Giannakouros v. Oriental Tanker Corp.
This text of 338 F.2d 649 (Giannakouros v. Oriental Tanker Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The S.S. World Sky and the S.S. Caltex London collided in the Persian Gulf. Four Greek seamen, members of the crew of the World Sky, lost their lives when the ship sank after it put to sea following temporary repairs effected in Sudan. Their widows filed these libels in Admiralty in the Eastern District of Virginia, undertaking to effect personal service upon the shipowners by service of process upon the Clerk of Virginia’s State Corporation Commission. ¿
The Caltex London was owned by Overseas Tankship Limited, an English corporation, while the World Sky was owned by Oriental Tanker Corporation, S.A., a Panamanian corporation. Each corporation moved to quash the service on the ground that it did no business in Virginia and was not present there for the purpose of service of process. Additionally, Oriental filed an exceptive allegation, in which it claimed that it was not the owner of the World Sky at the time of the collision.
On appeal from an order quashing the service, it is contended that Oriental’s exceptive allegation, expressly made subject to the previous motion to quash and purporting to reserve its rights under that motion, was a general appearance upon the basis of which the Court should exercise its jurisdiction.1
We agree with the District Court’s conclusion2 that the exceptive allegation was not a waiver of the motion to quash the service and the objections to the exercise of the Court’s in personam jurisdiction. The power of an Admiralty court to withdraw from the extremes to which the general appearance rule had been pushed and to find no waiver when there was no intentional abandonment of the jurisdictional objection was upheld after careful consideration in Untersinger v. United States, 8 Cir., 172 F.2d 298. [651]*651For the reasons persuasively stated there, we agree.
This is not a general importation of Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure into Admiralty. Our conclusion is not foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s holding in Miner v. Atlass, 368 U.S. 641, 80 S.Ct. 1300, 4 L.Ed.2d 1462, or by anything said in the opinion of this Court in Nolan v. Jensen, 4 Cir., 272 F.2d 630. We are not fashioning an Admiralty rule, but are applying judicially developed principles in an area where no Admiralty rule is applicable. If the Admiralty courts had the power to carry the principle to inordinate lengths, they have the power to confine it within reasonable bounds.
Affirmed.
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338 F.2d 649, 1965 A.M.C. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giannakouros-v-oriental-tanker-corp-ca4-1964.