PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
Our prior opinion is vacated and withdrawn, and this opinion is substituted in its place.
Wallace Boudreaux began working for Transocean Deepwater, Inc. ("Transocean") in January 2005. He failed to disclose serious back problems in Transocean's pre-employment medical questionnaire, affirmatively answering "no" to several inquiries regarding any history of back trouble. Less than five months after his hire, Boudreaux claimed that he had injured his back while servicing equipment. As a consequence, Transocean paid the seaman maintenance and cure for nearly five years.
In April 2008, Boudreaux filed suit against Transocean, alleging a right to further maintenance and cure, seeking punitive damages for Transocean's alleged mishandling of past benefits, and asserting claims for Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness. During discovery, Transocean obtained evidence of Boudreaux's pre-employment history of back problems. Transocean filed an unopposed motion for partial summary judgment on Boudreaux's claim for further benefits, invoking McCorpen as a defense to maintenance and cure
The district court granted Transocean's unopposed motion. Thereafter, Transocean filed a counterclaim to recover the maintenance and cure payments it had already made to Boudreaux. Transocean moved for summary judgment on the counterclaim, contending that its successful McCorpen defense automatically established its right to restitution under general maritime law. Prior to the district court's ruling on the motion, Transocean and Boudreaux reached a bracketed settlement that resolved Boudreaux's Jones Act negligence and unseaworthiness claims and left for decision only the viability of Transocean's proposed counterclaim for restitution. Under the settlement, Boudreaux was entitled to a lesser sum of money if the court recognized the counterclaim and a greater sum if it did not.
Though Transocean acknowledged that its restitution-via-McCorpen theory was novel, it urged the district court to fashion a new maritime right of action based on state law principles of fraud and unjust enrichment. In a thoughtful opinion, the district court agreed and awarded summary judgment to Transocean on its counterclaim, albeit without accepting Transocean's state-law theories. Boudreaux appeals.
In light of the parties' bracketed settlement, this case turns on the purely legal question of whether a Jones Act employer who has paid maintenance and cure to a seaman injured in its employ is, upon successfully establishing a McCorpen defense to further liability, automatically entitled to a judgment against the seaman for benefits already paid. Transocean made a strategic decision not to litigate this case on its facts; rather, it asks this Court to hold that any employer who establishes a McCorpen defense is automatically entitled to restitution. We decline the invitation.
We begin with an overarching reality: the First Congress, convening in New York, created the federal district courts primarily in service of the maritime law, thereby continuing the British law of the sea. Under that comprehensive body of jurisprudence, whose origins trace back to the middle ages, a seaman injured in his employ enjoys a right to maintenance and cure — a small daily stipend to pay for food, lodging, and basic medical care.
To be sure, it has always been the rule that a seaman can lose the right to maintenance and cure through gross misconduct. Traditionally, this exception was narrowly confined to "injuries or illnesses resulting from extreme drunkenness, brawls or the contraction of venereal disease."
The district court's concern with the egregious facts here is understandable, but the sweeping counterclaim it endorses would mark a significant retreat from our hoary charge to safeguard the well-being of seamen.
Transocean asks us to weigh again conflicting values — of protecting seamen from the dangers of the sea, and employers from dishonesty. But the existing regime
Today, we merely render explicit what has been implicit for many years: that once a shipowner pays maintenance and cure to the injured seaman, the payments can be recovered only by offset against the seaman's damages award — not by an independent suit seeking affirmative recovery. The case for exercising our extraordinary power to create a new right of action has not been made. There is only the change of advocates and judges, by definition irrelevant to the settling force of past jurisprudence — always prized but a treasure in matters maritime. This against the cold reality that the sea has become no less dangerous, and the seaman no less essential to maritime commerce.
We REVERSE the district court's order awarding summary judgment to Transocean on its counterclaim and RENDER judgement for Boudreaux.
EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment.
Transocean asks us to recognize a counterclaim for restitution upon a successful establishment of a McCorpen defense. While I believe that such a counterclaim is possible under maritime law and general equitable principles, see Pizani v. M/V Cotton Blossom, 669 F.2d 1084, 1089 (5th Cir.1982) ("A court of admiralty is, as to all matters falling within its jurisdiction, a court of equity." (quoting The David Pratt, 7 Fed. Cas. 22, 24 (D.Me.1839))), the majority has expressed concern about recognizing this counterclaim wholesale with little in terms of caselaw to guide us.
Although I concur in the judgment — if not the discussion of Still v. Norfolk & Western Railway Co. — I would recognize (not inconsistently with the majority opinion) that an employer may assert a counterclaim for maintenance and cure as a set-off to Jones Act damages when restitution will not result in an undue adverse impact on the seaman, and when maintenance and cure is not entirely duplicative of Jones Act damages. Cf. Colburn v. Bunge Towing, Inc., 883 F.2d 372, 378 (5th Cir.1989).