ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS AND MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This is a personal injury case arising under the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C.App. § 688 et seq. and general maritime law. Plaintiff allegedly suffered an injury on September 27, 1995 while serving aboard the MW GULF KING 35. Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss or, in the alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment. This is the fourth time Defendants have sought to evade this Court’s proper jurisdiction where substantially identical factual and legal issues concerning choice of law are present. As in
Denis v. Gulf King, 4,9, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98-491,
Victor Manuel Urbina v. Gulf King 55, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98-143, and
Solano v. Gulf King 55, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98-095,
I. FACTUAL SUMMARY
Defendants Gulf King 35, Inc. and Gulf King Services, Inc. (“Gulf King”) are Texas corporations with their principal places of business in Aransas Pass, Texas. Both businesses are closely held corporations in which members of the owning family, who are American citizens and residents of Texas, own 96 percent of the stock. Defendants own forty-three shrimping vessels, thirty-four of which operate exclusively in the waters off the shore of Nicaragua. These thirty-four vessels comprise what Defendants refer to as the “Nicaragua Fleet.” Corporate officers in Defendants’ Texas office make all decisions that concern the deployment or sale of any vessel in the Nicaragua Fleet. All operational and maintenance decisions regarding the fleet are made by a “fleet manager,” a Nicaragua-based employee who is charged with running the fleet’s day-to-day affairs but must consult with Defendants on all major decisions. 1
The Nicaragua Fleet is the most profitable division owned by Defendants. Defendants also maintain a fleet of shrimping vessels that operates in the waters off of Texas. From 1995 to 1997, the Nicaragua Fleet generated profits of more than $1.6 million. These profits come entirely from sales in the United States of the shrimp caught in Nicaraguan waters. The shrimp are processed in Nicaragua by a Nicaraguan company called Oceanic, S.A., which receives a flat fee for its work. 2 The processed shrimp are then *562 shipped to Miami, Florida, where Defendants maintain a refrigerated warehouse. From Miami, Defendants sell the shrimp exclusively to United States-based customers. The proceeds attributable to the shrimp produced by the Nicaragua Fleet end up commingled with the proceeds from Defendants’ domestic operations.
Each of the vessels in the Nicaragua Fleet sails under the United States flag. According to the testimony of company officials, sailing under the U.S. flag is a condition imposed by Defendants’ three primary financing creditors, the Department of Commerce, the National Marine Fishery Service, and the Small Business Administration. Together, those three government agencies have loaned Defendants approximately $23 million since 1980. The loans are secured through liens on individual ships in both the Nicaraguan and domestic fleets. To better secure their liens, the creditor agencies require that the ships sail under the U.S. flag and be documented in the United States.
The vessels are all entirely crewed by Nicaraguan citizens and captained for the most part by American citizens. The fleet manager hires a captain for each vessel, who then hires a crew for each shrimping voyage. At the conclusion of each voyage, the fleet manager faxes a payroll request based upon the particular vessel’s catch to Defendants in Texas. Defendants then wire the payroll funds to a Nicaraguan bank, where the money is converted into local currency and distributed to the crew.
In this case, Plaintiff is a Nicaraguan citizen who served aboard one of the vessels in Defendants’ Nicaraguan Fleet, the MTV GULF KING 35, in September 1995. On September 27 of that year, he was cutting down netting which had become entangled in the propeller of the vessel. Without any warning to Plaintiff, a wave caused the vessel to lift out of the water and Plaintiff was struck in the head.by the propeller of the vessel. He suffered serious injuries including the loss of his hearing.
II. ANALYSIS
The issue once again confronting this Court is the choice of law governing Plaintiffs claim. The analysis is similar to that set forth in this Court’s Orders in
Denis v. Gulf King, 49, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98 — 491,
Victor Manuel Urbina v. Gulf King 55, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98-143, and
Solano v. Gulf King 55, Inc., et al.,
Civil Action No. G-98-095,
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. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The question of whether United States or foreign law applies to a maritime injury case is governed by the Supreme Court trilogy of
Lauritzen v. Larsen,
In the present case, the law of the flag is undisputedly that of the United States. The M/V Gulf King 35 was flying the U.S. flag at the time of the accident. Defendants were required to sail under the U.S. flag as a condition of the loans the received from three government agencies. While each of the vessels in the Nicaragua Fleet flew a Nicaraguan flag as well, Plaintiff has offered testimony from a corporate officer that those flags merely served as an indication that the vessels were authorized to fish in Nicaraguan territorial waters. The flag was not a sign of Nicaraguan ownership or registration. The law of the flag clearly favors application of American law.
Defendants argue that the second key factor in a choice of law analysis, the base of operations of the vessel, is Nicaragua. However, as this Court has previously noted, the summary judgment evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that Defendants’ real base of operations is the United States. While it is not irrelevant that MW 35 is permanently stationed in Nicaragua and plies its trade in Nicaraguan waters, this Court is instructed to look beyond the “facade of the operation” to the “actual operational contacts that this ship and this owner have with the United States.”
Rhoditis,
Similarly, the allegiance of Defendants supports application of American law. Defendants are two Delaware corporations who operate principally from their corporate headquarters in Texas. In addition, their stock is almost entirely controlled by two members of the owning family-.
Only two factors favor application of Nicaraguan law. First, Plaintiff is a Nicaraguan citizen who maintains his residence in .that country. Second, the place of the employment contract entered into between Plaintiff and Defendants was Nicaragua. The remaining factors — the place of the alleged wrong, the accessibility - of Nicaragua as a forum,. and the law of this forum — are not relevant to the determination. .
In light of Defendants’ overwhelming ties with the Unites States, the Court is extremely troubled by Defendants’ attempts to escape the liability imposed by United States law. Such action approaches fraud upon American taxpayers whose tax "dollars to the tune of $23 million, in the form • of loans secured through the United States Department of Commerce, Small Business Administration, and the National Marine Fishery Service, provide the primary financing mechanism for Defendants’ operations, thus keeping Defendants’ operations afloat. To protect that investment, the lending agencies require that the Nicaragua Fleet fly the American flag. This provides Defendants' and their assets with the extensive protections that the United States government and its laws afford American citizens and businesses abroad. As one of Defendants’ officers testified, United States registration protects the vessels of the Nicaragua Fleet in the event that the Nicaraguan government tries to nationalize any of them, as it had done with other shrimping vessels during periods of political instability. Thus this Court is presented with the astonishingly arrogant assertion that Defendants would readily seek the benefits of American financial assistance, and the shelter provided by American., laws and the United States Government should they find their assets threatened, yet they wish to evade the protections American law provides to their very own crewmembers. They ask .American taxpayers to fund a shrimping operation that places its profits into the pockets of a few affluent Texans, that competes with United States businesses, and that results in jobs lost to American citizens, yet they wish to be held unaccountable for their misconduct under American law. It cannot be doubted that Defendants profits- are largely attributable to the wage savings resulting from the employment of Nicaraguans rather than Americans. Profits are likely also attributable to reduced maintenance and repair outlays for the Nicaragua fleet.as the incentive to maintain the Nicaragua Fleet to comply with U.S. regulations is minimal because Defendants^ have located their fleet outside the immediate reach of the U.S. Coast Guard. In fact, since transferring the vessels that now comprise the Nicaragua fleet to Nicaragua, those vessels have not been subject to one single safety inspection despite the U.S. registration and documentation of those ships. The American fleet, by contrast, is annually and periodically inspected. This sort of conduct is the worst example of American jingoism which has created so many" problems over the last century between the United States *565 and its fellow countries in Latin America. Fortunately, the law provides this Court with an opportunity to hold these Defendants accountable under American law for their actions and to provide them with an incentive to provide safe working conditions for then-employees. Even if the Department of Commerce, the Small Business Administration, the National Marine Fishery Service, and the Coast Guard choose to turn a blind eye to Defendants’ atrocious conduct, this Court has no intention of doing so. The Court firmly concludes that these Texas Defendants must answer for their conduct under the Jones Act and general maritime law. Consequently, Defendants’ Motion for Dismissal, and, in the alternative, Summary Judgment is therefore emphatically DENIED.
III. CONCLUSION
The Court finds as a matter of law that the Jones Act and the general maritime law of the United States governs Plaintiffs claim. Because United States law governs Plaintiffs claim, the Court need not consider Defendants’ arguments in favor of forum non con-veniens dismissal.
See Schexnider,
For the reasons set forth above, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim or, in the alternative, 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.
Notes
. Defendants have employed five different fleet managers since they began their operations in Nicaragua. Three of the fleet managers have been American citizens, while two have been Nicaraguan citizens. The current fleet manager is an American.
. When Defendants launched their shrimping operations in Nicaragua, they entered into an agreement with Oceanic through which Oceanic would process all of the shrimp caught and assist Defendants’ American ship captains and fleet managers in identifying qualified Nicaraguan seamen and processing payroll requests at the completion of each voyage. Upon receipt of the payroll requests prepared by Oceanic, Defendants would wire the requested funds to Oceanic’s Nicaraguan bank account. Oceanic would *562 then pay the seamen. At the same time, Defendants agreed to purchase 50% of Oceanic’s stock for the price of $1.1 million. In 1996, Defendants assumed control over all aspects of the shrimping operations, relieving Oceanic of all duties except for processing.
