FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
August 1, 2016
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT
_________________________________
In re: ARAMARK SPORTS AND
ENTERTAINMENT SERVICES, LLC, a No. 14-4118
Delaware limited liability company, as
owner of a certain 20' 2007 Baja Islander
202 for exoneration from or limitation of
liability,
Plaintiff - Appellant.
_________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Utah
(D.C. No. 2:09-CV-00637-TC-PMW)
_________________________________
John R. Lund (Alan S. Mouritsen, with him on the briefs), Parsons Behle & Latimer, Salt
Lake City, Utah, for Appellant.
Daniel Benchoff, (M.E. “Buddy” Rake, Jr., with him on the brief) Rake Law Group, P.C.,
Phoenix, Arizona, for Appellees.
_________________________________
Before HARTZ, PHILLIPS, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges.
_________________________________
HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
_________________________________
This suit arose out of a recreational boating accident on Lake Powell that claimed
the lives of four adults. The boat had been rented from Aramark Sports and
Entertainment Services, LLC. Because the accident occurred on navigable waters, the
case falls within federal admiralty jurisdiction. See Foremost Ins. Co. v. Richardson, 457
U.S. 668 (1982). Anticipating that it would be sued for damages, Aramark filed in the
United States District Court for the District of Utah a petition under the Limitation of
Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 30501–12, which permits a boat owner to obtain a ruling
exonerating it or limiting its liability based on the capacity or value of the boat and
freight. The district court denied the petition, leaving for further proceedings the issues
of gross negligence, comparative fault, and the amount of damages. Aramark appeals the
denial. After determining that we have appellate jurisdiction, we hold that the district
court erred in its application of admiralty principles of duty and remand for further
proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Accident
Aramark rents boats out of the Wahweap Marina on Lake Powell, near the Utah-
Arizona border. In April 2009 three married couples—the Bradys, the Prescotts, and the
Tarantos—went on vacation to Lake Powell. On Friday, April 24 the Bradys and
Prescotts went to Aramark’s boat rental office at Wahweap to procure a boat for the next
day. Mr. Prescott signed a contract to rent a Baja 202 Islander, which is classified in the
owner’s manual as a Design Category C boat based on its limited “ability to withstand
wind and sea or water conditions.” Aplee. Supp. App., Vol. 4 at 417. For Category C
boats the manual lists a “Maximum wind speed” of 27 knots (31 miles per hour). The
manual further states:
The wind speed and wave height specified as the upper limit for your
category of boat does not mean that you or your passengers can survive if
2
your boat is exposed to these conditions. It is only the most experienced
operators and crew that may be able to operate a boat safely under these
conditions. You must always be aware of weather conditions and head for
port or protected waters in sufficient time to avoid being caught in high
winds and rough water. Do not take chances!
Id. The boaters were never informed of the Baja’s Category-C classification.
When the contract was signed, the National Weather Service (NWS) forecast for
the next day on Lake Powell called for breezes from 15–23 miles per hour and gusts up to
37 miles per hour. That forecast was based on data collected at 3:44 a.m. that morning.
Before the boaters left, Aramark rental agent Phyllis Coon gave that forecast to Mr.
Prescott and told him that he would be given an updated forecast the next morning when
they picked up the boat.
Early Saturday morning the NWS updated its Lake Powell forecast for noon to 6
p.m. on Saturday to call for sustained winds of 25 to 35 miles per hour and gusts as high
as 55 miles per hour. When the three couples arrived on Saturday morning to begin their
trip, Aramark’s boat-rental instructor, who told the boaters about the weather channel on
the boat’s radio, did not inform them of the updated forecast, nor did they request it. He
asked Mr. Brady if he knew how to use the radio and Mr. Brady said he did.
The group left Wahweap at about 8 a.m. and safely arrived at their planned
destination, Rainbow Bridge. On their return trip to Wahweap, they stopped to refuel at
Dangling Rope Marina, also operated by Aramark. Aramark employee Scott Bergantz
spoke with some of them during the stop. He testified by deposition that because the
water was rough he invited the couples to stay at Dangling Rope if they were
3
uncomfortable. This testimony is disputed, and the district court made no findings
concerning any offer of hospitality.
Mr. Brady testified that after his group left Dangling Rope the water was “bumpy”
and then “got rough” as they entered a small bay. Aplt. App. at 103. The boat proceeded
through a “small opening” and then into “a larger bay, which turned out to be Padre
Bay,” at which point “the wind came up like unbelievable. It was ruthless.” Id. at 104.
At one point Mrs. Brady noticed water at her feet inside the boat and then heard her
husband issue a mayday call. The boat sank shortly thereafter. The Bradys were able to
reach a rock pile from which they were later rescued. The Prescotts and Tarantos lost
their lives.
B. Governing Law
Admiralty law is not a commonplace in the Tenth Circuit, so a brief introduction
to some relevant law may be useful.
1. Admiralty and Maritime Jurisdiction
The United States Constitution extends the “judicial power to . . . all Cases of
admiralty and maritime Jurisdiction.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. The first Congress
enacted a statute under that authority, stating: “[T]he district courts shall have . . .
exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction;
saving to suitors, in all cases, the right of a common law remedy, where the common law
is competent to give it.” Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, § 9, 1 Stat. 73, 76–77. The
second clause is often referred to as the saving-to-suitors clause. The original statute has
4
been amended several times and now reads: “The district courts shall have original
jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of: (1) Any civil case of admiralty or
maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are
otherwise entitled.”1 28 U.S.C. § 1333. The Supreme Court has said that despite the
change in language, the “substance [of the saving-to-suitors clause] has remained largely
unchanged.” Lewis v. Lewis & Clark Marine, Inc., 531 U.S. 438, 443–44 (2001).
That substance is quite broad. For the most part, the saving-to-suitors clause has
been construed to permit in personam claims within federal admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction to be brought in state court as well as in federal court. See Lewis, 531 U.S. at
445 (“[T]he saving to suitors clause [is] a grant to state courts of in personam
jurisdiction, concurrent with admiralty courts.”); Grant Gilmore & Charles L. Black, Jr.,
The Law of Admiralty § 1–13, at 40 (2d ed. 1975) (“Where the suit is in personam, it may
be brought either in federal court under the admiralty jurisdiction . . . or, under the saving
clause, in an appropriate non-maritime court, by ordinary civil action.”). “The right of a
common law remedy, so saved to suitors, . . . . includes remedies in pais, as well as
proceedings in court; judicial remedies conferred by statute, as well as those existing at
the common law; remedies in equity, as well as those enforceable in a court of law.”
Lewis, 531 U.S. at 445 (internal quotation marks omitted).
But note that the saving-to-suitors clause preserves “remedies” not “rights.” See
28 U.S.C. § 1333(1) (“saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are
1
28 U.S.C. § 1333(2) relates to prizes under admiralty and maritime law.
5
otherwise entitled”). Federal maritime and admiralty law still controls the applicable
substantive law. The clause’s scope “does not . . . include attempted changes by the
States in the substantive admiralty law, but it does include all means other than
proceedings in admiralty which may be employed to enforce the right or to redress the
injury involved.” Lewis, 531 U.S. at 445 (ellipsis and internal quotation marks omitted).
One particular attraction of proceeding under the saving-to-suitors clause is that there is
generally a right to trial by jury in state-court proceedings but, absent some limited
statutory exceptions, there is no right to a jury in an action brought under admiralty or
maritime jurisdiction. See Romero v. Int’l Terminal Operating Co., 358 U.S. 354, 363,
368–69 (1959); 2 Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Admiralty and Maritime Law § 21-10, at 571–
74 (5th ed. 2011); Fed. R. Civ. P. 38(e) (“These rules do not create a right to a jury trial
on issues in a claim that is an admiralty or maritime claim under Rule 9(h).”).
Thus, the exclusive federal jurisdiction expressed at the outset of 28 U.S.C. § 1333
does not live up to its apparent promise. That is not to say, however, that the promise is
empty. There is exclusive federal jurisdiction to hear an in rem action against a vessel or
other maritime property, “[a] procedure unique to American admiralty practice” in which
the “action is brought against the vessel itself as defendant.” 2 Schoenbaum, supra,
§ 21-3, at 535; see Lewis, 531 U.S. at 444 (“[P]roceedings in rem were deemed outside
the scope of the [saving-to-suitors] clause because an in rem action was not a common
law remedy, but instead a proceeding under civil law”). And state-court proceedings are
6
restricted by the statute employed by Aramark here—the Limitation of Liability Act. We
now turn to that statute.
2. The Limitation of Liability Act
Congress enacted the Limitation of Liability Act in 1851 “to encourage ship-
building and to induce capitalists to invest money in this branch of industry.” Lewis, 531
U.S. at 446 (internal quotation marks omitted). It was following the lead of other nations.
See Norwich & N.Y. Transp. Co. v. Wright, 80 U.S. 104, 120 (1871). In the seventeenth
century the Dutch scholar Hugo Grotius had written that “men would be deterred from
investing in ships if they thereby incurred the apprehension of being rendered liable to an
indefinite amount by the acts of the master.” Id. at 116. Various European nations had
therefore adopted laws limiting the owner’s liability to the value of the ship and freight.
See id. at 116–17. In England, for example, once a ship owner confessed liability and
paid the value of the ship and freight into court, his exposure would be limited to that
sum and he would have the right to stay any suit against him for damages. See id. at 118.
The current version of the Limitation of Liability Act was codified in 2006 at 46
U.S.C. § 30501 et seq.2 Its key provision limits the boat owner’s liability to the limitation
fund—“the value of the vessel and pending freight,” id. at § 30505(a)— provided that the
acts giving rise to the damage occurred “without the privity or knowledge of the owner,”
2
Many pre-2006 cases reference the Act at its then-locus, 46 U.S.C. App. § 181 et seq.
See, e.g., Lewis, 531 U.S. at 441.
7
see id. at § 30505(b).3 The vessel’s value is measured “after the voyage on which the
incident occurred. Thus if the ship is lost, the value is zero.” Pickle v. Char Lee Seafood,
Inc., 174 F.3d 444, 449 (4th Cir. 1999) (citation omitted) (internal quotation mark
omitted). Pending freight is “the total earnings for the voyage, both prepaid and
uncollected.” In re Caribbean Sea Transp., Ltd., 748 F.2d 622, 626 (11th Cir. 1984). If
the limitation fund is insufficient to pay all claims, it is divided by claimants “in
proportion to their respective losses.” 46 U.S.C. § 30507. For personal-injury or death
claims the cap on liability may be increased to $420 times the tonnage of the vessel; but
this applies only to a “seagoing” vessel, id. at § 30506—that is, one that “does, or is
intended to, navigate in the seas beyond the Boundary Line in the regular course of [their]
operations,” In re Talbott Big Foot, Inc., 854 F.2d 758, 761 (5th Cir. 1988); see id. (“The
Boundary Line is that line which divides the high seas from rivers, harbors, and inland
waters.”).
3
46 U.S.C. § 30505 states:
(a) In general. Except as provided in section 30506 of this title [relating to claims
for personal injury or death], the liability of the owner of a vessel for any claim,
debt, or liability described in subsection (b) shall not exceed the value of the
vessel and pending freight. If the vessel has more than one owner, the
proportionate share of the liability of any one owner shall not exceed that owner’s
proportionate interest in the vessel and pending freight.
(b) Claims subject to limitation. Unless otherwise excluded by law, claims, debts,
and liabilities subject to limitation under subsection (a) are those arising from any
embezzlement, loss, or destruction of any property, goods, or merchandise shipped
or put on board the vessel, any loss, damage, or injury by collision, or any act,
matter, or thing, loss, damage, or forfeiture, done, occasioned, or incurred, without
the privity or knowledge of the owner.
(c) Wages. Subsection (a) does not apply to a claim for wages.
8
“[F]ederal courts have exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether a vessel owner
is entitled to limited liability.” Lewis, 531 U.S. at 442. To govern procedures under the
Limitation Act, the Supreme Court promulgated rules a century and a half ago. The
current version of those rules is found in Rule F (entitled “Limitation of Liability”) of the
Supplemental Rules for Admiralty or Maritime Claims and Asset Forfeiture Actions.
Under Rule F a ship owner seeking limitation must file a complaint “set[ting] forth the
facts on the basis of which the right to limit liability is asserted and all facts necessary to
enable the court to determine the amount to which the owner’s liability shall be limited.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. Supp. Admiralty Rule F(2). Necessary facts include a description of the
voyage, the amount of any pending demands against the owner, and the present value of
the vessel. See id. Once the owner files the complaint and deposits with the court or a
trustee an amount equal to the limitation fund (or security therefor), plus security for
costs and interest, “all claims and proceedings against the owner or the owner’s property
with respect to the matter in question shall cease”; and if moved to do so by the ship
owner, “the court shall enjoin the further prosecution of any action or proceeding . . .
subject to limitation in the action.” Id. at F(3). If the court grants limitation, it then
distributes the limitation fund “pro rata, subject to all relevant provisions of law, among
the several claimants in proportion to the amounts of their respective claims, duly
proved.” Id. at F(8).
Rule F echoes much of the procedure under prior English law. See generally
Norwich, 80 U.S. at 117–20. But it is not identical. One innovation has been in the rule
9
since first promulgated in 1871. Although English practice required the owner to admit
his liability at the outset, the Supreme Court thought that such an admission “is, perhaps,
not necessary in an admiralty court.” Id. at 124. Under Rule F, “[i]n the process of
seeking limited liability, the owner [is] permitted to contest the fact of liability,” Lewis,
531 U.S. at 447; see Rule F(2) (the complaint may “demand exoneration from as well as
limitation of liability”).
“The determination of whether a shipowner is entitled to limitation employs a two-
step process.” Farrell Lines Inc. v. Jones, 530 F.2d 7, 10 (5th Cir. 1976). “First, the
court must determine what acts of negligence or conditions of unseaworthiness caused
the accident.” Id. “Second, the court must determine whether the shipowner had
knowledge or privity of those same acts of negligence or conditions of unseaworthiness.”
Id. There are three possible outcomes to a limitation petition: exoneration, limitation, or
no limitation. If no negligence is shown, the inquiry ends and the district court will
typically issue an order exonerating the owner from liability. See In re Trawler Snoopy,
Inc., 268 F. Supp. 951, 953 (D. Me. 1967) (“If no liability is found to exist, the petitioner
is entitled to a decree of exoneration, and there is no need to consider the claim to
limitation.”). If claimants demonstrate negligence, the burden shifts to the owner to show
lack of privity or knowledge. See Farrell Lines, 530 F.2d at 10. If the owner meets this
burden, the court caps the owner’s liability at the value of the vessel and pending freight,
resolves the claims, and apportions the fund. See Rule F(8). But if the owner fails to
establish lack of privity or knowledge, the court denies the limitation petition and the
10
owner is as fully liable as it would have been absent the Limitation Act. See 46 U.S.C.
§ 30505. The claimant then may pursue relief in any suitable forum. See Pickle, 174
F.3d at 449 (“If the shipowner fails to establish its right under the Limitation Act and
limitation is therefore denied, the claimants are released to pursue their original claims in
full.”); Wheeler v. Marine Navigation Sulphur Carriers, Inc., 764 F.2d 1008, 1011 (4th
Cir. 1985) (“Each circuit that has considered this question has ruled that once limitation
is denied, plaintiffs should be permitted to elect whether to remain in the limitation
proceeding or to revive their original claims in their original fora.”). See generally
Gilmore & Black, supra, § 10–41, at 935 (when limitation is denied, “[t]he lower courts
have on the whole found that . . . plaintiffs, by virtue of the saving to suitors clause,
should be allowed to choose the forum of litigation”).
Although a limitation-of-liability proceeding may fully dispose of a maritime
claim against a ship owner, that is not always the case. As noted in the previous
paragraph, if the limitation court does not exonerate or limit the liability of the defendant,
the claim can proceed in another court. And even if the vessel’s owner succeeds in
limiting liability, proceedings may then move to another venue as long as the owner’s
right to limitation is protected. See Lewis, 531 U.S. at 454–55. For example, when the
sum of all claims is less than the limitation fund, and thus does not threaten the owner
with liability exceeding the fund, the federal court hearing the limitation-of-liability
proceeding may lift the injunction against other proceedings and allow litigation of the
claims in state court. See id. at 450–51. Similarly, when a single claimant agrees not to
11
seek a recovery greater than the limitation fund, the federal court should permit the claim
to proceed elsewhere. See id. at 448–50. The owner may even plead the defense of
limitation in state court rather than file a limitation action in federal district court. See
Langnes v. Green, 282 U.S. 531, 541–43 (1931); Cody v. Phil’s Towing Co., 247 F.
Supp. 2d 688, 691 (W.D. Pa. 2002) (“Although a limitation proceeding commonly is
commenced as a separate action by the filing of a petition, invocation of the statutory
rights created by the Act also can be accomplished through a plea of limited liability
asserted in the answer to a plaintiff’s complaint.”); 2 Schoenbaum, supra, § 15-5, at 181
(“Limitation may be invoked either as a defense to an action seeking damages or as an
independent complaint in admiralty.”); Gilmore & Black, supra, § 10–14, at 853 n.52. In
such instances the state court can resolve certain limitation-related issues, such as the
limitation amount. See Langnes, 282 U.S. at 543. But the state court lacks jurisdiction to
consider the owner’s entitlement to limitation; if a plaintiff wishes to challenge that
entitlement, the federal district court, not the state court, “has exclusive cognizance of
such a question.” Id.; see Lewis, 531 U.S. at 442. The federal court may therefore retain
jurisdiction over a limitation action while the litigation proceeds in state court, just in
case the state-court litigation threatens the owner’s limitation rights. See Lewis, 531 U.S.
at 448–50, 453–55.
C. Procedural History
Aramark filed a limitation complaint in federal court before any claim against it
had been brought. The estates and heirs of the Prescotts and Tarantos (Claimants) filed
12
answers and counterclaims seeking damages for wrongful death. The Bradys, who are
not parties to this appeal, filed an answer and counterclaim that did not seek damages but
sought indemnification from Aramark in case they were held liable for the deaths of the
Tarantos or the Prescotts. Claimants then successfully moved to bifurcate the limitations
issues from those raised by their counterclaims for wrongful death, for which they
claimed the right to a jury trial. The court left for later resolution whether, if Aramark
failed on its limitation complaint, to grant Claimants’ request to proceed in state court on
their wrongful-death claims. Phase one was a bench trial on the limitation issue, leaving
nonlimitation issues such as gross negligence, damages, and apportionment of fault for a
phase-two jury trial. The court found that negligence had “at least in part” caused the
accident and that such negligence was within Aramark’s privity or knowledge. It
therefore could not exonerate Aramark from liability and denied Aramark’s petition for
limitation.
II. APPELLATE JURISDICTION
Before addressing the merits, we must assure ourselves of our appellate
jurisdiction. Aramark asserts that jurisdiction lies under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3), which
states that “courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from . . . [i]nterlocutory
decrees of . . . district courts or the judges thereof determining the rights and liabilities of
the parties to admiralty cases in which appeals from final decrees are allowed.”
Claimants argue that § 1292(a)(3) does not grant us jurisdiction because “the
district court did not fully or ultimately determine the rights and liabilities of the parties
13
or the merits of the controversy between them.” Aplee. Br. at 2. In particular, they point
out that the court “did not pass upon various issues pertaining to liability and the merits
of the controversy,” such as their “allegations of gross negligence, request for punitive
damages, and allocation of degrees of fault as well as compensatory damages.” Id.
This argument would be convincing if jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 were
being invoked. That section restricts appellate jurisdiction to “final decisions” of the
district courts, and the unresolved issues pointed out by Claimants would prevent the
court’s decision below from being final. See, e.g., Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wetzel, 424
U.S. 737, 744 (1976) (“[J]udgments [limited to the issue of liability] are by their terms
interlocutory, and where assessment of damages or awarding of other relief remains to be
resolved have never been considered to be ‘final’ within the meaning of 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); Roska ex rel. Roska v.
Sneddon, 437 F.3d 964, 970 (10th Cir. 2006) (“Because further proceedings are necessary
to determine causation and the amount of damages, if any, the district court’s order is not
final and the grant of Plaintiffs’ motion is not immediately appealable [under § 1291].”);
Albright v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 59 F.3d 1089, 1092 (10th Cir. 1995) (noting “the
general and well-established rule that an order that determines liability but leaves
damages to be calculated is not final” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
But the bailiwick of § 1292(a)(3) is not final decisions. It is “interlocutory
decrees” in admiralty “cases in which appeals from final decrees are allowed.” Since the
statute was enacted in 1925, see Schoenamsgruber v. Hamburg Am. Line, 294 U.S. 454,
14
457 (1935), federal courts have been consistent in giving the statutory language its plain
meaning: all that is required is that a right or liability of a party have been determined.
As stated in one of the earlier appellate decisions on the statute:
It is obvious that [the statutory language] does not mean all the
rights and liabilities of the parties for, if so, the only appeal allowable is
from the final decree denying any limitation and determining the amount of
the claims and their share of the fund. The question is, Is any right of [the
appellant] finally determined by the decree fixing the limit of liability?
Rice Growers Ass’n of Cal. v. Rederiaktiebolaget Frode, 171 F.2d 662, 663 (9th Cir.
1948) (emphasis added).
The decision in In re S.S. Tropic Breeze, 456 F.2d 137 (1st Cir. 1972), illustrates
how far appellate courts have gone in hearing appeals under § 1292(a)(3) when liability is
at issue. The ship had been libeled to pay crew wages. See id. at 138. Tropical
Commerce Corporation had chartered the vessel and installed cement equipment. See id.
A party with a mortgage on the vessel had argued in district court that Tropical could
claim an interest in the cement equipment only out of the proceeds of the ship’s sale, but
the court had ruled that the mortgagee was bound by a stipulation to pay Tropical the
value of the equipment, provided that Tropical actually owned the equipment. See id.
The court referred to a master the issues of whether Tropical owned the equipment and its
value. See id. The mortgagee appealed the ruling that it could itself be liable to Tropical
for the equipment’s value, rather than Tropical being limited to collecting out of the
proceeds of the ship’s sale. See id. Tropical moved to dismiss the appeal because the
15
issues of ownership and value were still to be determined. The First Circuit denied the
motion, relying on § 1292(a)(3). It wrote:
It is true that the usual interlocutory appeal under section 1292(a) (3)
is from an order finally determining that one party is liable to another and
referring the cause to an assessor for the determination of damages. The
statute is not limited to such situations, however, but, rather, applies to any
decree finally determining the liability of one of the parties, even if it leaves
open an issue which may, ultimately preclude recovery by a particular
plaintiff.
Id. at 139 (citations omitted). “The fact that this question [of Tropical’s title] was left
open,” wrote the court, “does not mean that the court did not adequately determine rights
within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (3), which broadly permits admiralty
appeals.” Id.
Section 1292(a)(3) was designed to allow ship owners to seek an appeal to halt
litigation at an early stage, in the hope of eliminating the need for further proceedings.
“Congress intended 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3) to permit parties to appeal the finding of
liability on the merits, before undergoing the long, burdensome, and perhaps unnecessary
damages proceeding.” Evergreen Int’l (USA) Corp. v. Standard Warehouse, 33 F.3d 420,
424 (4th Cir. 1994); see also United States v. The Lake George, 224 F.2d 117, 118 (3d
Cir. 1955) (“[T]he classic example of [§ 1292(a)(3)’s] day-to-day operation is presented
when there is a determination of liability as distinguished from amount.”). To be sure,
not every district-court ruling on a potentially dispositive issue in an admiralty suit is
appealable under § 1292(a)(3). See Schoenamsgruber, 294 U.S. at 458 (denying right to
appeal order to arbitrate maritime claims); In re Ingram Towing Co., 59 F.3d 513, 517
16
(5th Cir. 1995) (“Orders which do not determine parties’ substantive rights or liabilities
. . . are not appealable under section 1292(a)(3) even if those orders have important
procedural consequences.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). The decision to be
reviewed must have involved substantive “rights and liabilities.” But that is the case
here. There has been a determination of liability, the express concern of the jurisdictional
statute—Aramark was not exonerated and would have to pay some damages, with the
amount depending on how much at fault others were, whether Aramark was grossly
negligent, and how much in damages was suffered by Claimants.
There is particular reason to permit appeals of denials of limitation or exoneration,
because the dispute is then likely to go to another court. If the ship owner files a
limitation claim after suit has been brought against it in a different forum (say, a state
court), the earlier suit would be stayed during the limitation proceeding, but the stay
would be lifted if limitation and exoneration are denied. And even if the limitation action
is filed before suit is brought against the owner, the claimants may wish to proceed
elsewhere once the limitation issue has been resolved. For example, in Lewis the
Supreme Court approved the district court’s order permitting a suit to proceed in state
court even though the vessel owner filed for limitation in federal court before the plaintiff
had sued in state court and the plaintiff had counterclaimed for personal-injury damages
in the federal suit. See 531 U.S. at 441. (The district court had ruled that it was not
necessary to resolve the limitation issue because the plaintiff’s claim was less than the
limitation fund conceded by the owner (although the court retained jurisdiction to protect
17
the owner’s limitation rights in case the state-court judgment exceeded the limitation
amount). See In re Lewis & Clark Marine, Inc., 31 F. Supp. 2d 1164, 1169–70 (E.D. Mo.
1998).) Indeed, Claimants have sought to continue this litigation in state court. See
Motion to Bifurcate at 2, In re Aramark, No. 2:09-cv-00637-TC-PMW, Doc. No. 173 (D.
Utah Oct. 30, 2012). Why wait (even if federal appellate practice permitted that course)
till state-court litigation has concluded before taking an appeal of the limitation ruling?
Such delay could be particularly problematic because the federal district court’s rejection
of Aramark’s limitation complaint “is res judicata on the issue of liability.” Republic of
France v. United States, 290 F.2d 395, 397 (5th Cir. 1961). It makes sense to resolve
finally (through appellate review) those limitation rulings to which the state court must
defer during its proceedings, rather than conducting a federal appeal after a state-court
judgment and thereby risking the need for a state retrial if the federal appeal leads to
reversal. The value of comity between jurisdictions suggests avoiding such offense to
state proceedings.
It is therefore not surprising that appellate courts have regularly exercised
jurisdiction over denials of petitions for limitation of liability. See, e.g., In re Bankers
Trust Co., 651 F.2d 160, 163–64 (3d Cir. 1981) (reversing denial of limitation);
Waterman S. S. Corp. v. Gay Cottons, 414 F.2d 724, 727 (9th Cir. 1969) (affirming
denial); Coleman v. Jahncke Serv., Inc., 341 F.2d 956, 957 (5th Cir. 1965) (affirming
denial); Republic of France, 290 F.2d at 401 (reversing denial).
18
Republic of France is illustrative. The United States sued France following a
horrendous explosion (the Texas City Disaster) started on a French ship loaded with
fertilizer-grade ammonium nitrate manufactured by the United States. See 290 F.2d at
396. It sued in two capacities: first, as the assignee of hundreds of individual claims for
deaths, personal injuries, and property damages, for which the United States had paid the
claimants an aggregate sum of $16 million; second, as successor to the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation, which had lost $350,000 in goods. See id. France filed a limitation
action, see id., but the district court found France negligent and declined to exonerate it or
limit its liability, see id. at 398. Admiralty law at that time permitted damages to be
reduced for a claimant’s own negligence, see Pope & Talbot v. Hawn, 346 U.S. 406, 409
(1953) (contributory negligence can be considered “in mitigation of damages as justice
requires”), and the United States conceded that the court had not yet adjudicated France’s
claim that the United States was negligent, see Republic of France, 290 F.2d at 397 n.4.
In addition, the United States still had to prove liability on its asserted claims
(presumably by establishing causation for the alleged damages to property and for the
personal injury or death of the hundreds of persons whose claims had been assigned to it).
See id. Yet after acknowledging that “[t]he only ultimate issue so far determined by the
district court is that the petitioners are not entitled to exoneration from or limitation of
liability,” the court of appeals still found jurisdiction under § 1292(a)(3) on the ground
that the district court “finally determined the rights and liabilities of the parties by
denying the petition for exoneration from or limitation of liability.” Id. at 397. Similarly,
19
here the district court denied limitation and exoneration. That suffices to establish our
jurisdiction under § 1292(a)(3), even though the district court declined to rule on
nonlimitation issues.
Citing Becker v. Poling Transportation Corp., 356 F.3d 381, 387–88 (2d Cir.
2004), and other cases, Claimants assert that “[s]ection 1292(a)(3) is construed
narrowly.” Aplee. Br. at 1. But these cases stand for nothing more than that the statute
will not be stretched to include matters beyond its purview, which is rulings determining
“the rights and liabilities of the parties to admiralty cases.” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3). Two
of the cited cases actually held that the appellate court had jurisdiction. Becker, which
expressly stated that the statute confers appellate jurisdiction even when the district court
“has left unsettled the assessment of damages or other details required to be determined
prior to entry of a final decree,” 356 F.3d at 387, decided that it had jurisdiction to hear
an appeal from an interlocutory ruling that held the appellant liable for a fire but left open
some claims for indemnity and contribution, see id. at 386–88. And in Deering v.
National Maintenance & Repair, Inc., 627 F.3d 1039, 1041–43 (7th Cir. 2010), the court
exercised jurisdiction over an appeal from an order dismissing a counterclaim. Also, in
two cited cases denying appellate jurisdiction the appealed decision had not addressed
liability. See Evergreen, 33 F.3d at 422–25 (declining to exercise jurisdiction over appeal
of order granting summary judgment to defendants because claims should have been
brought in arbitration); Astarte Shipping Co. v. Allied Steel & Exp. Serv., 767 F.2d 86, 88
(5th Cir. 1985) (order confirming an attachment in admiralty is not appealable under
20
§ 1292(a)(3) because it does not determine the rights and liabilities of the parties). As for
the two remaining cited cases, the courts held that they lacked appellate jurisdiction to
resolve an issue concerning liability because there remained other issues to be resolved
before it could be known whether the party had any liability. In Francis ex rel. Francis v.
Forest Oil Corp., 798 F.2d 147, 149–50 (5th Cir. 1986) (per curiam), the Fifth Circuit
ruled that it had no jurisdiction to hear an appeal of the district court’s order denying a
summary-judgment motion that had asserted that the wrongful-death claims had been
contractually released, thereby leaving liability for trial. And in The Lake George, the
Third Circuit ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal of a district-court order
dismissing one of four causes of action seeking forfeiture, 224 F.2d at 118–19; because
three other causes of action remained live, it said, “[t]he liability of the vessel to
forfeiture has yet to be determined,” id. at 119. We need not decide whether we agree
with those two decisions because in our case the district court definitively resolved that
Aramark would bear liability for the accident. In any event, whatever the precise
implications of these two opinions, we can be confident that they do not cast doubt on our
jurisdiction in this case. Both the Third and Fifth Circuits have held that the denial of
limitation and exoneration is appealable. See In re Bankers Trust, 651 F.2d at 163–64
(3d Cir.); Republic of France, 290 F.2d at 401 (5th Cir.).
Claimants have not cited, nor are we aware of, any decision rejecting appellate
jurisdiction over a denial of limitation and exoneration. We hold that we have
jurisdiction over this appeal. We therefore turn to the merits.
21
III. EXONERATION?
A two-step process governs whether a ship owner is entitled to limitation or
exoneration. “First, the court must determine what acts of negligence or conditions of
unseaworthiness caused the accident. Second, the court must determine whether the
shipowner had knowledge or privity of those same acts of negligence or conditions of
unseaworthiness.” Farrell Lines, 530 F.2d at 10. Because Claimants do not assert
unseaworthiness and Aramark does not claim lack of privity or knowledge, the two-step
inquiry in this case boils down to whether negligence by Aramark caused the accident.
The question of negligence is governed by federal maritime law. “With admiralty
jurisdiction comes the application of substantive admiralty law.” East River S.S. Corp. v.
Transamerica Delaval, Inc., 476 U.S. 858, 864 (1986); see 1 Schoenbaum, supra, § 5-2,
at 251 (“[O]nce admiralty jurisdiction is established . . . a plaintiff’s case will be
determined under principles of maritime negligence rather than common law
negligence.”). “Absent a relevant statute, the general maritime law [is] developed by the
judiciary.” East River, 476 U.S. at 864. “Drawn from state and federal sources, the
general maritime law is an amalgam of traditional common-law rules, modifications of
those rules, and newly created rules.” Id. at 864–65; see 1 Schoenbaum, supra, § 4-1, at
220 (“The general maritime law is a body of concepts, principles and rules, originally
customary and international in origin, that have been adopted and expounded over time
by the federal courts.”). In developing maritime law, “courts sitting in admiralty may
draw guidance from, inter alia, the extensive body of state law . . . and from treatises and
22
other scholarly sources.” Exxon Co., U.S.A. v. Sofec, Inc., 517 U.S. 830, 839 (1996). In
particular, maritime courts have regularly looked to the current Restatement of Torts for
guidance. See Oswalt v. Resolute Indus., Inc., 642 F.3d 856, 860 (9th Cir. 2011)
(following Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability (1998)); St. Paul Fire &
Marine Ins. Co. v. Lago Canyon, Inc., 561 F.3d 1181, 1190 n.18 (11th Cir. 2009)
(same); Krummel v. Bombardier Corp., 206 F.3d 548, 552 (5th Cir. 2000) (same); All
Alaskan Seafoods, Inc. v. Raychem Corp., 197 F.3d 992, 995 (9th Cir. 1999) (same);
Lobegeiger v. Celebrity Cruises, Inc., No. 11-21620-CIV, 2011 WL 3703329, at *16–17
(S.D. Fla. Aug. 23, 2011) (following Restatement (Third) of Torts: Physical and
Emotional Harm (2010)).
A. General Tort Principles
The district court found that Aramark “had a duty to be advised of the current
weather forecasts and wind advisories before allowing any party to leave” and “breached
its duty of reasonable care when it allowed the Prescott Party to leave the morning of
April 25, 2009.” Order at 14. The court found that because the forecast called for high
winds and the boat’s owner’s manual stated that the boat was unsafe in winds exceeding
31 miles per hour, Aramark could have foreseen that the boat would sink, leading to the
injury or death of its passengers. And because the accident was foreseeable, the court
reasoned, Aramark had a duty to prevent the boaters from venturing onto Lake Powell.
Aramark responds that it had no duty to be advised of and warn of weather conditions
23
and that to require concessionaires to close down whenever a danger is foreseeable would
unduly impede access to national parks.
Before we determine what, if any, duty Aramark owed the boaters, we express our
disagreement with the district court’s methodology. Even if we accept that the accident
was foreseeable, foreseeability does not equate to duty. In a maritime products-liability
case, the Supreme Court expressly rejected the notion that a manufacturer’s duty is
coextensive with foreseeability: “In products-liability law, where there is a duty to the
public generally, foreseeability is an inadequate brake. Permitting recovery for all
foreseeable claims for purely economic loss could make a manufacturer liable for vast
sums. . . . The law does not spread its protection so far.” East River, 476 U.S. at 874
(citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Instead, in a negligence case, such as the one before us, the role of foreseeability
should be in assessing whether a person acted with reasonable care—that is, without
negligence, see Restatement (Third) of Torts: Physical and Emotional Harm
(Restatement (Third)) § 3, at 29 (“A person acts negligently if the person does not
exercise reasonable care under all the circumstances.”)—after the court has determined
that there is a duty. In his classic formulation Judge Learned Hand wrote that whether a
person is negligent “is a function of three variables: (1) The probability [of injury]; (2)
the gravity of the resulting injury, if [it occurs]; (3) the burden of adequate precautions.”
United States v. Carroll Towing Co., 159 F.2d 169, 173 (2d Cir. 1947). To exercise
reasonable care one must take a precaution if the cost of doing so is less than the
24
probability of injury times the magnitude of the potential injury. See id. The
Restatement (Third) has refined this formula: “To establish the actor’s negligence, it is
not enough that there be a likelihood of harm; the likelihood must be foreseeable to the
actor at the time of conduct.” Restatement (Third) § 3 cmt. g, at 33 (emphasis added).
Thus, the Restatement states: “Primary factors to consider in ascertaining whether the
person’s conduct lacks reasonable care are the foreseeable likelihood that the person’s
conduct will result in harm, the foreseeable severity of any harm that may ensue, and the
burden of precautions to eliminate or reduce the risk of harm.” Id. § 3, at 29 (emphasis
added). Under the Restatement, lack of foreseeability can still be a basis for judgment in
favor of the defendant. But it “is not a no-duty determination. Rather, it is a
determination that no reasonable person could find that the defendant has breached the
duty of reasonable care.” Id. § 7 cmt. j, at 83.
Of course, it makes no practical difference whether we say that a defense
judgment based on nonforeseeability is a no-duty determination or a no-breach
determination. But when the potential for injury is foreseeable, it can make a decisive
difference whether or not the court equates duty and foreseeability. The district court, not
without some support in caselaw, ruled that Aramark had a duty simply because the
danger was foreseeable. We think the better view, however, is that the determination of
duty is a policy matter, not based on the foreseeability of danger in the particular case.
The Restatement (Third) reflects this approach in the black letter of § 7:
(a) An actor ordinarily has a duty to exercise reasonable care when the
actor’s conduct creates a risk of physical harm.
25
(b) In exceptional cases, when an articulated countervailing principle or
policy warrants denying or limiting liability in a particular class of
cases, a court may decide that the defendant has no duty or that the
ordinary duty of reasonable care requires modification.
Id. at 77. That is, “in some categories of cases, reasons of principle or policy dictate that
liability should not be imposed. In these cases, courts use the rubric of duty to apply
general categorical rules withholding liability.” Id. cmt. a, at 77.
Such limitations on duty are widely accepted for a variety of reasons. One reason
is “general social norms of responsibility.” Id. cmt. c, at 79. As an example, the
Restatement notes:
[M]any courts have held that commercial establishments that serve
alcoholic beverages have a duty to use reasonable care to avoid injury to
others who might be injured by an intoxicated customer, but that social
hosts do not have a similar duty to those who might be injured by their
guests. Courts often justify this distinction by referring to commonly
held social norms about responsibility.
Id. Similarly, the joy and benefits of sports, and respect for individual autonomy, have
caused courts to limit liability for injuries in athletic competition. See id. at 78.
Sometimes factors that go beyond the specific case may cause courts to adopt a no-duty
rule even when “reasonable minds could differ about the application of the negligence
standard to a particular category of recurring facts.” Id. cmt. i, at 81. “In conducting its
analysis, the court may take into account factors that might escape the jury’s attention in
a particular case, such as the overall social impact of imposing a significant precautionary
obligation on a class of actors. These cases are properly decided as duty or no-duty
cases.” Id. For example, courts have held that because treating physicians are in the best
position to inform patients of the risks and benefits of prescription drugs, drug
26
manufacturers must provide warnings to physicians but ordinarily have no duty to warn
individual patients. See id. cmt. i, at 82. In sum:
A no-duty ruling represents a determination, a purely legal question,
that no liability should be imposed on actors in a category of cases.
Such a ruling should be explained and justified based on articulated
policies or principles that justify exempting these actors from liability or
modifying the ordinary duty of reasonable care. These reasons of policy
and principle do not depend on the foreseeability of harm based on the
specific facts of a case. They should be articulated directly without
obscuring references to foreseeability.
Id. cmt. j, at 82.
For the sake of completeness, we note that two additional conditions must be met
to establish liability even if it has been determined that the defendant had a duty and
breached the standard of care. First, the defendant’s action must have factually caused
the harm, meaning “the harm would not have occurred absent the conduct.” Id. § 26, at
346. Second, the injury must have “result[ed] from the risks that made the actor’s
conduct tortious.” Id. § 29, at 493. The confusing term proximate cause is sometimes
used to describe this second condition, see id. cmt. b, at 494, but the better term is scope
of liability. The central idea is that “an actor should be held liable only for harm that was
among the potential harms—the risks—that made the actor’s conduct tortious.” Id. cmt.
d, at 495–96. For example, a man who hands a loaded gun to a child negligently creates
the risk that the child will shoot someone; if the child drops the gun on her toe, breaking
it, the man is not liable because dropping the gun onto the foot is not within the scope of
risks that rendered the man’s action negligent. See id. illus. 3, at 496–97.
27
B. Aramark’s Duty
We now turn to Aramark’s duty in this case. As we understand Claimants’
argument, Aramark had a duty not to rent the boat because of the dangers apparent from
the weather forecast and the limited capacity of the boat to withstand high winds.
Implicit in this argument is the argument that Aramark had a duty to warn the boaters
about the weather forecast and the boat’s limited capacity. It is useful to discuss
separately the alleged duties to warn of the weather and to warn of the boat’s capacity
because different considerations apply to each. We first address whether Aramark had a
duty to warn of the weather; then whether Aramark had a duty not to rent the boat
because of the weather; and then whether Aramark had a duty to warn of the boat’s
limited capacity.
In our view, Aramark had no duty to obtain a weather forecast and provide it to
the boaters. As we noted above in the general discussion of duty, notions of personal
responsibility regularly underlie no-duty determinations. The question here is whether
the defendant must protect the plaintiff against a danger not created by the defendant
when the plaintiff could take the same protective steps at least equally easily and well.
The rented boat was equipped with a radio for obtaining weather reports. The boaters
could obtain the forecast with the same minimal effort that the Aramark representative at
the marina could. Also, forecasts are notoriously iffy. The forecasts available on the
boat radio during the trip would be more timely than the forecast that could be provided
by the representative before the trip began. With all this in mind, it is unsurprising that
28
every reported decision (cited to or found by us) to consider the point has held that there
is no duty to acquire a weather forecast and provide it to customers.
Of particular note is Leach v. Mountain Lake, 120 F.3d 871, 872–73 (8th Cir.
1997), also involving a fatal boating accident after the renting marina neither obtained
weather information nor passed it on to its customers. See id. at 872. As here, the
weather was calm when the boat was rented, but the NWS had issued an advisory
warning of strong afternoon gusts. The Eighth Circuit held that as a matter of law “the
marina had no . . . duty to acquire and pass on weather information,” affirming the district
court’s reasoning “that weather information is readily available to those who rent boats
(should they choose to seek it), that boaters can themselves observe weather and sea
changes and ascertain water temperature, and that the ability of boaters to do this is not in
any way dependent upon what marinas do or do not tell them.” Id. at 873; see also, e.g.,
Grant v. Wakeda Campground, LLC, 631 F. Supp. 2d 120, 128 (D.N.H. 2009) (“Both the
inherent unreliability of weather forecasts and the fact that weather changes constantly
justify not imposing on defendant a greater duty to monitor the weather than can be
expected of plaintiffs. . . . [T]here is no basis to impose a duty to monitor the weather as
part of the duty to keep the [campground] safe.”); Petition of Binstock, 213 F. Supp. 909,
915 (S.D.N.Y. 1963) (prospective boat purchaser died in a storm while testing the boat;
the court ruled that the seller had no duty to warn of weather conditions when “such
perils as may have existed were equally apparent to and cognizable by [purchaser and
seller]”); West v. City of St. Paul, 936 P.2d 136, 139 (Alaska 1997) (“Because most
29
weather conditions are open and obvious, and can be discovered with reasonable
diligence, a wharfinger does not have a duty to warn of such dangers.”); cf. Black v.
United States, 441 F.2d 741, 744 (5th Cir. 1971) (ruling in a plane-crash case that any
negligence of flight controller was superseded by pilot’s negligence because “[i]t was the
pilot’s responsibility to obtain a weather briefing” and the pilot could have obtained
weather updates “merely by monitoring the stations along his route”); Croce v. Hall, 657
A.2d 307, 312 (D.C. 1995) (landlord had no duty to monitor weather reports so that he
could be prepared to immediately clear sidewalk of snow; “weather predictions are often
wrong”).
Similar considerations undoubtedly underlie, at least in part, limitations on
liability for negligent failure to warn set forth in § 18 of the Restatement (Third). The
black letter states:
(a) A defendant whose conduct creates a risk of physical or emotional
harm can fail to exercise reasonable care by failing to warn of the
danger if:
(1) the defendant knows or has reason to know: (a) of that risk; and
(b) that those encountering the risk will be unaware of it; and
(2) a warning might be effective in reducing the risk of harm.
Restatement (Third) § 18 (emphasis added); see Scope Note to §§ 17–19 at 183 (“To
some extent these rules . . . involve matters with public-policy significance that courts
have deemed to be duty issues under § 7, to be decided by courts rather than by juries.”).
Thus, under § 18 a defendant is not liable for failing to warn of a danger to another
person when the defendant would expect the other person to be aware of the danger or if
the warning would not be effective in reducing the risk, even if the defendant created the
30
risk. Here, the defendant did not create the danger and had no greater capacity to learn of
the danger than the injured persons did, particularly when one considers the advisability
of getting periodic updates of the forecast. We conclude that Aramark had no duty to
monitor the weather and provide a forecast to the boaters.4
It would be even more problematic to impose upon Aramark a duty to shut down
boat rentals based on the forecasts it receives. If Aramark has no duty to customers to
monitor and report the weather forecast, we see no basis for requiring it to monitor the
weather and then make the decision for customers about whether it is advisable to venture
onto the lake. See Grant, 631 F. Supp. 2d at 129 (no duty to close campground). Such
decisions are sometimes made by governmental authorities (for example, the NPS could
close Lake Powell to boating, although it did not restrict access on the day of the
accident). But see Johnson v. U.S., Dep’t of Interior, 949 F.2d 332, 337 (10th Cir. 1991)
4
Claimants suggest that Aramark “assumed the responsibility of providing weather
information to [the boaters] yet failed to provide accurate and up-to-date such
information.” Aplee. Br. at 43; see id. at 37 (“Aramark exacerbated the situation by
telling [the boaters] that they would receive an updated forecast and the rental prospects
would be reevaluated the following morning, but then failed to do so.”); id. at 35
(“Aramark . . . undertook the responsibility of providing weather forecast information to
[the boaters].”). A duty may arise where a party voluntarily undertakes to warn others of
weather conditions, and those others rely on that party for those warnings. See
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323 (1965); Sall v. T’s, Inc., 136 P.3d 471, 473–74, 484
(Kan. 2006) (golf course assumed the duty to use a horn to warn its patrons of dangerous
thunderstorms, which lightning-strike victim relied on to his detriment). We question
whether Claimants adequately raised on appeal an assumed-undertaking theory of duty.
But in any event they failed to raise an assumed-duty theory below, as illustrated by the
district court’s discussion of duty, which contains no reference to an assumed
undertaking. (That was a reasonable course for Claimants because it would be hard for
them to prove reliance when the boaters never requested the weather information on the
day they took the boat.) The issue was therefore forfeited. See Tele-Communications,
Inc. v. C.I.R., 104 F.3d 1229, 1232 (10th Cir. 1997).
31
(although rock climbers in Grand Teton National Park are required to obtain a permit,
park rangers have no authority to stop them from attempting dangerous climbs).
Claimants, however, have pointed us to no comparable duties under tort law. Imposing a
duty that so limits personal choice in the context of recreation would be particularly
inappropriate. We have already noted that the duty of ordinary care—imposed on those
who created the danger—has generally been relaxed in the context of athletic
competition. Similarly, nearly every state has encouraged landowners to freely open their
property for outdoor recreation by relaxing the traditional standard of care for landowners
to keep their property safe. See Klepper v. City of Milford, Kansas, 825 F.2d 1440, 1444
(10th Cir. 1987). “[T]hese statutes promote casual recreational use of open space by
relieving landowners of the concern that they will be sued for injuries to strangers who
hunt, trek, fish, and otherwise recreate on their land or water free of charge.” Id. Absent
such statutes, landowners would “simply close their lands to public use and many
recreational opportunities thereby would be lost to the public.” Id. Requiring marinas to
stop renting boats because of forecasted bad weather would without doubt unnecessarily
limit opportunities for adventure that many seek. See Aplt. App. at 99–100 (Trial Tr.)
(according to Aramark’s agent, although she suggested to the rental party that rather than
renting their own boat they book passage on a “warm” and “comfortable” tour boat
piloted by Aramark, they declined because “they wanted the adventure. They wanted to
go by themselves rather than a tour boat group of people.” Id.). The weather may turn
out to be calm, or the boaters may take precautions that minimize risk. We therefore
32
reject Claimants’ contention that Aramark could be liable for negligence in allowing the
boaters to rent the boat.
We need not decide whether a marina could be liable for gross negligence or
recklessness in renting a boat during inclement weather. The evidence of record here,
particularly the fact that the forecasted bad weather was not supposed to arrive for several
hours, would not support such a claim.
Our discussion thus far has addressed only the claims of duty that depend on
information regarding the weather. We have assumed that the boating party was fully
informed in all other respects. But Claimants have not contended that the weather in
itself was the sole source of risk when the boat was rented. They claim that what made
the forecasted weather particularly dangerous was that the boat was not designed for such
weather conditions. As we stated above, we think that implicit in their claim is the
contention that Aramark had a duty to warn the boaters of this design limitation. Such a
duty to warn is quite different from a duty to warn about the weather when the boaters
had at least as good access to information as Aramark. We can think of no reason of
policy or principle to excuse Aramark from negligence for failure to warn a renter of a
boat’s limitations. Therefore, Restatement (Third) § 7(a) applies and Aramark had a duty
to exercise reasonable care. But we express no view on whether Aramark failed to
exercise such care. Because the relevant facts have not been resolved by the district
court, we must remand for further proceedings on the issue.
33
Finally, we consider Aramark’s contention that even if it had been negligent, the
boaters’ own negligence was the superseding cause of the accident. The alleged acts of
superseding negligence are failure to obtain a weather forecast before departing or to
monitor weather updates during the journey; failure to wear life vests; failure to monitor
deteriorating conditions or to take action to safeguard against them; and declining to seek
safe harbor, including declining an offer to stay at Dangling Rope. We cannot say as a
matter of law that these were superseding causes. The contention that the boaters failed
to monitor or safeguard against worsening conditions is factually disputed, as is the
availability of a safe harbor and the nature of the conversation at Dangling Rope. In any
event, Aramark’s claimed negligence was its failure to warn of the boat’s wind limitation,
and we decline to declare as a matter of law that the boaters would have acted the same if
they had been so warned.
IV. CONCLUSION
We VACATE the judgment below and REMAND to the district court for further
proceedings to determine whether Aramark negligently failed to warn the boaters of the
information contained in the Baja owner’s manual.
34