In these consolidated maritime personal injury actions, we must determine whether the trial court erred by enforcing a forum-selection clause in form contracts issued by Carnival Cruise Lines to Kathryn Barry and Thomas Leslie, two of its fare-paying customers, prior to embarking
It is agreed by and between Guest and Carnival that all disputes and matters arising under, in connection with or inсident to this Contract or the Guest’s cruise, including travel to and from the vessel, shall be litigated, if at all, before the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami, or as to those lawsuits to which the Federal Courts of the United States lack subject matter jurisdiction, before a court located in Miami-Dade County, Florida, U.S.A. to the exclusion of the Courts of any other county, state or country![ 2 ]
Barry and Leslie are Florida residents who wish to use the courts of their own state for the resolution of negligence аctions they brought against Carnival for shipboard injuries incurred during their cruises. Because of a one-year limitation period on the filing of cruise-related claims also present in Barry’s and Leslie’s ticket contracts, each provisionally filed identical actions in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. 3 Due to a lack of diversity jurisdiction between them and Carnival, these actions are pending on the admiralty side of that court.
Barry’s and Leslie’s chief grievance regarding Carnival’s forum-sеlection clause is that it strips them of their constitutional right to a jury trial, and instead affords them a jury trial in their federal forum only “with the consent of both parties.”
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 39(c).
4
Carnival represents in its Answer Brief here that it “has no intention of opposing Appellants!!’] request fоr a jury trial” in these passengers’ pending federal actions, which Barry and Leslie suggest is further evidence of what it divines to be Carnival legerdemain. We interpret Carnival’s statement to mean that if the United States District Court lifts the stays in these passengers’ federal admiralty actions, Carnival will consent to a jury trial in these cases. We conclude
I. Carnival’s Forum-Selection Clause is Prima Facie Valid and Enforceable
It is well settled that federal maritime law governs the enforceability of a forum-selection clause in a passenger cruise ticket contract.
See Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
In
M/S Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
In
Shute,
First, a cruise line has a special interest in limiting the fora in which it potentially could be subject to suit. Because a cruise ship typically carries passengers from many locales, it is not unlikely that a mishap on a cruise could subject the cruise line to litigation in several different fora. Additionally, a clausе establishing ex ante the forum for dispute resolution has the salutary effect of dispelling any confusion about where suits arising from the contract must be brought and defended, sparing litigants the time and expense of pretrial motions to determine the correct forum аnd conserving judicial resources that otherwise would be devoted to deciding those motions. Finally, it stands to reason thatpassengers who purchase tickets containing a forum clause like that at issue in this case benefit in the form of reduced farеs reflecting the savings that the cruise line enjoys by limiting the fora in which it may be sued.
Id.
at 593-94,
II. Carnival Has Not Unlawfully “Federalized” Its Passenger Personal Injury Actions
Despite our conclusion, Barry and Leslie make a final, intriguing argument — glaringly ignored by Carnival — that neither The Bremen nor Shute afford meaningful guidance in this case, because both cases treated “geographical” forum-selection clauses as distinguished from the clause under consideration here, which Barry and Leslie aptly characterize as a “sovereign selection clause.” These passеngers point out that, in substantial contrast to a “geographical” forum-selection clause, Carnival’s new forum-selection clause effectively dictates not only the location where a passenger may sue, but also contractually сonstrains the “subject matter jurisdiction” of the available courts within that jurisdiction. According to Barry and Leslie, this constraint arises from the fact that, henceforth, all of Carnival’s Florida resident passengers and its alien passengers (who all lack diversity of сitizenship with Carnival) 5 , and all its passengers whose claims are worth less than $75,000 (the federal diversity jurisdictional minimum), must initiate suits against Carnival on the admiralty side of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and, at the same time, all other United States citizens (fоr whom diversity does exist) henceforth must file on the law side of that court.
For this reason, Appellants’ counsel contends, Carnival’s forum-selection “creation, for proprietary use with its own particular passengers” operates henceforth both: (1) to deprive its maritime passengers of their “ ‘historic option’ and right under the Savings to Suitors Clause of 28 U.S.C. [Section] 1331(Z) to initiate their suits in state court and to remain there unless and until properly removed by Carnival to federal
We acknowledge the disruption to traditional maritime policy caused by Carnival’s new forum-selection clause. We also are mindful that until relatively recently, forum-selection clauses, including those found in admiralty and maritime contracts, have not been favored by American courts.
See The Bremen,
The argument that such clauses are improper because they tend to “oust” a court of jurisdiction is hardly more than a vestigial legal fiction. It appears to rest at core on historical judicial resistance to any attempt to reduce the power and business of a particular court and has little place in an era when all courts are overloaded and when businesses once essentiаlly local now operate in world markets. It reflects something of a provincial attitude regarding the fairness of other tribunals.
Id.
at 12,
Although our participation in maritime personal injury claims might be lessened by the adoption of clauses of this type, we doubt we will be silenced completely as Barry, Leslie, and their counsel so eloquently urge. Nor do we harbor jurisdictional or sovereign concern. Rather, we concur with the sentiment expressed in
The Bremen, id.,
that “[it] reflects something of a provincial attitude rеgarding the fairness of other tribunals[]” to suggest, as the passengers and their counsel do in the final analysis here, that plaintiffs who might become contractually obligated to appear before and litigate their cases before the fine judges of thе United States
Affirmed.
Notes
. These cases arrive here upon final orders of dismissal from separate complaints filed by Barry and-Leslie. We review these dismissals de novo.
D'Angelo v. Fitzmaurice,
. The passengers do not contest that this clause, which was referenced expressly in a bold-faced “Important Notice to Guests” on the first page of the Ticket Contract, was "reasonably communicated” to them as required by federal maritime law.
See Nash v. Kloster Cruise, A/S,
. These cases have been stayed by the United States District Court pending resolution of the forum-selеction clause issue presented here.
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 39(c) states:
In all actions not triable of right by a juiy the court upon motion or of its own initiative may try any issue with an advisory jury or, except in actions against the United States when a statute of the United States provides for trial withоut a jury, the court, with the consent of both parties, may order a trial with a jury whose verdict has the same effect as if trial by jury had been a matter of right.
.
See Universal Licensing Corp. v. Paola del Lungo S.p.A.,
