Shultz v. FL Keys Dive Center, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 30, 2000
Docket98-5704
StatusPublished

This text of Shultz v. FL Keys Dive Center, Inc. (Shultz v. FL Keys Dive Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shultz v. FL Keys Dive Center, Inc., (11th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Blaine SHULTZ, Personal Representative for the Estate of Patricia Shultz, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

FLORIDA KEYS DIVE CENTER, INC., a Florida corporation, Gregory Hessinger, et al., Defendants- Appellees.

No. 98-5704.

United States Court of Appeals,

Eleventh Circuit.

Aug. 30, 2000.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. (No. 97-10047-CV-JCP), James C. Paine, Judge.

Before TJOFLAT, RONEY and FAY, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiff Blaine Shultz sued Florida Keys Dive Center, Inc. ("Dive Center") and its employees

Gregory Hessinger and John Brady and owners Pamela Timmerman and Thomas Timmerman for the

wrongful death of his wife, Patricia Shultz, who died of an apparent drowning while scuba diving on a trip

conducted by the Dive Center. The district court granted summary judgment for defendants, relying on a

release of liability signed by Patricia Shultz, which the court determined to be valid under Florida law. We

affirm the judgment, concluding that the district court correctly held that the liability release is not invalidated

by an admiralty statute, 46 U.S.C. app. § 183c(a) (1994). Further, we conclude that it is not invalidated by

the admiralty common law.

Briefly, the facts are as follows: The day before her dive, Patricia Shultz signed a document releasing

defendants from liability for all claims, even for those arising out of negligence or gross negligence. The next

day, the Dive Center's boat, the Goody III, transported Patricia and Blaine Shultz and their 13-year-old

daughter, all certified divers, to the location of their dive. Not long after entering the water, the Shultzes

surfaced, but found themselves too far away to swim back to the Goody III. The Goody III did not pick them

up immediately, because it was waiting for other divers still in the water to reboard. The divemaster from the Goody III swam out to help the Shultzes, but Patricia Shultz became unconscious before she was picked

up by a boat, and she died.

Plaintiff filed a lawsuit in federal district court, invoking the court's diversity jurisdiction. He claimed

that defendants had been negligent in, among other things, not warning the Shultzes of the strength of the

current, not sending the Goody III immediately to retrieve the Shultzes from the water, not outfitting the

Goody III with a small boat that could be used to pick up divers, not bringing rescue devices to Patricia

Shultz, and not being attentive to Patricia Shultz's condition in the water. The court granted summary

judgment for defendants based upon the liability release, which it determined to be valid under Florida law.

Unless the liability release signed by Patricia Shultz is invalidated under either 46 U.S.C. app. §

183c(a) or admiralty common law, the release is unquestionably valid and bars plaintiff's claim. 46 U.S.C.

app. § 183c(a) provides:

It shall be unlawful for the manager, agent, master, or owner of any vessel transporting passengers between ports of the United States or between any such port and a foreign port to insert in any rule, regulation, contract, or agreement any provision or limitation (1) purporting, in the event of loss of life or bodily injury arising from the negligence or fault of such owner or his servants, to relieve such owner, master, or agent from liability, or from liability beyond any stipulated amount, for such loss or injury, or (2) purporting in such event to lessen, weaken, or avoid the right of any claimant to a trial by court of competent jurisdiction on the question of liability for such loss or injury, or the measure of damages therefor. All such provisions or limitations contained in any such rule, regulation, contract, or agreement are declared to be against public policy and shall be null and void and of no effect.

In affirming the district court's decision that § 183c(a) does not invalidate a scuba diving release

otherwise valid under state law, we follow the consistent lead of the few cases addressing the release issue

under facts similar to this one. There are no federal appellate cases. In addition to this case, every district

court and state court presented with the issue, however, has upheld such releases in recreational scuba diving

cases such as this one, based on either the lack of application of § 183c(a) or based on a lack of admiralty

jurisdiction.

The release was upheld as not meeting the requirements of § 183c(a) in the case at bar and in Cutchin

v. Habitat Curacao, 1999 AMC 1377, 1380-81 (S.D.Fla.1999) and in Thompson v. ITT Sheraton Corp., No.

97-10080, at 4-7 (S.D.Fla. Feb. 2, 1999). The one case holding that § 183c(a) did apply to invalidate a scuba diving liability release involved a scuba diver who was struck by the propeller of another boat. See Courtney

v. Pacific Adventures, Inc., 5 F.Supp.2d 874, 878-80 (D.Haw.1998). The application of § 183c(a) to the

release in Pacific Adventures has been criticized. See Jeffrey T. Woodruff, Please Release Me—The

Erroneous Application of 46 U.S.C.App. § 183c to Scuba Diving Releases in Courtney v. Pacific Adventures,

Inc., 23 Tul. Mar. L.J. 473 (1999). Even in Pacific Adventures, however, the court apparently would have

upheld the release in this case based on a lack of admiralty jurisdiction. The court reasoned that the

allegations "involve[d] the operation of a vessel," 5 F.Supp.2d at 878, but then opined that if plaintiff's

injuries "were related solely to scuba diving and had no relationship to the operation or maintenance of a

vessel, then there would be no admiralty jurisdiction." 5 F.Supp.2d at 880 n. 5.

The district court in the case at bar relied on two other cases, which it cited as Keith v. Knopick, CL

95-3845 AF, Palm Beach County, Florida (March 18, 1997) and Mudry v. Captain Nemo, Case No. 94-

0265(1), 2nd Cir. Hawaii (February 13, 1996), stating that they determined § 183c(a) or a similar state law

statute to be inapplicable to a scuba diving liability release. Those two cases, however, are unpublished, and

have not been made available to us.

These cases are fact-specific. We have been cited to no case with facts similar to this one—where

the injury, an apparent drowning, resulted strictly from a recreational scuba diving accident-that held a release

such as the one here to be invalid under § 183c(a). The Goody III served only as a dive boat: it departed the

port of Tavernier in the Florida Keys, brought the divers to the location of the dive, and after the dive returned

them to Tavernier. It was not a "vessel transporting passengers between ports of the United States or between

any such port and a foreign port." 46 U.S.C. app. § 183c(a).

The legislative history supports the interpretation by these cases that the statute does not cover the

liability release signed by Patricia Shultz. Congress enacted § 183c(a) in 1936 to "put a stop to" practices

like "providing on the reverse side of steamship tickets that in the event of damage or injury caused by the

negligence or fault of the owner or his servants, the liability of the owner shall be limited." H.R.Rep. No. 74-

2517, at 6-7 (1936); S.Rep. No. 74-2061, at 6-7 (1936). That "practice" that Congress intended to outlaw was much different than the practice here-requiring a signed liability release to participate in the recreational

and inherently risky activity of scuba diving.

The other case upholding a release under similar circumstances relied on a lack of admiralty

jurisdiction.

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