This is an appeal in admiralty from a final order of the district court dismiss *282 ing libelant’s cause without prejudice. 1 The suit is in rem by a foreign seaman to recover injuries and damages for alleged breach of contract and an alleged tort committed by the appellee’s Mastеr. The only question presented is whether the trial court erred in declining jurisdiction of the cause.
The appellant, a Greek national, entered into a contract of employment in Greece, written in Greek, with an agent of аppellee’s owner. The contract provided that appellant was to join the vessel at Houston, Texas, and that “for any dispute between the seaman and the ship, the Greek law will apply, competent courts to solve any dispute will be the Greek courts at Piraeus. * * * ” Appellant joined the ship while it was berthed at dry dock in Galveston, Texas, but he found the conditions of employment unsatisfactory. He alleges a total breach of his employment contract by reason of failure to furnish quarters, edible food, and proper living conditions. In general, appellant claims that the ship presented a condition of squalor and that it was impossible for seamen to serve on it. He determined to discontinue his service on the vessel and apparently made these intentions known, for he asserts that the Master refused or negligently failed to obtain an extension of his visa, which resulted in his being arrested and incarcerated.
The appellee is a vessel of Liberian registry. 2 It is owned by a Liberian corporation, which is wholly owned and controlled by an American corporation, which, in turn, is wholly owned and controlled by a United States citizen.
On February 26, 1963, a libel in rem was filed against the vessel seeking damages for breach of contract and for the alleged conduct of appellee’s Master in causing appellant to be jailed. The court advanced the cause on the docket so it might be heard before the vessel sаiled. The parties could not agree on the applicable law and failed to produce evidence of relevant Greek law. However, the depositions of witnesses were taken and completed about March 25, 1963. Shortly thereafter the ship sailed from the United States. On February 24, 1964, the trial court stayed the action to allow the libel-ant 120 days after January 27, 1964, in which to institute an action in a forum having jurisdiction, whereupon it would enter an order declining jurisdiсtion and dismissing the cause without prejudice. 3 In order to foreclose any possibility of prejudice by reason of further litigation in the United States courts, the appellee later agreed to extend, for 120 days beyond the date of any final order which might be entered by the trial court after “all appeals,” the time within which it would appear generally in the Greek courts to litigate the appellant’s claim. After this agreement, on December 18, 1964, the trial cоurt entered an order of dismissal of the cause without prejudice, from which order Anastasiadis appeals.
Undoubtedly, a federal district court has subject-matter jurisdiction of an
in rem
suit in admiralty in circumstances here present, regardlеss of the nationality of the parties or the situs of the events and transactions in controversy, even though the parties have stipulated that disputes shall be settled be
*283
fore a foreign court. The Belgenland, 114 U.S.
355, 5
S.Ct. 860,
Both parties place reliance on the leading case of Lauritzen v. Larsen,
The Supreme Court, recognizing the advantages of achieving stability in the application of the general maritime law, held in Lauritzen that the right of an alien seaman to invoke the Jones Act must be determined by “ascertaining and valuing [the] points of contact between the transaction and the states or governments, whose competing laws are involved,” and by weighing “the significance of one or more connecting factors between the shipping transaction regulated and the national interest served by the assertion of authority.”
While the appellant has alleged a tort, his claim is essentially one for breach of contract. He is a Greek national and his allegiance is to that country. The ship is of foreign registry and flies a foreign flag. His contract of employment was made in Greece, and specifically provides that any dispute will be litigated in the Greek сourts under Greek law. There has been no showing that a Greek forum would be inaccessible or that Greek laws would be unjust if applied and enforced. To the contrary, the appellee has formally agreed of record to appear in the Greek courts and litigate appellant’s cause of action. The most significant contacts with the United States are that the alleged breach of contract and tort occurred in this country, and the fact that beneficial ownership of the vessel is in a United States citizen. There is no positive proof that the vessel is regularly engaged, or intends to be engaged, in substantial commerce within the terri *284 torial United States. Apparently its presence in this country was only transitory.
The appellant relies heavily on the fact that the ship is owned and controlled by United States interests. Voyiatzis v. National Shipping & Trading Corp., (S.D.N.Y.1961)
The appellant also relies on Bartholomew v. Universe Tankships, Inc., (2 Cir. 1959)
As noted in Lauritzen, the
lex loci delicti
test in maritime tort cases is necessarily of limited application “because of the varieties of legal authority over waters [a ship] may navigate.”
In summary, we agree with the district court thаt an analysis of the contacts in this case militate against the assumption of jurisdiction. As the Court recognized in Lauritzen, where the parties specifically contract as to governing law, “[e]xcept as forbidden by some public рolicy, the tendency of the law is to apply in contract matters the law which the parties intended to apply.”
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. A former appeal was dismissed for lack of a final order. Anastasiadis v. SS Little John (5 Cir. 1964)
. In his original complaint the libelant alleged on information and belief that the vessel was of Liberian registry, although the appellee’s agents represented to him that it would be registered under the Lebanese flag. He further alleges that upon arrival he discovered that the vessel had no registry. Subsequently, it was actually registered under the Liberian flag.
. An appeal from this order was dismissed. See footnote 1 supra.
