINION
This case arises from the tragic death, in the offshore waters of Puerto Rico, of Natalie Calhoun, the minor daughter of Lucien B. Calhoun and Robin L. Calhoun. In the summer of 1989, Natalie, twelve, who lived with her parents in Pennsylvania, went on a vacation trip to Puerto Rico with a friend and her friend’s parents. During their stay at a resort hotel, Natalie rented a “Wavejammer” jet ski. The Wavejam-mer hit a vessel at anchor near the beach. Natalie was killed.
Invoking Pennsylvania law, Natalie’s parents brought a combined wrongful death and survival action in this court against Yamaha Motor Company, Ltd., a Japanese corporation, which is the manufacturer of Wavejammer jet skis, and Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A., a California corporation, which is the American distributor of Wavejammers. (The defendants are hereinafter collectively referred to as “Yamaha”). The complaint alleged defects in the Wavejammer, and attributed liability to Yamaha on the basis of negligence, strict liability, and breach of implied warranties of merchantability and fitness.
Plaintiffs contended that, since the parties were of diverse citizenship, the suit should be treated as a conventional diversity action, to be tried under Pennsylvania
*290
law in conformity with the requirements of the
Erie
doctrine.
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
The Court of Appeals, in a detailed and closely reasoned opinion, reversed,
The Supreme Court, on certiorari, affirmed in a unanimous opinion.
Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A. v. Calhoun,
The Court, in the opinion’s closing footnote, pointed out that “[t]he Third Circuit left for initial consideration by the District Court whether Pennsylvania’s wrongful-death remedies or Puerto Rico’s apply.”
Id.
at 216 n. 14,
The opinion’s closing footnote also identified a related question whose disposition the Supreme Court — like the Court of Appeals — felt could be deferred (id.):
The Court of Appeals also left open, as do we, the source — federal or state — of the standards governing liability, as distinguished from the rules on remedies. We thus reserve for another day reconciliation of the maritime personal injury decisions that rejected state substantive liability standards, and the maritime wrongful-death cases in which state law has held sway. Compare Kermarec,358 U.S., at 628 [,79 S.Ct. 406 ] (personal injury); Pope & Talbot, Inc. v. Hawn,346 U.S. 406 , 409[,74 S.Ct. 202 ,98 L.Ed. 143 ] (1953) (same), with Hess v. United States,361 U.S. 314 , 319[,80 S.Ct. 341 , 4 *291 L.Ed.2d 305] (1960). (wrongful death); The Tungus v. Skovgaard,358 U.S. 588 , 592-594[,79 S.Ct. 503 ,3 L.Ed.2d 524 ] (1959) (same).
II.
As the foregoing recital explains, two questions were remitted to this court by the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court. The first question is which jurisdiction’s remedial regime — that prescribed by the law of remedies of Puerto Rico or that prescribed by the law of remedies of Pennsylvania — frames the damages claims advanced by the Calhouns. The second question is whether the source of the Cal-houns’ substantive claims is federal maritime law or state law. If the second question yields the answer that state substantive law governs, a further question is presented: Is the applicable substantive law that of Pennsylvania (the home jurisdiction of Natalie Calhoun and of her parents, and the jurisdiction in which this litigation is being conducted), or that of Puerto Rico (the jurisdiction in which Natalie’s tragic death occurred). 1
The first of these questions was addressed by this court last fall. After briefing and argument I announced a provisional ruling — “provisional” in the sense that it was not then embodied in an order. See Transcript of Oral Argument, Sept. 23, 1998. At a subsequent hearing a week later I stated that, after giving counsel the opportunity to file supplemental briefs, I would (1) reconsider my provisional ruling (a ruling which, as I explain below, was at odds with the position of the Calhouns and with the position of Yamaha) on the question of remedies and (2) rule on the question whether the Calhouns’ claims are substantively rooted in federal maritime law or state law. Further, I expressed agreement with the joint view of the parties that my rulings’on .these two questions (whatever those rulings turned out to be) should be certified to the Court of Appeals pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
i.
My provisional decision on the question of the applicability of Pennsylvania’s or Puerto Rico’s remedial regime commenced with a ruling that the question was not one to be decided, Klaxon-wise, by reference to which jurisdiction’s remedial provisions would be applied by a Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas invoking principles ' of Pennsylvania conflict of laws. Because this case is deemed an admiralty case, not a diversity case, the question of whosé remedial regime should be applied was, in my view, a question of federal choice-of-law law, not of state choice-of-law law. It seemed to me that for this court to be guided by how a Pennsylvania tort case involving (a) cognate claims and (b) parties of similarly diverse citizenship would be handled by a Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas would be an invitation to a species of disuhiformity in the 'management of maritime death claims that the Supremé Court and the Court of Appeals could hardly have intended, since it would mean that, if a case identical to this were brought in a federal district court in Puer-to Rico, the question of what remedies were available would depend on Puerto Rico’s choice-of-law rules which might well not be harmonious with Pennsylvania’s choice-of-law rules.
In sum, I decided that whether Puerto Rico’s or Pennsylvania’s remedial rules should govern was a matter of federal choice of law which it was up to me to determine.
*292 With respect to the Calhouns’ claim for punitive damages, I concluded that such a claim was not cognizable in this case because Puerto Rico does not have punitive damages as part of its conventional damages arsenal. Punitive damages, I noted (Transcript, Sept. 23, 1998, pp. 35-39), are:
intended to punish an egregious wrongdoer [and] are also intended to deter that wrongdoer and others from engaging in the grievously tortious conduct that is at issue. These two purposes appear to me to be the community purposes of the state or community in which the tortious activity takes place. The fact that Puerto Rico does not have a regime of punitive damages reflects a community determination that Puerto Rico for its reasons does not think that punitive damages are the instrument ... through which it wishes to pursue ... punishment on the one hand and deterrence on the other....
In reaching this result I rejected the contention of the Calhouns’ counsel that the Puerto Rico situs of Natalie Calhoun’s death was “adventitious,” and hence should be disregarded for choice-of-law purposes — “adventitious” in the sense that, in
Scott v. Eastern Air Lines, Inc.,
Having determined that Puerto Rico’s interest should-govern on the question of punitive damages, I came to a contrary view on the question of compensatory damages (Transcript, Sept. 23, 1998, p. 41):
It is Pennsylvania that must care for the Calhoun family in their loss and must afford what compensation is appropriate for the estate of Natalie Calhoun. These are matters of much more limited concern to Puerto Rico.
Subsequent to my provisional ruling the parties have rebriefed the question. But the rebriefing has not materially altered the terms of debate. 2 I adhere to the view *293 that the Calhouns, at the trial of their suit against Yamaha, may not seek punitive damages but may assert whatever claims for compensatory damages are available under Pennsylvania’s law of remedies to plaintiffs in wrongful death and survival actions.
ii.
The foregoing determination of which jurisdiction’s rules govern which items of damages addresses the first of the two problems identified by the Supreme Court in the final footnote of its
Yamaha
opinion. Next to be addressed is the second of the two problems: determining “the source-federal or state — of the standards governing liability, as distinguished from the rules on remedies.”
For the purpose of deciding the issue now presented to this court, what must be considered is whether the Supreme Court has jettisoned the rule which in 1960, in its
per curiam
opinion in
Goett v. Union Carbide Corp.,
As a conceptual matter, a determination that
The Tungus, Goett
and
Hess
are no longer good law — and, accordingly, that federal law defines the substantive rights of a claimant seeking redress for a death occurring in territorial waters — would appear to accomplish the reconciliation of personal injury and wrongful death cases adverted to by the Supreme Court in
Yamaha
as a doctrinal goal the Court looks forward to achieving at some future time.
3
*294
Moreover, such a determination would, on a verbal level, harmonize with the Court’s ruling in
Moragne,
a case arising in the territorial waters of Florida which came to the Court ten years after
Goett
and
Hess,
and eleven years after
The Tungus,
“that an action does lie under general maritime law for death caused by violation of maritime duties.”
In
Moragne
— decided in 1970 — the Court recognized that a judge-made federal cause of action for wrongful death was required in order to provide equitable treatment for claimants in admiralty whose decedents had lost their lives within territorial waters, rather than on the high seas, and who were not adequately protected by the federal statutes covering those engaged in maritime occupations, or by state wrongful death statutes.
5
To reach that proper conclusion, the Court expressly overturned
The Harrisburg,
Respected authority — the 1975 edition of the classic admiralty treatise written by Charles Black and the late Grant Gilmore — has answered the question in the affirmative: Moragne “overruled both The Harrisburg and The Tungus (and its sequels) .... ” Grant Gilmore and Charles L. Black, Jr., The Law of Admiralty (2d ed., 1975) 367. 6
However, in this fortieth anniversary year of
The Tungus,
it now appears that reports of the demise of
The Tungus
and its progeny have been exaggerated. “In the wake of
Calhoun [v. Yamaha],”
maritime lawyer Walter Johnson has written,
“The Tungus, Hess
and
Goett
have taken on new life.” Walter Johnson,
Diving into the Wreck; An Exploration of Yamaha Motor Corp. v. Calhoun,
9 U.S.F. Mar. L.J. 141, 157 (1996). Mr. Johnson builds his case for this doctrinal resurrection on the Supreme Court’s
Yamaha
opinion, but the evidence Mr. Johnson relies on is somewhat ambiguous.
7
More compelling
*295
evidence is to be found in the Court of Appeals’s
Yamaha
opinion. That court’s opinion describes
The Tungus
as deciding that
“pre-Moragne
rights of non-seaman killed in state territorial waters depend on state wrongful death statute.”
I conclude, therefore, that, certainly in this circuit, The Tungus, with all its Harrisburg-er& warts, remains good law with respect to the proposition that “rights of non-seaman killed in state territorial waters depend on state wrongful death statute.” The substantive rights of those suing derivatively from, or in the name of, nonseafarers killed in the territorial waters of a state have their source in state law, not federal law. This conclusion is mandated by the opinion of the Court of Appeals which — in conjunction with the Yamaha opinion of the Supreme Court — ■ governs this case. This conclusion also appears to be in harmony with the general receptivity to state law which infuses Yamaha at both levels of the appellate process — in correction of my prior analysis.
The last question to be resolved is whether the state substantive law to be looked to is that of Pennsylvania or Puerto Rico. The answer to this is provided by
The Tungus
which quotes (
Conclusion
In the order accompanying this opinion, this court directs that:
(1) with respect to the remedies that plaintiffs may seek, (a) partial summary judgment is granted to Yamaha, 8 insofar as Yamaha has moved to preclude plaintiffs from seeking punitive damages against Yamaha, and (b) partial summary judgment is denied to Yamaha insofar as Yamaha has moved to preclude plaintiffs from seeking compensatory damages as authorized by Pennsylvania law rather than as authorized by Puerto Rico law, plaintiffs being entitled to sue for whatever compensatory damages the Pennsylva *296 nia law of remedies authorizes in wrongful death actions; 9
(2) plaintiffs’ substantive liability claims have their source in the law of Puerto Rico governing wrongful death actions;
(3) given that, in this court’s view, there is “substantial ground for difference of opinion” as to the legal principles underlying the foregoing two numbered paragraphs, and because, in this court’s view, “an immediate appeal from the order” embodying the foregoing determinations “may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation,” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), this court concludes that it would be proper to recommend to the Court of Appeals that it exercise its discretion to review these two interlocutory determinations. Specifically, this court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), certifies to the Court of Appeals the following questions:
Natalie Calhoun, the twelve-year old daughter of Lucien and Robin Calhoun, who are Pennsylvania residents, was killed when the “Wavejammer” jet ski she had rented, while on a vacation trip to Puerto Rico with a friend and her friend’s parents, crashed into a vessel anchored in territorial waters just off shore. Natalie’s parents brought suit against Yamaha Motor Corporation, a Japanese corporation which is the manufacturer of Wavejammer jet skis, and Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd., a California corporation which is the American distributor of Wavejammers (the defendants are hereinafter collectively referred to as “Yamaha”), in a federal district court in Pennsylvania. The complaint, which alleges defects in the Wavejammer Natalie Calhoun rented, sounds in negligence, strict liability, and implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit,40 F.3d 622 and the Supreme Court,516 U.S. 199 ,116 S.Ct. 619 ,133 L.Ed.2d 578 , have concluded that the Calhouns’ suit against Yamaha, arising out of their daughter’s tragic death, is an admiralty suit arising under the aegis of Moragne v. States Marine Lines,398 U.S. 375 ,90 S.Ct. 1772 ,26 L.Ed.2d 339 (1970). Further, in considering what sorts of damages the Cal-houns may sue for, the two appellate courts have concluded that the question of what damages may be sought under this Moragne cause of action is a matter of state law. But the two appellate courts did not themselves undertake to decide what state’s law would govern: That question — involving a choice between the remedial law of Pennsylvania and that of Puerto Rico — was to be addressed, in the first instance, by this court on remand. Similarly, the two appellate courts reserved decision on what state’s substantive liability law was the source of the Calhoun’s suit. The questions now posed are these:
1. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that partial summary judgment should be granted to Yamaha, precluding any claim by the Calhouns for punitive damages, on the ground that (a) the availability of punitive damages should be determined by the remedial law of Puerto Rico, the situs of the tragic accident giving rise to the suit, and (b) the law of remedies of Puerto Rico makes no provision for punitive damages?
2. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that the Calhouns’ entitlement to seek particular categories of compensatory damages should be determined by the law of remedies of Pennsylvania, the state of residence of Lucien and Robin Calhoun and of their daughter Natalie, rather than by the law of remedies of Puerto Rico, the situs of Natalie’s fatal accident, and hence that Yamaha’s motion for partial summary judgment should be denied insofar as it sought to *297 preclude the Calhouns from seeking compensatory damages in conformity with the law of remedies of Pennsylvania?
3. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that the jurisdiction whose substantive liability law is the source of the Calhouns’ claims is Puerto Rico?
ORDER
For the reasons set forth in the accompanying opinion, it is hereby ordered that:
(1) with respect to the remedies that plaintiffs may seek, (a) partial summary judgment is GRANTED to defendants (hereinafter, “Yamaha”) insofar as Yamaha has moved to preclude plaintiffs from seeking punitive damages against Yamaha, and (b) partial summary judgment is DENIED to Yamaha insofar as Yamaha has moved to preclude plaintiffs from seeking compensatory damages as authorized by Pennsylvania law rather than as authorized by Puerto Rico law, plaintiffs being entitled to sue for whatever compensatory damages the Pennsylvania law of remedies authorizes in wrongful death actions (the term “wrongful death actions” is to be understood as including survival actions);
(2) plaintiffs’ substantive liability claims have their source in the law of Puerto Rico governing wrongful death actions;
(3) given that, in this court’s view, there is “substantial ground for difference of opinion” as to the legal principles underlying the foregoing two numbered paragraphs, and because, in this court’s view, “an immediate appeal from the order” embodying the foregoing determinations “may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation,” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), this court concludes that it would be proper to recommend to the Court of Appeals that it exercise its discretion to review these two interlocutory determinations. Specifically, this court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), certifies to the Court of Appeals the following questions:
Natalie Calhoun, the twelve-year old daughter of Lucien and Robin Calhoun, who are Pennsylvania residents, was killed when the “Wavejammer” jet ski she had rented, while on a vacation trip to Puerto Rico with a friend and her friend’s parents, crashed into a vessel anchored in territorial waters just off shore. Natalie’s parents brought suit against Yamaha Motor Corporation, a Japanese corporation which is the manufacturer of Wavejammer jet skis, and Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd., a California corporation which is the American distributor of Wavejammers (the defendants are hereinafter collectively referred to as “Yamaha”), in a federal district court in Pennsylvania. The complaint, which alleges defects in the Wavejammer Natalie Calhoun rented, sounds in negligence, strict liability, and implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit,
1. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that partial summary judgment *298 should be granted to Yamaha, precluding any claim by the Calhouns for punitive damages, on the ground that (a) the availability of punitive damages should be determined by the remedial law of Puerto Rico, the situs of the tragic accident giving rise to the suit, and (b) the law of remedies of Puerto Rico makes no provision for punitive damages?
2. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that the Calhouns’ entitlement to seek particular categories of compensatory damages should be determined by the law of remedies of Pennsylvania, the state of residence of Lucien and Robin Calhoun and of their daughter Natalie, rather than by the law of remedies of Puerto Rico, the situs of Natalie’s fatal accident, and hence that Yamaha’s motion for partial summary judgment should be denied insofar as it sought to preclude the Calhouns from seeking compensatory damages in conformity with the law of remedies of Pennsylvania?
3. Did this court err in deciding, on remand, that the jurisdiction whose substantive liability law is the source of the Calhouns’ claims is Puerto Rico?
Notes
. The term "state law” is here used to denote the law of Puerto Rico as well as the law of Pennsylvania, notwithstanding that Puerto Rico is, as a matter of formal federal terminology, a "commonwealth” rather than a "state.” (Pennsylvania’s formal self-description as the "Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,” in the Preamble of the Pennsylvania Constitution, is deeply rooted in Pennsylvania's history, but it is, of course, a matter of local terminology which in no respect modifies or qualifies Pennsylvania’s status as a "stale” for all federal purposes.)
. (A) Yamaha relies on
Lauritzen v. Larsen,
(B) Equally remote is
LaPlante v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc.,
The Calhouns argue that LaPlante supports their contention that Pennsylvania’s punitive damages provisions should apply to the claims they are pressing in the case at bar. Although it is true that in LaPlante the district *293 court followed Rhode Island law, not Colorado law, on punitive damages, the precise ruling of the district court, which the First Circuit sustained, was that the plaintiff had failed as a matter of law to establish a cognizable punitive damages claim; whether there was dispute as to the applicability, under Rhode Island choice-of-law law, of the Rhode Island punitive damages regime does not appear.
Finally, the Calhouns point to LaPlante's statement that “the tortious conduct allegedly giving rise to plaintiff’s injuries occurred in Japan, where the subject ATV was designed and its warnings devised,”
.
Yamaha
is not the first occasion on which the Court has noted the tension between the doctrines applicable in personal injury and wrongful death cases arising in territorial waters. See
Moragne v. States Marine Lines,
. Although "the Court’s driving concern in
Moragne"
was to "achieve!] uniform access by seafarers to the unseaworthiness doctrine,”
Yamaha,
. As pointed out in footnote 4, supra, the Supreme Court in Yamaha assumed, without deciding, that Moragne's recognition of a wrongful death cause of action would also involve recognition of a survival action.
. It is fair to say that The Tungus, Hess and Goett are not decisions admired by Professors Gilmore and Black. The 1975 edition of the treatise, after describing the elaborate and arcane divisions of the Court in The Tungus (five-to-four) and Hess (six-to-three), says of Goett (five-to-three-to-one): "The Goett case, decided the same day as Hess, marked a descent into a still lower circle of the Court's private jurisprudential hell.” Gilmore and Black, supra, at 367.
The 1975 edition of Gilmore and Black was the second edition. The first edition was published in 1957. Lamentably, there has been no third edition.
.Citing footnote 10 of the Supreme Court’s
Yamaha
opinion, Mr. Johnson notes that, “[significantly, the
Calhoun
Court points out that
Moragne
could have overturned
The Tungus
but did not.” Johnson,
supra,
at 157. But Mr. Johnson may have over-read the
Yamaha
footnote. What the first sentence of the footnote says, in commencing a discussion of the sweep of
Moragne,
is this: "The Court might have simply overruled
The Tungus ...
*295
thus permitting plaintiffs to rely on federal liability standards to obtain state wrongful-death remedies,”
Mr. Johnson also observes that "[t]he
[Yam
aha] Court notes that
Moragne
left in place the cause of action for negligence under Florida law.” Johnson,
supra
at 157. The
Yamaha
Court did indeed so note,
. As noted at the beginning of this opinion, the term "Yamaha” denotes both defendants.
. The term “wrongful death actions” is to be understood as including survival actions. See note 5, supra.
