Frank R. HODES, Mildred Hodes
v.
S.N.C. ACHILLE LAURO ed ALTRI-GESTIONE Montonoave Achille
Lauro in Amministrazione Straordinaria
and
Commissario of the Flotta Achille Lauro in Amministrazione
Straordinaria
and
Chandris (Italy), Inc. (Two Cases).
Appeal of CHANDRIS, INC.
Appeal of LAURO LINES S.R.L.
Nos. 88-5086, 88-5092.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued June 22, 1988.
Decided Sept. 22, 1988.
Daniel J. Dougherty (argued), Kirlin, Campbell & Keating, Caldwell, N.J., for appellant in No. 88-5086--Chandris, Inc.
John R. Geraghty, Raymond A. Connell (argued), Healy & Baillie, Bergenfield, N.J., for appellant in No. 88-5092--Lauro Lines S.R.L.
Stanley M. Brand, Abbe David Lowell, Sean Connelly (argued), Brand & Lowell, Washington, D.C., for appellees.
Before GIBBONS, Chief Judge, and HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge, and ROTH, District Judge*.
OPINION OF THE COURT
ROTH, District Judge.
Appellants, defendants below, contest the refusal of the district court to enforce a foreign forum selection clause contained in a cruise ship ticket, purchased by appellees, plaintiffs below, Mildred and Frank Hodes. Finding that the clause satisfies the "reasonable communicativeness" test this court set forth in Marek v. Marpan Two, Inc.,
I.
This suit arises out of the terrorist hijacking of the Achille Lauro. The oceangoing Italian-flag vessel left Genoa, Italy, on October 3, 1985, scheduled to return to Genoa 11 days later. During its voyage, the Achille Lauro was to sail the Mediterranean Sea, calling at various ports. On October 7, 1985, off the coast of Egypt, Palestinian terrorists on board seized the vessel. They held the crew and some of the passengers hostage for three days and killed one passenger, an American citizen. Appellee Mildred Hodes was on board the ship during its capture; her husband, Frank, had disembarked to tour Egyptian sights.
At the time of the hijacking, Achille Lauro ed Altri-Gestione M/N Achille Lauro s.n.c. ("ALA"), an Italian partnership, owned the Achille Lauro. ALA was one of a cluster of 19 Lauro entities, another being Societa di Fatto, Achille Lauro ed Altri Gestione Armatoriale Nava Noleggiate ("FAL"), also an Italian partnership. In February 1982, both ALA and FAL entered Italian reorganiation proceedings called Amministrazione Straordinaria On July 28, 1986, the entire cluster of Lauro entities, including ALA and FAL, were merged into one company, Lauro Lines s.r.l. ("Lauro Lines"). The merger was deemed retroactive to February, 1982.
On September 14, 1984, ALA chartered the Achille Lauro for a three-year period to a joint venture composed of FAL and Chandris S.A., a Greek corporation. The joint venture operated the vessel as a cruise ship in the Mediterranean. ALA provided the joint venture with blank passenger ticket contracts which were sold worldwide by Chandris and FAL. Included among the markets for which Chandris was responsible was the United States. A little over ten percent of the joint venture's advertising budget was allocated for the United States and Canada. Chandris S.A. retained Chandris, Inc., a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in New York City, to distribute American tickets. However, only 4.7 percent of the passengers who sailed on the Achille Lauro during the joint venture charter were U.S. citizens. On the October 3, 1985 cruise, 72 of the 728 passengers were Americans.
The Hodeses became aware of the Achille Lauro cruises through a travel club, Club ABC Tours (the "Club"), of which they were members. The Club was operated by a travel agency, Crown Travel Service ("Crown"). Crown and the Club were in no way affiliated with ALA, FAL, or Chandris. Crown received information from Chandris, Inc. on the Achille Lauro cruises and negotiated with Chandris, Inc. a price for passage for its members on them. The Club then offered 16-day Mediterranean cruises to its members. The package included air travel from New York to Italy and return, 11 days on the Achille Lauro, leaving from and returning to Genoa, and then three days in a hotel on the Italian Riviera. The cost of the package was $1699 per person plus $60 Port Taxes. The cost of the cruise portion of the package was $825 per person in a two-bed outside cabin. The Club offered 15 different cruise dates to its members. The Hodeses signed up for the tour which left New York for Genoa on October 2, 1985, and sailed from Genoa on the Achille Lauro on October 3. In total, 57 members of the Club were booked for that cruise.
The Club members paid the Club for the entire tour, the Hodeses paying $3,530.44 by check. The Club in turn remitted all ship passage fares for its members to Chandris, Inc. The Club then received from Chandris, Inc., the individual passenger tickets. Appellees allege they did not actually receive their tickets until "immediately before boarding the ship" in Genoa when a Club representative distributed them to the members. Nobody discussed the terms of the ticket with the Hodeses. Appellees "were totally unaware that [they] were waiving any legal rights simply by accepting the ticket."
The cover of the passenger ticket contained the statement: "IMPORTANT: Passengers attention is drawn to the Shipowner's terms and conditions printed inside." Among the terms and conditions were 32 fine print articles on the back of the ticket. Article 31 stated: "All controversies that may arise directly or indirectly in connection with or in relation to this passage contract must be instituted before the judicial authority in Naples, the jurisdiction of any other authority being expressly renounced and waived." Article 32 provided for application of Italian law to any contractual disputes.
As a result of the highjacking, appellees filed suit on April 7, 1986, claiming negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress, breach of the maritime law obligation to provide safe passage, and breach of contract and implied warranties. In essence, appellees charged that the defendants failed to provide adequate security. Appellees sought $5,000,000 to compensate Mildred Hodes, $1,500,000 to compensate Frank Hodes, and $10,000,000 punitive damages for "each plaintiff against each defendant." Appellants moved for dismissal. In the event the action was dismissed, appellants agreed to waive any statutory or contractual limitations on time for bringing suit and to appear and defend in the correct Italian forum if suit was brought within 90 days of dismissal. Upon referral, the Magistrate recommended that the court dismiss the complaint on the basis, inter alia, of the forum selection clause. The district court did not adopt that recommendation but held that the suit could proceed because the forum selection clause was unenforceable.
II.
This court exercises appellate jurisdiction over decisions refusing to dismiss an action in order to enforce a forum selection clause on three grounds: (1) as interlocutory decisions under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1292(a)(1); (2) as collaterally final orders under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291; and (3) under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1651. In re Diaz Contracting, Inc.,
We note that, despite appellees' argument to the contrary, the recent Supreme Court decision in Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp., --- U.S. ----,
III.
The question of whether terms and conditions of a cruise ship ticket were reasonably communicated to the passenger is a question of law for the court. The standard of review is plenary. Marek v. Marpan Two, Inc.,
Plenary also is our review of the district court's ultimate decision refusing to dismiss this action in order to enforce the forum selection clause. General Eng'g Corp. v. Martin Marietta Alumina, Inc.,
IV.
A passenger ticket for an ocean voyage is a maritime contract. The Moses Taylor,
V.
Our analysis of the applicable maritime law starts with Marek v. Marpan Two, Inc.,
One focal point is the adequacy of so-called "warning language," often found on the front cover of a cruise ticket, directing a passenger to read the particular terms inside the ticket. The other focal point is the ticket terms themselves, and concerns such physical characteristics as the location of the terms within the ticket, the size of the terms within the ticket, the size of the typeface in which they are printed, and the simplicity of the language they employ.
Id. at 245. The court then had to determine "whether, 'taken together, the various notices and provisions of this cruise ticket contract' suffice legally to give effect to the time limits it contains." Id. at 245, quoting Lubick v. Travel Servs., Inc.,
Applying the reasonable communicativeness test, we find the foreign forum selection clause was incorporated into the appellees' contract for passage.
The ticket itself consisted of one 11 inch by 17 inch page, to which were stapled seven ticket coupons. The page was folded into thirds, creating a cover and enfolding the coupons. On the back of the page appeared 32 contractual conditions.
As for its warning language, on the cover, directly beneath a schematic design of the cruise ship, appeared the statement:
IMPORTANT: Passengers attention is drawn to the Shipowner's terms and conditions printed inside.
The word "important" was printed in capital letters approximately 1/8 inch high; the rest of the statement was printed in upper and lower case letters, with the capitals again 1/8 inch high. The statement was clearly legible. Save for a similar admonition in Italian, and an identification of the carrier, this was the only wording on the ticket cover. Its starkness contributed to its readability. The unfolded back page, the top half in Italian, the bottom half in English, containing the 32 Articles, was headnoted in approximately 1/8 inch boldfaced letters, "TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF CONTRACT OF PASSAGE AND BAGGAGE." The headnote was absolutely clear. The Articles themselves were prefaced by a clause reading:
The Company undertakes to transport the passengers and their baggage at [sic] the following conditions which the passenger--owing to the mere fact of having booked and/or purchased the passage ticket--implicitly states to know and undertakes to fully comply with.
And they were followed by a clause reading:
The holder of this passage ticket, do[es] hereby declare to the effects [sic] and under provisions of art. 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 contract, and that he specifically approves clauses Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 20, 21, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 30 and 32.
These clauses were in very small but readable print, less than 1/16 inch high. The ticket coupons themselves, in their lower lefthand corners, contained in print approximately 1/16 inch high the legible admonition: "This ticket is issued subject to the terms, conditions and regulations set out herein." Viewed in the aggregate, the ticket's warning language reasonably communicated to the Hodeses that their ticket formed a contract for passage, a contract incorporating the terms and conditions by which they were bound.
As for the foreign forum selection clause itself, Article 31 declared that "[a]ll controversies that may arise ... must be instituted before the judicial authority in Naples, the jurisdiction of any other authority being expressly renounced and waived...." Repeating our conclusion in Marek, although "the print is small, we have no trouble reading it, and the paragraph is certainly not 'so muddled or illegible as to be unenforceable.' " Marek,
In sum, the foreign forum selection clause was reasonably communicated to the Hodeses. While our determination does contradict the ruling of the lower court and a similar bench ruling by the Southern District of New York, Klinghoffer v. Achille Lauro, 85 Civ. 9303 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 21, 1987), appeal dismissed sub nom. Chasser v. Achille Lauro Lines,
Appellees would distinguish Marek not on the basis of the physical arrangement of the ticket but rather on the basis of the contract right at stake. Marek involved conditions regarding the timing of notice of injury and initiation of suit; this appeal involves forum selection. That distinction, appellees claim, is vital for two reasons. First, the injured passenger can avoid the time contraints by reading the ticket soon after injury and acting promptly; a forum selection clause cannot be similarly avoided. Second, because United States law, 46 U.S.C.App. Sec. 183b(a), prohibits conditions that require notice of injury sooner than within six months of injury or initiation of suit sooner than within one year of injury, it can be said conditions that meet that law are implicitly endorsed. Forum selection clauses enjoy no such sanction.
The Marek court did take these considerations into account, Marek,
Appellees further argued that they did not receive their tickets until immediately before boarding the ship and, therefore, they had no effective opportunity to read the conditions of contract. Prior to the appellees boarding the Achille Lauro, the tickets had been held by Club ABC, the appellees' travel agent. In Marek, we found that a friend's "possession of the folder is sufficient to charge [plaintiff] with notice of its provisions."
VI.
Having found the foreign forum selection clause was incorporated into the Achille Lauro contract for passage, we must decide whether the clause should actually be enforced.3
In The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
Appellants would extend The Bremen to reach the Achille Lauro contract for passage and its Neapolitan forum selection clause. Appellees respond that a correct application of The Bremen works in their favor because (1) the Achille Lauro foreign forum selection clause was the result of overweening bargaining power, (2) its enforcement would contravene strong public policy, and (3) Neapolitan litigation would effectively deprive the appellees of a meaningful day in court. We analyze, and reject, those three arguments in turn.
The Bremen Court did take into consideration that the London forum selection clause it studied was the result of "an arm's length negotiation by experienced and sophisticated businessmen,"
The choice of Italian venue for disputes arising out of a cruise on an Italian vessel, departing from and returning to Italy, was a sensible and fair choice. Furbee v. Vantage Press, Inc.,
For similar reasons it was appropriate to provide that Italian law govern the contract, see Article 32 of the Contract for Passage, a law best administered by Italian courts. Cent. Contracting Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
We note this is not a case in which a consumer contracted to have a service rendered or buy a product in his/her home jurisdiction only to later learn of the existence of a forum selection clause. See Yoder v. Heinold Commodities, Inc.,
Appellees next argue that the public policy perpetuated by the law of the forum, i.e., the public policy of American maritime law, precludes enforcement of the foreign forum selection clause, referring to Indussa Corp. v. S.S. Ranborg,
Appellees might nonetheless construct an analogous argument on the basis of 46 U.S.C.App. Sec. 183c which forbids any "provision or limitation ... purporting, in the event of loss of life or bodily injury arising from the negligence or fault of the [ship] owner or his servants, to relieve such owner, master, or agent from liability, or from liability beyond any stipulated amount, for such loss or injury." Section 183c also forbids any provision or limitation purporting to "lessen, weaken, or avoid the right of any claimant to a trial by court of competent jurisdiction on the question of liability for such loss or injury, or the measure of damages therefor." But the provisions of Sec. 183c, like those of COGSA, are limited in their application to voyages that touch the United States. Id.; 46 U.S.C.App. Sec. 1300. The law, and its policy, go no further. American maritime law as declared by statute does not avail the appellees.
Alternatively, appellees refer to public policy promulgated judicially. The judiciary, especially before passage of Sec. 183c in 1936, has at times restricted, on public policy grounds, the ability of a carrier to limit its liability for negligent conduct. See, e.g., The Arabic,
Appellees protest that an Italian court might enforce provisions of the contract of passage that purport to limit the carrier's liability for passenger injury to $10,0005 and completely absolve the carrier's liability for passenger injury arising out of acts of piracy.6 Neither litigant has proferred an expert opinion on Italian law as to whether these clauses would actually be enforced. In any case, we adamantly refuse to wield the trump of American public policy. Cf. The Bremen,
In The Bremen, the Supreme Court similarly straitened American public policy. The Fifth Circuit had refused to enforce the London forum selection clause, expressing concern that an English court would accept clauses of the towage contract limiting the liability of the tower for its own negligence. The Bremen,
Finally, appellees argue that "trial in the contractual forum will be so gravely difficult and inconvenient that [they] will for all practical purposes be deprived of [their] day in court," the third Bremen standard. The Bremen,
VII.
For the errors now assigned to the trial court, its decision not to enforce the foreign forum selection clause will be reversed and this suit remanded to that court with directions to dismiss the action brought by the Hodeses. Appellees may pursue their action in Italy.
Notes
Honorable Jane R. Roth, United States District Judge for the District of Delaware, sitting by designation
This suit was brought in the Southern District of New York by seven passengers and executrices of two other passengers involved in the hijacking of the Achille Lauro. The district court denied a motion to dismiss on the basis of the forum selection clause and the Court of Appeals held that denial of the motion was not appealable under the collateral order doctrine
Applying the general maritime choice of law rules to this litigation, we find American general maritime substantive law controls the issues before us today. First, while the terms and conditions of the ticket apparently provide for application of Italian law, the preliminary question of whether a specific condition is incorporated into a ticket contract putatively entered into in the United States by an American citizen is one for American law to decide. McQuillan v. "Italia" Societa per Azione di Navigazione,
Neither party has argued that Italian law pertains to this question. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 44.1.
In cases involving time limitation clauses, inquiry into enforcement is usually brief because the provisions of 46 U.S.C.App. Sec. 183b can be straightforwardly applied. Because no statutory provisions govern foreign forum selection clauses, the question of enforcement here is more complex
Appellees rely on Consumers Power Co. v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.,
The contract of passage also refers to the applicability of the Athens Convention of 1974 which limits liability for personal injury to 700,000 francs (the "franc" being defined therein as a unit consisting of 65.5 milligrams of gold of millesimal fineness 900). Athens Convention of 1974, Arts. 7, 9, IMCO No. 75.03E (entered into force April 28, 1987), reprinted in 6 Benedict on Admiralty 2-9 (7th ed. 1988)
Whether the Achille Lauro hijacking constituted an act of piracy is a matter of controversy. See Franck & Senecal, Porfiry's Proposition: Legitimacy and Terrorism, 20 Vand. J. Transnat'l L. 195, 199 n. 8 (1987)
