delivered the opinion of the court.
The
Pesaro
an, Italian steamship which carried a shipment of .olive oil from Genoa to New York, was sued
in rem
“I do certify that the vessel was released from arrest,by me by a final decree herein, solely because I deemed that the United States District Court, sitting as a Court of Admiralty, has no jurisdiction to subject to its process a steamship, which is by the suggestion of the said Italian Ambassador filed in this Court represented to be the public property and in the possession of the Kingdom of Italy. ”
Our authority to entertain the appeal is challenged upon two grounds. One is that the decree is not final, because it does not dismiss the libel. That it does not formally do so is true, but this is not decisive. The suit is
in rem
— is against the ship. The decree holds for naught .the process under which the ship was arrested, declares she is not subject to any such process arid directs her release — in other words, dismisses her without day. Thus the decree ends the suit as effectually as if it fsrmally dismissed the libel.
The other ground is that the question raised and decided was not a jurisdictional one in the sense of the statute, Jud. Cpde, § 238, providing for an appeal or writ of error from a District Court directly to this court.“in any case in which, the jurisdiction of the court is in issue. ” But we think it was such a question, because it directly concerned the. power of the District Court, as defined by the laws of the United States, to entertain and determine the suit.
The Steamship Jefferson,
We come "then to consider whether the court erred in sustaining the Ambassador’s suggestion that the ship was not subject to its process. Apart from that suggestion, there was nothing pointing to an absence of jurisdiction. On the contrary, what was said in-the libel pointed plainly to its presence. The suggestion was made directly to the court' and not through aiiy official channel of the United States. True, it was accompanied by a certificate of the
Decree reversed.
