Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.
Appellants Gregory Milanovich and Marjorie Koch-Milanovich appeal the grant of summary judgment to appellees Costa Cro-ciere, S.p.A., an Italian cruise line corporation, and Costa Cruises, Inc., a New York corporation serving as Costa Crociere’s general sales agent. For reasons given below, we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings on appellants’ claim.
I. Background
Appellants Gregory Milanovich and Marjorie Koch-Milanovich, a husband and wife residing in the District of Columbia, booked passage for a one-week Caribbean cruise on an Italian flag vessel owned by appellee Costa Crociere, S.p.A. The cruise disembarked from San Juan, Puerto Rico on Feb *765 ruary 6, 1988. On the morning of February 7, while the ship was in international waters, the deck chair upon which Mr. Mi-lanovich was sitting collapsed, allegedly causing him serious injury.
On December 13, 1988, the Milanoviches made a written demand for damages on appellee Costa Cruises, Inc. Three months later, on March 31, 1989, appellants filed a personal injury action in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The suit was filed one year and fifty-three days after the date of the accident. The cruise company promptly moved for summary judgment claiming that the suit was time-barred by a provision of the passage ticket establishing a one-year time limit for bringing personal injury actions. Appellants opposed summary judgment arguing that another provision of the ticket invoked Italian law as the “ruling law of the contract,” and that under Italian law the one-year limitation was unenforceable. 1 They submitted uncontroverted expert testimony that under Articles 1341 and 1342 of the Italian Civil Code, provisions expressly referenced in the passage ticket, 2 liability limiting provisions in certain kinds of “adhesion” contracts, of which a passenger ticket is one, are unenforceable against the non-drafting party unless that party gives specific written assent to such provisions. Without such written approval, they contended, the one-year limitation period in this case was unenforceable. 3
The district court disagreed. The court reasoned that federal maritime law governed this contract, and that under federal maritime choice-of-law rules, the governing law of the contract is determined by a “center of gravity” analysis, not by the contractual intent of the parties alone.
Milanovich v. SJK Enterprises, Inc.,
*766
In a supplemental memorandum and order, the district court considered, and rejected, appellants’ argument that the district court had failed to appreciate the significance of the Supreme Court’s decision in
The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
[i]t is doubtful if the Supreme Court anticipated an extension of the rule of The Bremen so far from the [commercial] circumstances of that case as to allow a passenger ticket for a pleasure cruise to dictate, as a matter of contract alone, the terms and conditions upon which a shipowner would be liable to its passengers for personal injury_ The proposition may be tested by asking whether, were the situation reversed and the limitations clause less favorable to the Mila-noviches under Italian law than under the applicable provision of U.S. maritime law, would it nevertheless be enforced under the rule of The Bremen in the circumstances of this case.
Id.
at 5,
II. Analysis
The Milanoviches’ cruise ticket is a maritime contract and thus the substantive law to be applied in this case is the general federal maritime law, including maritime choice-of-law rules.
See Hodes v. S.N.C. Achille Lauro Ed Altri-Gestione,
The contract contains a provision purporting to adopt Italian law as the law of the contract, but to follow that direction and use Italian contract law to decide whether the provision telling us to use Italian law is valid would obviously be “putting the barge before the tug.”
DeNicola v. Cunard Line Ltd.,
Under American law, contractual choice-of-law provisions are usually honored. Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 187 (1971). This principle applies even when the choice-of-law clause is contained in a contract of adhesion, although courts typically scrutinize such contracts to prevent substantial injustice to the adherent.
Id.
comment b. Thus, in
Siegelman v. Cunard White Star,
The district court here, however, ignored the choice-of-law clause, reasoning that The Bremen, in which the Supreme Court enforced a similar clause, 7 was distinguishable because it involved commercial parties of equal bargaining strength. Appellees, in turn, argue that the district court properly disregarded the choice-of-law clause— a clause that they drafted and included in this adhesion contract — because a contractual choice-of-law clause is only one factor to be considered in a court’s choice-of-law analysis. Brief for Appellee at 14. We find neither argument persuasive.
First, while there are indeed statements by some district courts that a choice-of-law clause is only one factor in determining the applicable law,
see, e.g., McQuillan v. “Italia” Societa Per Azione Di Navigazione,
*768
Second, the district court’s conclusion that the reasoning of
The Bremen
is limited to the commercial context has been undermined by the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
— U.S. —,
Under
The Bremen
and
Carnival Cruise,
then, courts should honor a contractual choice-of-law provision in a passenger ticket unless the party challenging the enforcement of the provision can establish that “enforcement would be unreasonable and unjust,” “the clause was invalid for such reasons as fraud or overreaching,” or “enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum in which suit is brought.”
The Bremen,
Appellees do not argue that enforcement of the choice-of-law provision would be unreasonable or unjust, or that they have been the victim of fraud, bad faith or overreaching; after all, appellees drafted the choice-of-law provision and included it in the form passage contract. Instead, appellees argue that a particular policy of the forum would be contravened by enforcement of the contractual choice-of-law clause. Under 46 U.S.C.App. § 183b(a), they say, it is unlawful
for the ... owner of any sea-going vessel ... transporting passengers ... from or between ports of the United States and foreign ports to provide ... a shorter period for ... the institution of suits on [claims for loss of life or bodily injury] than one year.
Appellees argue that this provision implicitly sanctions a maximum limitation period of one year and was enacted “to provide uniformity of treatment and predictability of outcome for American passengers” regardless of the nationality of the carrier. Enforcing a choice-of-law clause that will permit suit beyond one year from the date of the accident, appellees argue, would contravene this public policy. Brief of Appel-lees at 18-19.
The plain language of 46 U.S.C.App. § 183b, however, reveals that the provision seeks only to prevent time limitations of less than one year. Enforcing the choice-of-law clause here obviously does not con *769 travene that policy. To the extent there is an affirmative forum policy regarding time bars to suit, it is embodied in 46 U.S.C. § 763a, which provides for a three-year statute of limitations for maritime torts. Enforcing the choice-of-law clause here would clearly not undermine that policy.
III. Conclusion
The Milanoviehes' passage ticket designates Italian law as the ruling law of the contract. Appellees, the parties opposing enforcement of that provision, have not demonstrated that the choice-of-law clause is unjust or unreasonable or that its enforcement would violate American public policy. We therefore see no reason to deny enforcement of this express provision of the Milanoviehes’ passage ticket. Under Italian law, 10 as it was explained by appellants’ expert without contradiction by ap-pellees, the contract’s one-year limitation on suit is invalid, and thus appellants’ action was timely filed. The summary judgment of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded for further proceedings to adjudicate appellants’ personal injury claim.
So ordered.
Notes
. Appellants’ passage ticket came in a 13-page booklet, measuring 81/2 by 3‘/2 inches, setting out the terms and conditions of carriage. The following notice was printed on the front of the booklet in red letters against a white background:
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Each passenger should carefully examine this ticket, particularly the conditions on pages 2-10.
A similar notice appeared in the upper left hand corner of the actual ticket: "By accepting or using this ticket the passenger agrees to the terms and conditions appearing on pages 2-10 of Passage Ticket Booklet.”
Article 30, printed in small type on page 9 of the ticket, provided that ”[n]o action or proceeding against the Company for ... injury ... to the passenger shall be instituted, unless ... the action or suit ... is commenced within one year from the date when the ... injury occurred." Art. 35, printed on the next page of the ticket and entitled "RULING LAW OF THIS CONTRACT,” provided that "[tjhis passage ticket is subject to the Italian law.”
. The following passage, translated from the Italian, appeared on page 10 of the ticket immediately following Article 35's invocation of Italian law:
THE HOLDER OF THIS PASSAGE TICKET, DO [sic] HEREBY DECLARE TO THE EFFECTS AND UNDER PROVISIONS OF ARTT. 1341 AND 1342 OF THE ITALIAN CIVIL CODE IN FORCE, THAT HE IS AWARE AND ADHERES TO ALL CONDITIONS AND CLAUSES SET FORTH IN THIS PASSAGE TICKET CONTRACT AND THAT HE SPECIFICALLY APPROVES CLAUSES ... 30 ... and 35.
. Appellants also argued that even if enforceable, under Italian law the one-year limitation period was tolled by their demand letter. Because we find that the limitation period is not enforceable, we do not reach this question.
. The court reasoned that under U.S. law, liability limiting provisions in passenger cruise tickets are incorporated into the contract between the passenger and the cruise line if “the contents of the ticket ‘reasonably communicated’ the presence of the limitation term to the passenger against whom it might be invoked.”
Milanovich,
the general characteristics of those tickets held to be sufficiently communicative have *766 included a boldface or otherwise distinguishable warning to the passenger to read the fine print; placement of this warning on the cover of the ticket booklet; repetition of the warning elsewhere; contrast between the warning and the background on which it is printed; and opportunity afforded the passenger to study the provisions of the ticket by which he is to be bound.
Id. Measured against these criteria, the court concluded that "the tickets given the plaintiffs here reasonably communicated that [they] contained information of which it was in their interest to be aware.” Id.
.
In
The Bremen,
. Because we agree with appellants that the district court erred in refusing to enforce the contractual choice-of-law provision, we do not reach appellants’ alternative arguments that (1) the reference to Articles 1341 and 1342 of the Italian Civil Code in the ticket incorporated the requirement of those provisions that the limitation period be specifically approved and therefore the one-year limitation was invalid strictly as a matter of American contract law and (2) the passage ticket did not “reasonably communicate” to appellants the presence of the one-year limitation clause.
. As noted above, The Bremen involved a choice-of-forum clause, but the Supreme Court recognized that enforcing the provision would have the effect of subjecting the contract to foreign law. See supra note 5.
. Nor are we persuaded by appellees’ reliance on
Hodes v. S.N.C. Achille Lauro Ed Altri-Gestione,
*768
In
Lubick,
the court appears to have ruled that choice-of-law clauses in passage tickets are
per se
unenforceable.
. Of course, a preliminary question exists as to whether the choice-of-law clause was validly incorporated into the passage ticket. Under American maritime law, the terms and conditions in a passage ticket are deemed to be incorporated as long as they are "reasonably communicated" to the passenger.
Hodes,
. The parties' choice of law is presumed to exclude reference to the choice-of-law rules of the selected jurisdiction. Restatement (Second) of Choice of Laws § 186 comment b, so we need not examine what law the Italian courts would apply under these circumstances.
