The libel contains two counts — the first seeking indemnity for personal injury; the second, expenses of maintenance and cure. It does not clearly appear whether the first count relies upon the Merchant Marine Act (Act June 5, 1920, c. 250, § 33, 41 Stat. 1007 [46 USCA § 688]), or the general maritime law. If the first alternative be assumed, the two-year limitation of the statute creating the cause of action necessarily precludes maintenance of the suit. Engel v. Davenport,
The appellant asks us to depart from the normal rule because she herself was diligent in following up the prosecution of her prior suit, and its dismissal was due to the neglect of attorneys to whom her attorney of record had intrusted the litigation, when appointment to an official position and illness after -that appointment terminated rendered impossible his giving personal attention to her suit. In McGrath v. Panama R. R. Co.,
The second count of the libel may be dealt with briefly; it has not even been argued separately from the first in the appellant’s brief. In a suit for maintenance and cure, the cause of action is contractual (Pacific S. S. Co. v. Peterson,
The decree is affirmed, but without costs.
