delivered the opinion of of the court.
While a passenger on the steamboat
Fairhaven,
plying upon Puget Sound, Laura G. White sustained a. severe personal injury in being caught or thrown by a rod, called a hog-chain, extending through the deck and connecting with the paddle-wheel. To recover for the injury she brought an action against the Island Transportation
*348
Company, the owner of the vessel, in the Superior Court for King County, in the State of Washington, naming $21,350.87 as her damages.' The owner then filed a libel or petition in the District Court of the United States for that district to secure the benefit of the statute limiting the liability of vessel owners. Rev. Stat., §§4283-4285; Admiralty Rules, 53-57,
The objection that the court was without jurisdiction, because the pleadings showed that the damage was occasioned by the negligence of the owner, evidently resulted from a misapprehension of what was in the pleadings. So far were they from settling where the fault lay that they put the matter directly in issue, the petition alleging that the injury was occasioned without the owner’s privity or knowledge and the answer affirming that it was caused by the owner’s negligence and not otherwise. If the fact was
*350
as alleged in the petition, the case was within the statute, for §4283 declares: “The liability of the owner of any vessel ... for any act, matter, or thing, loss, damage, or forfeiture, done, occasioned, or incurred, without the privity, or knowledge of such owner or owners, shall in no case exceed the amount or value of the interest of such owner in such vessel, and her freight then pending.” And while the claimant was at liberty,-under admiralty rule 56, to contest the owner’s right to a limitation of liability, the decision of the question necessarily rested with the court. Its jurisdiction was not ousted merely because the claimant took issue with what was alleged in the petition.
Butler
v.
Boston Steamship Co.,
The objection that the court could not entertain the proceeding, because the petition disclosed only one claim arising out. of the injury, is grounded upon the terms of §§ 4284 and 4285, which require a
pro rata
distribution of the value of the vessel and freight when not sufficient to satisfy all claims, authorize proceedings to obtain the benefit of the statute, make the surrender of the vessel and freight for the benefit of claimants a sufficient compliance with the statute on the part of the owner, and declare that upon such surrender all claims and proceedings against the owner shall cease. It must be conceded that these sections, if taken alone, give color to the objection, for, with a single exception, their words apparently contemplate a plurality of claims. But to a right understand
*351
ing of these sections it is essential that they be read with § 4283. It contains the fundamental provision on which the others turn. It broadly declares that “the liability ... for
any
. . . damage ... occasioned . . . without the privity or knowledge of such owner . . . shall
in no case
exceed” the value of the vessel and freight. The succeeding sections are in the nature of an appendix and relate to the proceedings by which the first is to be made effective. Therefore, they should be so construed as to bring them into correspondence with it. It was so held in
Butler
v.
Boston Steamship Co.; supra
(pp. 550, 551), where it became necessary to consider another difference in terms between them and it. In that case this court said, quoting from a decision of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island: “These sections [4284 and 4285], if we look only to the letter, apply only to injuries and losses of property. The question is, therefore, whether we shall by construction'bring the three sections into correspondence by confining the scope of § 4283 to injuries and losses of property, or by enlarging the scope of the two other sections so as to include injuries to the person. We . think it is more reasonable to suppose that the designation of losses and injuries in §§ 4284 and 4285 is imperfect, a part being mentioned representatively for the whole, and consequently that those sections were intended to extend to injuries to the person as'well as to injuries to property, than it is to suppose that § 4283 was intended to extend only to the latter class of injuries, and was inadvertently couched in words of broader meaning.” In the lower Federal courts there has been some contrariety of opinion upon the point now being considered, but the prevailing view had been that due regard for the broad terms and dominant force of § 4283 requires that §§ 4284 and 4285 be construed as authorizing a proceeding for limitation of liability whether there be a plurality of claims or only one.
Quinlan v. Pew,
56 Fed. Rep. 111, 120;
The S.A. McCaulley,
*352
99 Fed. Rep. 302, 304;
The
Hoffmans, 171 Fed. Rep. 455, 457; Benedict’s Admiralty, 4th ed., § 533. In the recent case of
Richardson
v.
Harmon,
Decree affirmed.
