This is an appeal from a decree in the admiralty, dismissing the libel in a suit
in personam
for the loss of a cargo of coal. Judge Clancy refused to assume jurisdiction over the suit because, being between two foreign corporations, “the most just disposition” could be made in the English courts of admiralty. The libellant, a German corporation, had laded the coal upon the steamer, “Western Farmer,” owned by an American corporation, bound from Norfolk, Virginia, to Bremerhaven, West Germany. In the British Channel the “Bjorgholm,” a ship of the respondent, а Norwegian corporation, collided with the “Western Farmer,” cut her in two, and caused the loss of all the libellant’s coal. The owner of the “Western Farmer” sued the respondent in an English court of admiralty, and the parties have agreed to settle the suit upon the basis that the “Western Farmer” was 25% at fault, and the “Bjorgholm,” 75%. The respondent thereafter filеd a proceeding in England under which it has limited its liabilities to £85,354.10 ($238,992.60): £8 to the ton. It is the English law — apparently independently of the Brussels Convention — that the fault of the carrying ship is imputed to her cаrgo in the event of a collision (The Umona, L.R. 1914 Pro. 141), so that, if the libellant files a claim in the English limitation proceeding — the only English remedy now open to it — and if the “Western Farmer” is found pаrtly at fault the libellant will recover only that proportion of its loss, quite aside from the existence of any other claims that will be entitled to share in the bond, posted by the resрondent in the limitation proceeding. The libellant sued the respondent
in personam
in the Southern District of New York, hoping under the doctrine of The Atlas,
It is indeed true that in such cases the entertainment of a suit between two aliens for a collision on the high seas depends upon the discretion of the district court; but it is not true that we have no power to review the exercise of that discretion, as appears from The Mandu, 2 Cir.,
We therefore comе to the possible considerations that may be, or are, urged in support of a removal of the suit to England; and first, as to the convenience of witnesses, who will of necessity be the crews of the two vessels. Although it may well be easier to bring the crew of the “Bjorgholm” to London than to New York, it will be highly inconvenient to bring the crew of the “Western Farmer” to Londоn; and, indeed, it is most improbable that the libellant would be able to compel them to go there at all. There is no basis for this argument and, to do the respondent justice, it is not clear that it means to make it. Next, since the libellant would not be in privity with the owner of the “Western Farmer,” should a decree be entered in the English suit, it would not estop the libellant, even if it were based upon a contest and were not by consent. There is no way by which to avoid a trial of the libellant’s claim upon the merits; nor any greater convenience in hаving that trial in London than in New York. These are the usual reasons for declining jurisdiction in such situations; and, as both will not serve, the respondent invokes two others. It says that, because both Norway and Germany were signatories to the Brussels Convention of 1910, that document should apply to the libellant’s claim; and that it is more proper for an English court to pass upon the question, apparently because Great Britain was also a signatory. Second, it says that since, Norway, like Great Britain, limits the liability of shipowners by a fixed amount per ton, the English stаtute should apply.
As to the first, the collision was on the high seas between vessels flying different flags; and it has been the law of this country, at least since The Scotland,
We are not clear whether the rеspondent means to go further, and argue that the British law is essentially more equitable than ours; and that we should therefore allow an alien resort to an English court. If we were freе to choose, we might well agree at least to the law of proportional fault. That has now become the rule in collisions in most civilized countries; and it is becoming more and more in general use in torts of negligence ashore. It responds to the feeling of most people that it is just that lapses from the care that a situation demands may bе of different moral quality, and should have different consequences. Moreover, we are not prepared to say that our own limitation statute, which subjects the sufferer to thе gamble of the offending ship’s survival, is as just as that which insures some recovery, though not to her full value. However, whatever might be our personal preferences, obviously we may not follow them in our own decisions; and it should be equally clear that we should not bring about the same result by referring the controversy to a court which could, and might, do so. Since we can find nothing in the facts to warrant the conclusion that justice will be promoted by a removal, any more than we could find in The Mandu, supra,
Decree reversed.
