27 Mr Holmes placed reliance on that policy consideration and he submitted that the Act drew no distinction as to who the owners of the vessel were, whether public or private corporations or individuals. Mr McHugh contended that such a policy has no application in a case such as this where the shipowner was, in fact, an instrumentality created by statute. Neither the Responsibility of Shipowners Act 1733 (7 Geo 2, c.15), referred to by Palmer J in McKinnon v Huxley, nor the Merchant Shipping Act 1786 (26 Geo 3, c.86), which amended it, imposed any time limit on the bringing of an action against shipowners. Rather they were directed to restricting claims to the value of ship and cargo: see K C McGuffie, The law of collisions at sea, Marsden's British Shipping Law vol 4 (1961) 11th ed. Stevens & Sons at paragraphs 171 and 346. Neither the Maritime Conventions Act 1911 (UK) nor the Merchant Shipping Act 1995 (UK) nor, more importantly, the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW) have any preamble of the kind in the Responsibility of Shipowners Act: see also Thomas and Steel, Temperley on the Merchant Shipping Acts (1976) 7th ed. Stevens & Sons at paragraphs 824 - 844.
28 Whether the limitation of time within which action could be brought pursuant to the maritime conventions that are the subject of the Maritime Conventions Act 1911 and their analogues are a result of bargaining between, on the one hand, member states having shipowners' protection as a priority and on the other hand, member states having no such interest to protect, it is not discernable from the Act itself, but it may well be that the shorter than usual period of time for action to be brought against shipowners is a reflection of the same protectionist approach that was the genesis of the Responsibility of Shipowners Act.