delivered the opinion of the court.
On August 4, 1914, Great Britain declared war against Germany, and on August 12, 1914, against Austria-Hungary. Prior to August 4, Watts, Watts & Co., Limited, a British corporation, had supplied to Unione Austríaca di Navigazione, an Austro-Hungarian corporation, bunker coal at Algiers, a dependency of the French Republic. Drafts on London given therefor having been ‘protested for non-payment, the seller brought, on August 24, 1914,- a libel in personam against the purchaser in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District -of New York. Jurisdiction was obtained by attaching one of the steamers to which the coal had been furnished. The attachment was discharged by giving a bond which is now in force. The respondent appeared and filed an answer which admitted that the case was within the admiralty jurisdiction of the court; and it was submitted for decision upon a stipulation as to facts and proof of foreign law..
. The respondent contended that the District Court, as a court of a neutral nation,- should not exercise its juris- *20 dictionai power between alien bemgeieuts to ; ¿quire tub transfer, by process of judgment and execution, A lands by one alien belligerent to another; an act wnieh it alleged was prohibited alike by the municipal iaw of both, belligerents. The libelant replied that performance of the contract by respondent, that is, the payment of a debt due, was legal by the law of the place of performance, whether that place be taken to be Algiers 01 London; that it was immaterial whether it was legal by the AustroHungarian law, since Austria-Hungary was not the place of performance; and that the enforcement of legal rights here would not infringe the attitude of impartiality which underlies neutrality. The District Court held that it had jurisdiction of the controversy, and that it was within its discretion to determine whether it should exercise lire jurisdiction, since both parties were aliens and tne cause of action arose and was tó be performed abroad. It then dismissed the libel without prejudice, saying: ‘"From' the standpoint of this neutral jurisdiction the controlling consideration is that the law of both belligerent countries [Great Britain and Austria-Hungary] forbids a payment by one belligerent subject to his enemy during the eon- < tinuance of war. This court, in the exercise of jurisdiction founded on comity, may not ignore that state of war and disregard the consequences resulting from it.” 224 Fed. Rep. 188, 194.
The dismissal by the District Court was entered on May 27, 1915. On December 14, 1915, the decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, on the ground that it was within the discretion of the trial court to. determine whether to take or to decline jurisdiction,
The Belgenland,
This court, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, has power not only to correct error in the judgment entered below, but to make such disposition of the cáse as justice may at this time require.
Butler
v.
Eaton-,
Since the certiorari was granted, the relation of the parties to the court has changed radically. Then, as earlier, the proceeding was one between alien belligerents in a court of a neutral nation. Now, it is a suit by one belligerent in a court of a co-belligerent^ against a common enemy. A suit may be brought in our courts against an alien' enemy. ’
McVeigh
v.
United States,
The respondent, although an alien, enemy, is, of course, entitled to defend before a judgment should be entered.
McVeigh
v.
-United States, supra.
. See also
Windsor
v.
McVeigh,
.
Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that the decree dismissing the libel should be set aside and the case remanded to the District Court for further proceedings, but that no action should be taken there (except such, if any, as may be required to preserve the security and the rights of the parties in statu quo) until, by reason of the restoration of peace between the United States and Austria-Hungary, or otherwise,, it may become *23 possible for the respondent to present its defense adequately. Compare The Kaiser Wilhelm II, 246 Fed. Hep. 786. Robinson & Co. v. Continental Insurance Company of Mannheim, [1915] 1 K. B. 155, 161-162.
Reversed.
