ORDER ON PENDING DISCOVERY MOTIONS
I. BACKGROUND
This action is a maritime claim arising from an injury that Plaintiff sustained on-board a vessel during an offshore excursion promoted by Defendant, Royal Caribbean Cruises. [D.E. 20]. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant was negligent when in failing to warn Plaintiff of the dangers of “high speed boating” and in failing to correct those conditions. [D.E. 20 ¶ 33].
The primary issue in dispute in two pending discovery motions [D.E. 43, 59] relates to discovery requests for “prior similar incidents” aboard shore excursion vessels, other than Out Island Charters NV, for a five-year period prior to the Plaintiffs accident. Defendant argues that these interrogatory and
Plaintiff argues that the scope of discovery is broad, goes beyond what will ultimately be admissible at trial, and thus his requested discovery should be compelled. He contends that the discovery relevant and necessary to establish Defendant’s notice of the dangerous condition, while being sufficiently limited in scope (i.e., incidents involving passengers being injured while participating in a shore excursion offering a high speed boating component).
II. ANALYSIS
A.
The context of the dispute arises from federal maritime law in actions arising from alleged torts “committed aboard a ship sailing in navigable waters.” Keefe v. Bahama Cruise Line, Inc.,
The duty of care owed by a shipowner to its passengers of “ordinary reasonable care under the circumstance ... requires, as a prerequisite to imposing liability, that the carrier have had actual or constructive notice of the risk-creating condition.” Keefe,
The question most pertinent here is the scope of discovery when a plaintiff alleges the shipowner knew or should have known of those risks to warn its passengers and minimize the risks. This requires us to consider the body of caselaw that addresses “substantially similar” incidents. See Heath v. Suzuki Motor Corp.,
Critically, however, “[b]ecause of the potential prejudicial impact of prior accidents, courts have developed limitations governing their admissibility. First, conditions substantially similar to the occurrence in question must have caused the prior accident.... Second, the prior accident must not have occurred too remote in time.” Jones v. Otis Elevator Co., 861 F.2d at 661-62 (citing Ramos v. Liberty Mut. Ns. Co.,
For discovery purposes, these prerequisites for the admission and reliance on past incidents need not be strictly construed. See, e.g., In re Cooper Tire & Rubber Co.,
The problem that Plaintiff has, however, is that even applying a relaxed discovery standard his prima facie showing for discoverability fails by any measure. As to the first factor, the existence of similar conditions between past incidents and the present injury claim, Plaintiffs pending discovery requests are not tethered in any way to similar (or even remotely similar) conditions. The request presumably requires production of past injuries involving any type of “high speed” boat on any navigable ocean waterway, in any area of the world where Defendant travels. The first limitation is utterly inconsequential because every excursion vessel could arguably fit that category. The request is not limited to a particular type of vessel in any form or manner (even though the complaint specifically refers to a “zodiac” vessel).
Thus Plaintiff has failed to show even on a “similar enough” basis how these requests are permissible based on the location or conditions alleged. To satisfy the substantial similarity doctrine a past incident must be reasonably related in terms of location and condition. See, e.g., Sorrels,
At the very least, a relevant request tethered to the particular waters where the accident occurred, coupled with the type of vessel involved, would be somewhat similar— and might be enough for discovery purposes. But these requests are not so limited. They seek production of data that is potentially utterly irrelevant from the circumstances of this case. In other words, they are not seeking “similar” incidents in any meaningful way.
The fact that Plaintiff may be aware of another similar incident involving a different operator or a different cruise line only highlights the deficiency in the prima facie showing here. Because the only relevant issue is notice to this Defendant, the notice alleged must either be tied to the particular operator, the particular vessel, the particular waters, or at least the particular conditions. Otherwise, the only notice that Defendant would have would be that high speed boats on the open ocean can be dangerous, but that then squarely implicates the Defendant’s argument that such knowledge is common knowledge to everyone, including this Plaintiff.
. This is fundamentally the same as the question decided by this Court in Wolf v. Celebrity Cruises, Inc.,
Also analogously, Judge King held that the duty to warn could not extend to liability for an injury to a passenger who was victimized in Nassau due to a rising crime rate, which condition the cruise line was alleged to have known about but did not adequately address. See Koens v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.,
We too must resolve the pending dispute under the same principle. The duty to warn can arise only for the specific location or the specific operator of the excursion, or otherwise based upon similar conditions or locations where the accident occurred that could have given a vessel owner constructive notice of a particular risk. The duty does not extend to knowledge of any generalized maritime danger in any region of the world. Plaintiffs attempt to obtain discovery into general risks associated with vessels on the ocean is outside the scope of possible relevance in this case, even assuming such discovery could be obtained.
And so we find that discovery requests like these that are not adequately linked to a particular hazard, location or condition are not enforceable. See also Joseph v. Carnival Corp.,
B.
Other than the issue decided above, the amended motion to compel production [D.E. 59] also separately challenges the manner in which Defendant responded to the production requests. Defendant’s responses to the similar incident requests appear to have answered in the negative initially (e.g., Nos. 26, 29, 32, 33, 34 and 35) but then objected on the basis of relevance and scope, as well as privilege in some instances.
The Court agrees that ambiguous responses like these are improper because they leave a requesting party in doubt as to what may be left at issue. See Guzman v. Irmadan, Inc.,
Therefore, the amended motion to compel is Granted in part on this basis. Defendant shall amend each response cited in the motion to clarify whether any known responsive documents were withheld on the basis of an objection or privilege, If a privilege was relied upon to do so, a privilege log must be served that complies with the Court’s Local Rule. Defendant shall comply with this Order within fourteen days.
Ill CONCLUSION
A. Plaintiffs Motion to Compel Better Responses to Interrogatories [D.E. 43] is DENIED.
B. Plaintiffs Motion Motion to Compel Better Responses to Production Requests, [D.E. 46], is DENIED as moot upon the filing of an amended motion.
C. Plaintiffs Amended Motion to Compel Better Responses to Production Requests, [D.E. 59], is GRANTED in part as set forth above and otherwise DENIED.
DONE AND ORDERED in Chambers at Miami, Florida, this 25th day of February, 2016.
Notes
. It is also true that a dangerous condition is one that is not apparent and obvious to the passenger. Smolnikar v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.,
. This ruling extends to Production Request No. 31 that is linked to notice of back or neck injuries on any shore excursion. Again, this request is objectionable in part on the reasons cited above. But in addition, the request is facially overbroad because how or why a person sustained a back injury on an excursion materially different from the one at issue here has zero bearing on Defendant's liability in this case. There is no authority for the proposition that the similarity of an injury, without more, is sufficient to trigger unbounded discovery into all such injuries.
. At the very least, Defendant has met its initial burden of showing that the requested discovery has no reasonable bearing on the claims and defenses raised in the case, e.g., Wrangen v. Pennsylvania Lumbermans Mut. Ins. Co.,
