Richard C. Marotte, Sr., and Olympia Marotte, husband and wife, appeal the district court’s adverse grant of summary judgment in favor of American Airlines.
See Marotte v. Am. Airlines, Inc.,
I.
For purposes of this appeal, the following facts are undisputed. On August 20, 1996, Mr. Marotte, Mrs. Marotte, their son Richard, and his girlfriend attempted to board their scheduled’ American Airlines flight from Miami to New York. ' The flight in question was to be the final leg of their round-trip travel from New York to the Bahamas. Upon arrival at the gate, Mrs. Marotte searched for, but was unable to find, the party’s tickets and boarding passes. Nevertheless, Mr. Marotte asked the gate attendant if his party could board the plane because computer records showed that the tickets had been paid for and that seat assignments had already been assigned. Also, Mr. Marotte explained to the attendant on duty that he wanted to board the plane as soon as possible because he recently had heart bypass surgery, was diabetic, and at that time was not feeling well. In response, the gate attendant called her supervisor, Madeline Barrett, who informed Mr. Mar-otte that he would have to purchase new tickets if he wanted to board the flight. Despite Barrett’s rebuke, Mr. Marotte repeatedly requested to board the plane because of his condition. His requests, however, were of no avail because Barrett refused to permit the Marotte’ party to board without buying new tickets.
In an attempt to solve this dispute, Mr. Marotte called American Express, the company through whom he had initially purchased the tickets, to see if it would pay for a new set of tickets. During this time, Mrs. Marotte found all of the tickets and boarding passes in her pocketbook. As a result, Barrett began to yell at Mrs. Marotte saying that if she had not been so lazy in searching for and negligent in not finding the tickets, she (Barrett) would not have had to go through so much trouble. Mr. Marotte complained to Barrett about *1258 her behavior, and Mrs. Marotte took down Barrett’s name to report her actions.
With the Marotte party still in possession of their tickets and boarding passes, they started walking toward the glass door that leads to the jetway. Before passing through, Barrett ordered that the door be shut. Next, Barrett began yelling at the party, got up out of her chair, and approached Mr.. Marotte. Barrett then punched or pushed Mr. Marotte in the chest, and as a result Mr. Marotte was knocked against the door and fell to the ground. Barrett then kneeled on top of Mr. Marotte, grabbed all of the party’s tickets and boarding passes, tore them up, called security, told security to call the police, and directed other airline personnel not to let the Marotte party board the plane.
Eventually, Mr. Marotte was taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he remained for a number of days. Mrs. Mar-otte stayed in Miami with her husband until he was released from the hospital. The Marottes’s son and his girlfriend returned to New York the next day.
Almost
four
years later,
on
August 18, 2000, the Marottes filed their complaint against American Airlines and Barrett in state court in Miami, Florida, claiming numerous counts against each party.
Marotte,
On appeal, both parties agree that the Marottes’s claims, if covered by the Convention, are time barred because the Mar-ottes completed their travel on or about August 21, 1996, but did not file suit until August 18, 2000, nearly four years after their travel was completed. In light of this, we now determine whether the Convention, and its two-year limitations period, applies.
II.
A Legal Background
The Warsaw Convention was signed in 1929 in order to aid and assist the then-fledgling commercial airline industry.
E. Airlines, Inc. v. Floyd,
[An airline] carrier shall be hable for damage sustained in the event of the death or wounding of a passenger or any other bodily injury suffered by a passenger, if the accident which caused the damage so sustained took place on board the aircraft or in the course of any of the operations of embarking or disembarking.
49 U.S.C. § 40105 (emphasis added). Thus, to satisfy Article 17’s carrier liability provision, a plaintiff must establish three requirements: (1) an “accident” must have occurred; (2) injury or death must have occurred; and (3) the preceding two conditions must have occurred- while “embarking or disembarking” or during the flight itself. Here, neither party disputes ‘ that Barrett’s intentional ■ misconduct satisfies the first prong of the analysis; 3 nor does either party dispute that an actual injury occurred. Accordingly, the only substantive question with which this court is faced is whether, on the facts before us, the Marottes were “embarking” within the meaning of the Warsaw Convention.
The terms “embarking” and “disembarking” are not specifically defined in the- Convention. Despite the Marottes’s contention to the contrary, however,' the definition of the term “embarking” within the Warsaw Convention is a question of law to be decided by the court, not one of fact to be decided by the 'jury.
Blake v. Am. Airlines, Inc.,
As noted above, the term “embarking” is not defined in the treaty, nor has this court had an opportunity to define the contours of the term. However, this does not mean that we write on a clean slate. *1260 In fact, numerous courts of appeals decisions from other circuits have addressed this issue. Our opinion today joins in the reasoning of our sister circuits.
Generally, when determining whether an airline is liable under Article 17 of the Warsaw Convention, courts employ a totality of the circumstances approach.
Maugnie v. Compagnie National Air France,
B. . Legal Analysis
‘ Viewing the total circumstances surrounding the incident in question, with particular emphasis placed on location, activity, control, and the imminency of the intended flight, leads us to the firm conclusion that any injury that Mr. Marotte suffered due to the attack by Barrett occurred in the process of embarking, as contemplated by the Warsaw Convention. First, as the Marottes readily admit, the party had their boarding passes in hand and were attempting to board the plane when the attack took place. This is significant because it shows that the Marottes had already passed through security and were in a section of the airport that is not open to the general public, but rather only to ticketed passengers.
McCarthy,
III.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of American Airlines. To find the Warsaw Convention inapplicable would require us to draw a bright-line at the jetway or the actual door of the aircraft. We decline to do so for the reasons set forth above.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The limitations period established by Article 29 of the Warsaw Convention provides that "[t]he right to damages shall be extinguished if an action is not brought within 2 years, reckoned from the date of arrival at the destination; or from the dale on which the aircraft ought to have arrived, or from the date on which the transportation stopped." 49 U.S.C. § 40105.
. For those interested in a thorough historical analysis regarding Article 17, we direct your attention to the Second Circuit’s opinion in
Day v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
. For purposes of this opinion we will assume, without deciding, that Barrett's conduct is considered an “accident" as contemplated by the Convention because neither party disputes the district court's conclusion on this score. We do note, however, that the Supreme Court has defined the term "accident” under the Convention as "an unexpected or unusual event or happening that is external to the passenger,”
Air France v. Saks,
. Seemingly ignoring these cases, the Mar-ottes asks us “to adopt the view that .a passenger is only 'embarking' after the ticket has been collected and honored for travel and the . passenger is passed through [the] gate check where the boarding stub is given [sic] the .passenger to be examined by the attendant on the plane.” In other words, the Marottes ask this court to draw a bright-line at, what appears to be, the actual doorway to the jetway leading to th,e aircraft. Such a position based on arbitrary line-drawing "is both too arbitrary and too specific to have broad application.”
Evangelinos,
. Any suggestion by the Marottes's counsel that finding the Warsaw Convention applicable would reward American Airlines for Barrett's behavior, and effectively deny the Marottes any remedy under the law, is undermined by our decision today. By finding the Convention applicable to the facts before us, our opinion makes clear that the Mar-ottes had'a remedy under the Warsaw Convention so long as they filed suit within two years of completing their intended travel. For whatever reason, however, the Marottes failed to file within the required two-year window and accordingly their claims are barred by the Convention's limitations period.
. Because the Marottes did not raise the issue of failure to provide medical assistance below, the issue has been waived.
Leal v. Ga. Dept. of Corr.,
