1. The defense of sovereign immunity by a defendant in the
district court does not present a question of federal jurisdiction
reviewable here on direct appeal.
Oliver American Trading Co.
v. United States of Mexico, 264 U. S. 440. P.
265 U. S.
105.
2. This is equally true whether the claim of immunity be
contested because of the character of the defendant or because the
immunity is alleged to have been waived.
Id.
Writ of error dismissed and cause transferred.
Error to a judgment of the District Court for the plaintiff,
Almeida, in his action for wages as a seaman.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Almeida, a seaman, brought this action for wages against
Transportes Maritimos do Estado on the common law side of the
Federal Court for Southern New York. The
Page 265 U. S. 105
defendant appeared generally; answered that it was a department
of the government of the Republic of Portugal; offered evidence in
support of the allegation, and claimed the immunity of a sovereign
from all process. The district judge entered judgment for the
plaintiff in an amount stipulated by counsel; allowed a direct writ
of error from this Court, and issued the certificate of a
jurisdictional question provided for in § 238 of the Judicial
Code.
This Court is without jurisdiction of the writ of error. It was
settled in
Oliver American Trading Co. v. United States of
Mexico, 264 U. S. 440,
decided since the entry of the judgment below, that the claim of
sovereign immunity does not present a question of federal
jurisdiction within the meaning of § 238. This is equally true
whether the claim of immunity is contested because of the character
of the defendant or because the immunity is alleged to have been
waived. The question involved here is not that presented in
The
Pesaro, 255 U. S. 216, and
The Carlo Poma, 255 U. S. 219.
There, the question requiring decision was whether Congress had
conferred upon the district court sitting in admiralty power to
entertain a suit against "a general ship engaged in the common
carriage of merchandise by water, for hire" which, at the time of
the arrest, was owned by the Italian government and was in its
possession. That question being one of the jurisdiction of the
court as a federal court, the direct appeal was sustained in
The Pesaro and the appeal to the circuit court of appeals
was ordered dismissed in
The Carlo Poma. A related
question was presented in
The Sao Vicente, 260 U.
S. 151, which was likewise a suit in admiralty. There,
the writ of certiorari was dismissed.
Compare In the Matter of
Transportes Maritimos do Estado, 264 U.
S. 105.
As the writ of error from this Court was improvidently allowed,
the case must be transferred to the Circuit Court
Page 265 U. S. 106
of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Section 238(a) of the
Judicial Code; Act of September 14, 1922, c. 305, 42 Stat. 837;
Smith v. Apple, 264 U. S. 274.
It is so ordered.