18 F. Cas. 1068 | D. Or. | 1861
The libel in this cause was filed on the 27th of March, 1861, and, after the formal allegations, avers that the libellant, on the 17th of March, 1861, and thereafter, was a duly licensed pilot, for the Columbia Elver bar, according to the laws of Oregon, and attached to the pilot-boat California, on said bar. That on the said 17th day of March, the libellant boarded the said steamship Panama “just outside” said bar, and offered his services as pilot to conduct said steamer over said bar to the port of Astoria, in' Oregon. That the said steamship at the time was bound in, and the said libellant was the only duly authorized pilot on board said steamship on the said day, and the first pilot who offered his services to her that day outside the bar.
That on the 22d of March, in the year aforesaid, the said steamship being bound outward, the said libellant hailed said steamship at the port of Astoria, and offered his services to conduct said steamship as pilot, across said bar to the sea. That libellant was the first pilot who offered his services to said steamship on said “ occasion,” and that there was no pilot on said steamship “ at the time.” That said steamship, when inward bound, on said 17th of March, drew fourteen feet of water,, and that libellant is entitled to full pilotage therefor, the same being twelve dollars per foot, in all, the sum of $168. That when outward bound, on the said 22d of March, she drew thirteen feet of water, and that libellant is entitled to half pilotage therefor, the same being six dollars per foot, in all, the sum of $78. That said sums of money remain due and unpaid to libellant.
On the first of July thereafter, the libellant filed an amended libel, and admits that on the said 17th of March said Rogers, “ a person pretending to be a duly authorized pilot, was on board said steamship Panama,” and piloted her across the bar to the port of Astoria, but avers that libellant offered his services before Rogers did. Admits the same as to the voyage out on the 22d of March, and avers that libellant “ hailed the said steamship, and offered his services as pilot,” before Rogers did. That said Rogers pretends to be an authorized pilot by virtue of a license from one Pitfield, “ a person pretending to be a supervising inspector of the fourth district of the "United States.” That “ if said license is genuine,” it does not authorize said Rogers to pilot steamships over the Columbia River bar. Admits that Rogers, at the dates aforesaid, had a license as pilot on the Columbia River bar from the board of pilot commissioners of "Washington Territory, by virtue of the said act of 1854, of said territory; hut avers that Rogers never performed the conditions imposed by said law, and on that account said license never toot effect. That said act of 1854 has long since been repealed, and that all licenses issued under it became void on such repeal. Admits that the steamship Panama is an ocean-going vessel, propelled, in whole or in part, by steam, engaged at the dates aforesaid in carrying freight and passengers between San Francisco and Portland, and avers that she also sails to the port of Yietoria, in British Columbia, and that she was regisas a “ vessel trading to and with a foreign port.”
From the evidence, it appears that the libellant was constituted a bar pilot of the Columbia River bar, under a law of the State of Oregon, “approved October 17th, 1860,” by a warrant from the “hoard of pilot commissioners,” bearing date January 22d, 1861. That Moses Rogers was constituted a bar pilot of the Columbia River bar under a law of Washington Territory, passed February 28th, 1854, by a warrant of
I conclude, from these premises, that the pilot laws of Washington Territory are valid and binding, and that Moses Rogers was a duly authorized pilot for the Columbia bar, on the 17th of March, 1861, when the libellant boarded the Panama. By the law of Oregon, the first pilot that “ offers his services outside of the bar” to a vessel bound inward is entitled to full pilotage, whether his services are accepted or not, and to one bound outward, half pilotage. Did the libellant or Rogers first offer his services on the 17 th of March? It is substantially admitted by the pleadings that the libellant was the first pilot that boarded the Panama outside the bar, and from the evidence, it satisfactorily appears that Rogers was on board at the time, hired by the month, to run on board as pilot between the ports of San Francisco and Portland, and that he brought the steamship over the bar as pilot on the occasion in question. Under these circumstances, is Rogers to be considered as a bar pilot, tendering his services to the Panama before the libellant. I think while Rogers holds the warrant, in a suit between third persons, he must
The next question is, the claim of the libellant for half pilotage on the outward-bound voyage. I find from the evidence, that on the 22d of March, between upper and lower Astoria, and below the custom-house, as the Panama was proceeding to sea, the libellant rowed out into 'the stream, hailed the Panama, and offered his services as pilot. That the master of the Panama paid no attention to him, but proceeded with the vessel some three or four hundred yards down the stream, and opposite the wharf at lower Astoria. There the vessel was stopped, and Sogers, who appears to have been on the shore waiting for the vessel, came on board immediately, and took charge of her as pilot, and took her out to sea. This all occurred on what is understood among navigators,
That “ it shall be unlawful for any person to employ, or any
The constitution gives Congress power to regulate commerce. {Art. I., seo. 8.) This includes the power to regulate navigation, and pilot laws are regulations of navigation. In the case of Cooley v. Board of Wardens, 12 How. 315-16, the Supreme Court says : “ That the power to regulate commerce includes the regulation of navigation, we consider settled. And when we loot to the nature of the service performed by pilots, to the relation which that service and its compensations bear to navigation between the several States, and between the ports of the United States and foreign countries, we are brought to the conclusion, that the regulation of the qualification of pilots, of the modes and times of offering and rendering their services, of the responsibilities which shall rest upon them, of the powers they shall possess, of the compensation they may demand, and of the penalties by which their rights and duties may be enforced, do constitute regulations of navigation, and consequently of commerce, within the just meaning of this clause of the constitution.” The power of Congress in the premises cannot be questioned. As to its intent, there is no limitation in the words of the act. It speaks of all “ such vessels,” wherever they may be, whether upon bars, bays, rivers or inlets. As to the argument from inconvenience and the impropriety of superseding the State laws, I cannot agree with it. The acts of Congress within its power are not to be restrained in their import, or limited in their operation, because it can be supposed or shown that