ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS
THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon Defendant Carnival Corporation’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Complaint, D.E. 12, filed October 19, 2012. Plaintiff filed its Response, D.E. 18, on November 15, 2012. Defendant filed its Reply, D.E. 27, on November 30, 2012. Accordingly, this matter is now ripe for disposition.
Background
Plaintiff, Hung Kang Huang, is a citizen of New York. D.E. 1 ¶ 1. Defendant, Carnival Corporation (“Carnival”) is a corporation incorporated under the laws of Panama, with its principal place of business in Florida. Id. Carnival is engaged in the business of promoting and operating vacation cruises aboard its vessels, including, in this case, the Carnival Miracle. Id. ¶ 3(f). On or about September 30, 2011, Plaintiff was a paying passenger on the Carnival Mircale, which, at the time, was in navigable waters. Id. ¶ 13.
Plaintiff alleges that, during his stay on the Carnival Miracle, on or about September 30, 2011, he slipped and fell in the shower inside his cabin bathroom, injuring his neck and spine. Id. ¶ 15. According to Plaintiff, he requested medical evacuation from the Carnival Miracle, which at the time was located in port at King’s Wharf, Bermuda, but his request was denied and he was sent back to his cabin without any way to stabilize, immobilize, or support his injured neck or spine. Id. He further alleges that he did not receive any treatment for the bruising that he sustained. Id. He was finally evacuated from the ship the following day, but alleges that the delay in treatment, coupled with the failure to stabilize, immobilize, or support his neck and spine, caused Plaintiff severe injuries and further aggravation of the injuries he sustained in the shower accident. Id. As a consequence of all this, Plaintiff claims to have suffered a loss of motor capacity, loss of sensation, loss of physical strength, and difficulties walking. Id.
The Complaint charges one count of negligence directly against Carnival for failing to take reasonable care in the design and maintenance of its showers. Id. ¶ 16. Specifically, Plaintiff claims to have been injured as a result of Carnival’s failure to have a “proper shower” in his cabin’s bathroom, failure to utilize adequate flooring in the shower, failure to adequately design the shower so as to prevent slipping hazards, failure to provide adequate markings of a slipping hazard, failure to provide adequate hand-holds or grips in the cabin bathroom generally and shower specifically, failure to provide an adequate shower door to prevent persons from slipping in the shower and then falling out of the same, and. other failures in bathroom design and safety protocol. Id. ¶ 18.
The remaining counts directed at Carnival are derivative of Carnival’s relationship to the medical staff that attended Plaintiff aboard the Carnival Miracle. These members of the shipboard medical staff that provided care to Plaintiff aboard the ship are William Pretorius (“Pretorius”), Jacqueline Gobeil (“Gobeil”), and Bryan Patiu (“Patiu”). Id. ¶ 5. At all times material to this action, Pretorius was the ship’s doctor, worked in the vessel’s medical facility, and intended to provide medical care to Plaintiff. Id. ¶ 9. At all times material to this action, Gobeil and Patiu worked as nurses in the ship’s medical facility, and
Legal Standard
In order to state a claim, Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2) requires only “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” While a court, at this stage of the litigation, must consider the allegations contained in the plaintiffs complaint as true, this rule “is inapplicable to legal conclusions.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
In practice, to survive a motion to dismiss, “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.’ ” Id. (quoting Twombly,
Discussion
A. Plaintiff properly states a claim for negligence
Carnival moves to dismiss Count I, which alleges negligence on its part, for failure to state a claim on which relief may be granted. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Carnival argues that Count I should be dismissed because: (1) it contains mere conclusory form allegations; and (2) it fails to allege proximate causation. With respect to the first contention, Carnival maintains that Plaintiffs list of alleged shower and bathroom defects, see D.E. 1 ¶ 18, are “simply form allegations completely devoid of factual support,” D.E. 27, at 2. The Court finds that the allegations made in Count I are sufficiently detailed for the purposes of the Rule 8 notice pleading, as they relate directly to the circumstances in which Plaintiff claims to have suffered the accident in question. The allegations relate specifically to the place of injury — the shower stall within the cabin’s bathroom. Furthermore, Plaintiff alleges design and safety protocol deficiencies that relate specifically to slip-and-fall dangers. Count I does not run mechanically recite all allegations that could be made with respect to defective shower stalls (e.g., that the water was scalding hot, that there was moldy growth, or that a jagged surface punctured his exposed skin). There is no basis for classifying these allegations as “mere conclusory form allegations.”
The Court also finds that Plaintiff sufficiently pleaded a basis for proximate cause. Federal courts do not require that plaintiffs formulaically recite the elements of a cause of action. The Complaint states
B. Counts II, III, and IV may not be asserted vicariously against Carnival.
Carnival correctly contends that it may not be held vicariously liable for the alleged malpractice of its medical staff Plaintiff concedes that the weight of existing authority supports the position that ship owners may not be held vicariously liable for the malpractice of its shipboard medical staff. Instead, Plaintiff urges the Court to depart from settled precedent For the reasons set forth below, the Court upholds the majority rule with respect to a ship owner’s vicarious liability.
It is now well-settled that ship owners cannot be held vicariously liable under general maritime law for a physician’s or other medical staffs negligence in treating on-board patients. See Benedict on Admiralty § 9.03 (7th ed. 2011). The case most cited for this proposition is Barbetta v. S/S Bermuda Star,
The most durable rationale underlying Barbetta is that ship owners are powerless to intrude into the physician-patient relationship. See Barbetta,
Nor does the Court give credence to Plaintiffs assertion that Barbetta is especially susceptible to distinction or abrogation because neither the Supreme Court nor the Eleventh Circuit have affirmatively pronounced or reiterated the rule in holdings of their own. That the Supreme Court has not explicitly weighed in means nothing at all, since it would have no reason to grant a writ of certiorari on a question of general maritime law over which there is absolutely no disagreement among the lower courts. And while the Eleventh Circuit may not have had occasion to explicitly rule on the matter, it has
In Counts III and IV of the Complaint, Plaintiff attempts to circumvent Barbetta by pleading “apparent agency against Carnival Corporation for acts of Defendant William Pretorius,” D.E. 1, at 9, and “apparent agency against Carnival Corporation for the acts of the ships [sic] nurses, Defendants Jacqueline Gobeil and Bryan Patau,” Id. at 12. While Barbetta might not prohibit such agency claims as a matter of law, these claims are in practice very difficult to establish. Peterson,
C. Plaintiff fails properly to state a claim for joint venture liability
Plaintiff cannot make out a claim for liability under the theory that Carnival and its shipboard medical staff were engaged in a joint venture to provide medical services to passengers aboard the Carnival Miracle. In order to assert a joint venture claim, Plaintiffs must allege: (1) the intention of the parties to create a joint venture; (2) joint control or right to control; (3) joint proprietary interest in the subject matter of the joint venture; (4) the right of all venturers to a share in the profits; and (5) the duty of both to share in the losses. Skeen v. Carnival Corp., No. 08-22618,
Plaintiff does not allege any facts that might plausibly establish the existence of a joint venture between Carnival and the shipboard medical staff that attended him. A court considering the sufficiency of a pleading should “begin by identifying allegations that, because they are
Plaintiffs allegations as to joint proprietary interest and joint control cannot plausibly satisfy those elements. Plaintiff alleges that “Carnival had the interest in the money it devoted to setting up the medical facility and Defendants William Pretorius, Jacqueline Gobeil, and Bryan Patiu had a proprietary interest in the time and labor expended in operating the ship’s medical facility.” Id. ¶ 54. But a joint proprietary interest “requires joint ownership of the subject matter of the contract,” Gibson v. NCL (Bahamas) Ltd., No. 11-24343,
D. Plaintiff fails properly to state a third-party beneficiary claim against Carnival
Plaintiff fails to make out a third-party beneficiary claim against Carnival because it does not allege that Carnival breached the purported contract to which Plaintiff is a third-party beneficiary. A party making a third-party beneficiary claim must allege: (1) the existence of a contract in which the claimant is not a party; (2) an intent by the contracting parties that the contract primarily and directly benefit the plaintiff; (3) a breach of that contract by one of the parties; and (4) damages resulting from the breach. Rinker v. Carnival Corp.,
Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, D.E. 12, is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Counts II, III, IV, V, and XII of the Complaint, D.E. 1, are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The Motion is denied as to Count I.
Notes
. Plaintiff appears to have misnumbered this Count, but the parties have continued to refer to it as Count XII for clarity’s sake. The Court will do the same.
. Furthermore, the trend does seem to be toward reading the Barbetta Rule itself as a bar to any form of vicarious liability for the actions of medical staff, regardless of the doctrinal label affixed to the particular claim. See, e.g., Wajnstat v. Oceania Cruises, Inc., No. 09-21850,
