JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge: '
The sole remaining issue1 for en banc determination is the validity of the provision of a marine protection and indemnity (P & I) policy fixing the underwriter’s maximum liability to that of the assured shipowner’s judicially declared limitation of liability. Stated obversely, the question is whether the P & I underwriter is liable in excess of the assured shipowner’s admitted limited liability. Along the way we will determine the continued vitality of our earlier Nebel Towing2 decision on which the trial court and the panel majority relied. We hold that the underwriter is not liable for the excess and in doing so overrule Nebel Towing.
I.
This appeal grows out of an allision on the Mississippi River between the tow in tow of the tug F.R. BIGELOW and Crown Zellerbach’s (CZ) water intake structure. Involved also was the tug’s (and owners’) maritime limitation of liability proceeding in which CZ brought a Louisiana direct action against prime and excess P & I underwriters of the vessel owner/operator. After trial, the District Court held that Ingram Industries, Inc. (Ingram), the tug owner/operator, was liable, but was entitled to limit its liability to the value of the vessel and the pending freight. The excess P & I underwriter was held liable for nearly $2,000,000 of the portion of CZ’s damages that exceeded the limited liability of the vessel owner. We approved the trial court’s holding of (i) no “privity or knowledge” by the tug owner, (ii) the valuation of the vessel, (iii) the computation of CZ’s damages, and (iv) the award of prejudgment interest calculated from a date later than the accident. However, the Court by divided vote determined that the District Court was free of error in holding the tug owner’s underwriter liable beyond the dollar limits fixed, or ascertainable, in the P & I policy.
How it All Happened
On February 3, 1979, the tugboat F.R. BIGELOW owned (or bareboat chartered) by Ingram, while pushing 15 loaded barges down the Mississippi River in heavy fog and rain, caused its forward lead barge to collide with and damage CZ’s water intake structure, located above Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Shortly after this incident, CZ began to repair the structure, but these repairs were interrupted on May 18, 1979, when another tugboat collided with the structure and damaged the remaining portion. The structure was not rebuilt in kind, but was rebuilt in a different form.
CZ filed suit against the tugboat F.R. BIGELOW, and Ingram, her bareboat charterer, in April of 1979. Subsequently, it amended its complaint to include Cherokee Insurance Company (Cherokee), the prime P & I insurer of Ingram, with a policy limit of $1,000,000, and London Steam-Ship Owners’ Mutual Insurance Association (London Steam-Ship), excess P & I insurers of Ingram, with a deductible franchise of $1,000,000.
[1298]*1298In its answer to the suit based upon the accident of February 3, 1979, Ingram, the charterer-owner/operator of the F.R. BIGELOW, sought limitation of its liability to the value of the vessel plus freight then pending. See 46 U.S.C. § 183. Ingram stipulated liability for striking the intake structure, and the issues of damages and limitation of liability were tried. Following trial, the District Court entered judgment for CZ in the “total sum” of $3,948,210.31 with prejudgment interest calculated from December 11, 1980. The District Court granted Ingram’s prayer for limitation of liability, valued the vessel at $2,134,918.88, and limited the owner’s liability to that amount. Since Cherokee’s prime P & I policy was for $1,000,000, the District Court decreed the total sum of CZ’s judgment as follows:
Table I
(a) Total Damages to CZ $3,948,210.31
(b) Payable by Owner and
Cherokee Prime P & I $1,025,000.00
(e) Payable by Owner and
London Steam Excess P & I 1,109,918.88
(d) Owner's Limited Liability 2,134,918.88
(e) Balance by London Steam
Excess P & I $1,813,291.44
Following the entry of judgment, Ingram and its two P &.I underwriters made payments up to Ingram’s limited liability ($2,134,918.88).
London Steam-Ship challenged the portion of the District Court’s judgment holding that underwriter liable for the amount ($1,813,291.44) of CZ’s claim over and above Ingram’s fixed limited liability ($2,134,918.88). The panel, by divided vote, affirmed that holding.
The P & I Coverage
For its protection against claims for damage to piers and other fixed (non-vessel) structures, Ingram, as chartered owner of the tug BIGELOW, had two P & I covers. The prime cover was with Cherokee, with the amount of insurance being specified as $1,000,000. London Steam-Ship, through A. Bilbrough and Company as managers, dove-tailing Cherokee’s cover with a deductible franchise of $1,000,000, supplied an excess P & I cover in accordance with its Rules.
Louisiana Enters the Fray
In what at one time was thought to be the tranquil waters of Jensen3 with its jealous guard of admiralty uniformity unsettled by Wilburn Boat4 and the intrusion of state laws into these sacred waters, our problem comes about by the Louisiana Direct Action statute, La.R.S. 22:655.5
[1299]*1299This statute, as its name implies, allows a direct action against a liability insurer for Louisiana-incurred damages. But the statute does not create new Louisiana liabilities. On the contrary,' by its own terms, reinforced by Louisiana judicial decisions, the statute imposes liability on the insurer subject “to all of the lawful conditions of the policy or contract and the defenses which could be urged by the insurer to a direct action brought by the insured, provided the terms and conditions of such policy or contract are not in violation of the laws of this State.”
II.
In our much discussed decision of Olympic Towing Corp. v. Nebel Towing Co., 419 F.2d 230, 1969 A.M.C. 1571, rehearing denied, 419 F.2d 238 (5th Cir.1969) (en banc), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 989, 90 S.Ct. 1120, 25 L.Ed.2d 396 (1970), the Court relied in part on the Louisiana Direct Action Statute to affirm the District Court’s award of judgment in excess of the limitation value against the underwriter of the vessel at fault.
The P & I policy in Nebel Towing did not by its terms limit the insurer’s liability to the vessel owner’s limited liability. That meant that the P & I underwriter, in its effort to limit its liability, had to contend that as the insurer it had the right to claim the vessel owner’s statutory right to limit its liability.
In holding the statutory limitation right unavailable to the insurer, the Nebel Towing court reasoned as follows: the enigmatic but undeniable Cushing
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JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge: '
The sole remaining issue1 for en banc determination is the validity of the provision of a marine protection and indemnity (P & I) policy fixing the underwriter’s maximum liability to that of the assured shipowner’s judicially declared limitation of liability. Stated obversely, the question is whether the P & I underwriter is liable in excess of the assured shipowner’s admitted limited liability. Along the way we will determine the continued vitality of our earlier Nebel Towing2 decision on which the trial court and the panel majority relied. We hold that the underwriter is not liable for the excess and in doing so overrule Nebel Towing.
I.
This appeal grows out of an allision on the Mississippi River between the tow in tow of the tug F.R. BIGELOW and Crown Zellerbach’s (CZ) water intake structure. Involved also was the tug’s (and owners’) maritime limitation of liability proceeding in which CZ brought a Louisiana direct action against prime and excess P & I underwriters of the vessel owner/operator. After trial, the District Court held that Ingram Industries, Inc. (Ingram), the tug owner/operator, was liable, but was entitled to limit its liability to the value of the vessel and the pending freight. The excess P & I underwriter was held liable for nearly $2,000,000 of the portion of CZ’s damages that exceeded the limited liability of the vessel owner. We approved the trial court’s holding of (i) no “privity or knowledge” by the tug owner, (ii) the valuation of the vessel, (iii) the computation of CZ’s damages, and (iv) the award of prejudgment interest calculated from a date later than the accident. However, the Court by divided vote determined that the District Court was free of error in holding the tug owner’s underwriter liable beyond the dollar limits fixed, or ascertainable, in the P & I policy.
How it All Happened
On February 3, 1979, the tugboat F.R. BIGELOW owned (or bareboat chartered) by Ingram, while pushing 15 loaded barges down the Mississippi River in heavy fog and rain, caused its forward lead barge to collide with and damage CZ’s water intake structure, located above Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Shortly after this incident, CZ began to repair the structure, but these repairs were interrupted on May 18, 1979, when another tugboat collided with the structure and damaged the remaining portion. The structure was not rebuilt in kind, but was rebuilt in a different form.
CZ filed suit against the tugboat F.R. BIGELOW, and Ingram, her bareboat charterer, in April of 1979. Subsequently, it amended its complaint to include Cherokee Insurance Company (Cherokee), the prime P & I insurer of Ingram, with a policy limit of $1,000,000, and London Steam-Ship Owners’ Mutual Insurance Association (London Steam-Ship), excess P & I insurers of Ingram, with a deductible franchise of $1,000,000.
[1298]*1298In its answer to the suit based upon the accident of February 3, 1979, Ingram, the charterer-owner/operator of the F.R. BIGELOW, sought limitation of its liability to the value of the vessel plus freight then pending. See 46 U.S.C. § 183. Ingram stipulated liability for striking the intake structure, and the issues of damages and limitation of liability were tried. Following trial, the District Court entered judgment for CZ in the “total sum” of $3,948,210.31 with prejudgment interest calculated from December 11, 1980. The District Court granted Ingram’s prayer for limitation of liability, valued the vessel at $2,134,918.88, and limited the owner’s liability to that amount. Since Cherokee’s prime P & I policy was for $1,000,000, the District Court decreed the total sum of CZ’s judgment as follows:
Table I
(a) Total Damages to CZ $3,948,210.31
(b) Payable by Owner and
Cherokee Prime P & I $1,025,000.00
(e) Payable by Owner and
London Steam Excess P & I 1,109,918.88
(d) Owner's Limited Liability 2,134,918.88
(e) Balance by London Steam
Excess P & I $1,813,291.44
Following the entry of judgment, Ingram and its two P &.I underwriters made payments up to Ingram’s limited liability ($2,134,918.88).
London Steam-Ship challenged the portion of the District Court’s judgment holding that underwriter liable for the amount ($1,813,291.44) of CZ’s claim over and above Ingram’s fixed limited liability ($2,134,918.88). The panel, by divided vote, affirmed that holding.
The P & I Coverage
For its protection against claims for damage to piers and other fixed (non-vessel) structures, Ingram, as chartered owner of the tug BIGELOW, had two P & I covers. The prime cover was with Cherokee, with the amount of insurance being specified as $1,000,000. London Steam-Ship, through A. Bilbrough and Company as managers, dove-tailing Cherokee’s cover with a deductible franchise of $1,000,000, supplied an excess P & I cover in accordance with its Rules.
Louisiana Enters the Fray
In what at one time was thought to be the tranquil waters of Jensen3 with its jealous guard of admiralty uniformity unsettled by Wilburn Boat4 and the intrusion of state laws into these sacred waters, our problem comes about by the Louisiana Direct Action statute, La.R.S. 22:655.5
[1299]*1299This statute, as its name implies, allows a direct action against a liability insurer for Louisiana-incurred damages. But the statute does not create new Louisiana liabilities. On the contrary,' by its own terms, reinforced by Louisiana judicial decisions, the statute imposes liability on the insurer subject “to all of the lawful conditions of the policy or contract and the defenses which could be urged by the insurer to a direct action brought by the insured, provided the terms and conditions of such policy or contract are not in violation of the laws of this State.”
II.
In our much discussed decision of Olympic Towing Corp. v. Nebel Towing Co., 419 F.2d 230, 1969 A.M.C. 1571, rehearing denied, 419 F.2d 238 (5th Cir.1969) (en banc), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 989, 90 S.Ct. 1120, 25 L.Ed.2d 396 (1970), the Court relied in part on the Louisiana Direct Action Statute to affirm the District Court’s award of judgment in excess of the limitation value against the underwriter of the vessel at fault.
The P & I policy in Nebel Towing did not by its terms limit the insurer’s liability to the vessel owner’s limited liability. That meant that the P & I underwriter, in its effort to limit its liability, had to contend that as the insurer it had the right to claim the vessel owner’s statutory right to limit its liability.
In holding the statutory limitation right unavailable to the insurer, the Nebel Towing court reasoned as follows: the enigmatic but undeniable Cushing6 decision declined to hold the Louisiana statute to be preempted by the paramount federal maritime power. Therefore, the Court tested the insurer’s claim of entitlement to the shipowner’s statutory right to limit liability according to the law of Louisiana.
The insurer attempted to rely on a clause in its policy limiting its liability to “such sums as the assured * * * shall have become legally liable to pay and shall have paid on account.” This no-action clause, however, directly ran afoul of the Louisiana Direct Action Statute.
The statute simply voids any policy clause which conditions the right of the injured person to enforce against the insurer its contractual obligation to pay the insured’s debt upon, as prerequisite, the obtaining by the injured person of a judgment against the insured.
Hidalgo v. Dupuy, 122 So.2d 639, 644-45 (La.App.1960), quoted in Nebel Towing, 419 F.2d at 237.
The Nebel Towing court also held that the limitation of liability defense was a defense “personal” to the shipowner and could not be availed of by the insurer. See LA.CIV.CODE ANN. art. 1801 (West 1985); note 15 infra. As we discuss below, this holding was the result of a flawed analogy to Louisiana immunity law and was wholly unnecessary to the Nebel Towing decision. See infra.
III.
Out of the Fog of Nebel Towing
It is here that we must part ways with Nebel Towing. In a nutshell, the distinction between this case and Nebel Towing is a simple one. Nebel Towing dealt solely with the contention that the P & I underwriter was entitled to the shipowner’s statutory right to limit liability. See note 9 [1300]*1300infra. Here the claim is quite different: the P & I underwriter is claiming only that, as prescribed by the Louisiana Direct Action Statute, the terms of its own insurance policy limits maximum liability to the dollar amount for which the shipowner-assured would be liable upon successfully maintaining the right to limit its liability. The P & I underwriter is not claiming the statutory right of the assured. To the contrary, it is here claiming only the limitation of the insurance policy defense itself. As we explain below, this policy limitation cannot be contrary to Louisiana law nor to the public policy of the state.
London Steam-Ship Coverage
London Steam-Ship (known in the parlance as a “P & I Club”)7 promulgated rules which defined its liabilities and defenses.
The uncontradicted record traces the history of London Steam-Ship Rules from 1881-82, when liability was fixed at 30 per entered ton with a limit of 3000 tons, to 1952-53, when the maximum of 3000 entered tons was deleted. The Club realized that, in this day and time of almost unlimited, astronomical liabilities with aggravated uncertainties as to the shipowner’s ability successfully to maintain the statutory right to limit liability and the practical demands of its shipowner members, it was faced with the problem of determining in what manner its total liability exposure could be expressed. Beginning in 1955 — long before Nebel Towing was decided — this was handled by Rule 8(i):
When a Member for whose account a ship is entered in this Class, is entitled to limit his liability, the liability of the Class shall not exceed the amount of such limitation____8
In sharp contrast to the situation in Nebel Towing in which the P & I claimed only the right to a statutory defense, London Steam-Ship’s excess P & I policy by Rule 8(i) has a policy term which limits its liability to that of the owner’s limited liability. This is a policy not a statutory defense. The P & I insurer is not claiming the owner’s statutory right to a shipowner’s limited liability, but merely the right to assert its policy defense.9
Since there can be no question that Rule 8(i) is one of the “... lawful conditions of the policy or contract,” it brings us face to face with the critical provision of the Louisiana Direct Action Statute that “any action brought hereunder shall be subject to ... the defenses which could be urged by the insurer to a direct action brought by the insured____” 10
[1301]*1301
Direct Action
We start with our decisions which today are still very much intact. For example, see Degelos v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 313 F.2d 809 (5th Cir.l963)11 and Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance Co. v. Aetna Casualty Co., 322 F.2d 113, 1964 A.M.C. 308 (5th Cir.1963).12
The decisions of the Louisiana courts have been as unambiguous as the language of the Direct Action Statute itself: there must be a legal liability on part of the assured for the insurer to have a direct action liability. In Burke v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Co., 209 La. 495, 24 So.2d 875 (1946), the question was whether under the law of Mississippi a wife had a right of action against her husband’s Louisiana liability insurer for a tort that her husband committed against her in Mississippi. The Louisiana Supreme Court stated:
The statute does not give plaintiff any more rights , than she has under the law of Mississippi. It only furnishes her with a method to enforce in Louisiana whatever rights she has in Mississippi. Since she has no cause of action under the law of Mississippi, necessarily Act No. 55 of 1930 confers upon her no cause of action in Louisiana. The mere fact that under the statute plaintiff was able to obtain jurisdiction against her husband’s liability insurer in a direct action in this State does not create, as against her husband, or as against her insurer, a substantive cause of action that does not exist under the law of the State where the wrongful act occurred.
24 So.2d at 877 (emphasis added).
See also Ruiz v. Clancy, 182 La. 935,162 So. 734, 735-36 (1935):
The statute does not purport to interfere with the right of an insurance company to limit the so-called coverage, “in any policy against liability,” to “liability imposed upon him [the assured] by law,” as this policy provides. An insurance company therefore, may — as the company did in this instance — limit the coverage, or liability of the company, to pay only such sums as the insured shall become obligated to pay by reason of the liability imposed upon him by law. The attorney for the insurance company contends that the statute would interfere with the freedom of parties to enter into contracts, and would be therefore unconstitutional, if it forbade insurers to limit their so-called coverage in liability insurance policies, so as to cover only the legal liability of the insured. The statute does not purport to do that, by merely giving an injured person a right of action against the insurer, and by compelling the insurer to respond — within the limits of the policy — to the obligation of the insured.
(Emphasis added).
In the face of these strong precedents, from both Louisiana and this Court, the contrary result reached in Nebel Towing cannot stand. The policy provision 8(i) {see [1302]*1302note 8 and related text) is not couched as a claim to the shipowner’s statutory right to limit liability. What — and all — it says is that we, the P & I underwriters, will pay up to but not beyond the assured’s legal liability. Whatever the assured is liable for we will pay, 100% in full with no discount, but no more.
In the face of such a wholesome economic principle there is nothing in Nebel Towing that could lead this Court to say — as did the panel and concurring opinion, 745 F.2d 998, — that this is contrary to public policy or, in the words of § 655 “in violation of the laws of [the] state.” See note 5 supra. From the standpoint of Louisiana’s concern — reflected in § 655 — about the injured victims of a tort, how could an insurance policy be more fair than to say: whatever your (the assured’s) liability, we will pay 100% in full without reduction?
And what, from the standpoint of fairness and Louisiana’s public policy could be unfair about the P & I policies expressing the insurer’s maximum liability, not in terms of dollars,13 but rather in words which are plain and readily ascertainable; not in terms of contentions or hopes, but in words of a realized permanent judicial decision? 14
Nor is there any support to the theory that applying Rule 8(i) is contrary to Louisiana public policy because Nebel Towing held the limitation of liability defense “personal” to the shipowner. Influenced greatly by Judge Ellis’ lengthy opinion in Alcoa Steamship Co. v. Charles Ferran & Co.,15 the Nebel Towing court seized upon the idea of “personal defense” based on Codal Art. 2098.16 The Ferran opinion listed examples of defenses considered “personal” under Louisiana law which could not be asserted by the insurer in a direct action suit:
These defenses included infancy, LSA-Rev.Stat. 9:571 and Rouley v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 235 F.Supp. 786, 793 (W.D.La.1964); coverture, Edwards v. Royal Indemnity Co., 182 La. 171, 161 So. 191 (1935) and Dumas v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 241 La. 1096, 134 So.2d 45, 50 (1961); charitable immunity, Lusk v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., [1303]*1303La.App., 199 So. 666 (Orleans 1941); and governmental immunity, Brooks v. Bass, La.App. 184 So. 222 (Orleans 1938), certiorari denied, November 28, 1938. As succinctly stated in Simmons v. Clark, La.App. 64 So.2d 520 (1 Cir.1953), “[personal defenses are such as infancy, interdiction, coverture, lunacy, bankruptcy and the like.” 64 So.2d at 523.
251 F.Supp. at 831. Nebel Towing then quoted from that opinion:
Amongst these apparently varied “personal” defenses, one common denominator is discernible — each person possessing a “personal” defense obtained that defense because the law granted it to all members of his class as a matter of public policy. The personal defense attaches to the status. Hence parents, children, husbands, wives, governmental units, charitable organizations, bankrupts, lunatics, interdicts, vessel owners, and the like possess a defense denied their respective insurers.
419 F.2d at 238.
Not mentioned, but still another common denominator, is that in each of these instances the defense is more than that. The nonliability is an absolute immunity, an immunity extended to each of the respective classes and to all of the members of each class. Seen in that light, it is immediately obvious that the class of “vessel owners” does not belong on Judge Ellis’ list.17 The federal right of limitation of liability has been granted to certain vessel owners under certain circumstances as a matter of federal policy, but it is not an immunity. Even for those who satisfy its requirements, the Limited Liability Act recognizes a liability. All the act does is put a ceiling on damages. More importantly, the privilege is not available for all owners or operators of all ships or vessels for all liabilities.18
Even for those owners-operators who can qualify for limitation of liability, the limitation provides them with neither an immunity nor an assured defense. To obtain the benefit of the Act the owners must establish a right to it. That involves the always difficult — and often times impossible — burden of establishing that the casualty occurred without the owner’s privity and fault, including prevoyage unseaworthiness.19 The books are filled with hundreds of cases denying limitation of liability.
IV.
Related to the concept of personal defense which serves as an additional ground for our decision is the fact that Rule 8(i) is a defense that is personal to London Steam-Ship. The defense asserted by London Steam-Ship is not a defense of Ingram, its assured. Indeed, London Steam-Ship is not asserting any defense of Ingram, the owner.
As a policy clause, Rule 8(i) is a defense personal to London Steam-Ship, the underwriter as a solidary obligor. Article 2098 allows a debtor to raise all defenses that “are personal to himself,” as this policy defense certainly is. See supra note 15. London Steam-Ship may raise this defense without regard to whether Ingram’s right to limit liability is a defense personal to it.
[I]nsurers may assert defenses which result from the nature of the obligation— contributory negligence, assumption of risk, confusion, collateral estoppel and res judicata, for example, as well as ■ those common to all co-debtors____ Ad[1304]*1304ditionally, insurers enjoy and frequently assert defenses personal to themselves, such as coverage, policy limits, and procurement by misstatement of material facts in the application.
Alcoa Steamship Co. v. Charles Ferran, Inc., 251 F.Supp. 823, 831 (E.D.La.1966), aff'd, 383 F.2d 46 (5th Cir.1967), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 836, 89 S.Ct. 111, 21 L.Ed.2d 107 (1968) (emphasis added).
This result makes it unnecessary for us to decide whether, in view of the Supreme Court’s enigmatic 4-1-4 decision for that day and time only in Cushing v. Maryland Casualty Co., 347 U.S. 409, 74 S.Ct. 608, 98 L.Ed.2d 806, 1954 A.M.C. 837 (1954), there is yet a final decision on the constitutionality of the Louisiana Direct Action Statute vis-a-vis the federal shipowner’s limitation of liability statute, 46 U.S.C. § 183 et seq.
Conclusion
Nebel Towing is overruled and the District Court is reversed with respect to the liability of London Steam-Ship for amounts in excess of Ingram’s limited liability. In all other respects the District Court is affirmed.
REVERSED IN PART, AFFIRMED IN PART.