(after stating the facts as above). [1 ] The first question in this case is whether the respondents are guilty of a breach of the charter party for refusing to carry ore on February 10, 1917, at Felton, Cuba, a few days before this libel was filed. That question I quite distinguish from their right to repudiate the charter party altogether on February 17, 1917, a point I am reserving for the moment. The libelants object, first, that the action of the British Admiralty was not authorized by the prerogative of the Crown, and could not be an excuse, at least until followed by some threat of compulsion. The act of another sovereign within its own territory is of necessity legal. Underhill v. Hernandez, 168 U. S. 250, 18 Sup. Ct. 83, 42 L. Ed. 456; American Banana Co. v. United Fruit Co., 213 U. S. 347, 29 Sup. Ct. 511, 53 L. Ed. 826, 16 Ann. Cas. 1047; Oetjen v. Central Leather Co., 246 U. S. 297, 38 Sup. Ct. 309, 62 L. Ed. 726; Ricaud v. American Metal Co., 246 U. S. 304, 38 Sup. Ct. 312, 62 L. Ed. 733; Hewitt v. Speyer, 250 Fed. 367, - C. C. A. -. It is quite true that the act of any public official of a foreign state may in fact be illegal by the municipal law of that state, but no domestic court may admit such a possibility without trenching upon the prerogative of its own executive. The presupposition upon which states must deal with each other is that each is responsible for, and so bound by, the acts of its own functionaries. The Invincible, Fed. Cas. No. 7,054. A court may not, therefore, make any assumption contrary to the fundamental presupposition upon which its executive will act. Hence I should not entertain this issue, whether or no the Embassy’s certificate were in evidence.
The libelants urge that in Brunner v. Webster, 5 Com. Cas. 167, the court went into the question of the authority of a foreign official under his own law; but I cannot agree. In that case, while the ship was at Beyrut, the owners inquired of a Roumanian official, one Dr. Ob-regea, whether a cargo of rice might be discharged at Calais:, a place at which he had jurisdiction. Dr. Obregea answered that he should prevent the discharge, and the owners treated it as a restraint of princes. Kennedy, J., held that in his judgment Dr. Obregea’s opinion would have been found erroneous, had the ship proceeded, and held that there was no restraint. The point is a narrow one, but it is still quite true that the official had not undertaken to stop the discharge; he had only indicated his purpose to do so, and Kennedy, J., was not undertaking to pass upon the validity of an official act, but to express his doubts as to what would in the sequel have been the definitive action of the Rou-manian government, had the owners proceeded to Galatz.
[2] Nor am I impressed with the suggestion that the formal requisition followed the original telegram only because of the respondents1' complaisance in its telegraphic answer. It appears to me somewhat naive to suppose, under such circumstances as then existed, that the British Admiralty made requisitions dependent upon the consent of the shipowner. That the respondents were eager enough to have their *130ship taken is clear enough, as well as is their desire to get rid of a charter then become onerous, and to substitute the Admiralty hire; but that this attitude had any effect upon the result seems to me a thin supposition.
[3] I must therefore assume that the requisition was legal and that it was in invitum. Did it excuse the owner? I think it did. I distinguish between the legality of the requisition which was sent and received in Great Britain and'of the respondents’ refusal to load in Cuba. The breach was committed in the territory of another state, and its legality was dependent wholly on the law of the place where it occurred, of, if one will, upon the law of New York, where the charter party was made, I do not care which. It was a wrong, not by virtue of British, but of Cuban, law, and no supposed law of the flag has anything whatever to do with it, in my judgment. No command of a foreign sovereign to its subject can legalize a wrong committed elsewhere. The refusal was excused only in case the owner' was within the terms of the exception. Mr. Haight says that no coercion was exercised, or even threatened, which is quite true; but I thi.nk it is not enough. The ship might have been seized on the high seas by British cruisers — the only testimony is that it would — or it might have been detained by the British consul at Felton. That possibility was alone thought enough in The Athanasios, 228 Fed. 558.
But I do not rely upon restraints directed against the ship itself, for the case was between sovereign and subject, not between the owner and a foreign power. In the former case, at least now in England, a legal command of the sovereign is enough, though it operates only in per-sonam. Brit. & Foreign Mar. Ins. Co. v. Sanday, [1916] 1 A. C. 650; Furness Withy & Co. v. Rederiaktiegelabet Banco, [1817] 2 K. B. 373. There is no case in the United States, so far as I know; but I accept the rule there laid down. It appears to me quite unreasonable to suppose thdt the parties should have supposed the owner to be released when his ship was restrained by a foreign power, but not when he was himself within the sanctions possible to his own sovereign. Nor do I think it necessary to show to what sanctions he would have in fact been subject. Force is implied in the very nature of law, and the requisition was a command having the force of law. The restraint was in existence, unlike that in Watts, Watts & Co. v. Mitsui, [1917] A. C. 227. It was the “direct” cause of the breach, unlike Becker, Gray & Co. v. London Assur. Co., [1918] A. C. 101. If the actual incidence of power was still somewhat contingent, that is no objection in this country, if reasonable prudence justified compliance, and not defiance. The Styria, 186 U. S. 1, 22 Sup. Ct. 731, 46 L. Ed. 1027; The Kronprinzessin Cecilie, 244 U. S. 12, 37 Sup. Ct. 490, 61 L. Ed. 960. I cannot agree that the owners were called upon to undertake the risks of disobeying a valid command of their sovereign, in order to see whether the command would be pressed with penalties. This was the assumption throughout in Tamplin, etc., Co. v. Auglo-Mexican, etc., Co., [1916] 2 A. C. 227.
So it follows, as I view it, that the refusal to load at Felton was excused, and if the case rested there nothing more need be said; but *131it does not. While the respondents might safely have continued to refuse all orders while the ship remaiuded on requisition, they would have been obliged to receive the hire and allow the libelants to collect the Admiralty hire; but this they did not do. On the contrary, they repudiated the charter party altogether and that was quite another thing.
[4j This repudiation the respondents justify upon the ground that the adventure' has been “frustrated,” in the language of the English cases. Whether one looks at it in that way, or as a question arising under the “restraint of princes” clatise, makes in my judgment no difference. Certainly under the clause the owner was excused from observing the charterer’s orders, because he could not; but if the charterer gave no orders of his own, and was content to adopt the directions of the Admiralty, how did the clause operate to relieve the owner from going on until the ship was used for purposes not covered by the charter party? This had as yet not happened; a voyage from Cuba to England was within the charter limits, and the cargo was not, so .far as appears, either “molasses or wet sugar,”'which were excluded. While the charterer paid the hire, and the ship was not used for such other purpoges, I can see no excuse under the clause for refusing to allow the charterer to adopt the Admiralty orders. Nor is there any difference, if one regards the. question upon the basis of “frustration.” The owner’s adventure remained wbat it had been.
Now, the case is different with the charterer, whose rights must be considered, I believe, although the reason is not at once apparent. The requisition did not, of course, prevent his continued payment of the hire, or his performance of any of the other covenants in the charter party, not even the payment for coals, port charges, and dunnage, if demanded. Yet the restraint of prince's clause the parties inserted as a mutual exception. As such it must he given some effect, if it can, and I can think of nothing so natural as to say that it excused the covenant to pay hire when the charterer could not have stipulated use of the ship. I recognize the force of Lord Parker’s judgment in Tamplin, etc., Co. v. Anglo-Mexican, etc., Co., [1916] 2 A. C. 397, based upon the “breakdown” clause; but, as I view this charter, we have not the case of implying a condition which the parties have not expressed, hut of giving effect to all the language which they used. The purpose evidenced by that clause is to put the vessel off hire when the charterer has no use of her. It is altogether consonant with that purpose to interpret the restraint of princes clause as effecting the same result, and the embarrassment felt by Lord Parker appears to me largely overcome when the parties have provided express language which must be taken as supplementary to the conditions specified in the “breakdown” clause.
However, as I have already implied, that excuse depends upon the failure of the consideration of the covenant to pay hire, not upon the impossibility of performance of the covenant, and when the ship is requisitioned on full hire there appears to me to be no failure at all. It is true that the charterer loses the use of the ship, but by hypothesis he gets the full equivalent in money. Presumably he could fix other *132equal tonnage with the substituted hire, but it malees no difference whether he can or not. The venture is commercial, and may be settled in money. The changed situation is changed only in form; the charterer has the risk, and the advantage of any variation in the rates, and the owner his original assurance of the stipulated hire, which is precisely what each party agreed to accept. Moreover, if the charterer alone be allowed_to disaffirm, he will do so only when the rates have fallen, and not if they rise. Such a right is obviously unfair, and could not have been the purpose of the parties. It deprives the owner of the security of a fixed hire, and relieves the charterer of the risk of a fall in rates. If, therefore, the charterer have such a right, so must the owner, which means that the contract is at an end, though, if continued, it would for the balance of the term leave the parties in substance in exactly that position which they accepted at the outset. Hence, if the Admiralty hire in the case at bar be fixed at the market rates for tonnage, I think that the charterer had no right to disaffirm upon requisition, and the owner no reciprocal right. That question the record does not answer.
If, on the other hand, the requisition be not at going rates, but at a substantially lower amount, as was, indeed, conceded arguendo, the situation appears to me quite different. I think it should fall as much within the clause as though the ship had been made a prize. Now it‘is quite true, and the case at bar is an instance of it, that notwithstanding that fact the actual Admiralty hire may be greater than the charter hire. The proper time at which to look is not, however, after the event, and when the rates have changed. The chief purpose of the charter, as I have said, is to impose upon one the risk of change, and to secure the other against it. But if the parties had been faced with the possibility that during the term the ship would have been seized at a large discount from the then going hire, obviously, if both were fair, they would have treated it as like a seizure without hire at all. The charterer’s right and risk in the variation in rates would be “loaded,” in the language of an actuary, with a heavy discount. He would not, if I may use the phrase, be getting a fair run for his money. Such an event the clause seems to me to cover as much as the capture of the ship or the like. And if the charterer have such a right, then so must the owner in similar case, and for the same reasons as when the requisition is at full rates. He may not be deprived of his assurance of a fixed hire when the venture 'turns out to be a loss, and deprived of the gain when it results in a profit.
There is, it is true, some artificiality in speaking of the right of the charterer to repudiate as a protection when the charter party was made before the war; but I suppose we must agree that the rule should apply generally both to charters made before the war and after it had affected rates. We necessarily look at the putative situation presented to the parties when the contract is made somewhat abstractly, not in the full concreteness of what afterwards occurred. If we did not, there could never be a bargain at all. Therefore, as I view it, if the requisition be permanent, the right of either party to disaffirm turns upon the Admiralty rate.
*133The English cases, and they are the only ones which deal with the question, do not, I must own, consider the matter quite in this way, though the result is the same as that which I have reached. The question always is of an implied condition which the parties have not expressed, an approach not- really different in practice, though it is somewhat different' in theory, at least if the exception be mutual. The absence of any consideration of the amount of the Admiralty hire I apprehend is due to the fact that the hire is never in fact a full equivalent. It would, indeed, be hardly excusable to consider the question so generally as I have, were it not that the difference in judicial opinion in England had left the law not wholly settled in theory. The rule is nevertheless quite the same as that which, as it seems to me, theoretical considerations would suggest.
The cases all take their origin from Tamplin, etc., Co. v. Anglo-Mexican, etc., Co., [1916] 2 A. C. 397, in which the owner had repudiated the charter party upon requisition of the ship. In both the courts below he had been unsuccessful, upon the ground that his concern was only with his hire, and that he could not complain if the charterer chose to accept the changed status, so long as he paid regularly. In the blouse of Cords the decision was affirmed by a vote of three to two, but for quite different reasons. Cord Parker of Waddington thought that the whole doctrine of an implied condition contradicted the express provisions of the charter party, and that the requisition did, not affect the charterer’s obligations or his rights to the Admiralty hire. I,ord Haldane and Cord Atkinson thought that any requisition interrupted so vitally the basis on which the parties had contracted that the charter party was at an end. Cord Loreburn agreed with them in principle, hut thought that the rule applied only when it was apparent that the requisition would outlast the charter party and that there was no such evidence. The case has been accepted as ruling, that, when the requisition to the mind of a reasonable man would seem likely to outlast the charter party, it terminated the contract, and that it applies as well to time as to voyage charters.
The charterer repudiated, and was sued by the owner, in Countess of Warwick S. S. Co. v. Le Nickel Soc. An., 34 T. L. R. 27, Admiral Shipping Co. v. Widner, Hopkins & Co., [1917] 1 K. B. 222, and Lloyd Royal Belge, etc., v. Stathatos, 33 T. L. R. 390 (as to the counterclaim) ; while the owner repudiated, and was sued hy the charterer, in Chinese Eng. & Mining Co. v. Sale, [ 1917] 2 K. B. 599, and Heilgers v. Cambrian, etc., Co., 33 T. L. R. 348. Throughout, the only question discussed has been -the probable duration of the requisition at the time when it was made; Tamplin, etc., Co. v. Anglo-Mexican, etc., Co., supra, being interpreted as leaving open only that issue.
There remains the question of the probable duration of the requisition. Even if the English rule be adopted, it appears to- me that the probabilities were all strongly that the requisition would outlast the remainder of the term. I take it that the whole circumstances must-be considered, and not merely the unexpired part of the term. If so, the evidence is strongly with the respondents. All the shipping men called were of opinion that there was small chance of any release at *134the time, and the well-known facts bear them out. In February, 1917, Germany had already declared her unrestricted U-boat campaign and it was in force. The seriousness of the situation to Great Britain is a matter of such common knowledge that I may refer to it. The following months of that year were among the most critical of the war, and the crisis turned wholly upon the destruction of shipping. The avowed purpose was to prevent the victualing of the United Kingdom, and there was no reason to question the relentless determination with which it was announced. While the success of the project was, of course, uncertain, the large diminution of Britain’s mercantile marine was to all intents a certainty, as well as the continued necessity of a national mobilization of all bottoms. Of course, no one could say how long the war would last; but the necessity of continuing that mobilization would not terminate with the war, for the shortage would in every probability be felt for long thereafter. The likelihood that a vessel then requisitioned should be released within 14 months appears to me, therefore, very slight.
If, on the other hand, the time at which the contract must be repudiated is at an interval after requisition, the result is the same. Every month after February, 1917, until April, 1918, only made the need of ships more pressing, and the event in fact justified the respondents’ assumption.
I should myself incline to think that any requisition ought prima facie to terminate the charter party. As I have said, I do not regard the conditions of the “breakdown” clause as necessarily exclusive. It does not seem to me, with deferencé, a very practicable rule to speculate upon whether the charter party will outlast the requisition by any period at all. Suppose it does outlast it by a few months. The charterer may have been deprived of the use of the ship without adequate return for perhaps all but a short time. It seems unfair to hold him to the hire. I recognize the difficulties where tire charter may have years to run; but when, as here, the question is of months, it seems to me that a requisition which is presumably intended for a substantial time should terminate the contract. This question it is not, however, necessary for me to decide.
Hence it follows that the libel should be dismissed, unless the libel-ants can show that the Admiralty hire was intended to be a full equivalent for the going rates. It is not necessary, therefore, to consider the questions of jurisdiction and of pleading which the case raises until it appears that they wish to raise that question. Within ten days after the filing of this opinion I will entertain a motion to amend the libel, alleging that fact; but, if none is made, the lihel will be dismissed. The replication in no event appears to me valid.