In this case we must determine whether punitive damages are available in an unseaworthiness action brought by a Jones Act seaman under general maritime law. In addressing such a claim, the court of appeals reversed a take nothing judgment against Respondent Richard Williams, holding that punitive damages were recoverable by Jones Act seamen in unseaworthiness actions.
Respondent Richard Williams was injured in two separate incidents while employed as a welder on one of Petitioner Penrod’s offshore oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. Williams sought recovery for his injuries, asserting a negligence theory under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.App. § 688 (1988), 1 breach of warranty of seaworthinеss under general maritime law, and maintenance and cure. The maintenance and cure claims were severed prior to jury trial on the remaining issues. Williams further sought punitive damages for gross negligence and/or wanton or willful breach of warranty of seaworthiness.
The trial court rendered a take nothing judgment against Williams on his punitive damage claims.
2
The court of appeals re
*296
versed, holding that while punitive damages were not recoverable under the Jones Act, such could be recovered in an unseaworthiness action under general maritime law.
We disagree with both the court of appeals’ result and what appears to be the methodology that led it to that result. The court of apрeals’ discussion of
Merry Shipping
and its cursory dismissal of contrary federal precedent from other jurisdictions suggests that the court felt bound by the pronouncements of the Fifth Circuit on federal law issues. This is not the case. While Texas courts may certainly draw upon the precedents of the Fifth Circuit, or any other federal or state court, in determining the appropriate federal rule of decision, they are
obligated
to follow only higher Texas courts and the United States Supreme Court.
See Mohamed v. Exxon Corp.,
By focusing so exclusively on
Merry Shipping,
the court of appeals overlooks the implications of
Miles
and the weight of intervening federal court decisions from other jurisdictions. In
Miles,
the parent of a Jones Act seaman who died while on his employer’s vessel brought a negligence claim under the Jones Act and an unseaworthinеss claim under general maritime law. The parent sought loss of society damages under the unseaworthiness claim; such damages were not recoverable under the Jones Act. The United States Supreme Court ultimately held that since “nonpecuniary” damages, such as those for loss of society, were not made available under the Jones Act, they should not be made available under general maritime law.
It would be inconsistent with our place in the constitutional scheme were we to sanction more expansive remedies in a judicially created cause оf action in which liability is without fault [(namely, unseaworthiness) ] than Congress has allowed in eases of death resulting from negligence.
Id.,
at 32,
The rationale of
Miles
compels its extension to the present case, a Jones Act sеaman’s claim for
punitive
damages in an unseaworthiness action arising from
nonfatal
injuries. First, as the court of appeals acknowledges, punitive damages, like the loss of society damages in
Miles,
have been
*297
deemed “nonpecuniary” for purposes of the Jones Act and hence unavailable under that statute.
See, e.g., Kopezyknski v. The Jacqueline,
Second, there is no reason why the Supreme Court’s еxpressed concern with uniformity and consistency between general maritime law and the Jones Act in the context of a wrongful death action would not likewise extend to claims involving non-fatal injuries. If Congress has precluded recovery for “nonpecuniary” damages under the Jones Act, we should be no less hesitant to circumvent that intent by authorizing such recoveries through unseaworthiness claims in non-death cases than the United States Supreme Court was in
Miles.
Reflecting this rationale, a number of courts have extended
Miles
beyond the wrongful death context to bar loss of society or loss of consortium damages in unseaworthiness actions by Jonеs Act seamen involving nonfatal injuries.
See, e.g., Murray v. Anthony J. Bertucci Const. Co., Inc.,
Accordingly, a number of courts have applied
Miles
to bar punitive damages in unseaworthiness cases involving nonfatal injuries.
See La Voie v. Kualoa Ranch and Activity Club, Inc.,
For these reasons, pursuant to Rule 170, Tex.R.App.P., without hearing oral argument, a majority of this court grants the application for writ of error, reverses the judgment of the court of appeals, and renders judgment that Williams take nothing on his punitive damage claims.
Notes
. The Jones Act provides:
Any seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the course of his employment may, at his election, maintain an action for damages at law, with the right of trial by jury, and in such actions all statutes of the United States modifying or extending the common-law right or remedy in cases of personal injury shall apply; and in cases of death of any seamаn as a result of any such personal injury the personal representative of the seaman may maintain an action for damages at law with the right of trial by jury, and in such action all statutes cоnferring or regulating the right of action for death in the case of railway employees shall be applicable. ...
Id. Penrod stipulated that Williams was a “seaman” on a vessel at the time оf his injuries.
. The procedural history of this case is rather convoluted. After the trial court severed out the maintenance and cure claim, the parties went to jury trial on the Jones Act negligеnce, unseaworthiness, and punitive damage claims. The jury found that Penrod’s negligence proximately caused both incidents in which Williams was injured, but found that an unseaworthy condition on the rig proximatеly caused only the first incident (Question 3) and not the second (Question 4). It further found actual damages of $300,000.
Jury questions were also submitted on the issue of gross negligence due to unseaworthiness. As originally prеpared, Question 6, which inquired as to whether Penrod’s supervisory personnel acted with gross negligence, was to be answered only if the jury answered either question 3 or 4 in the affirmative. However, before the jury retired to deliberate, the trial court, without informing the attorneys, changed the instruction to make Question 6 conditional upon an affhmative answer to both Question 3 & 4. Hence, because the jury answered Question 4 in the negative, it never reached the punitive damages issue.
At the time the verdict was read by the court, the parties were still unaware of the court’s alterations to the charge. After Williams learned of these alterations, he filed a motion to sever out the gross negligence/punitive damages claim and to consolidate it with the pending maintenance and cure claim. The court, admitting that it had erred, granted this motion on January 28, 1991 and entered an order accordingly. It then proceeded to render judgment in Williams' favor on the negligence, unseaworthiness, and actual damages issues. Penrod did not appeal this judgment or the severance order.
On February 21, Penrod filed a "Motion for Judgment and, in the First Alternative, Motion for Judgment Non Obstante Veredicto, and, in the Second Alternative, Motion for Directed Ver- *296 diet, and, in the Third Alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment." On April 1, the trial court granted the motion without specifying the grounds therefor or which of Penrod's alternative motions it was ruling on, and rendered a take nothing judgment on the exemplary damage issues. Then, on April 16, it severed out those issues from the maintenance and cure claim, effectively making its judgment on punitive damages final. The present appeal emanates from this judgment.
Penrod now raises several points of error concerning the effect of the January 28 order and whether Williams properly preserved error at trial. We neither approve nor disapprove the court of appeals' disposition of these issues, as they do not affect our ultimate result.
. Further support for this result is derived from judicial interpretations of the Federal Employers' Liability Act (FELA), 45 U.S.C. § 51 et seq. Throughout its references to "railway employees,”
see supra
note 1, the Jones Act incorporates the rights and remedies available to railway workers under the FELA.
See, e.g., Miles,
. The issue analyzed here should not be confused with the questions, decided in the negative in some reported cases, as to whether
Miles
bars punitive or other nonpecuniaiy damages in cases
not
involving Jones Act seamen, or in suits by Jones Act seamen against someone other than their employer,
see Mussa v. Cleveland Tankers,
