ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Plаintiff brings this suit on behalf of himself and several deceased and injured members of his family. Deceased Plaintiffs suffered fatal injuries on July 28, 1997, when their vehicle was struck by a vehicle driven by Third Party Defendant Chris Dewayne West, who allegedly had been gambling and extensively drinking at the casino boat owned and operated by Defendant in Lake Charles, Lоuisiana. Plaintiff filed this claim against Defendants on July 20, 1998. Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment of February 22, 1999. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is DENIED.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
On July 28, 1997, Plaintiffs Katherine Young, Joshua Young, Seth Young, and Angelina Rios, all residents of Texas, were traveling west along Interstate Highway 10 in Vinton, -Louisiana when their vehicle was struck by a vehicle driven by Third Party Defendant Chris Dewayne West (“West”). West’s vehicle was traveling east along I — 10, but at the time of the collision, it had crossed over the highway median and was on the westbound side, moving against oncoming traffic. Angelina Rios, Katherine Young, and Seth Young, an eighteen-month-old infant, were killed instantly or died en route to the hospital. A fourth passenger, Joshua Young, was severely injured and has since undergone extensive rehabilitation in Texas. West was also severely injured and remains confined to a nursing home in Texas.
Laboratory tests conducted after the accident determined West’s blood alcohol level to be .259, or more than twice the level of per se intoxication in Texas, approximately an hour and a half after the collision. West had undisputedly been drinking for several hours onboard PLAYERS III, Defendants’ riverboat casino in Lake Charles, Louisiana, where he had gone to gamble. During the time he gambled, West received eleven “comps” from the casino, аt least some of which he used to purchase drinks. West had left the riverboat only a short time before the accident.
On July 20, 1998, Plaintiff filed suit against Defendants in this Court. On July 22,1998, Plaintiff filed suit against West in the 136th District Court of Jefferson County, Texas. On July 27, 1998, several members of Rios’s family on behalf of themselves and Rios’s estate filed suit against Defendants in this Court. Three weeks before, on July 6, those parties had filed suit against West and his insurer in the Parish of Calcasieu, Louisiana. All of these actions were subsequently consolidated in this Court. Plaintiffs’ theory of Defendants’ alleged negligence is that Defendants were negligent in serving alcohol to West when Defendants knew or should have known that West was intoxicated and posed a danger to himself and others, including Plaintiffs.
II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P.
III. ANALYSIS
In their Motion for Summary Judgment, Defendants argue that Louisiana law governs this action. If that is the case, Plaintiffs’ claims must be dismissed, because Louisiana law completely insulates providers of alcohol from liability for the actions of those to whom they sell or serve alcohol. See La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 9:2800.1 (West 1986). Plaintiffs make two arguments in response. First, they argue that this Court has admiralty jurisdiction over the action and that consequently it must apply the substantive general maritime law. Second, Plaintiffs argue in the alternative that if maritime law does not apply, Texas choice of law provisions require the Court to apply Texas law. Because the Court agrees with Plaintiffs that the general maritime law provides the substantive law in this action, it does not reach either Plaintiffs’ second argument, or the dubious wisdom of Louisiana’s appalling insulation of casino boats who use frеe or discounted liquor as the bait to entice gamblers, while ignoring the consequences when those predictably intoxicated gamblers hit the streets in lethal vehicles.
The Court notes that the existence of admiralty jurisdiction over this action is not in dispute at this time. Nonetheless, the Court feels constrained to address that quеstion as a basis for further analysis. To determine whether it has admiralty jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1333, the Court employs a two-pronged test. Under the first prong, the Court determines whether the tort occurred on navigable water or whether injury suffered on land was caused by a vessel on navigable water.
See Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
None of the parties dispute that the alleged negligence, the serving of copious amounts of alcohol on the casino boat, occurred on navigable waters. Therefore, the first prong is indisputably satisfied. With respect to the first issue under the second prong, there appears to exist the potential for а disruptive impact on maritime commerce. Reaching this conclusion
Defendants correctly argue that the presence of admiralty jurisdiction by itsеlf does not necessarily answer the question of which substantive law governs this action. Ordinarily, with admiralty jurisdiction comes the application of substantive maritime law.
See East River S.S. Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc.,
This Court recognizes the scholarship of its distinguished brethren in the Northern District of California. However, the existence of an unreported opinion from that district, as compelling as its reasoning might be to some, does not bind or persuade this Court. In fact, there is analоgous precedent in the Fifth Circuit that there is a maritime rule concerning dram shop liability.
This
very
Court has held that a defendant can be held liable at maritime law for providing alcohol without adequate supervision. In
Thier v. Lykes Bros., Inc.,
the plaintiff suffered severe injuries when a car driven by the defendants’ chief officer crashed on the way to a dinner.
Moreover, this Court’s opinion in
Thier
was not without antecedents in the Fifth Circuit. In
Reyes v. Vantage S.S. Co., Inc.,
the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit addressed the issue of liability for the death of an intoxicated seaman who leaped from his vessel and drowned.
While
Reyes,
like
Thier,
is a Jones Act case, the Court finds no talismanic significance in that fact with respect to maritime dram shop liability. Neither opinion expressly premised the existence of a duty regarding the serving of alcohol on the status of the injured party. In fact,
Thier
expressly admonished that regardless of whether the Jones Act applied to the plaintiffs claim, the defendants were directly liable for any injuries resulting from their negligence in allowing alcohol to pervade their ship unsupervised.
See Thier,
Similarly, the fact that Defendants in this case sold or gave alcohol to gambling patrons rather than provide it as a sort of “perk” to employees does not distinguish this case from thоse where courts in this Circuit found dram shop liability applying maritime law. Factually, the cases do not appear to be as distinguishable as Defendants would argue. In
Reyes,
for instance, the defendant shipowner sold alcohol to the seamen it employed.
See Reyes v. Vantage S.S. Co., Inc.,
Additionally, to the extent that the sale of alcohol differs from the free provision of alcohol, it is а difference without distinction. Defendants appear to imply that the question of dram shop liability for sellers of alcohol is too complex for a court to adequately address, being left instead to legislative process (properly influenced by well funded lobbyists for the gaming industry). Such a position is patently insulting to the judicial system, and, worse, is factually asinine. What complicates the issue of liability for sellers of alcohol is the tapestry of state legislatures that have involved themselves, each thread of which appearing to represent simply a distinct prevailing special interest. That can hardly be blamed on alleged judicial “simplicity.” The fact that numerous state legislatures have each promulgated a different rule on the issue of dram shop liability does not mean that the question of seller liability is an inherently complex one. Rather, it simply means that, for various reasons, each legislature has chosen a distinct approach to a single issue. This Court (however simple it might be) views that issue to be well within its limited capabilities. Did Defendants have a duty toward Plaintiffs, did Defendants breach that duty, and was there a causal connection between Defendants’ breach and Plaintiffs’ injury? According to the fundamental principles of negligence law, which the general maritime law has adopted, plaintiffs are owed a duty of ordinary care. See
Daigle v. Point Landing, Inc.,
In sum, the Court concludes that there is an existing maritime rule governing the issue of dram shop liability. Accordingly, there is no need to perform a Wilburn analysis to determine whether the Court must apply state dram shop law. If Louisiana wants to establish shoreside casinos and insulate their liability, that is solely Louisiana’s business. But, where navigable ships in Louisiana are going to entiсe residents of Texas and other states to flock in huge numbers to their casinos to drink too much and return home in a murderous condition, the general maritime law should and does afford the endangered public with a ready and wholly appropriate remedy. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is therefore emphatically DENIED.
IV. CONCLUSION
The Court finds as a matter of law that the general maritime law of. the United States governs Plaintiffs claim. This case is set for trial on July 26, 1999. Without further commenting on the merits of the claims or defenses asserted, this Court will be prepared to carefully address them again at that time. For the reasons set forth above, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED. The parties are ORDERED to bear their own taxable costs and expenses incurred herein to date.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
