The 57th rule in admiralty provides, that any person or persons claiming damages, “and who shall have presented his or their claim to the commissioner under oath, shall and may answer the libel or petition, and contest the right of the owner or owners of said ship or vessel, either to an exemption from liability, or to a limitation of liability under the said act of congress, or both.” William Knowlton and others, and Harding and Bassett, without presenting any claim to the commissioner, come in, each by a paper called “Exceptions and Answer,” and undertake by such paper to contest the right of the owners of the Oceanus to exemption from liability, and also to a limitation from liability. This cannot be done. Nevertheless as the-parties, although they decline, by not presenting their claims to the commissioner, to share in such moneys as this court may have for distribution, and to receive from this court such relief as might follow a successful resistance to the rights claimed by the owners of the Oceanus in their petition, are so far made parties to this proceeding, by such owners, and by the action of this court, as to be enjoined by it from further prosecuting actions brought by them in a state' court, I think they are entitled to put in an exception to the jurisdiction of this court to-so enjoin them. The paper will, therefore, be allowed to stand, so far as it amounts-to such an exception. In this view, paragraphs two, three, and four, must be stricken out, and so much of paragraph six as-follows the word “just."