delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, a longshoreman, was injured at Port Huron while unloading a vessel lying in navigable water. He was about his work on the deck of the vessel when he was struck by a swinging hoist, lifting cargo from a hatch, and was precipitated upon the wharf. He sought compensation under the compensation act of the State of Michigan. His employer, the Port Huron Terminal Company, contended that the accident occurred upon navi
*648
gable water and. that the state law did not apply. The defense was overruled by the state commission in the view that the injury must have been occasioned by petitioner’s fall upon the wharf and hence that the claim was within the state statute, although the injury would not have been received except for the force applied to his person while on the vessel. The Supreme Court of the State vacated the commission’s award, holding that the federal law controlled.
We have held that the case of an employee injured upon navigable waters while engaged in a maritime service is governed by the maritime law.
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Jensen,
We had the converse case before us in
Smith & Son
v.
Taylor,
If, when the blow from a swinging crane knocks a longshoreman from the dock into the water, the cause of action arises on the land, it must follow, upon the same reasoning, that when he is struck upon the vessel and the blow throws him upon the dock the cause of action arises on the vessel. Compare
Vancouver S. S. Co.
v.
Rice,
The decision in
L’Hote
v.
Crowell,
Affirmed.
