OPINION
Kent and Nancy Stobaugh and Richard and Doris Heidbrink, appellants, filed suit against Norwegian Cruise Line Limited d/b/a Norwegian Cruise Line (“NCL”), ap-pellee, to recover damages for personal injuries suffered on NCL’s cruise ship M/S Dreamward. Almost a year after suit was filed, NCL filed a Motion to Dismiss based on a forum selection clause which designated Florida as the venue for any disputes between the parties. The trial court granted the Motion to Dismiss and appellants appeal that ruling. We reverse and remand.
In the spring of 1996, appellants decided to take a cruise. They contacted their Houston travel agent and received NCL’s promotional brochures. Appellants selected a seven-day cruise aboard the M/S Dreamward departing New York for Bermuda on August 31, 1996. Full payment was sent in June, but NCL did not send the appellants a passenger ticket until August 8, 1996. The ticket included a “Contract of Passage,” which purported to contain all of the terms of the agreement *234 between the parties, including the now disputed forum selection clause.
A few days before the departure date, appellants learned of several tropical storm systems and a possible hurricane in the Atlantic Ocean. Appellants contacted NCL, expressed their concerns and inquired about a refund in case they decided to cancel. NCL informed the appellants that if they canceled they would receive no refund, and that they should proceed with the trip and trust the judgment of the ship’s captain. The appellants did just that, and NCL’s ship proceeded to sail into Hurricane Eduardo, which allegedly resulted in physical and emotional injuries to many of the passengers on board.
Following their return to Texas, the appellants filed this class action lawsuit. NCL immediately attempted to remove the case to Federal Court, but the removal was unsuccessful and the case was remanded on May 28, 1997. Soon thereafter, a discovery dispute arose in which the NCL refused to produce discoverable material. The dispute continued until September 19,1997, when the trial judge ruled that NCL’s objections to the appellant’s discovery requests were without merit. The court ordered NCL to produce the materials and pay sanctions for the delay. On October 1, 1997, nearly eleven months following the filing of the original lawsuit, and only one month before the appellant’s lawsuit would be barred, 1 NCL asserted the forum selection clause as a basis for its Motion to Dismiss this lawsuit.
The issue presented in this appeal is the enforceability of a forum selection clause that rears its head for the first time after the appellants paid in full for a cruise selected from NCL’s promotional brochure which made no reference to the clause. Appellants present two arguments to support their contention that the forum selection clause is unenforceable. First, they assert that the forum selection clause is not properly part of the contract between the parties because it is a material term that NCL added following the formation of the contract without additional consideration. Second, the appellants argue that the forum selection clause should not be enforced because it is fundamentally unfair. Since we find that enforcement of the forum selection clause in the present case is fundamentally unfair, we need not address appellants complaint that the forum selection clause is not properly a part of the contract.
The issues relating to the enforceability of a forum selection clause in a cruise line passenger ticket are issues of admiralty, and are therefore governed by federal maritime law.
See Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
The enforceability of forum selection clauses was first addressed by the United States Supreme Court in
The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
In
Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
the United States Supreme Court first recognized the difference between negotiated commercial contracts and cruise line passenger contracts, and addressed the enforceability of forum selection clauses in the latter.
Until appellants received the passenger tickets, the only terms and conditions of the agreement between the parties were those contained in NCL’s brochure. The brochure did not mention the now contested forum selection clause, but rather contained only a short sentence buried on page one hundred-eleven, the last page, which warned that “[t]he passenger ticket contract contains information that affects your legal rights, and we recommend that you read it carefully.” Similar to the location of the warning in the brochure, the forum selection clause was buried in the last paragraph on the back of the Passenger Ticket, and stated in the following minuscule print:
[tjhis Contract shall be governed in all respects by the laws of the State of Florida and the laws of the United States of America. It is hereby agreed that any and all claims, disputes or controversies whatsoever arising from or in connection with this Contract and the transportation furnished hereunder shall be commenced, filed and litigated, if at all, before a court of proper jurisdiction located in Dade County, Florida, U.S.A.
By sending in their full payment in June 1996, the appellants impliedly accepted the terms and conditions set out in NCL’s promotional brochure. It was not until August 8, 1996, twenty-three days before the cruise departed, that NCL modified the agreement by including additional terms in the Contract of Passage, one of which was the forum selection clause.
*236
As stated earlier, forum selection clauses that are negotiated are generally enforceable. Further, in some situations a forum selection clause that is not negotiated may also be enforceable. However, in such situations the law imposes the additional requirement that the non-negotiated forum selection clause be fundamentally fair to the party against whom it is being enforced.
See Shute,
Additionally, the forum selection clause does not pass muster because when its existence was made known to the appellants, they were not in a position to reject the modified contract with impunity. The brochure that enticed the appellants to purchase NCL’s cruise contained its cancellation and refund policy, which stated in relevant part:
Depending on when you cancel your cruise, cancellation charges will be assessed as follows: For 5-9-day cruises, $100 per person when canceled 60-30 days prior to sailing; $200 per person when canceled 29 — 4 days prior to sailing. ... There are no refunds for no-shows, or for cancellations that occur less than 4 days prior to sailing day.
Even assuming that NCL would have honored the refund policy outlined in the brochure,
2
NCL did not send the Contract of Passage containing the forum selection clause to the appellants in a timely manner. If the appellants had immediately read the Contract of Passage containing the forum selection clause and attempted to reject the forum selection clause on the same day it was received, each couple would have been subject to a $400 cancellation penalty. Such a result does not pass the fundamental fairness test prescribed in
Shute
and is against the public policy of this state.
See Schaff v. Sun Line Cruises, Inc.,
Texas has a significant interest in providing its citizens with a forum in which to resolve civil disputes.
See Accelerated Christian Educ., Inc.,
The judgment is reversed and remanded for trial on the merits.
Notes
. In addition to the forum selection clause, the Contract of Passage also contained a requirement that any suit must be brought within one year of the injury, regardless of the applicable statute of limitations in the forum in which it is filed. The forum selected by NCL in the forum selection clause is Florida. Under Florida law, there is no savings statute.
See
Fla. Stat. ch. 95.051(2);
Swartzman v. Harlan,
. There is a conflict between the cancellation policy in NCL's brochure and the Contract of Passage in the passenger ticket. The express terms of the Contract of Passage state that "[t]his contract shall be the entire agreement between the parties and supersedes all representations or conditions contained in [NCL’s] advertisements [and ] ... brochures,” and "[c]arrier shall not be liable to make any refund to passenger in respect of ... tickets wholly or partly not used by a passenger.” Therefore, under the literal terms of the Contract of Passage, NCL may have had no obligation to honor the refund policy as stated in its brochure.
