Published on: July 11, 2025
ADMIRALTY (JURISDICTION & SETTLEMENT OF MARITIME CLAIMS) ACT, 2017
ADMIRALTY (JURISDICTION & SETTLEMENT OF MARITIME CLAIMS) ACT, 2017
NEWS – Kerala High Court ordered conditional arrest of Liberian ship MSC Akiteta II under Section 4 of the Admiralty Act, following a state government suit.
HIGHLIGHTS
- Objective of the Act:
- Consolidates laws related to admiralty jurisdiction, arrest, detention, and sale of vessels.
- Repeals outdated British-era laws like Admiralty Court Act, 1861; Colonial Courts of Admiralty Acts, 1890 & 1891; and relevant Letters Patent of 1865.
- Applicability:
- Applies to all vessels regardless of owner’s domicile.
- Exemptions:
- Inland vessels (per Inland Vessels Act, 1917),
- Vessels under construction (unless notified),
- Warships and non-commercial government vessels,
- Foreign non-commercial vessels (if notified).
- Admiralty Jurisdiction:
- Conferred on 8 High Courts: Bombay, Calcutta, Madras, Karnataka, Gujarat, Orissa, Kerala, Hyderabad.
- Jurisdiction extends to territorial waters.
- Scope of Maritime Claims:
- Disputes on ownership, damage/loss caused by vessel, personal injury, cargo loss, or commercial agreements.
- Powers of Arrest:
- Courts may arrest vessels to secure maritime claims.
- Arrest possible for ownership disputes, mortgage claims, or damage liability.
- Claimant may need to provide security to protect the defendant in wrongful arrest cases.
- Sale of Vessels:
- High Court may order vessel sale and determine title over sale proceeds.
