This admiralty case arises from an alleged rape on board a cruise liner. We must decide whether the Supreme Court has implicitly overruled this circuit’s law that a ship owner is absolutely liable for a crew member’s assault on a passenger.
*290 I
Plaintiffs Susan and William Morton paid to take a cruise in 1989 on the M/V Carni-vale, a ship owned and operated by Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. Crew member Joaquin De Oliveira served as their regular dining room waiter.
One evening, while William Morton was at the ship’s casino, Susan Morton was alone in their cabin when, according to her account, De Oliveira appeared at her door with a bottle of wine and two glasses and said he thought the Mortons would like to sample some.
Susan asked him in and they exchanged pleasantries and each had a glass of wine. According tо Susan, she began to feel dizzy. She asked De Oliveira to get her husband, but instead De Oliveira pushed her on the bed and raped her. She did not tell her husband immediately about the attack nor did she report it to authorities aboard the ship.
De Oliveira, who no longer works for Carnival and apparently cannot be located, made a statement to a Carnival security official in which he denied raping Susаn Morton. He claimed in essence that he was delivering a container of milk when she invited him inside for some wine and then attempted to seduce him. He denied having intercourse with her. Several weeks аfter the cruise ended, according to her deposition, Susan Morton told her husband she had been assaulted by De Oliveira during the cruise.
The Mortons sued De Oliveira and Carnival Cruise Lines. After a period of discovery, the Mortons conceded that they would be unable to show any negligence by Carnival in hiring or supervising De Oliveira. Instead, their complaint rested on a theory of a ship owner’s absolute liability for assaults on passengers by its crew members.
The district judge determined that “those cases relied upon by the plaintiffs in support of a strict liability standard have been superseded or over-ruled” by
Kermarec v. Compagnie Generate Transatlantique,
II
We review summary judgments and questions of law de novo.
See Kruso v. International Tel. & Tel. Corp.,
We begin by examining the Ninth Circuit case on point. In
Pacific S.S. Co. v. Sutton,
The court first noted the carrier-passenger relationship and its consequences:
[B]y the sale of the ticket there arose a contractual relationship between the cоmpany and the passenger, to which relationship the law by its own force annexed certain implied obligations and duties to be observed and performed by the parties, respectively, toward each other. The contract of carriage made it the duty of the carrier to carry safely and to protect its passenger from violence and insult committed by its own servants.
*291 Appellant by the act of employment vouched for his deportment during the voyage. A cаrrier owes a duty to every passenger to protect him from insult and assault. It is a part of the contract of carriage. * * * As long as respondent was a passenger on appellant’s ship, appellant owed him a duty of absolute protection from the assaults and aggressions of its servants, and the rule is well nigh universal that the carrier cannot plead as a defense that the servant acted outside the scopе of his employment.
Id.
(quoting
Marks v. Alaska S.S. Co.,
Carnival, however, contends that the Supreme Court implicitly overruled
Pacific
in
Kermarec v. Compagnie Generate Transatlantique,
The Supreme Court stated the issue as “whether admiralty recognizes the same distinctions between an invitee and a licensee as does the common law.”
Id.
at 630,
In isolation, this statement might support Carnival’s contention and the district court’s conclusion. But read in the context of the entire opinion, it does not necessarily reject the principle that a ship owner is absolutely liable for its crew members’ assaults upon passengers.
In deciding
Kermarec,
the Court first noted that it “must be decided in the performance of the Court’s function in declaring the general maritime law, free from inappropriate common-law concepts.”
Id.
at 630,
The Court found that such distinctions “originated under a legal system in which status depended almost entirely upon the nature of the individual’s estate with resрect to real property, a legal system in that respect entirely alien to the law of the sea.”
Id.
at 631-32,
Even with that conclusion, however, the court noted:
This is not to say that concepts of status are not relevant in the law of maritime torts, but only that the meaningful categories are quite different. Membership in the ship’s company, for example, a status that confers an absolute right to a seaworthy ship, is peculiar to the law of the sea.
Id.
at 632 n. 9,
In that note, the Court makes clear thаt “reasonable care under the circumstances” is not the universal standard of eare to be provided aboard ship. A different standard may apply where it makes sense under maritime law.
Unlike thе invitee/licensee distinction, the rule regarding absolute liability for crew members’ assaults cannot be traced
*292
to obsolete concepts regarding real property and conceрts of feudalism. Rather, it is a widely adopted rule that common carriers owe such an absolute duty to their passengers.
See, e.g., St. Michelle v. Catania,
Where the deliberate or willful wrong was not done to further the master’s business the tendеncy has been to deny vicarious liability, but here too there have been many qualifications. The relationship between master and plaintiff may be such as to put on the master a duty of protective care that he may not delegate. Thus a carrier is liable to its passengers for assaults by employees prompted by purely personal motives.
5 Fowler V. Harper, Fleming James, Jr., & Oscar S. Gray, The Law of Torts § 26.9, at 53 (2d ed. 1986).
There is no doubt that the M/V Carnivale is a common carrier and that many of the concerns that led to the establishment of this rule are present on ships as well as trains, taxi cabs and other carriers.
Given this meaningful basis for the rule, we find that the Cоurt’s decision in Kerma-rec cannot be read to overrule it. The Court explicitly exempted unseaworthiness claims from its holding; we think it is clear that it implicitly exempted other “meaningful categories.”
We are nоt persuaded by Carnival’s argument that this circuit has adopted the
Kermarec
standard as all-encompassing through cases such as
Craig v. M/V Peacock,
We also are not persuaded by the contrary result reached in
Jaffess v. Saavedra,
No. 85 Civ. 7365 (MJL),
In conclusion, we hold that
Pacific
remains the law of this circuit. It is clear that we do not have the authority to set it aside; only the court sitting en banc may overrule a prior decision of the court.
See Montana v. Johnson,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
