Plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the United Arab Republic. It is the owner and operator of the S.S. Cleopatra, a cargo vessel flying that Republic’s flag. Its complaint, entitled in a civil action, alleges that the Cleopatra having docked at Pier 16, East River, on April 13, 1960, in New York Harbor, defendant Seafarers’ International Union placed a picket line in the vicinity of the vessel and induced defendant International Longshoremen’s Association to picket her and to instruct said defendant’s members, who would normally discharge and load her cargo, to refuse to work. The basis of the picketing was a pamphlet, signed by both unions, bearing the legend “We Protest Nasser’s Blacklist of American Ships.” The complaint alleged that by reason of the picket line and defendants’ activities, combination and conspiracy, the Cleopatra had been unable to discharge or load cargo, to plaintiff's irreparable damage and sought an injunction and damages.
Plaintiff applied for a temporary injunction against the picketing. Plaintiff’s affidavits supported the allegations of the complaint; the Seafarers’ Union submitted an affidavit claiming that 125 American vessels having contracts with the Union, representing 5,000 jobs, had been boycotted at United Arab ports for having traded with Israel. Judge Murphy denied the injunction as prohibited by the Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 101-115, which, as here material, forbids a “court of the United States * * * to issue any * * * injunction in a case involving or growing out of a labor dispute * * as the Act has recently been construed by the Supreme Court in Marine Cooks & Stewards v. Panama Steamship Company, Ltd., 1960,
In our view plaintiff’s application for an injunction did not come within the Norris-LaGuardia Act’s prohibition on a federal court’s issuing an injunction in a “labor dispute.” However, we affirm the denial of an injunction on the broader basis that, Norris-LaGuardia apart, the complaint assei'ts no ground on which an injunction may lawfully be issued by a federal court, confined as federal courts are by the historic limitations on the powers of the admiralty and the jurisdictional grants made by Congress under Article III of the Constitution.
The ban of the Norris-LaGuardia Act upon the issuance of injunctions by a court of the United States applies to any case “involving or growing out of a labor dispute,” 29 U.S.C.A. § 101. Section 13 of the Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 113(c), defines “labor dispute” broadly to include “any controversy concerning terms or conditions of employment * * * regardless of whether or not the disputants stand in the proximate relation of employer and employee.” In Marine Cooks v. Panama Steamship Co., supra, the Supreme Court held the prohibition of the Norris-LaGuardia Act to apply to the picketing of a Liberian vessel by *51 an American union concerned over the effect of foreign flags of convenience on the wages and working conditions of American seamen. The District Judge thought that decision determinative here.
We disagree. In some respects, to be sure, the cases are parallel. In both, American unions were picketing foreign registered vessels employing alien seamen, and there was no dispute either between the unions and the employers of their members or between the alien seamen and their employers. There, however, the similarity ends. In the Marine Cooks case the foreign shipowner was one of the persons alleged to be creating the substandard wages and working conditions against which defendants were protesting. Here, on the papers before the District Court, the shipowner was not the cause of the pieketers’ grievance. The basis for the picketing, as stated in the leaflet annexed to the complaint, was that the United Arab Republic “has placed many American-flag vessels, owned by Americans and manned by American seamen, on a blacklist * * * because, at some time, these ships have carried a cargo to or from Israel, or may have stopped at an Israeli port for fuel or food,” and therefore had cost some American seamen jobs and caused others to be “abused, mistreated or restricted to their vessels.” Accepting
arguendo
defendants’ contention that a controversy over the loss of jobs is one “concerning terms or conditions of employment,” see Order of Railroad Telegraphers v. Chicago and North Western R. Co., 1960,
However, plaintiff’s case fails upon a ground older and more fundamental than the Norris-LaGuardia Act, namely, that the complaint does not state a claim that would warrant the grant of an injunction by a federal court. The complaint does not allege diversity of citizenship. Three bases of federal jurisdiction are asserted: first, that the complaint sets forth a claim under the antitrust laws and is thus within 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1337; second, that the complaint states a claim for a tort committed' in violation of the law of nations within 28 U.S.C. § 1350; and, third, that the complaint alleges a maritime tort, 28 U.S.C. § 1333. These we shall now examine.
The complaint does not set forth a substantial claim under the antitrust laws. While union activities are not excluded from the coverage of the antitrust laws, see Allen-Bradley Co. v. Local No. 3, 1945,
Section 1350 of Title 28 gives the District Courts “original jurisdiction of any civil action by an alien for a tort.
*52
only, committed in violaion of the law of nations or a treaty of the United States.” Despite the age of this section authorities applying it are scant. The only case we have found in which jurisdiction was sustained on the basis of this section even iri part, in that instance an alleged violation of a treaty, is Bolchos v. Darrel, D.C.S.C.1795, 3 Fed.Cas. No. 1,607, p. 810. See also 26 Op.Atty. Gen. 250 (1907). O’Reilly De Camara v. Brooke, 1908,
We come therefore to appellant’s claim that a federal court may properly issue •an injunction because the complaint alleges a maritime tort. We assume in ■appellant’s favor, without deciding, that picketing which prevents a vessel’s being unloaded when the owner is powerless to take action that will end the piek■eting, is a tort, see American Law Institute, Restatement of Torts, § 777, and also that although the actions of the unions took place on land, the tort is maritime since its effect was felt on the navigable waters of New York harbor where the cargo continued to be held on the Cleopatra. See Judge Learned Hand’s statement in The Poznan, D.C. S.D.N.Y.1921,
However, while this would support jurisdiction in admiralty under 28 U.S.C. § 1333, and, if plaintiff makes out its case, a future award of damages, it would not warrant the grant of an injunction under the admiralty power For historical reasons admirably set forth in Marine Cooks & Stewards v. Panama Steamship Company, 9 Cir., 1959,
*53
Decision on this issue is controlled by Romero v. International Terminal Operating Co., 1959,
It follows that whatever rights plaintiff may have to recover damages in a federal court if its complaint, although entitled as a civil action, is treated as a libel in admiralty, and whatever rights it may have to injunctive relief or damages in a suit brought in a state court, plaintiff has presented no basis on which a federal court may lawfully issue an injunction. To the layman, and doubtless to some lawyers also, it will be hard to understand that decision of a controversy of this public importance should turn on considerations of federal jurisdiction which may appear dry and technical. But it was plaintiff who chose to bring its action in a federal court. Such courts must stay within the bounds placed upon them by Congress.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. International law recognizes a right of innocent passage through the territorial sea. However, the access of foreign vessels to ports is usually provided for in a treaty of friendship, commerce and navigation, see, e. g., the treaty of February 2, 1948 between the United States and Italy, 63 Stat. 2256, 2284. A Convention and Statute respecting the International Regime of Maritime Ports, signed at Geneva on December 9, 1923, provides that on a basis of reciprocity the vessels of the contracting parties shall enjoy eguality of treatment in, and freedom of access to, their maritime ports, see Oppenheim, International Law, 8th ed., Yol. 1, p. 504; but the United States is not a party to this Convention.
