delivered the opinion of the court:
The Government has moved for judgment on the pleadings dismissing the petitions herein upon the ground that all of the claims herein are based upon maritime contracts and, under the Suits in Admiralty Act of March 9,1920, 41 Stat. 525, 46 X7.S.C. §741, et seq., could be enforced only in a United States District Court sitting in admiralty.
The plaintiffs are all common carriers by water for hire in foreign commerce. They all carried goods for the Government under ocean bills of lading from foreign ports to the Port of New York. They discharged the goods upon the appropriate piers in New York. The Government failed to remove the goods from the piers within the “free time” per-*143mittecl by lawfully effective tariffs on file with the proper public authorities. Those tariffs set rates of demurrage to be paid by owners of goods who did not remove their goods within the free time. The charges here sued for are proper, according to those tariffs.
If a claim may be sued upon in a Court of Admiralty, this court does not have jurisdiction to entertain it, even though it is a claim otherwise included within the language of the statutes defining this court’s jurisdiction. Johnson v. United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, 280 U.S. 320; Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Inc. v. United States, 129 C. Cls. 455. The problem in cases in which the transaction has a relation to shipping by water is not the problem of interpreting the statutes conferring jurisdiction upon this court. It is, instead, the problem of determining whether, according to the history and traditions and judicial precedents relating to Admiralty jurisdiction, a Court of Admiralty would entertain the case. If it would, we cannot.
Surprisingly, there seems to be no precedent on the question of demurrage charged for leaving goods on a ship’s pier. It would be hard to think of any situation more closely related to water transportation, but not consisting of the actual carriage of goods in ships, than the instant situation. In a proceeding before the United States Maritime Commission entitled “Free Time and Demurrage Charges at New York,” 3 U.S.M.C. 89 at 101, the Commission said:
It should be noted that free time is granted by the carriers not as a gratuity, but solely as an incident to their obligation to make delivery. The Eddy, 5 Wall. 481, 495; The Titania, 131 F. 229, 230. This is an obligation which the carrier is bound to discharge as a part of its transportation service, and consignees must be afforded fair opportunity to accept delivery of cargo without incurring liability for penalties. Free time must be long enough to facilitate this result — but need not be longer. * * *
The Maritime Commission, then, regarded the storage of goods on the pier during the free time as an incident, an implied term, of a ship’s contract to transport and deliver goods. It would seem that the owner’s corresponding obligation to remove the goods within a reasonable time and not *144appropriate tbe space needed by the ship company for other cargo would be an implied term in the owner’s maritime contract. This court has held that a railroad’s charge for demurrage is subject to a tax on transportation charges. Swift and Co. v. United States, 136 C. Cls. 394, 399-400.
The parties have cited numerous decisions involving situations which they urge, are analogous to the instant situation. We do not find them helpful and do not discuss them. In such measure as a court not experienced in maritime matters is able to detect the subtle difference between what is maritime and what is not, it seems to us that the instant situation is sufficiently maritime in character to be within the jurisdiction of a Court of Admiralty and, therefore, not to be within the jurisdiction of this court.
Defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings is granted and the petitions are dismissed.
It is so ordered.
Laramore, Judge, and JoNES, Chief Judge, concur.