Regent Seven Seas Injury Lawyer | Maritime Attorney | Sky Law Firm, P.A.
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Table of Contents
- 1. About Regent Seven Seas Cruises
- 2. Common Injuries on Regent Seven Seas Ships
- 3. Notable Regent Seven Seas Incidents (Factual Public Record)
- 4. Regent Seven Seas Forum Selection Clause — What Miami Means for Your Case
- 5. How Sky Law Firm, P.A. Handles Regent Seven Seas Cases
- 6. Case Evaluation Process
- 7. Regent Seven Seas-Specific Frequently Asked Questions
- 8. Related Cruise Line Pages
- 9. Related Practice Pages
- 10. Call Now — Your 1-Year Regent Seven Seas Deadline Is Running
You have ONE YEAR to file. Not two. Not four. One. If you or a loved one was injured, sexually assaulted, sickened, or killed aboard a Regent Seven Seas ship, the deadline buried on page 22 of your Regent Seven Seas ticket contract is moving faster than almost any deadline in American personal injury law. Regent Seven Seas enforces the 1-year statute of limitations and the 6-month pre-suit written notice requirement aggressively in federal court. Miss either deadline by a day and your claim dies forever — and Regent Seven Seas’s defense lawyers at Foreman Friedman, Maltzman & Partners, Hamilton Miller & Birthisel, or Kaye Rose will file a motion to dismiss before your lawyer has unpacked the file.
At Sky Law Firm, P.A., we sue Regent Seven Seas in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida — the federal courthouse in downtown Miami where the Regent Seven Seas forum selection clause sends virtually every passenger injury case. Attorney Andrew Sky (University of Miami School of Law, JD 2012, 13+ years in Florida injury and maritime litigation) and our team litigate the federal cruise-injury docket every week. We know the Regent Seven Seas ticket contract. We know the Regent Seven Seas claims-handling pattern. We know which defense firms Regent Seven Seas hires and which arguments they run.
Free Case Review — Call (305) 320-4529 or toll-free 1-844-OUCH-844
Home › Practice Areas › Florida Cruise Ship Accident Lawyer › Regent Seven Seas Injury Lawyer
About Regent Seven Seas Cruises
Regent Seven Seas Cruises was founded in 1992 by Radisson Hotels Group (later Carlson, now NCLH) and is headquartered at Miami, Florida (7665 Corporate Center Drive). The line operates a fleet of 6 ships, including popular vessels such as Seven Seas Grandeur, Seven Seas Splendor, Seven Seas Explorer, Seven Seas Voyager, Seven Seas Mariner, Seven Seas Navigator. Regent Seven Seas Cruises is part of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NYSE: NCLH) and carries approximately 120,000-150,000 passengers per year. In Florida, Regent Seven Seas sails from PortMiami (primary), Port Everglades, which places virtually every Regent Seven Seas passenger injury case within the reach of the Southern District of Florida forum selection clause.
Regent Seven Seas is an ultra-luxury, all-inclusive line (fares include flights, excursions, beverages, and specialty dining). Because all shore excursions are included in the fare, the cruise line has more direct contractual responsibility for shore excursion injuries than mass-market lines that offer excursions as upsells — this changes the Smolnikar / Koens coverage-gap analysis significantly.
Common Injuries on Regent Seven Seas Ships
Every cruise line has its own injury-claim pattern that reflects its ship design, its attractions, its demographic, and its onboard service model. On Regent Seven Seas vessels, the recurring claim types we see at Sky Law Firm, P.A. include:
- Marble-floor slip injuries in the atriums and grand staircases (Regent uses extensive marble and polished stone)
- Balcony and suite-veranda falls — nearly every Regent cabin has a private balcony
- Canyon Ranch SpaClub treatment-room injuries
- Included shore-excursion bus and walking-tour injuries — unique to Regent because all excursions are included in the fare
- Specialty dining (Compass Rose, Chartreuse, Pacific Rim) slip-and-fall injuries
Beyond these cruise-line-specific claim patterns, Regent Seven Seas passengers also file the full range of general cruise-injury claims: slip-and-fall on pool decks, trip-and-fall over raised thresholds, elevator and escalator injuries, stateroom door and balcony injuries, gastrointestinal illness outbreaks (norovirus, E. coli, Legionnaires’ disease), food-allergy mislabeling, shipboard medical malpractice, shore excursion injuries, tender-boat injuries, crew assaults, sexual assaults by passengers or crew, and overboard / man-overboard wrongful-death cases.
Each of these claim types has its own legal framework. Slip-and-fall cases require proof of actual or constructive notice under Keefe v. Bahama Cruise Line, 867 F.2d 1318 (11th Cir. 1989). Shipboard medical malpractice cases turn on direct and apparent-agency liability under Franza v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., 772 F.3d 1225 (11th Cir. 2014). Shore excursion cases require coverage-gap analysis under Smolnikar v. Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., 787 F. Supp. 2d 1308 (S.D. Fla. 2011) and Koens v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., 774 F. Supp. 2d 1215 (S.D. Fla. 2011). Wrongful-death claims beyond 3 nautical miles are controlled by the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA), 46 U.S.C. §§ 30301-30308. Crew member claims are governed by the Jones Act, 46 U.S.C. § 30104, and the general maritime doctrines of unseaworthiness and maintenance and cure.
Notable Regent Seven Seas Incidents (Factual Public Record)
The following incidents are a matter of public record, drawn from U.S. Coast Guard reports, National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) findings, Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Vessel Sanitation Program postings, federal court dockets, and contemporaneous news reporting. They are included to illustrate the categories of incident that have produced passenger injury claims against Regent Seven Seas:
- Seven Seas Explorer — a 2019 rogue-wave event in the North Atlantic caused cabin flooding and passenger injuries.
- Seven Seas Navigator — documented medical-evacuation events on long world-cruise itineraries.
- Seven Seas Mariner — CDC-documented gastrointestinal illness events, though at lower rates than mass-market lines.
This is a non-exhaustive list of documented incidents. Many smaller incidents — individual slip-and-falls, cabin assaults, shore-excursion injuries, gastrointestinal-illness cases — are resolved in federal court without generating news coverage, but they make up the overwhelming majority of Regent Seven Seas claim volume.
Regent Seven Seas Forum Selection Clause — What Miami Means for Your Case
The single most important provision in your Regent Seven Seas ticket contract, from a litigation standpoint, is the forum selection clause. Federal courts have repeatedly upheld cruise line forum selection clauses under Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute, 499 U.S. 585 (1991), the landmark Supreme Court decision that made cruise-contract forum selection clauses enforceable against passengers nationwide.
Regent Seven Seas Forum Provision: Southern District of Florida (Miami), with a 1-year statute of limitations and a 6-month pre-suit written notice requirement. Regent Seven Seas’ ticket contract Section 14 contains the forum and limitation provisions. The contract is substantially similar to the parent NCL contract.
In practical terms, this means:
- Your case will almost certainly be filed in federal court in Miami (Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. U.S. Courthouse, 400 North Miami Avenue, Miami, FL 33128), regardless of where you live, where you boarded, or where the incident occurred
- Florida state courts cannot hear your case — Regent Seven Seas's ticket contract eliminates Florida state-court jurisdiction and funnels every passenger claim to the federal docket
- Federal admiralty and general maritime law applies to most substantive liability questions, not Florida negligence law — this is a critical distinction that many non-maritime lawyers miss
- The 1-year statute of limitations and the 6-month pre-suit written notice requirement are contractual and enforced strictly by federal judges
- Only lawyers admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida can appear in your case — Andrew Sky is admitted to the Southern District of Florida and litigates there continuously
If a lawyer outside Florida tells you they can handle your Regent Seven Seas case from another state, check whether they are admitted to the Southern District of Florida. Most are not, and the pro hac vice process adds delay and cost. Sky Law Firm, P.A. is already here.
How Sky Law Firm, P.A. Handles Regent Seven Seas Cases
- Emergency intake within 24 hours — we answer the phone at (305) 320-4529 twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Cruise injuries often happen overseas and pass through multiple time zones before anyone thinks to call a lawyer. We meet you at hour one, not day seven
- Immediate evidence preservation letter — within the first week of retention, we send Regent Seven Seas a formal evidence-preservation demand for CCTV footage, incident-report logs, medical-center records, crew work orders, sanitation logs, Vessel Sanitation Program (VSP) inspection records, and ticket-contract copies. Cruise lines routinely destroy evidence on normal rotation unless a preservation letter is on file
- 6-month pre-suit notice service — we prepare and serve written notice on Regent Seven Seas's designated claim agent well before the 6-month deadline under the ticket contract, preserving your right to file suit
- Federal complaint filing in the Southern District of Florida — we draft and file a maritime complaint under general maritime law, the Jones Act (if you were crew), DOHSA (if the death occurred beyond 3 nautical miles), or multiple theories in the alternative
- Expert retention — depending on the claim type, we retain naval architects, maritime safety experts, microbiologists (for outbreak cases), shipboard-medicine experts, vocational experts, economists, and life-care planners. All experts are fronted by the firm under our contingency agreement
- Deposition work-up of crew and shipside witnesses — cruise lines routinely deploy crew members overseas after incidents, which makes deposition planning a crucial tactical question. We coordinate with Regent Seven Seas's defense counsel on Miami-based depositions and, when necessary, foreign depositions under the Hague Convention
- Mediation and settlement positioning — the vast majority of Regent Seven Seas cases resolve through mediation rather than trial. Our mediation strategy is built around a detailed damages presentation and a documented liability file that makes the cost of trial unattractive to Regent Seven Seas's P&I insurer
- Trial readiness — when Regent Seven Seas declines to pay a fair value, we try cases. Every case is worked up as if it will go to trial in the Southern District of Florida, which is the only way to extract maximum settlement leverage
Case Evaluation Process
When you call (305) 320-4529, here is what happens:
- Intake call (30-45 minutes) — we collect the basic facts of the incident, the ship, the voyage dates, the injuries, the medical treatment, and the deadlines
- Ticket-contract review — we ask you to email a photograph or PDF of your Regent Seven Seas ticket contract, cruise confirmation, and any correspondence with Regent Seven Seas. We identify the exact 1-year deadline and 6-month notice deadline for your case
- Medical-record collection — we request medical records from the shipboard medical center, any shoreside emergency hospital, and all follow-up treating providers
- Liability analysis — we apply the Keefe notice rule, the Franza shipboard medical malpractice standard, the Smolnikar / Koens shore-excursion coverage-gap framework, the Jones Act unseaworthiness standard, or DOHSA, as applicable to your incident type
- Retainer and contingency agreement — if we accept the case, we send a contingency-fee agreement under Florida Bar Rule 4-1.5. You pay no fee and no costs unless we win
- Immediate evidence-preservation letter and pre-suit notice — filed within the first 30 days of retention
All of this is free. You do not pay a consultation fee. You do not pay for the ticket-contract review. You do not pay a retainer. Under Florida Bar Rule 4-1.5, Sky Law Firm, P.A. only earns a fee when we recover money for you.
Regent Seven Seas-Specific Frequently Asked Questions
1. How long do I have to file a Regent Seven Seas injury lawsuit?
One year from the date of injury under the Regent Seven Seas ticket contract. The contract also requires written notice within 6 months of the incident. These are contractual deadlines enforced by federal courts under Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute, 499 U.S. 585 (1991). This is not Florida’s 4-year negligence statute or the 3-year general maritime statute — it is a shorter contractual limit that you must meet. Call Sky Law Firm, P.A. immediately at (305) 320-4529.
2. Where will my Regent Seven Seas case be filed?
Almost certainly in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida (Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. U.S. Courthouse, downtown Miami). Southern District of Florida (Miami), with a 1-year statute of limitations and a 6-month pre-suit written notice requirement. This means your case is in Miami federal court regardless of where you live, where the ship sailed from, or where the injury happened.
3. Does Regent Seven Seas pay my medical bills if I was injured on one of their ships?
Generally, no — not voluntarily. Regent Seven Seas’s shipboard medical center will bill you for every service provided aboard, and shoreside medical care after evacuation is your responsibility or your health insurance’s. Regent Seven Seas is not obligated to pay your medical bills unless and until liability is established through settlement or judgment. Do not sign anything Regent Seven Seas presents you in the days after an incident without talking to a maritime lawyer first.
4. Can I sue Regent Seven Seas for a shore excursion injury?
Yes, in many cases. If your shore excursion was sold to you by Regent Seven Seas, booked through Regent Seven Seas’s website or onboard sales desk, or paid for through your onboard account, Regent Seven Seas can be liable under the coverage-gap analysis from Smolnikar v. Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. and Koens v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. We pursue the cruise line directly and we also pursue the excursion operator. If the excursion was a fully independent third-party booking, the analysis is different but we can still often reach Regent Seven Seas through apparent-agency theories.
5. I was sick with norovirus on my Regent Seven Seas cruise. Do I have a case?
Possibly. Norovirus and other gastrointestinal outbreaks on Regent Seven Seas ships are tracked by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Vessel Sanitation Program. If the CDC documented the outbreak on your sailing, that is powerful evidence. We subpoena Regent Seven Seas’s sanitation logs, crew health reports, food-handling records, and deck-sanitation schedules. Successful multi-plaintiff outbreak cases have resulted in six- and seven-figure recoveries. Call (305) 320-4529 with your sailing dates and ship name.
Related Cruise Line Pages
- Oceania Cruises Injury Lawyer — Oceania Cruises forum clause, ticket-contract deadlines, and claim handling
- Silversea Cruises Injury Lawyer — Silversea Cruises forum clause, ticket-contract deadlines, and claim handling
- Cunard Line Injury Lawyer — Cunard Line forum clause, ticket-contract deadlines, and claim handling
Related Practice Pages
- Florida Cruise Ship Accident Lawyer — parent silo page covering all major cruise lines
- Jones Act Crew Injury Lawyer — if you were working aboard a Regent Seven Seas vessel as crew, your case is governed by the Jones Act, not the passenger ticket contract
- Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA) Lawyer — for deaths occurring more than 3 nautical miles offshore, DOHSA displaces state wrongful-death law and limits recovery to pecuniary losses
- Shore Excursion Injury Lawyer — coverage-gap analysis for injuries on cruise-line-sold shore excursions
- Norovirus & Cruise Ship Illness Lawyer — CDC VSP records, outbreak documentation, and multi-plaintiff outbreak claims
- Cruise Ship Sexual Assault Lawyer — negligent hiring, retention, and supervision claims against cruise lines for crew assaults
- Miami Personal Injury Lawyer — our Miami-Dade practice covering injuries beyond the cruise-industry docket
Call Now — Your 1-Year Regent Seven Seas Deadline Is Running
The clock in your Regent Seven Seas ticket contract does not care that you were still in the hospital. It does not care that you were overseas. It does not care that Regent Seven Seas promised to take care of you. It runs.
Call Sky Law Firm, P.A. now at (305) 320-4529 or toll-free at 1-844-OUCH-844. We answer twenty-four hours a day in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Haitian Creole. Your first consultation is free. If we take your case, you pay no fee and no costs unless we win.
Sky Law Firm, P.A. 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309 Phone: (305) 320-4529 Toll-Free: 1-844-OUCH-844 Email: info@skylawmiami.com
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