OPINION AND ORDER
Patricia Polly, individually and as representative of the estate of Jerry Polly, moves to remand to Circuit Court for -Macomb County in case No. 94-CV-71742-DT and moves to dismiss and to dissolve the stay of state court proceedings in case No. 94-CV-71186-DT. For the following reasons, those motions are granted in part and denied in part.
I.
These cases arise out of a tragic boating accident. On July 26, 1993, Arne E. Carlson and his long-time Mend Jerry Polly set out in Arne’s 1979 34' Silverton powerboat from the Markley Marine on the Clinton River in Mt. Clemens, Michigan for Lake St. Clair. Both men somehow ended up drowned in the waters of Lake St. Clair. They were discovered in bathing suits. According to the Ma-comb County Sheriff’s report, the boat was found some distance away in weeds at the foot of the Mud Hen Canal in Mullet Bay with its engines still running and its shift levers slightly forward of neutral. The propellers were not turning. The vessel’s swim platform was down, with a pair of glasses on the deck near the stern. The police also found several empty beer cans onboard, two pairs of shoes, two sets of clothes, and both men’s wallets.
Jerry’s wife, Patricia Polly, acting both as personal representative of the estate of Jerry Polly and individually (collectively, “Polly”), originally brought a negligence action in Circuit Court for Macomb County against the estate of Arne E. Carlson and Arne’s sons James E. Carlson and Robert A. Carlson (the “Carlsons”). Robert and James, as representatives of Arne’s estate, and as co-owners of the boat, then filed suit in federal court asking for exoneration from or limitation of liability pursuant to the Limitation of Liability Act (“LOLA”), 46 U.S.C.App. §§ 181-189, a statute, which if applicable, would limit the damages Polly could recover to the value of the Carlsons’ boat and cargo (if any). I accordingly ordered the issuance of a monition directing any party claiming damages or losses arising from the incident described in the Carlsons’ complaint to file his or her claim with the clerk of this court. The Carl-sons, in turn, removed Polly’s state court action to federal court. Polly now moves (1) to dismiss the federal limitation action under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6); (2) to dissolve the stay of the state court proceedings; and (3) to remand the ease to the state court.
II.
Polly first alleges that maritime jurisdiction is improper in this case because the accident involved a pleasure boat engaged in recreational activity. I disagree with this argument.
28 U.S.C. § 1333 confers upon federal district courts original jurisdiction, exclusive of the state courts, over “[a]ny civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction.... ”
See Sisson v. Ruby,
In the most recent of these eases,
Sisson,
the Supreme Court held that maritime jurisdiction is appropriate when a “ ‘potential hazard to maritime commerce arises out of activity that bears a substantial relation to maritime activity_’ ”
Sisson,
The first prong of the
Sisson
test is easily met here. It is undisputed that both Arne and Jerry ended up overboard and that the vessel floated unmanned in navigable waters for more than a day. That men were overboard in an emergency situation by itself is likely to disrupt commercial activity; this event ordinarily occasions both air and sea searches and rescue operations.
See, e.g., Delta County Ventures,
The second prong of the
Sisson
test — whether there is a substantial relationship between the activity giving rise to the incident and traditional maritime activity— presents a more difficult question because the term “activity,” as used in the second prong, brings with it an ambiguity regarding the level of generality upon which a court should focus.
See, e.g., Delta County Ventures,
Judge Kozinski dissented, arguing that the relevant activity should be defined “more generally as the anchoring and mooring of the boat at the time of the accident.” Id. at 1264. The activity so described easily qualified as bearing a substantial relationship to traditional maritime activity. Although Judge Kozinski “recognize[d] that disputes about the appropriate level of generality always carry with them a certain degree of arbitrariness,” he maintained that under Sis-son, the proper inquiry is “whether the injury took place on or about a vessel engaged in traditional maritime activity.” Id. at 1264-65.
Most cases support Judge Kozinski’s approach. In
Price v. Price,
Polly attempts to describe the relevant activity as swimming, diving and/or falling off a pleasure boat, claiming that characterizing the activity in this fashion would defeat the Carlsons’ claim to federal jurisdiction.
3
As the Carlsons pointed out during oral argument, however, we simply do not know how this accident happened; all we know at this point is that the vessel left Mt. Clemens for Lake St. Clair, the men’s bodies were found, and the boat was abandoned. Given this scant information and given the early stage of this litigation, I conclude that the relevant activity was the navigation of the vessel from Mt. Clemens to Lake St. Clair. Navigation is a traditional maritime activity.
See, e.g., Price,
III.
Polly next argues that I should dismiss the LOLA claim because LOLA only permits boat owners to limit their liability for loss,
*274
damage, or injury if the act, damage or injury occurred without the owner’s privity or knowledge or malfeasance and/or nonfea-sance. 46 U.S.C.App. § 188(a). She maintains that any occurrence involving a pleasure craft operated by an owner (Ame here) is, as a matter of law, within the owner’s “privity of knowledge.” Polly argues further that I should dismiss the LOLA claim even if Jerry Polly and not Arne operated the vessel because LOLA affords no protection to an owner of a pleasure boat for his alleged negligent entrustment of a boat to another.
Joyce v. Joyce,
There is some case law supporting Polly’s position.
See, e.g., In re Ingoglia,
Determining whether LOLA applies instead requires me to go through a two-step analysis.
Hercules Carriers, Inc. v. Florida,
IV.
Polly finally claims that I should dissolve the stay of state court proceedings and remand case No. 94-CV-71742-DT to state court both because the estate of Jerry Polly is a “single” claimant which has invoked state law remedies (Patricia Polly apparently is willing to subordinate her individual claims in favor of Jerry’s estate) and because the limitation fund exceeds the total amount of the multiple claims against the owner.
28 U.S.C. § 1333(1) contains a “saving to suitors” clause which protects suitors’ attempts to obtain common law remedies in state court. Courts have invoked the savings-to-suitors clause in some cases to remand aspects of LOLA cases to the state courts for adjudication.
Langnes v. Green,
The purpose of the concursus, the proceeding before the admiralty court in which all competing claims must be litigated, is to provide for a marshalling of assets and for a setting of priorities among claims where the asserted claims exceed the value of the vessel and its freight. “[T]he purpose of the limitation proceedings is not to prevent a multitude of suits but ... to provide a marshalling of assets — the distribution pro rata of an inadequate fund among claimants, none of which can be paid in full.”
Id.
at 642 (quoting
In re Moran Transp. Corp.,
As a result, single claimants enjoy the right to proceed against a vessel owner in the forum of their choice, while the federal court retains exclusive jurisdiction to determine the issues relating to the limitation of liability under LOLA.
Langnes,
Polly also contends that a
concursus
is improper because the limitation fund is less than the total amount of the multiple claims she has against the Carlsons. As the U.S. Supreme Court noted in
Lake Tankers Corp. v. Henn,
Remand is inappropriate at the present time, however, because there is more than one claim and because it is unclear whether Polly’s damages are less than the value of the vessel.
5
Still, the case law makes clear that I must dissolve the injunction against the state court proceedings and remand ease No. 94-CV-71742-DT to state court if Polly files an appropriate stipulation which acknowledges either that the estate is the sole claimant or that her claims are equal or less than the LOLA limitation.
See, e.g., id.
at 643 & n. 13. That stipulation also must acknowledge that I retain jurisdiction to determine liability issues. Polly also must waive any res judicata arguments based on the state court’s judgment.
S & E Shipping,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, IT IS ORDERED THAT Polly’s motion to dismiss IS HEREBY DENIED. She may submit an appropriate order regarding her motion to dissolve the stay of her state court proceedings and her motion to remand. Those orders will be entered upon receipt of an appropriate stipulation conforming with the requirements set out in
S & E Shipping Corp. v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co.,
Notes
. In theory, at least, one always could define the activity giving rise to an incident on a sufficiently low level of abstraction such that no activity would ever have a substantial relationship to traditional maritime activity. Id. at 1265.
. Further supporting Judge Kozinski’s approach is the emphasis in
Sisson
on the "need for uniform rules of maritime conduct and liability...."
Sisson,
. Polly's attorney claimed at oral argument that I should assume that the men were swimming because they were clad in bathing suits. The Carlsons’ attorney pointed out, however, that the drownings occurred during warm weather and that wearing bathing suits would not be uncommon even if the two men were not engaged in recreational swimming.
.I need not decide at this point whether Polly’s claim that the men were engaged in recreational swimming or diving from a pleasure boat, if true, would suffice to defeat jurisdiction. As I noted in the text, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled in
Delta County Ventures
that admiralty jurisdiction is not appropriate in such circumstances. Other courts, however, have found admiralty jurisdiction in recreational boating accident cases.
See, e.g., Sinclair,
. The Carlsons claim that the value of the vessel was at most $20,500. The estate's damages, on the other hand, might be much higher: Jerry Polly apparently was only 45 years old, earned between $40,000 and $50,000, had a surviving spouse and two daughters.
