It has taken 109 years for this case to materialize. For the first time in this long continuance of the Act concerning limitation of shipowner’s liability 1 which, for our purposes, remains the same as originally enacted in 1851, a simple question is posed. In a multiple-claim-inadequate-fund limitation proceeding may the admiralty court modify its traditional injunction to permit some of the claimants to establish their claims initially in a state common law court?
Before we get to that we must take notice of a possible lack of jurisdiction. The order under review did not decide a petition for limitation of liability, nor was it an appealable interlocutory order “determining the rights and liabilities of the parties to admiralty cases.” 28 U.S.C.A. § 1292(a) (3). It was simply an order modifying the injunction previously entered to permit two of the four claimants to proceed with trial of their state court suits for the injuries growing out of this marine casualty. We do not have to decide whether this is an occasion for the exercise of our undoubted right and duty to reexamine a former decision when its correctness has been brought sharply into question. River Terminals Corp. v. Southwestern Sugar & Molasses Co., 5 Cir., 1958,
The petition for exoneration from and limitation of liability was filed by petitioner as owner of the 26-foot M/V Pershing. On September 28, 1957, the boat was laying in a public dock in Dade County, Florida, and while the four claimants were aboard apparently doing some work on the engine — whether authorized or not is highly disputed— she exploded, became a total loss and injured several persons severely. An ad interim stipulation for $500 was filed, representing a most liberal appraisal of her value. As has each judge to whom like sheaves of papers have come ex parte, the District Judge in the tradition of the admiralty signed three orders where one would have done. 4 Of most importance was the usual order which stayed and restrained institution or prosecution of any other suits pending hearing and determination of the limitation proceeding.
Within the prescribed time claims and answers were filed by four claimants through two sets of proctors for a grand total of $558,000. 5 It is an understatement to remark that the claims and answers of each disputed most vigorously the petition’s basic allegations of absence of neglect or fault and, more important, the lack of privity on petitioner’s part.
Nearly two years later, two of the claimants, Stein and Smithline, note 5, supra, through their proctors moved for a modification of the injunction, note 4, supra, to permit those claimants to proceed further with their actions then pending in the Florida state court against petitioner as well as other undisclosed defendants. The proposed protective stipulation was indeed a vague one 6 and apparently was so considered *549 by the District Judge. For in his order which “modified [the original injunction] as to said claimants * * * only to said extent,” the Court spelled out further conditions 7 to which these two claimants would have to subscribe (and later did) notwithstanding these still left much to be desired.
We would have considerable doubt that the stipulation prescribed in the Court’s order modifying the injunction, see note 7, supra, was adequate. 8 And accepting to the fullest extent the most favorable implication of the decisions of the Second Circuit in this field, we would likewise doubt that some, but less than all, of the claimants can attempt to stipulate where, as here, the remaining claims themselves greatly exceed the limitation fund. 9 On these points, we might reverse without more. But we think that in the interest of orderly administration to advance the trial of the limitation proceeding which is so inevitable, we should determine this on its substantive correctness, not possible procedural imperfections.
If an admiralty court in a multiple-claims-inadequate-fund case may permit the claimants first to try the issue of liability vel non and damages in every claim in court actions outside of the limitation proceeding during which time the limitation case will be in a suspensive state of limbo, there will be little, if anything, left of the statutory scheme creat *550 ed by Congress and implemented by Admiralty Rules contemplated in the statute. Because this is about all that is left now. No longer the occasion for lamentations, Langnes v. Green, note 8, supra, permits the claimant in a single claim situation after appropriate protective stipulations to proceed elsewhere reserving exclusive final determination of the right to limitation (and amount of the fund) to the admiralty court. Likewise, in multiple-claim situation where the total of all of the claims does not exceed the limitation fund, any or all of the claimants may under suitable stipulation litigate elsewhere. All that is left, then, is the case of multiple claims which exceed the limitation fund 10 and in which the right to limit is disputed.
If in this multiple-claim-inadequate-fund situation the admiralty court may do so where there are four claims growing out of the destruction of a motorboat, it would be equally free to do so when faced with an Andrea Doria-Stockholm collision or like spectacular maritime catastrophe. Reminiscent of these would be the Morro Castle, the occurrence of which has considerable relevance. Although it aroused intense public and governmental interest in the field of legal liabilities for seagoing disasters leading to the 1935-1936 Amendments concerning the time for commencement of limitation proceedings, the amount available for certain types of claims and a broadening of privity and knowledge as to certain actions, no effort was made by Congress to tamper with the traditional format of all of the claims being determined in a single proceeding. 11
In behalf of such a startling result, the claimants urge only that the notion of a concursus — on the analogy of an equitable bill to avoid multiplicity of suits — so often stressed in earlier opinions of the Supreme Court has now lost much favor. But granting the correctness of this approach, as does the approval in Lake Tankers Corp. v. Henn, 1957,
That Court made this plain on several occasions. “We have several times announced the principles which we think must apply here; Absent an insufficient fund (1) the statutory privilege of limiting liability is not in the nature of a
forum non conveniens
doctrine, and (2) the statute gives a ship-owner, sued in several suits * * * no advantage over other kinds of defendants in the same position. Concourse is to be granted ‘only when * * * necessary in order to distribute an inadequate fund.’ The ‘purpose of limitation proceedings is not
*551
to prevent a multiplicity of suits but, in an equitable fashion, to provide a marshalling of assets — the distribution pro rata of an inadequate fund among claimants, none of whom can be paid in full.’ ” Petition of Texas Co., supra, 2 Cir.,
Even more decisive is like language of the Supreme Court in Henn, supra, approving the Second Circuit’s approach. “It is, therefore, crystal clear that the operation of the Act is directed at misfortunes at sea where the losses incurred exceed the value of the vessel and the pending freight. And * * * where the fund created pursuant to the Act is inadequate to cover all damages and the owner has sought the protection of the Act the issues arising from the disaster could be litigated within the limitation proceeding. Otherwise the purpose of the Act, i. e., limitation of the owner’s liability, might be frustrated. Only in this manner may there be a marshalling of all of the statutory assets remaining after the disaster and a concourse of claimants.” Lake Tankers Corp. v. Henn, supra,
The wisdom of this conclusion is readily established by this case. If the briefs do not, the argument certainly disclosed that in the adjudication of liability vel non in the state court proceedings, the nature of this casualty was such that the acts relevant to the issue of privity and knowledge of petitioner would inevitably be involved. At the same time when it came to trying the admiralty proceedings —which is likewise inevitable since at least two claimants are still in it and would be unaffected by verdicts or judg *552 ments adverse to the state court plaintiffs — -the admiralty court would have to retry the whole case again. In other words, the state court trial of the issues sometimes permissibly open to it could not avoid trial of the ingredients of the issue reserved exclusively for the admiralty. At the same time the admiralty court in subsequently trying that issue could not escape a retrial of the issues of negligence found by the state court verdict and judgment. It would have to retry these to determine whether petitioner had sufficient complicity to constitute privity and knowledge. Trial of the state court action would hinder, not aid, and would result in three trials where but one might do. 14
We suspect that back of this strenuous effort to get the right to try these actions first in the state court is the apprehension that unless it is done in 'this .fashion the plaintiff-claimants will be irrevocably denied their right to jury trials even though they succeed in their confident expectation of defeating limitation on the merits. But this is a misapprehension erroneously deduced from the acknowledged power of the admiralty court to adjudicate the whole case and grant full relief even though limitation is denied.
15
This is a protection to those compelled under the monition and restraining orders to litigate in an unchosen forum. The claimants are the ones to determine whether such full relief from the admiralty is desired or needed. If they do not desire it, the admiralty court in its decree denying the right to limitation can make certain that they are free to pursue the petitioner in any other forum having requisite jurisdiction. This is precisely the holding of the Second Circuit in In re Wood’s Petition, supra,
The modification of the injunction must therefore be vacated and the cause reversed and remanded for a trial in the admiralty court on the petitioner’s right to limit liability.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. 46 U.S.C.A. §§ 181-195, especially §§ 183, 184, 185, 188. See also Rules in Admiralty & Maritime Cases 51-54.
. In re Petition of
Lake
Tankers Corp., 2 Cir., 1956,
. This was first announced in W. E. Hedger Transp. Corp. v. Gallotta, 2 Cir., 1944,
. These were the orders for ad interim stipulation, for issuance of the monition, and an injunction.
. Claimant Attorney Amount
William Gaffney Anderson & Nadeau $ 8,000
Daniel D. Diefenbach Anderson & Nadeau $ 50,000
Alan Smithline Nichols, Gaither, etc. $250,000
David I. Stein Nichols, Gaither, etc. $250,000
. The motion to modify the previous injunction was “with the understanding and stipulation that no execution would issue on any judgment received in such action against the Petitioner * * * pending the outcome and final disposition of this limitation of liability action * ❖ * >r
. The order recited that leave to proceed in the state court suits against petitioner was granted “Provided and Conditioned upon the filing with this Court of a stipulation of each of the claimants reciting therein that all claims of res adjudicata relative to the issue of petitioner’s rights to limit liability be waived if passed upon by the State Court and further that if in the event judgment is rendered by said Court or Courts, that no execution issue except and only upon Order of this Court, and in accordance with and in proportion to this Court’s ruling, if any, in the pending Limitation proceeding.”
. The order does stipulate that the claimants waive res adjudicata “relative to the issue of petitioner’s right to limit liability” but the phrase immediately following that waiver — -“if passed upon by the State Court” — reflects an acquiescence, if not active permission, for the claimants to try this issue or each of its essential ingredients, in the state court proceeding. But the law clearly recognizes that the shipowner is entitled as a matter of right to exclusive determination of this question by the admiralty court. Langnes v. Green, 1931,
. In Petition of Trinidad Corp. (The Fort Mercer), 2 Cir., 1955,
. It is even more graphic. Here each claim, see note 5, supra, exceeds the fund by a ratio running from 16 to 1 to 500 to 1.
. See Gilmore & Black, The Law of Admiralty (1957) § 10-33 (especially note 135 at page 717), § 10-9, § 10-14, § 10-15.
. To the cases cited in note 3, supra, should be added these. Petition of Texas Co. (The Washington), 2 Cir., 1954,
. This has reference to the opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter speaking for four members of the Court. “The heart of this system is a
concursus
of all claims to insure the prompt and economical disposition of controversies in which , there are often a multitude of claimants.” Maryland Casualty Co. v. Cushing, supra,
. Nor are the problems all confined to the federal court. Serious questions might arise about the appealability of a so-called “final judgment” rendered for the plaintiffs but unenforceable by execution or otherwise except through permission of the admiralty court. Would the petitioner as defendant have to file a supersedeas? In the event the admiralty case came on for trial while the state court judgment was pending on an appeal, would that judgment and verdict be of any significance as res judicata on permissible issues?
. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. of Hartford v. Southern Pacific Co., 1927,
