Plaintiff is a longshoreman who was injured while working in the hold of the S.S. Myken when it was docked at a Philadelphia wharf on December 22, 1958. The defendant corporation, or
As pointed out by Judge Goodrich in Elliott v. United States Steel Export Company, D.C.E.D.Pa.1960,
“The question for the Court here is not how far Pennsylvania may constitutionally go in exercising judicial jurisdiction over a foreign corporation but how far the legislature had taken it as of the time the complaint in this case was filed.”
The very full and able consideration given to this statute by Judge Lord in Summers v. Skibs A/S Myken, D.C.E.D. Pa.1960,
“Any nonresident of this Commonwealth, being the owner or operator of any vessel, who shall accept the privilege, extended by the laws of this Commonwealth to nonresident operators and owners, of operating a vessel in the waters of this Commonwealth or of using its port facilities or ports, * * * shall, by the operation of a vessel in the waters of the Commonwealth or of using its port facilities or ports, make and constitute the Secretary of the Commonwealth his agent for the service of process in any civil suit * * * against such operator or owner of such vessel arising out of, or by reason of, any accident or collision, occurring within the waters of the Commonwealth in which such vessel is involved.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In Terracciona v. Magee, 1959,
“The supplement in question by its very terms represents that which will take place in future time. The words shall and shall be are prospective in meaning and cannot embrace events which have already occurred.” Cassan v. Fern, 1954,33 N.J.Super. 96 ,109 A.2d 482 , 485.
There is every reason to believe that a like construction would be given by the Pennsylvania appellate courts to the statute before the court. It is the policy of the Pennsylvania appellate courts that legislative rules as to service of process must be strictly construed,
This construction of this Pennsylvania Act is supported by cases such as Kur-land v. Chernobil, 1927,
Whether Pennsylvania could apply this substituted service provision, under the Federal Constitution, to the owner or operator of a vessel which had come within its jurisdiction prior to November 10, 1959, and had carefully remained away from this Commonwealth and its navigable waters since that date need not be considered in view of the use of “shall” in the Act, as quoted above. For this reason, the Federal court decisions, involving substituted service of process statutes of states other than Pennsylvania, relied on in the able brief of counsel for plaintiff are not pertinent.
If plaintiff wishes to secure a construction of this Non-Resident Vessel Owner Act from the Pennsylvania appellate courts by promptly bringing the issue presented in this proceeding before the courts of that state in the pending case of Summers v. Skibs A/S Myken, C.P. No. 6, June Term 1960, No. 3215, application may be made to the undersigned within ten days to withhold the order granting the Motion now before the court until such issue has been decided by the appellate courts of Pennsylvania in that proceeding.
Notes
. McCall v. Gates, 1946,
. Overmiller v. D. E. Horn & Co., 1960,
. As this court said in Elliott v. United States Steel Export Company, D.C.E.D. Pa.1960,
“Developments leading up to the International Shoe case and since that decision are highly interesting and a favorite subject of discussion by law review writers, but they are of no help in determining the question before this Court. ‘Because a state may exercise jurisdiction it does not follow that it does do so, much less that it must.’ ”
For example, the Illinois statute before tlie court in Bluff Creek Company v. Green, 5 Cir., 1958, 257 E.2d 83, 85, provided “Any person, whether or not a citizen or resident of this state, who in person or through an agent does (not shall do) any of the acts hereinafter enumerated * * * submits said person * * * to the jurisdiction of the courts * * (Emphasis supplied.)
