OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff union purchased tickets from defendant cruise line for 90 of its members, officials and guests for a Caribbean cruise, intending to hold business meetings during the course of the voyage. These plans were frustrated when many of the passengers came down with a bacterial infection. The union brought this action in the courts of New York against the cruise line, alleging that defendant had “breached its agreement promise and warranty to [provide] a safe and reasonable environment” aboard ship, and seeking reimbursement for the tickets, as well as for other expenses involved in bringing the members of the New York-based union to Jamaica for the unhappy cruise. (Compl.t 17.)
Defendant removed the action to this court, invoking federal jurisdiction on grounds of diversity of citizenship. It then moved to dismiss, arguing that the union is bound by contractual provisions, printed on the purchased tickets, that require any lawsuit against the cruise line relating to the contract be brought (1) within one year of the incident giving rise to the action and (2) either in a (state) court located in Dade County, Florida, or in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. This lawsuit meets neither of these conditions. Plaintiff maintains that it is not bound by the provisions (although it apparently concedes that the individual passengers would be) because it claims to be suing on a contract, separate from the tickets themselves, by which cruise line agreed to provide not (just) a cruise but a conference facility.
The case presents a number of issues concerning the effect of contractual provisions limiting litigation. Defendant is correct that this action cannot be maintained in this court at this time. But precisely why, and precisely how this court should dispose of the case, turn out to involve complicated questions that have puzzled the courts.
The court having carefully considered the submissions of the parties, defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted.
Choice of Law
The first question to be resolved is what law governs the validity and interpretation of the litigation-limiting clauses of the contract. Neither party has explicitly addressed this question Defendant relies primarily on federal cases, all of which ultimately derive from
M/S Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
In removing the case from the New York courts, defendant invoked our diversity jurisdiction. In diversity cases, the question whether state or federal law controls a particular issue is always present. Generally speaking, matters of “procedure” are determined by federal law, while matters of “substantive law” are controlled by state law, although the line between the two is notoriously elusive.
See generally Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
The Second Circuit has held that the enforceability of forum-selection clauses should be decided according to federal law even in diversity cases, concluding that “[questions of venue and the enforcement of forum selection clauses are essentially procedural, rather than substantive, in nature.”
Jones v. Weibrecht,
Still, this court has a lingering doubt whether, if the issue came before the Supreme Court, the
Jones
decision would prevail. It is strongly arguable that in a diversity case, the validity of such clauses should be determined by state law, which generally governs substantive questions involving the making and enforcement of contracts.
See Stewart Organization, Inc. v. Ricoh Corp.,
The
Jones
rule, moreover, is not compelled by Supreme Court authority. In
Stewart Organization,
The Supreme Court applied federal law to determine the force of a forum-selection clause in a diversity case, but that was in the context of a motion to transfer venue pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). That context differs in several respects from that of the instant case. First, the defendant there had invoked a
statute
that determined the purely procedural matter of the place of trial within the federal courts. Congress has the “power to make rules governing the practice and pleading in [the federal] courts, which in turn includes a power to regulate matters which, though falling within the uncertain area between substance and procedure, are rationally capable of classification as either.”
Hanna v.
Plumer,
Second,
Stewart Organization
expressly does
not
approve application in a diversity case of the judge-made standard of
The Bremen
in preference to applicable state principles of contract law. Instead, while noting that
The Bremen
“may prove ‘instructive’ in resolving the parties’ dispute,”
In light of these various subtleties and complications, it is not surprising that the courts of appeals, both before and after Stewart Organization, have reached conflicting results on the question whether state or federal law controls the validity of a forum-selection clause in a diversity case, with several concluding that the matter is properly governed by state law. 4
Thus, in an ordinary diversity case, this court would be bound by
Jones
to apply federal law, but would do so with
In an admiralty case, federal law governs'the interpretation and validity of contractual provisions.
See Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
II
The Validity and Application of the Forum-Selection Clause
In this case, the choice of law issue may make little difference in any event. Under federal maritime law, forum-selection clauses will be enforced “unless [the plaintiff can] clearly show that enforcement would be unreasonable and unjust, or that the clause was invalid for such rea
Under federal law, there can be no doubt that the forum-selection clause is binding on the parties to this contract. Although
The Bremen
itself, which involved a negotiated forum-selection clause in a non-routine, individually-negotiated contract between two sophisticated business entities, might be distinguishable from this case, in which the contract term is a standard “fine-print” clause in a consumer adhesion contract, any attempt to limit its holding on that ground is precluded by
Carnival Cruise Lines.
That case, like this one, involved a forum-selection clause contained in a
form
contract drafted by a cruise line and printed on a cruise ticket. Nevertheless, the Court found that the clause was reasonable and enforceable. The Court mentioned various factors as bearing on the reasonableness of the clause: (1) the forum selected was the home base of the defendant cruise line, and the place from which many of its cruises (though not the one at issue in the case) departed; (2) the cruise line had a legitimate interest in limiting the fora in which it could be sued; (3) the clause potentially benefitted all parties by providing clarity in subsequent litigation and allowing reduced costs that could result in lower fares; (4) there was no indication that the purchasers lacked fair notice or were physically or financially incapable of proceeding in the chosen forum; (5) the purchasers’ agreement to the clause was not obtained by fraud or overreaching; and (6) Florida was not a “remote alien forum” bearing no relation to a purely local dispute that should logically be resolved elsewhere.
See Carnival Cruise Lines,
Plaintiff attempts to avoid the force of the forum-selection clause, however, by arguing that while the ticket provision controls the location of any litigation between the cruise line and the
ticket-holders
(that is, the individual members or guests of the union in whose names the tickets were issued), it does not bind plaintiff union, which purchased the tickets. Its complaint, it contends, claims damages for breach of a contract that arises “not from a provision of the ticket contract language which binds the individual passengers, but rather from an independent and separate contract for a cruise convention between
This argument is ingenious but unavailing. Plaintiff submits a document showing that in addition to the 90 tickets for passage on the ship, the cruise line agreed to provide, without additional charge, a variety of incidental services appropriate to the holding of business meetings, such as meeting rooms, audiovisual equipment, and refreshments, at various times during the cruise. (Pl.’s Mem. Opp. Mot. Dis., at 1-2; Bruce Decl., Ex. A.) The document demonstrates that the cruise line undertook to provide these additional services, and no doubt if they had failed to do so they would have been in breach of their agreement with the union. But this list of additional, complimentary, services to be provided by the cruise line does not constitute a separate contract with the union. 7 Rather, as plaintiff itself puts it, these services were provided “in order to induce plaintiff to hold the conference on one of defendant’s cruise liners.” (Pl.’s Mem. Opp. Mot. Dis., at 1.) That is, the consideration for the provision of these services was the purchase, by the union, of the tickets that were then issued in the names of the individual conference participants. The purchase of the tickets was integral to the agreement between the parties, whether that agreement is seen as a contract for a cruise or for a floating convention. And the tickets embody those terms of the agreement that relate to the passage— howsoever supplemented by the modest additional terms relating to the provision of meeting facilities on board. .That plaintiff negotiated for additional services does not mean that it is not bound by the terms of the tickets it purchased, any more than the same fact would save the cruise line from breach if it had provided the meeting facilities, but its ship had never left the dock in Jamaica.
The agreement embodied in the ticket, by its express language, binds the “purchaser” of the ticket as well as the “passenger.” Thus, the cover of the ticket provides, in large bold print, 8 the following language:
IMPORTANT THAT YOU READ: This is your ticket contract. It is important that you read all of the terms and conditions of this contract. Your attention is particularly drawn to the exemptions and limitations on the carrier’s liability. By accepting this ticket, the passenger and/or purchaser agrees to its terms and conditions on his own behalf and also on behalf of any other person or persons for whom this ticket is purchased as his, her or their agent (whether or not signed).
(Buisman Decl. Ex. A) (second emphasis added; first emphasis in original). Similarly, the “fine print” to which this notice refers the reader begins, in its very first paragraph: 9
This ticket constitutes a contract between the carrier ... and the passenger (whether or not signed by or on his behalf) and all the terms and provisions of both sides of this ticket ... are a part of such contract of [sic ] which the passenger and/or purchaser agrees by accepting this ticket, both on his own behalf and also on behalf of any other person or persons for whom this ticket is purchased as his, her or their agent.
Ill
Effect of Applying the Clause
Since the forum-selection clause binds the union as well as the individual passengers, this action cannot be maintained either in the state courts of New York or in this court. But this still leaves a minor but vexing question as to how this court should dispose of the action. Courts have differed, in cases governed by forum-selection clauses, with respect to the remedy to which the defendant is entitled. The issue is related to the proper characterization of the motion.
Defendant in this case seeks dismissal of the complaint “for lack of jurisdiction pursuant to the foreign forum selection clause.” Notice of Motion, at 1-2. The supporting declaration by defendant’s attorney makes clear that the reference is to “lack of
subject matter
jurisdiction.” (Unger Decl. ¶ 1) (emphasis added). But as noted above, this court does have subject matter jurisdiction over the case. The Constitution authorizes federal jurisdiction in cases of diversity of citizenship,
see
U.S. Const., art. Ill, § 2, and Congress has authorized district courts to exercise that jurisdiction by removal under the circumstances present here.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 1382(a)(2), 1441(a). Private parties cannot defeat the subject matter jurisdiction
No one seriously contends ... that the forum selection clause “ousted” the District Court of jurisdiction over Zapata’s action. The threshold question is whether that court should have eacer- cised its jurisdiction to do more than give effect to the legitimate expectations of the parties, manifested in their freely negotiated agreement, by specifically enforcing the forum clause.
Neither does the forum-selection clause defeat the court’s
in personam
jurisdiction. In
Carnival Cruise Lines,
the Supreme Court made clear that the question of enforcing a forum-selection clause is distinct from that of
in personam
jurisdiction, treating the issue of forum selection as “dispositive,” and therefore declining to reach “petitioner’s constitutional argument as to personal jurisdiction.”
Whether such a clause can defeat the
in personam
power of a non-seleeted forum, however, is a different matter. It could perhaps be argued that, where long-arm jurisdiction is based on a single transaction connected to a state, and in that very transaction the parties have agreed that any lawsuit arising from it should be brought elsewhere, the state did not by that transaction acquire
in personam
jurisdiction. But it would be quite different to argue that, when a person is present in
Some courts, including a number of distinguished judges in this district, have treated the existence of a forum-selection clause that requires disputes to be resolved somewhere other than in plaintiffs chosen forum as a flaw in venue.
See, e.g., Medoil Corp. v. Citicorp,
No authoritative guidance on these highly technical matters can be found in cases binding on this court, as neither the Supreme Court nor the Second Circuit has addressed these questions directly. In fact, the Second Circuit has acknowledged the confusion that has “developed as to the proper procedural mechanism to request dismissal of a suit based upon a valid forum selection- clause,” without attempting to resolve it.
New Moon Shipping,
It seems incorrect to treat the clause as defeating venue in the non-preferred forum. Well-reasoned opinions by Judge Sifton in the Eastern District of New York, and Judge Simandle in the District of New Jersey, have rejected the application of Rule 12(b)(3) and § 1406(a), which deal with dismissals for improper venue.
See Haskel v. The FPR Registry, Inc.,
Rule 12(b)(3) provides for a motion to dismiss for improper venue.... “Venue,” in turn, is defined by statute at 28 U.S.C. § 1391, which sets forth where venue may properly be laid. The determination of the appropriate venue under § 1391 revolves around [various factors listed in that statute, which do not include forum-selection clauses.] Venue, as that term is defined by Congress, is proper in this district.... The fact that the parties contractually agreed to litigate disputes in another forum is not a question of venue, but one of contract, which will be enforced unless fundamentally unfair.
A close examination of the typical forum-selection clause confirms the point that such clauses, while addressing venue in the broad sense of the particular forum where the case should be brought, are not usually concerned with “venue, as ... defined by Congress.”
Nat’l Micrographies,
The point is even more dramatically illustrated in this case. Here, plaintiff did not bring the case in the “wrong ... district.” It did not bring the case in any federal district at all, but rather in the courts of New York state. To the extent that doing so violated its agreement with defendant, that violation is not a matter of mere venue, but of the deeper matter of which sovereign entity should be asked to adjudicate the dispute. It was, rather, the defendant itself that laid venue in this district, when it removed the case to federal court. And in doing so, defendant indisputably laid venue in the correct district, since the removal statute specifically requires that the case be removed to “the district court ... for the district ... embracing the place where such action is pending”—in this case, the Southern District of New York, not the Southern District of Florida. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). If Congress under § 1441 has authorized initial venue in a removal case only in this district, this district could hardly be the “wrong” district under § 1406.
This conclusion finds modest support in the Supreme Court cases dealing with forum-selection clauses.
14
In
Stewart Organization,
as noted above, the Court affirmed a district court order granting a transfer of venue under § 1404(a), something the district court could not have done if venue had not been technically proper in the first instance, since § 1404(a) presumes that a case is properly brought in the forum district, and authorizes transfer “in the interest of justice” to “any
other
district ... where [the action] might have been brought” in the first place. (Emphasis added.) At least one district court has read
Carnival Cruise Lines
as implicitly resting on § 1406(a), and thus implicitly
More significant, however, than the theoretical propriety of venue is the question of remedy. If the forum-selection clause is valid, and precludes an action in this court, should I dismiss the action or transfer it to the Southern District of Florida, where the clause permitted the plaintiff to bring it? The remedy could affect the future course of the litigation in a variety of ways. Which state’s law applies in a diversity case, whether appellate review is available, and the correct calculation of the statute of limitations may all turn on whether the original case is dismissed or merely transferred. See generally 15 Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra, § 3846. Of course, the Supreme Court has approved both remedies in different contexts: approving a transfer in Stewart Organization, and authorizing a summary judgment of dismissal in Carnival Cruise Lines.
Some aspects of this problem are resolved by binding authority.
Stewart Organization
clearly stands for the proposition that,
where the party relying on the clause moves for a transfer under § 1101(a),
that remedy is available and appropriate, and in that circumstance, the normal factors applicable in deciding such a motion (of which the existence of a forum-selection clause is only one) apply.
See
But suppose the party relying on the clause chooses not to seek a transfer but instead, as has occurred here, to move for dismissal of the action? In
Haskel,
Judge Sifton seemed to conclude that, since a motion to dismiss for improper venue did not lie, the case could not be dismissed, and proceeded to consider whether the case should be transferred to the appropriate federal district.
See
The issue here is whether a party may limit the court to considering only dismissal rather than transfer and, to the extent that there is a difference [between the standard under § 1404(a) and the standard of The Bremen ], to the standard of Carnival Cruise and The Bremen, solely by virtue of the language in which he casts his motion.. Such a result would be inappropriate....
But this does not mean that transfer is the only appropriate remedy, or that dismissal is not available. In many cases, § 1404(a) will not provide a remedy consistent with the forum-selection clause. If, for example, the clause here authorized suit only in the state courts of Florida, transferring the case to another federal district would not adequately enforce the clause. The clause in this case does permit a suit to be brought in a federal district in that state, but it does not require it; the contract permits plaintiff to bring suit in state courts as well as in federal court. True, if it did so, defendant would be able to remove the action to federal court (as it did when plaintiff filed suit in the state courts of New York). It is not clear, however, that this court can or should anticipate what the parties would do in the event plaintiff sued in a Florida state court.
Defendant did not bargain for the case to be litigated only in the Southern District of Florida, or for the right to have any federal court in the country transfer the case there. Any right to have the case transferred must therefore be predicated not on the agreement, but only on the congressional statute, which does not make the clause conclusive. More importantly, to send the ease to the Southern District of Florida would eliminate the plaintiffs right to bring the case in a Florida state court. What is clear under the contract, in other words, is not where the case must be brought, since it offers a choice of fora to plaintiff, but where it must not be brought—which includes this court and the New York state courts. Dismissal thus might well be the remedy most in keeping with the intentions of the parties as provided in the contract. 16
But is dismissal within the court’s power to grant? Both Judge Sifton and the court in
Flake
felt that dismissal “could only reflect the application of § 1406.”
In fact, in keeping with the view expressed in Part I of this opinion, many of these decisions, as well as some more recent decisions, treat the entire matter not as one for a procedural motion addressed to venue at all, but simply as a decision to enforce the agreement of the parties as written. Thus, Judge Frank in
Cerro De Pasco,
thought that, far from dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction or proper venue, a court enforcing a forum-selection clause “took jurisdiction and granted specific performance of Clause 12 of the bill on the ground that that provision was fair and not against public policy, all the facts considered.”
As indicated above, there are factors suggesting that dismissal might be the more appropriate remedy in this case. One still further wrinkle to this particular case, however, makes it unnecessary to decide which remedy would be granted if the forum-selection clause were the only issue presented by this motion.
IV
Effect of the Limitations Clause
It will be recalled that defendant moved for dismissal on two grounds rooted in contractual provisions: the forum-selection clause and an additional clause providing that any claim had to be brought within one year of the episode giving rise to the cause of action. The effects of the two “potential types of dismissal would be quite different. A dismissal based on the forum-selection clause would mean only that the suit had been brought in the wrong place; plaintiff would be free to try its luck in one of the fora authorized by the clause. A dismissal based on the time-limit clause, however, would be a determination that under the contract, relief could not be granted in any forum. Once again, the court is faced with a conundrum about available remedies: If, as has been found above, the parties have determined that this action should be brought in some other forum, and that agreement is binding on this court, should not the court simply decline to proceed further, and either dismiss the action altogether on forum-selection grounds or transfer the case to the Southern District of Florida, in either case leaving it to some other court to decide the limitations issue? On the other hand, defendant has also moved for dismissal on the basis of the latter clause. Such a dismissal would make further litigation unnecessary, and the parties have fully briefed the issue: does not judicial efficiency argue for the complete resolution of the case, if such can be had, rather than for this court to push that issue onto some other court’s crowded docket?
The court, then, faces two further questions: (1) In light of the forum-selection clause, is there any basis for this court to consider the limitations issue at all? (2) If the issue can be considered, is that clause valid and enforceable under the circumstances of this case?
A. Can the Time-Limit Clause Be Considered in this Court ?
If defendant were correct that the forum-selection clause deprived the court of subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiffs claims, that would be the end of the matter: once a court determines that it lacks jurisdiction, nothing further can be decid
Unlike subject matter jurisdiction, the lack of
in personam
jurisdiction or of proper venue can be waived.
See
Fed R. Civ. P. 12(h)(1) (waiver of objection to venue if untimely); 28 U.S.C. § 1406(b) (same);
Hoffman v. Blaski,
The parties here, by their respective litigation tactics, have waived the forum-selection clause, at least to the extent of submitting to this court this issue of the validity and application of the limitations clause. Plaintiff union not only brought this case in New York, but also actively fought to keep the case in this court, opposing defendant’s argument that the forum-selection clause applied, and arguing the merits of the limitations-clause issue. Nowhere in its submissions has plaintiff suggested that the court should not decide that issue. By bringing suit in New York in violation of the forum-selection clause, plaintiff undoubtedly has waived any right to insist on its enforcement. Had defendant not moved to dismiss, but instead acquiesced in adjudication on the merits, plaintiff could not then have objected to an unfavorable outcome on the ground that the court should not have decided the case plaintiff itself had brought.
Although defendant has raised the forum-selection clause as a defense, it has presented that and the limitations clause in the alternative, in fact placing the limitations issue first in its brief. (Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dis., at 9-12.) Because a favorable resolution of the limitations issue would be more advantageous to defendant than a dismissal or transfer on forum-selection grounds, there can be no doubt that by raising the issue in the manner it has, defendant has intelligently and voluntarily waived its rights under the forum-selection clause, at least to the extent of seeking adjudication of the limitations issue. Both parties, then, have agreed to submit this issue to this court for resolution.
Such a partial waiver of the forum-selection clause does not bind this court. If defendant sought to waive the forum-selection clause in order to present a complex motion addressing the merits of the case, for example, while still arguing in the alternative that if the motion were denied, the court should apply the forum-selection clause and transfer the case elsewhere, neither fairness nor efficient judicial administration would be served by deciding the motion first. But that is not the case here. Defendant relies on two closely-related contractual provisions, each distinct from the underlying merits of the case, and each dispositive of the case before this court. The validity of the two clauses depends on similar considerations. For these reasons, judicial efficiency and fairness to the parties are furthered rather than undermined by reaching the merits of the limitations issue, as the parties have each requested us to do. There is thus no reason for the court to decline the parties’ invitation to decide this issue, even in the presence of a valid forum-selection clause directing the case to courts in Florida.
B. Is the Limitations Clause Valid and Applicable?
The contract for passage provided, in ¶ 12 of the ticket, that
[I]n no event shall any suit for any cause against the carrier with respect to delay, detention, personal injury, illnessor death or any reason be maintainable, unless suit shall be commenced within one (1) year from the day when the delay, detention, personal injury, illness or death of the passenger or other incident occurred, notwithstanding any provision of law of any state or country to the contrary.
(Busiman Decl., Ex. A ¶ 12) (emphasis added). It is undisputed that the ill-fated voyage complained of was concluded on May 24, 1998, and that the instant lawsuit was filed on January 10, 2000, much more than a year later. (See Compl. ¶ 7; Defs Mem. Supp. Mot. Dis., at 10.) If the clause is valid and applicable to this suit, the suit cannot be maintained.
The clause by its terms applies to this case. The language is sweeping, manifestly intended to cover “any” suit for “any reason.” Nothing in its terms limits its application based on the nature of the lawsuit or the identity of the plaintiff, and, as demonstrated above, the provisions of the contract embodied in the ticket were intended to bind purchasers such as plaintiff as well as the passengers who used the ticket. If valid, then, the clause applies to this suit.
The validity of contracting parties’ efforts to shorten an otherwise-applicable limitations period by agreement has received almost as much attention from the courts as have forum-selection clauses. It is well established that such limitations clauses in tickets for sea passage are valid and enforceable under federal maritime law, provided that the limitations period allows the passenger at least one year from the date of injury to sue, 46 App. U.S.C.A. § 183b(a) (Supp. V 1987), and provided that the instrument gives the purchaser adequate notice that clauses in the ticket may limit rights to sue.
See Spataro v. Kloster Cruise, Ltd.,
Therefore, the limitations clause of the contract is enforceable. Because this suit was brought more than one year after the incident complained of, the contract does not permit it to be brought, and the action must be dismissed.
V
Conclusion
Although careful consideration of procedural minutiae has extended the discussion of the instant motion, the result is straightforward. Whatever qualms a court might have about applying fine-print terms of an adhesion contract to relegate cruise passengers to distant fora and shortened limitations period, such qualms do not apply to the sophisticated purchaser here, and
Carnival Cruise Lines
forecloses them in any event. Under federal maritime law, defendant cruise line is entitled to enforce both the forum-selection and one-year limitations clauses it has written into the tickets. For the reasons stated above, the simple and conclusive disposition of this case is also the legally correct one: the complaint is dismissed, with prej
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The opinion is somewhat perfunctory. The conclusory classification of the issues as "procedural,” quoted in the text above, is the extent of the reasoning provided. The Court of Appeals appears to have believed that it was simply reaffirming "the well established rule of this Circuit that
Bremen
applies with equal force in diversity cases.”
Jones, 901
F.2d at 19. It is hardly clear, however, that there was such an established circuit rule before
Jones.
The Court cited only two previous diversity cases in which it had applied the
Bremen
standard,
Karl Koch Erecting Co. v. New York Convention Center Development Corp.,
. In addition, the selection of the forum may in turn influence the choice of which state's law will govern the substantive interpretation of the contract.
See
Richard D. Freer,
Erie’s Mid-Life Crisis,
63 Tul. L.Rev. 1087, 1134-1139 (1989). And state choice of law rules govern in diversity cases.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
. The
Erie
question may become increasingly academic, as more and more states adopt the federal rule on forum-selection clauses. At one time, American jurisdictions generally rejected their validity. Today, a clear majority of the states have reversed this stand, and, in agreement with the federal rule of
The Bremen,
will enforce forum-selection clauses unless they create injustice or were imposed by fraud. A 1989 survey found that only 12 states still held such clauses presumptively invalid. Freer,
supra
note 2, at 1095 & nn. 30, 31. Although Florida then appeared to be one of those states,
Tecnitur, S.A. v. Travel America Enters., Inc.,
. The Eleventh Circuit applied the federal standard of
The Bremen
in its opinion in
Stewart Organization,
. Both plaintiff’s suit in state court and defendant’s choice to remove were entirely appropriate. Although the admiralty jurisdiction is theoretically exclusive, the so-called "saving-to-suitors” clause of the Judiciary Act of 1789, now codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1333(1) "essentially ... provide[s] a plaintiff who has an in personam claim the choice of proceeding in an ordinary civil action in a state or federal ' court, rather than bringing a libel in admiralty in federal court." 14A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3672 (3d ed.1998) (footnote omitted). Where the plaintiff elects to bring the common-law action in state court rather than invoking the admiralty jurisdiction of the federal court, the case may nevertheless be removed to federal court where there is diversity of citizenship. Id. § 3674.
. Some academic commentators have been critical of
Carnival Cruise Lines,
arguing that the Court should have shown more sensitivity to the plight of a consumer of limited resources and sophistication compelled to pursue what may be a relatively small claim at great expense in a distant forum.
See, e.g.,
Borchers,
supra,
at 94 (stating that "Carnival Cruise showed that the Court is headed in the wrong direction” in enforcing forum-selection clauses contained in contracts of adhesion). Since the Supreme Court has settled the question, such arguments are not for this court in any event. But to the extent they have any merit, they are far less applicable to plaintiff here, an entity that has considerably greater resources and sophistication than individual passengers such as the plaintiffs in
Carnival Cruise Lines,
and that is pursuing a claim for nearly $100,000. The commentators’ disagreement does, however, point up the potential significance of the
Erie
question addressed in Part I, above. Although both New York and Florida courts seem to accept the rule of
The Bremen,
it is entirely possible that those jurisdictions might be persuaded by the critics who find
Carnival Cruise Lines
not to follow from that rule.
See, e.g., Oxman v. Amoroso,
. Indeed, if it had been so intended, it would not be enforceable, since there is no stated consideration for the provision of the convention services.
. Plaintiff does not argue that it was not reasonably put on notice of the provision, or that the typography of any part of the agreement constitutes "overreaching” that might make the clause unenforceable under The Bremen. On the contrary, it appears to concede that individual passengers would be bound by the clause {see Pl.’s Mem. Opp. Mot. Dis., at 3), and relies exclusively on the asserted distinction between passengers and purchasers in order to escape the force of the clause.
.Both parties refer to this language as ¶ 8. {See Def.'s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dis., at 4; Pl.’s Mem. Opp. Mot. Dis., at 3.) In the only documentary exhibit in the record reflecting the ticket, the language is found in ¶ 1. {See Buis-man Deck, Ex. A ¶ 1.)
. In a war of italics, the plaintiff emphasizes the first of the three passages underlined above, and the defendant the latter two. (Compare Pl.'s Mem. Opp. Mot. Dis., at 3 with Def.’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Dis., at 4.) In a spirit of even-handedness, I am happy to emphasize all three.
. Curiously, plaintiff’s brief memorandum does not quote or in any way rely on the actual language of the forum-selection clause itself, which is found in ¶ 12 of the ticket, and which provides that "it is agreed by and between the passenger and the carrier that all disputes and matters whatsoever arising under, in connection with, or incident to this contract shall be litigated [in the selected fora].” (Busiman Deck, Ex. A ¶ 12) (emphasis added). In light of the clear language of the cover and of ¶ 1, the parties' intention that both the "purchaser” of the tickets and the "passenger” agree to and are bound by all of the terms of the contract is firmly established, despite the occasional failure to repeat the "and/or purchaser” formula. There is no reason to assume that the parties intended to single out this section as one to which only the “passenger” agrees. Notably, ¶ 12 does not provide that only the passenger is limited to bringing an action in the selected fora; rather, it provides, within a document that already embodies acceptance of all its terms by both the "passenger” and the "purchaser,” that the passenger reiterates his agreement that "all disputes ... whatsoever [relating to] this contract,” regardless of the identity of the plaintiff, be brought in the selected fora. The broad sweep of the clause, and the clear language of the cover and of ¶ I by which the "purchaser” accepts it, make the intention to bind the purchaser sufficiently plain. Plaintiff's failure to rely on the passage further confirms that its argument is not rooted in the specific language of ¶ 12, or indeed on a close reading of any contractual language at all, but rather on its untenable claim that it simply is not bound by the ticket provisions at all, as the purchaser not of tickets but of a "convention.”
. An academic commentator has questioned whether contractual consent can serve as a basis for
in personam
jurisdiction absent other contacts with the forum state, and attempted to distinguish consent in advance from waiver by failure to object in an on-going proceeding. David H. Taylor,
The Forum Selection Clause:
A
Tale of Two Concepts,
66 Temp. L.Rev. 785, 812-14 (1993). I find the argument unpersuasive.
In personam
jurisdiction is primarily a matter of due process fairness to defendants, protecting them from suit in jurisdictions to which they lack connection.
Ins. Corp. of Ireland,
. Defendant’s answer asserts lack of in per-sonam jurisdiction as an affirmative defense, but the issue is not raised in the present motion. In view of the disposition of this motion, there is no need to decide whether making the present motion waives that issue for any purposes beyond the present motion. But see Rules 12(g) and 12(h)(1), Fed.R.Civ.P. (defense of lack of jurisdiction over the person waived if it is omitted from motion made under Rule 12 on other grounds).
. Parsing these cases can provide at most implicit support for any view of the problem, since the Court did not directly consider questions of remedy or theory.
.
Hoffman,
. It does not follow that dismissal will
always
be an appropriate remedy. If the parties had specified that disputes could only be resolved in the state courts of New York, their agreement could be enforced by remanding the removed case back to those courts.
Cf. Jones v. Weibrecht,
.At least one district court in this circuit, in fact, has invoked the doctrine of forum non conveniens itself as a basis for enforcing a forum-selection clause.
See TUC Electronics, Inc.
v.
Eagle Telephonics, Inc.,
. In
Central Contracting,
as, indeed, in the instant case, the motion to dismiss was effectively transformed
into
a motion for summary judgment, because the resolution of the motion required reference to documents beyond the complaint itself.
See Central Contracting,
. The contractual agreement to litigate in a particular forum can be enforced by means
