delivered the opinion of the Court.
Twelve-year-old Natalie Calhoun was killed in a jet ski accident on July 6, 1989. At the time of her death, she was vacationing with family friends at a beach-front resort in Puerto Rico. Alleging that the jet ski was defectively de *202 signed or made, Natalie’s parents sought to recover from the manufacturer pursuant to state survival and wrongful-death statutes. The manufacturer contended that state remedies could not be applied because Natalie died on navigable waters; federal, judge-declared maritime law, the manufacturer urged, controlled to the exclusion of state law.
Traditionally, state remedies have been applied in accident cases of this order — maritime wrongful-death cases in which no federal statute specifies the appropriate relief and the decedent was not a seaman, longshore worker, or person otherwise engaged in a maritime trade. We hold, in accord with the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, that state remedies remain applicable in such cases and have not been displaced by the federal maritime wrongful-death action recognized in
Moragne
v.
States Marine Lines, Inc.,
I
Natalie Calhoun, the 12-year-old daughter of respondents Lucien and Robin Calhoun, died in a tragic accident on July 6, 1989. On vacation with family friends at a resort hotel in Puerto Rico, Natalie had rented a “WaveJammer” jet ski manufactured by Yamaha Motor Company, Ltd., and distributed by Yamaha Motor Corporation, U. S. A. (collectively, Yamaha), the petitioners in this case. While riding the WaveJammer, Natalie slammed into a vessel anchored in the waters off the hotel frontage, and was killed.
The Calhouns, individually and in their capacities as administrators of their daughter’s estate, sued Yamaha in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Invoking Pennsylvania’s wrongful-death and survival statutes, 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. §§8301-8302 (1982 and Supp. 1995), the Calhouns asserted several bases for recovery (including negligence, strict liability, and breach of implied warranties), and sought damages for lost future earnings, loss of society, loss of support and services, and funeral expenses, as well as punitive damages. They grounded fed *203 eral jurisdiction on both diversity of citizenship, 28 U. S. C. § 1332, 1 and admiralty, 28 U. S. C. § 1333.
Yamaha moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that the federal maritime wrongful-death action this Court recognized in
Moragne
v.
States Marine Lines, Inc.,
Both sides asked the District Court to present questions for immediate interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U. S. C. § 1292(b). The District Court granted the parties’ requests, and in its § 1292(b) certifying order stated:
“Natalie Calhoun, the minor child of plaintiffs Lucien B. Calhoun and Robin L. Calhoun, who are Pennsylvania residents, was killed in an accident not far off shore in Puerto Rico, in the territorial waters of the United States. Plaintiffs have brought a diversity suit against, inter alia, defendants Yamaha Motor Corporation, U. S. A. and Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd. The counts of the complaint directed against the Yamaha defendants allege that the accident was caused by a defect or defects in a Yamaha jet ski which Natalie Calhoun had rented and was using at the time of the fatal accident. Those counts sound in negligence, in strict liability, and in implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. The district court has concluded that admiralty jurisdiction attaches to these several counts and that they *204 constitute a federal maritime cause of action. The questions of law certified to the Court of Appeals are whether, pursuant to such a maritime cause of action, plaintiffs may seek to recover (1) damages for the loss of the society of their deceased minor child, (2) damages for the loss of their child’s future earnings, and (3) punitive damages.” App. to Pet. for Cert. A-78.
Although the Court of Appeals granted the interlocutory review petition, the panel to which the appeal was assigned did not reach the questions presented in the certified order, for it determined that an anterior issue was pivotal. The District Court, as just recounted, had concluded that any damages the Calhouns might recover from Yamaha would be governed exclusively by federal maritime law. But the Third Circuit panel questioned that conclusion and inquired whether state wrongful-death and survival statutes supplied the remedial prescriptions for the Calhouns’ complaint. The appellate panel asked whether the state remedies endured or were “displaced by a federal maritime rule of decision.”
II
In our order granting certiorari, we asked the parties to brief a preliminary question: “Under 28 U. S. C. § 1292(b), can the courts of appeals exercise jurisdiction over any question that is included within the order that contains the controlling question of law identified by the district court?”
Section 1292(b) provides, in pertinent part:
“When a district judge, in making in a civil action an order not otherwise appealable under this section, shall be of the opinion that such order involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground *205 for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation, he shall so state in writing in such order. The Court of Appeals . . . may thereupon, in its discretion, permit an appeal to be taken from such order, if application is made to it within ten days after the entry of the order.” (Emphasis added.)
As the text of § 1292(b) indicates, appellate jurisdiction applies to the
order
certified to the court of appeals, and is not tied to the particular question formulated by the district court. The court of appeals may not reach beyond the certified order to address other orders made in the case.
United States
v.
Stanley,
We therefore proceed to the issue on which certiorari was granted: Does the federal maritime claim for wrongful death recognized in Moragne supply the exclusive remedy in cases involving the deaths of nonseafarers 2 in territorial waters?
*206 III
Because this case involves a watercraft collision on navigable waters, it falls within admiralty’s domain. See
Sisson
v.
Ruby,
Our review of maritime wrongful-death law begins with
The Harrisburg,
Federal admiralty courts tempered the harshness of
The Harrisburg’s
rule by allowing recovery under state
*207
wrongful-death statutes. See,
e. g., The Hamilton,
State wrongful-death statutes proved an adequate supplement to federal maritime law, until a series of this Court’s
*208
decisions transformed the maritime doctrine of unseaworthiness into a strict-liability rule. Prior to 1944, unseaworthiness “was an obscure and relatively little used” liability standard, largely because “a shipowner’s duty at that time was only to use due diligence to provide a seaworthy ship.”
Miles
v.
Apex Marine Corp.,
The disparity between the unseaworthiness doctrine’s strict-liability standard and negligence-based state wrongful-death statutes figured prominently in our landmark
Moragne
decision. Petsonella Moragne, the widow of a longshore worker killed in Florida’s territorial waters, brought suit under Florida’s wrongful-death and survival statutes, alleging both negligence and unseaworthiness.
*209
The District Court dismissed the claim for wrongful death based on unseaworthiness, citing this Court’s decision in
The Tungus
v. Skovgaard,
The Court acknowledged in
Moragne
that
The Tungus
had led to considerable uncertainty over the role state law should play in remedying deaths in territorial waters, but concluded that “the primary source of the confusion is not to be found in
The Tungus,
but in
The Harrisburg.”
IV
Yamaha argues that
Moragne
— despite its focus on “maritime duties” owed to maritime workers — covers the waters, creating a uniform federal maritime remedy for all deaths occurring in state territorial waters, and ousting all previously available state remedies. In Yamaha’s view, state remedies can no longer supplement general maritime law
*210
(as they routinely did before
Moragne),
because
Moragne
launched a solitary federal scheme.
7
Yamaha’s reading of
Moragne
is not without force; in several contexts, we have recognized that vindication of maritime policies demanded uniform adherence to a federal rule of decision, with no leeway for variation or supplementation by state law. See,
e. g., Kossick
v.
United Fruit Co.,
The uniformity concerns that prompted us to overrule
The Harrisburg,
however, were of a different order than those invoked by Yamaha.
Moragne
did not reexamine the soundness of
The Harrisburg
out of concern that state monetary awards in maritime wrongful-death cases were excessive, or that variations in the remedies afforded by the States threatened to interfere with the harmonious operation of maritime law. Variations of this sort had long been' deemed compatible with federal maritime interests. See
Western Fuel,
By 1970, when
Moragne
was decided, claims premised on unseaworthiness had become “the principal vehicle for recovery” by'seamen and other maritime workers injured or killed in the course of their employment.
Moragne,
First, the Court noted that “within territorial waters, identical conduct violating federal law (here the furnishing of an unseaworthy vessel) produces liability if the victim is merely injured, but frequently not if he is killed.”
Second, we explained in
Moragne
that “identical breaches of the duty to provide a seaworthy ship, resulting in death, produce liability outside the three-mile limit . . . but not within the territorial waters of a State whose local statute excludes unseaworthiness claims.”
Finally, we pointed out that “a true seaman [a member of a ship’s company]... is provided no remedy for death caused by unseaworthiness within territorial waters, while a longshoreman, to whom the duty of seaworthiness was extended only because he performs work traditionally done by seamen, does have such a remedy when allowed by a state statute.”
*213
The anomalies described in
Moragne
relate to ships and the workers who serve them, and to a distinctly maritime substantive concept — the unseaworthiness doctrine. The Court surely meant to “assure uniform vindication of federal policies,”
Moragne,
in sum, centered on the extension of relief, not on the contraction of remedies. The decision recalled that “ ‘it better becomes the humane and liberal character of proceedings in admiralty to give than to withhold the remedy, when not required to withhold it by established and inflexible rules.’”
Id.,
at 387 (quoting
The Sea Gull,
Our understanding of Moragne accords with that of the Third Circuit, which Judge Becker set out as follows:
“Moragne ... showed no hostility to concurrent application of state wrongful-death statutes. Indeed, to read into Moragne the idea that it was placing a ceiling on recovery for wrongful death, rather than a floor, is somewhat ahistorical. The Moragne cause of action was in many respects a gap-filling measure to ensure that seamen (and their survivors) would all be treated alike. The ‘humane and liberal’ purpose underlying the general maritime remedy of Moragne was driven by the idea that survivors of seamen killed in state territorial waters should not have been barred from recovery simply because the tort system of the particular state in which a seaman died did not incorporate special maritime doctrines. It is difficult to see how this purpose can be taken as an intent to preclude the operation of state laws that do supply a remedy.”40 F. 3d, at 641-642 (citation omitted).
We have reasoned similarly in
Sun Ship, Inc.
v.
Pennsylvania,
When Congress has prescribed a comprehensive tort recovery regime to be uniformly applied, there is, we have generally recognized, no cause for enlargement of the damages statutorily provided. See
Miles,
H= H= *
For the reasons stated, we hold that the damages available for the jet ski death of Natalie Calhoun are properly governed by state law. 14 The judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit is accordingly
Affirmed.
Notes
The Calhouns are citizens of Pennsylvania. Yamaha Motor Corporation, U. S. A., is incorporated and has its principal place of business in California; Yamaha Motor Company, Ltd., is incorporated and has its principal place of business in Japan.
By “nonseafarers,” we mean persons who are neither seamen covered by the Jones Act, 46 U. S. C. App. §688 (1988 ed.), nor longshore workers covered by the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U. S. C. §901 et seq.
Throughout this opinion, for economy, we use the term wrongful-death remedies or statutes to include survival statutes.
Congress also mitigated the impact of The Harrisburg by enacting two statutes affording recovery for wrongful death. In 1920, Congress passed the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA), 46 U. S. C. App. § 761 et seq. (1988 ed.), which provides a federal claim for wrongful death occurring more than three nautical miles from the shore of any State or Territory. In that same year, Congress also passed the Jones Act, 46 U. S. C. App. § 688 (1988 ed.), which provides a wrongful-death claim to the survivors of seamen killed in the course of their employment, whether on the high seas or in territorial waters.
Indeed, years before
The Harrisburg,
this Court rendered a pathmarking decision,
Steamboat Co.
v.
Chase,
The Court extended the duty to provide a seaworthy ship, once owed only to seamen, to longshore workers in
Seas Shipping Co.
v.
Sieracki,
If Moragne’s wrongful-death action did not extend to nonseafarers like Natalie, one could hardly argue that
Moragne
displaced the state-law remedies the Calhouns seek. Lower courts have held that Moragne’s wrongful-death action extends to nonseafarers. See,
e. g., Sutton
v.
Earles,
The federal cast of admiralty law, we have observed, means that “state law must yield to the needs of a uniform federal maritime law when this Court finds inroads on a harmonious system[,] [b]ut this limitation still leaves the States a wide scope.”
Romero
v.
International Terminal Operating Co.,
As noted earlier, unseaworthiness recovery by longshore workers was terminated by Congress in its 1972 amendments to the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U. S. C. § 901 et seq. See § 905(b).
The Court might have simply overruled
The Tungus,
see
supra,
at 209, thus permitting plaintiffs to rely on federal liability standards to obtain state wrongful-death remedies. The petitioner in
Moragne,
widow of a longshore worker, had urged that course when she sought certiorari. See
Moragne
v.
States Marine Lines, Inc.,
While unseaworthiness was the doctrine immediately at stake in
Moragne,
the right of action, as stated in the Court’s opinion, is “for death caused by violation of maritime duties.”
Id.,
at 409. See
East River S. S. Corp.
v.
Transamerica Delaval Inc.,
Moragne
was entertained by the Court of Appeals pursuant to a 28 U. S. C. § 1292(b) certification directed to the District Court’s order dismissing the unseaworthiness claim. See
Federal maritime law has long accommodated the States’ interest in regulating maritime affairs within their territorial waters. See,
e. g., Just
v.
Chambers,
The Third Circuit left for initial consideration by the District Court the question whether Pennsylvania’s wrongful-death remedies or Puerto Rico’s apply.
