An unfortunate sea accident and the tragic events that followed it require us to consider the relationship between general federal admiralty jurisdiction and the Death on the High Seas Act (“DOHSA”). We hold that DOHSA applies where the decedent is injured on the high seas, even if a party’s negligence is entirely land-based and begins subsequent to that injury.
I.
The decedent, Neville Motts, joined the M/V GREEN WAVE as Chief Engineer on January 10, 1998, for its voyage to McMurdo Station in Antarctica. The GREEN WAVE’S mission was to resupply the American scientific research center in McMurdo. The GREEN WAVE arrived at McMurdo but encountered engine difficulties on its return voyage. Specifically, the No. 2 piston broke, causing the entire engine to fail.
The ship’s Captain, Peter Stalkus, ordered Motts to repair the engine. Motts, assisted by the second and third assistant engineers, attempted to repair the No. 2 piston. The three engineers removed the 3000-pound cylinder head and laid it on its headstand. Before they had a chance to secure the cylinder head to the headstand, the ship experienced an unforeseeable, dramatic roll. This roll caused the cylinder head to slide off its headstand, knocking Motts down and pinning him against a platform rail. Motts suffered a badly crushed pelvis and hip as a result. Motts’s treating physician, who has performed over 2,000 hip surgeries, testified that Motts’s was one of the most severe injuries he had ever treated.
Motts was examined by Captain Stalkus and the Chief Mate, in preparation for a telephone consultation with a physician at George Washington University Hospital (“GWU”). GWU’s Maritime Medical Access Unit provides medical advice to ships at sea. GWU’s doctor initially diagnosed a soft-tissue, injury, but recommended that Motts be x-rayed as soon as possible, so that a more serious injury could be ruled out. Although Motts told Captain Stalkus that he had a history of vascular problems and cardiovascular surgeries, Stalkus did not relay this information to GWU’s personnel.
Appellant Central Gulf Lines, Inc. (“CGL”) owns and operates the GREEN WAVE. Appellant LMS Ship Management, Inc. (“LMS”) is a Louisiana corporation that serves as the management company for the GREEN WAVE. As part of its contract with CGL, LMS is to ensure adequate and timely medical attention to injured or ill seamen on CGL’s vessels. LMS had no employees aboard the GREEN WAVE; LMS’s health care officers all work in its New Orleans office. Captain Stalkus informed LMS’s officers of the nature of Motts’s injuries and of Motts’s vascular problems and history of cardiovascular surgeries.
For the next two days, the GREEN WAVE drifted on the high seas while the crew labored unsuccessfully to repair the vessel’s engine. The GREEN WAVE requested and received prompt assistance from the POLAR STAR, a Coast Guard
Neville Motts first received appropriate medical attention when the GREEN WAVE arrived in New Zealand on March 1, 1998, two weeks after his injury. LMS provided him with the option of undergoing hip replacement surgery in New Zea-land or in Houston. Motts opted to have the operation in Houston. The surgery was performed on March 10, 1998. Ten days later, Motts suffered a fatal heart attack. The district court held that the delays in Motts’s receiving treatment proximately caused Motts’s death. Seo id. at 645. Motts’s risk of death was at least doubled by the fact that the hip replacement surgery was not performed within 48 hours of the injury. See id. at 644. Specifically, the delays placed Motts at an increased risk of pulmonary embolism and cardiac problems. See id. The three-week interval between the injury and the surgery made the operation ten times more difficult to perform than it would have been had the surgery been done within two days of the injury. See id. at 644-45. The court determined that although Motts’s decision not to undergo surgery in New Zealand delayed his operation, the desire to undergo surgery in the United States was normal and reasonable under the circumstances. See id. at 645.
Motts filed suit against CGL and LMS in federal court prior to his death. After his death, Appellee Danna Motts, Neville Motts’s widow, was substituted as the plaintiff. Appellee sued CGL under the Jones Act and general maritime law for negligence and unseaworthiness. Appellee sued LMS under Texas state law, or in the alternative, general maritime law. LMS argued that DOHSA provides the exclusive remedy for any suit against it by Appellee. The district court granted in part and denied in part LMS’s motion for partial summary judgment in a published opinion, holding DOHSA to be inapplicable.
See Motts v. M/V GREEN WAVE,
25 F.Supp.2d. 771 (S.D.Tex.1998). After a bench trial the court found in Appellee’s favor against both Appellants, again in a published opinion.
See Motts,
II.
We review the district court’s determination that DOHSA does not apply de novo.
See Bailey v. Carnival Cruise
III.
As a threshold matter, the district court determined that DOHSA does not govern Appellee's claims against LMS. Because DOHSA does not permit the award of non-pecuniary damages, see 46 U.S.C.App. § 762, and preempts all wrongful death actions under state law where it applies, see Dooley v. Korean Air Lines Co.,
DOHSA provides, in pertinent part, that "[wihenever the death of a person shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect, or default occurring on the high seas •.. the personal representative of the decedent may maintain a suit for damages in the district courts of the United States." 46 U.S.C.App. § 761. At first glance, the plain text of this statutory provision seems to indicate that DOHSA is implicated only when the wrongful act precipitating death occurs on the high seas. See Lacey v. L.W. Wiggins Airways, Inc.,
As subsequent courts have interpreted DOHSA, however, the statute's application is not limited to negligent acts that actually occur on the high seas. The Supreme Court has repeatedly noted that when the death itself occurs on the high seas, DOHSA applies. See Offshore Logistics, Inc. v. Tallentire,
Even if the "accident" is defined, not as 1V[otts's initial injury, but as LMS's wrongful acts, DORSA still applies to the instant action. LMS is accused of a series of omissions that aggravated Motts's injury from treatable to mortal. One series of decisions-LMS's failure to develop a plan for evacuating seamen injured on the high seas-occurred prior to the accident. The others-involving LMS's delays in securing adequate medical treatment for Motts-occurred while Motts was on the high seas. LMS's continuing negligence ceased the moment Motts arrived in New Zealand, where LMS saw to it that Motts received appropriate medical attention. 3
LMS's negligence in failing to establish an evacuation plan is akin to an airline's inadequate maintenance of an aircraft engine that ultimately causes the aircraft to crash into the sea. Even though the negligence occurred onshore, the fact that the accident occurred on the high seas implicates DOHSA. See In re Dearborn, Marine Serv., Inc.,
The district court did not cite Smith, the Fifth Circuit's primary interpretation of DOHSA jurisdiction. Instead, the district court turned to the wrong body of case law-cases governing admiralty jurisdiction in the absence of a statute such as DOHSA.
4
But it should be clear
In order to determine whether DOHSA governs, the district court applied
Executive
Jet’s “locality-plus” test, which initially calls for a determination of where the wrongful act occurred.
Motts,
This Circuit’s precedents look to the location of the accident in determining whether DOHSA applies. True, none of the DOHSA cases cited above involve post-accident negligence occurring while the victim was still at sea.
7
That said, as long
In light of our conciLision that DOHSA applies to the instant suit, the district court's award of non-pecuniary damages tO Appellee was erroneous. 9
Iv.
Appellants argue that the district court clearly erred by failing to find that Motts was contributorily negligent. Appellants' argument centers on Motts's alleged use of insufficient assistants in moving the cylinder head and his failure to secure the cylinder head prior to the ship's roll.
Appellants submit that Captain Stalkus ordered Motts to use deck department personnel to assist him with the heavy lifting that the repair would require. While Stalkus indeed testified to that effect, the district court obviously did not find his testimony credible, based on the inconsistencies contained therein. Such a credibility finding was certainly within the district court's discretion. And it does sound implausible that Motts, a very experienced and skilled seaman, would have violated a direct order so brazenly. The district court was therefore free to disregard Stalkus's testimony and conclude that Motts did not violate a direct order to utilize additional crew members in the repair. That is precisely what the district court did when it chose not to believe Stalkus's story, and found that the "Captain also instructed Mr. Motts to utilize deck department personnel to assist with the rigging and securing of the head, piston and liner, if required."
Although Appellants presented some credible evidence suggesting that Motts was negligent by failing to secure the cylinder head, Appellee's evidence suggesting that Motts was not negligent is strong. The district court credited the statements of the two surviving witnesses to the accident, who both stated that the vessel rolled "before the head could be lashed down," suggesting that Motts was planning to fasten the cylinder head at the time of the accident. Id. at 638. The court found the ship's roll unforeseeabie, given the weather conditions at the time. See id. The court reasonably inferred that Motts assumed the head cylinder's sheer weight would prevent it from sliding in the event of a roll. See id. And the court credited the expert testimony of two witnesses, both of whom described Motts's seamanship practices in glowing terms. See id. at 642. Given this evidence, it was certainly reasonable for the district court to determine that Motts was not contributorily negligent. The district court made a difficult judgment call, but one that was well within the fact finder's discretion.
V.
Appellant CGL takes issue with the district court's finding that it failed to render timely, adequate cure. Appellant pins its hopes on the district court's determina
CGL’s argument on this issue does not come close to warranting a reversal. Given the current state of medical technology, the diagnosis of a doctor who is assessing a patient’s condition from a location thousands of miles away depends on the accuracy of the information conveyed to that doctor. When a ship’s master withholds known, material, medical information from a diagnosing physician, it is no defense to say that the master reasonably relied on the physician’s instructions.
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court with respect to CGL, and REVERSE the district court’s award of non-pecuniary damages assessed against LMS. 10 We REMAND for an entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. A recent law review Note concluded that the Smith court's conclusion "that admiralty jurisdiction could exist under DOHSA without a maritime nexus" is consistent with DOHSA's framework and purpose. See Russell I. Smith, Note, Congress Giveth and the Fifth Circuit Taketh Away: Post Executive Jet Viability of the Admiralty Extension Act, 6 U.S.F. Mar. L.J. 609, 618 (1994).
. Motts's decision to seek care in the United States may have been reasonable, as the district court found, but LMS cannot be held responsible if it was that final delay in undergoing surgery that proximately caused Motis's death.
. In Brown v. Eurocopter, S.A.,
. Executive Jet was later extended to apply to accidents involving vessels, as well as accidents involving aircraft. See Foremost Ins. Co. v. Richardson,
. While we hold that DOHSA does expand federal admiralty jurisdiction, we note that DOHSA does not appear to confer federal question jurisdiction on the courts.
See Pain v. United Techs. Corp.,
. We do not agree with the district court’s "moment of consummation" approach. As we explain herein, the district court’s attention should have been drawn to Motts's location when he was injured by the piston, not the moment at which Motts's injury went from being bad to inevitably fatal.
.One district court case concludes that whether the negligence occurs pre-or post-accident is not relevant.
See Moyer
v.
Klosters Rederi,
. DOSHA is not implicated by post-accident negligence that begins after the victim leaves the high seas. For example, had Motts died as the result of medical malpractice in Houston, Appellee's state-law suit against his doctor would not have been preempted by DOH-SA.
. Given oth~ conclusion that Appellee is not entitled to punitive damages as a matter of law, three issues on appeal raised by Appellants (concerning the propriety of the district court's decision to hold CGL jointly and severally liable for punitive damages with LMS, the availability of prejudgment interest on the punitive damages award, and whether the district court's decision to award punitive damages was clearly erroneous) become moot.
. Specifically, we vacate the awards of $75,-000 for Appellee’s past mental anguish; $25,-000 for past loss of society; $200,000 for future mental anguish; $75,000 for future loss of society; and $250,000 in punitive damages. We affirm the awards of $225,000 for physical pain and mental anguish sustained by Neville Motts; $50,686 for the past loss of care, maintenance, and support; $400,000 for the future loss of care, maintenance, and support; and the award of prejudgment interest on the remaining damages.
See
