delivered the opinion of the court.
This case comes here upon a certificate from the Gircuit Court of Appeals. The facts stated are as follows, with slight abbreviation. The Titanic, a British steamship, which had sailed from Southampton, England, on her maiden voyage for New York, collided on the high seas with an iceberg, on April 14, and sank the next morning, with the loss of many lives and total loss of vessel, cargo, personal effects, mails and everything connected with the ship except certain life boats. The owner, alleging that the loss was occasioned and incurred without its privity or knowledge, filed a petition for limitation of its liability under the laws of the United Statеs, Rev. Stats., §§ 4283, 4284, 4285, and Admiralty Rules 54 and 56.
A. Whether in the case of a disaster upon the high seas, where (1) only a single vessel of British nationality is concerned and there are claimants of many different nationalities; and where (2) therе is nothing before the court to show what, if any, is the law of the foreign country to which the vessel belongs, touching the owner’s liability for such disaster, — such owner can maintain a proceeding under §§ 4283, 4284 and 4285 U. S. Revised Statutes and the 54th and 56th Rules in Admiralty?
B. ' Whether, if in such a case it appears that the law of the foreign country to which the ve”ssel belongs makes provision for the limitation of the vessel owner’s liability, upon terms and conditions different from those prescribed in the Statutes of this cоuntry, the owner of such foreign vessel can maintain a proceeding in the courts of the United States, under said Statutes and Rules?
In. the event of the answer to quеstion B being in the Affirmative,
C. Will the courts of the United States in such proceeding enforce the law of the United States or of the foreign country in respect tо the amount of such owner’s liability?
The general proposition that a foreign ship may resort to the courts of the United- States for a limitation of liability under Rеv. Stat., § 4283 is established.
The Scotland,
It is true that the act of Congress does not control or profess to control the conduct of a British ship on the high seas. Sеe
American Banana Co.
v.
United Fruit Co.,
It is not necessary to consider whether the act of Congress may not limit the rights of shippers or American vessels to recover fоr injuries in our waters or on the high seas, so that if they sued in a foreign court they could not be allowed to recover more than the act allows, if our construction of the law were followed. A law that limits a right in one case may limit a remedy in another. This' statute well might be held to announce a general poliсy, governing both obligations that arise within the jurisdiction and suits that are brought in the courts of the United States. Emery v. Burbank, 163 Massachusetts, 326, 328. It clearly limits the remedy, as we have shown, in cаses where it has nothing to say about the rights. ■ With the explanation that we have made we may repeat here Jus *734 tice Bradley’s words: “The rule of limited respоnsibility is now our maritime rule. It is the rule by which, through the Act of Congress, we have announced that we propose to administer justice in maritime cases.”
We see nо absurdity in supposing that if the owner of the Titanic were sued in different countries, each having a different rule affecting the remedy there, the local rule should be applied in each case. It can be imagined that in consequence of such diverse proceedings the owner might not be able to comply with the local requirements for limitation, as it also is conceivable that if it sought the advantage of an alien law it might as a condition have to pаy more than its liability under the law of its flag in some cases. But the imagining of such possible difficulties is no sufficient reason for not applying the statute as it has been сonstrued; on the whole, it would seem with good effect.
It follows from what we have said that the first two questions must be answered in the affirmative and the third, the law of the United States.
Answers: A, Yes.
B, Yes.
C, The law of the United
States.
