delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner suffered a severe injury on the high seas while employed as an engineer on the tugboat Henrietta, *62 belonging to A. Paladini, Incorporated, a corporation of the State of California. He sued the corporation and also the respondents, the stockholders of the same, seeking to hold the latter liable under the Constitution of the State, Article XII, § 3 and the Civil Code, § 322, which provide that each stockholder shall be individually and personally liable for such proportion of all its debts and liabilities contracted during the time he was a stockholder, as the amount of stock owned by him bears to the whole of the subscribed capital stock. The respondents took proceedings in the District Court of the United States to limit their liability under the Acts of Congress, and the limitation was established by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit under R. S. § 4283, (Code, Title 46, § 183,) and the Act of June 26, 1884, c. 121, § 18, 23 Stat. 57. (Code, Title 46, § 189.) 26 F. (2d) 21. These statutes, it will be remembered, provide for the limitation of the liability of shipowners to the value of the vessel and pending freight, and of part owners to their proportional share. The argument of the present petitioner is that the stockholders of A. Paladini, Inc., were not the owners of the Henrietta and that their liability under the law of California was an independent one voluntarily assumed by contract, with which the Acts of Congress do not interfere.
The Circuit Court of Appeals disposed of the case after a thorough discussion. It is unnecessary to do more than to make a short statement of the points. The purpose of the act of Congress was
“
to encourage investment by exempting the investor from loss in excess of the fund he is willing to risk in the enterprise.” 26 F. (2d) 24.
Richardson
v.
Harmon,
The other branch of the petitioner’s argument seems to us a perversion of the California law. The effect of that law so far as it goes is to destroy the operation of a charter as a nonconductor between the persons injured by a breach of corporate duty and the members of the corporation, who but for the charter would be liable. As suggested in
Flash
v.
Conn,
Decree affirmed.
