delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding for the limitation of liability of the steamship Hamilton in. respect of a collision on the high seas with the steamship Saginaw, in which the Saginaw was sunk and her chief mate and some of’ her crew and passengers were drowned. It is found, and not disputed, that both vessels were to blame. Both vessels belonged to corporations of the State of -Delaware. A statute of that State, after enacting that actions for injuries to the person shall not abate by reason of the plaintiff’s death, provides that “whenever death shall be occasioned by unlawful violence of negligence, and no suit be brought by the party injured to recover damages during his or her life, the widow or widower of any such deceased person, or if there be no widow or widower, the personal, representatives may maintain an action for and recover damages for the death and loss thus occasioned.” Act of January 26, 1866, chap. 31, p. 28, vol. 13, Part 1, Delaware Laws, as amended
*403
by act of March
9,
1901, chap. 210, p. 500, vol. 22, Delaware Laws. On the strength of this statute the representatives of a passenger and of three of the crew filed claims; and the claims were allowed by the District Court (see 134 Fed.-Rep. 95; 139 Fed. Rep. 906), and afterwards by the Circuit Court of Appeals; 146 Fed. Rep. 724;
Apart from the subordination of the State of Delaware to the Constitution of the United States there is no doubt that it would have- had power tó make its statute applicable to this case. When so applied, .¡the statute governs the reciprocal liabilities' of two corporations, existing only by virtue of the laws of Delaware, and permanently within its jurisdiction, for the consequences of conduct set in motion by them there, operating outside the territory of the State, it is true, but within no other territorial jurisdiction. If confined to corporations, the State would have power to enforce its law to the extent of their property in every casé. But the same authority would exist as to citizens domiciled within the State, even when personally on the high seas, and not only could be enforced by the State in case of their return, which their domicil by its very meaning promised, but in proper cases would be recognized in other jurisdictions by the courts of other States. In short, the bare fact of the parties being outside the territory in a place belonging to no other sovereign would not limit the authority of the State, as accepted by civilized theory. No one doubts the power of England or France to govern their own ships upon the high seas.
The first question, ■ then, is narrowed to whether there is anything in the structure of the National Government and under the Constitution of the United States that takes away
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or qualifies'the authority that otherwise1 Delaware- would possess—a question that seéms to have been considered doubtful in
Butler
v.
Boston & Savannah Steamship Co.,
The power of Congress to legislate upon the subject has been derived both from the power to regulate commerce and from the clause in the Constitution extending the judicial power to “all .cases of admiralty and .maritime jurisdiction.” Art. 3, §2;
That doubt, however, cannot be .serious. The grant of admiralty jurisdiction, followed and construed by the Judiciary Act of 1789, “saving to suitors in alF cases the'right of a common law remedy where the common law is competent to give it,” Rev. Stats. § 563, ,cl. 8, leaves open the common law jurisdiction of the state courts over torts committed- at Sea. This, we believe, always has been admitted.
Martin
v.
Hunter,
The jurisdiction commonly expressed in the formula that a vessel at sea is regarded as part of the territory of the State, was held, upon much consideration, to belong to Massachusetts, so far as to give preference to a judicial assignment in insolvency of such a vessel over an attachment levied immediately upon her arrival at New York, in
Crapo
v.
Kelly,
We pass to the other branch of the first question: whether the state Jaw, being valid, will be applied in the admiralty. Being valid, it created an
dbligatio,
a personal liability of the owner of the' Hamilton to the claimants.
Slater
v.
Mexican National R. R. Co.,
The second question concerns the right of the representatives of the crew to recover their claims in full. There is a faint suggestion that the mate of the Saginaw was negligent, but on this point we shall not go behind the findings below. The main objection is that the statute allows a recovery beyond the maintenance and support which were declared in
The Osceola,
We are of opinion that all the claimants are entitled to the full benefits of a statute “granting the right to relief where, otherwise it could not be administered by . a maritime court.”
Workman
v.
New York,
Decree affirmed.
