25 So. 2d 527 | La. | 1946
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Plaintiffs hold first class pilot licenses from the United States Government and are experienced pilots on the Mississippi River and other waters. They brought this suit against the Board of River Port Pilot Commissioners for the Port of New Orleans and the individual members thereof to have Act
In 1908 the Legislature passed an act regulating the system of river port pilotage for the Port of New Orleans, providing for a board of river port pilot commissioners, defining its duties, prescribing the necessary qualifications for port pilots and fixing their charges. Act
Section 1 of the act creates the Board of River Port Pilot Commissioners for the Port of New Orleans to consist of three citizens to be appointed by the Governor with the consent and advice of the Senate. Sections 2 and 3 provide for the appointment and commissioning by the Governor of twenty-eight pilots from those pilots who were actively and continuously engaged for one year previous to the passage of the act in piloting sea-going vessels from the head of the Passes to the Port of New Orleans and return. Section 4 declares that whenever there exists a necessity for more pilots among the river port pilots, the Board of River Port Pilot Commissioners shall hold examinations of applicants for appointment under such rules and regulations and with such requirements as they shall have provided, with the approval of the Governor; provided no applicant shall be considered by the Board unless he submits proper evidence of moral character, is a voter of the State, and shall have served six months apprenticeship in his proposed calling. Section 4 further provides, upon the certificate of the Board to the Governor that the applicant has complied with the provisions of the act, the Governor may in his discretion appoint to existing vacancies. *745
Act
Plaintiffs' petition alleges, in substance, that Act
The petition further sets out the names of a number of pilots who were appointed in 1938 and 1944, the last time appointments were made, and also sets out their relationship to those pilots then holding commissions or to pilots formerly holding commissions; that thirty-four of the forty-one pilots presently holding commissions are related to other pilots or to their predecessors.
The petition alleges it is a matter of common knowledge that membership as a commissioned pilot is closed to all persons except those favored by the pilots; that nevertheless four of the petitioners, whose names are mentioned at various times, made formal application to the defendant Board to be considered as applicants for examination as pilots and that their applications have been ignored. That being barred by the provisions of Act
The petition alleges that for the above reasons Act
The contentions raised by the petition require this Court to determine whether Act
Pilot regulations are regulations of commerce upon navigable waters. In Ex parte McNiel, 13 Wall. 236, 238,
It has long been settled by decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States that although state laws concerning pilotage are regulations of commerce they fall within that class of powers which may be exercised by the states until Congress has seen fit to act upon the subject. Cooley v. Society for Relief of Distressed Pilots, Their Widows and Children, Board of Wardens of Port of Philadelphia to use of, 12 How. 299,
Since Congress has not acted to relieve vessels engaged in foreign trade from the provisions of state pilotage laws, the State has power to legislate concerning such pilotage.
Pilotage is not merely a business. It is a highly specialized and hazardous calling which, in the absence of action by Congress, is under the control of the State. By the adoption of Act
Plaintiffs agree that the pilotage of vessels engaged in foreign trade is subject to state regulation, but they insist that *749
such regulation must not be arbitrary or discriminatory, which they contend is the case with respect to the statutes in question. Plaintiffs' contention is based upon the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and Section 2 of Article 1 of the State Constitution. The argument is that the right of a person to render pilotage services is a fundamental right guaranteed by the constitutional provisions, and that therefore Act
It is indisputable that the right to follow any of the ordinary occupations of life is one of the privileges of citizenship, and this includes the right to pursue any lawful occupation without statutory restrictions except such restrictions as may be applied to all persons pursuing the same occupation under the same conditions. But it is also indisputable that there are certain occupations in which the public has such interest as will make those occupations subject to statutory regulations, or even prohibition. The constitutional provisions on which plaintiffs rely were not designed to interfere with the public powers of the State; and within the limits stated by the Constitution, Federal and State, the Legislature is free to determine what subjects are proper to be legislated upon in the conservation *750
of order, morals, health and safety. The cases relied on by plaintiffs, including the much cited case of Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
The argument that the statutes under review confer upon the commissioned pilots a monopoly of the business and permits them by a combination among themselves to exclude all other persons from rendering pilotage service is also in effect a denial of the power of the State to regulate the business since, if the State has power to regulate and in so doing to name and commission those who are to perform pilotage service, it must follow that no monopoly or combination in a legal sense can arise from the fact that the duly authorized agents of the State are alone allowed to perform the duties devolving upon them under the law.
The authorities support the legal propositions we have hereinabove referred to concerning the right of the State to control and regulate the business of pilotage within its territorial limits. Thus in People ex rel. Palmer v. Woodbury,
The leading and controlling case on the subject is Olsen v. Smith,
Many authorities are cited on behalf of plaintiffs which announce or reaffirm sound principles of law, but we fail to find their application to the issues involved in this case. For example, it is argued that the doctrine for which plaintiffs contend is sustained by the case of State v. Board of Pilotage Commissioners,
In discussing the cases of Olsen v. Smith, Caples v. McNaught and Palmer v. Woodbury, the Supreme Court of Washington pointed out that those cases were distinguishable on the facts from the case which it was deciding and that also in those cases the Legislature of the respective states, either directly or by implication, conferred authority upon the board or individuals *755 to limit the number of pilots whereas, the statute of Washington conferred no such power on the board either expressly or impliedly.
It is argued with great earnestness on behalf of plaintiffs that if the statutes in question are constitutional on their face, they are rendered unconstitutional by the arbitrary manner in which they are administered by the defendant Board of River Pilot Commissioners. In plaintiffs' petition it is alleged that the defendant Board has always assumed and exercised authority with respect to the commissioning of pilots; that no examinations have been held and that appointments have always been made on a personal basis, the appointee being first selected by the members of the Crescent River Port Pilots Association, an organization composed exclusively of commissioned river pilots and of which the three defendant commissioners are members; that in a vast majority of cases, the appointees have been kinsmen of one or more of the pilots with no pilotage experience whatever prior to their selection; and that it is a matter of common knowledge membership as a commissioned pilot is closed to all except those having the favor of the pilots.
Generally speaking, the constitutionality of a statute must be determined not by what is done, but what it authorizes to be done under its provisions. Thus in Ward v. Leche,
The fact that power is particularly given and may be abused by incompetent or unscrupulous officials chosen to administer it does not justify the argument that the power itself can not be constitutionally exercised, for it is only because of the existence of the power that makes possible its abuse.
The allegations of the petition to which we have referred are, in their essence, that the Crescent River Port Pilots Association controls the commissioning of pilots. But there is a clear distinction existing between the Board of River Pilot Commissioners and the River Pilots Association. The Board of Commissioners is composed of pilots commissioned by the Governor as officers of the State. The Pilots Association is a private corporation organized under the general corporation laws of the State. The Legislature, in adopting Act
As was pointed out by the Supreme Court of the United States in Ex parte McNiel, 13 Wall. 236,
It is argued that the Board of River Port Pilots dictates the appointment of pilots but, when tested by the terms of the statute itself, the argument must fall. The only power conferred by the statute upon the Board of Pilot Commissioners is the power, when the necessity exists for additional pilots, to hold examinations under such rules and regulations and with such requirements as they may provide, with the Governor's approval. In holding *758 these examinations, the Board is limited to applicants who submit proper evidence of their moral character, are voters of the State, and have served six months apprenticeship in their proposed calling. Upon the certificate of the Board to the Governor that the applicants have complied with the provisions of the act, the Governor may, in his discretion, appoint to existing vacancies. The Board of Commissioners has nothing to do with the selection of apprentices. Plaintiffs' charge that only a favored few may become apprentices is a charge levelled against the Pilots Association and has no relation whatsoever to any action of the Board. The statute does not provide for the appointment of those making the highest grades. It merely provides that the applicant shall have served an apprenticeship of six months and have passed the examination prescribed by the Board of Commissioners. The right to make the appointment is conferred upon the Governor and plaintiffs can not be heard to complain because the Governor in exercising his authority appoints some persons who are closely related to other pilots instead of ignoring such relationship and appointing plaintiffs. The reasons which move the Governor to make the appointments are beyond judicial inquiry.
It is argued that Act
The leading case of State v. Dalon, 35 La.Ann. 1141, 1144, contains a full discussion on the subject of special laws and general laws. In that case the legislative act organizing the Criminal District Court for the Parish of Orleans was involved. Dalon, who was convicted of arson, challenged the validity of his conviction on the ground that the creation of the machinery of the Criminal District Court was a local or special law requiring publication, because it did not operate throughout the State and all of the parishes thereof. The Court, after characterizing the contention as preposterous and one that could not stand criticism, pointed out that: "The real distinction between public or general laws and local or special laws is, that the former affect the community as a whole, whether throughout the State or one of its subdivisions; and the latter affect *760 private persons, private property, private or local private interests."
There are a number of decisions of this Court holding that a statute is not a special or local law merely because of the fact that the conditions under which it can operate prevail in only certain parts of the State. See State v. Donato,
In State v. Donato, a liquor statute that was resticted to apply only to prohibition parishes, was held to be a general law notwithstanding the restriction. In that case this Court held: "A law, general in its terms, applying to all persons * * *, is not a `local law' * * * merely because the conditions under which it can operate prevail only in certain parts of the state."
The general rule is set forth in 59 Corpus Juris, at page 536, as follows: "A statute is not a local or special law within the meaning of constitutional provisions requiring notice if persons or things throughout the State are affected, or if it operates on a subject in which the people at large are interested, even though its enforcement be restricted to a particular locality, or if an act is both general and special or private."
Pilots are State officers, created by the Legislature. A source of legislative authority is the police power of the State. Its exercise is in the promotion of *761 the general welfare. The fact that the Legislature deemed it necessary to regulate pilotage on the Mississippi River between Southport and Pilot Town, but did not find it necessary to regulate pilotage in other parts of the State does not make the regulatory statute a local or special law. The statute was adopted by the Legislature in the exercise of State sovereignty and the fact that the exercise of such sovereignty is not required for the regulation of pilotage throughout the State does not bring the law within the requirement of Section 6 of Article 4 of the Constitution. The test of whether a law is special or local is whether it operates only on a certain number of persons, within a class, but does not affect generally all persons within that class. The regulation by the Legislature of pilotage between Southport and Pilot Town without attempting to regulate it where such regulation is not needed is a matter solely for legislative determination. It would lead to an absurd result for the Legislature, in the exercise of the sovereign powers of the State, to prescribe regulations for pilots on every bayou and stream in the State. The congestion of shipping within the harbor of the Port of New Orleans and on the Mississippi River between Pilot Town and the upper limits of the port is obviously the reason for the legislation. Its need grows out of the congestion of such shipping and the demands of interested parties for the protection of commerce by the regulation of pilotage. No argument is necessary to sustain the proposition that the Legislature is not required to regulate pilotage where such regulation *762 is not needed in order to regulate pilotage where such pilotage is needed.
Plaintiffs ask, in the alternative, that the defendant Board be ordered to examine them as to their qualifications as pilots and, finally, to certify them to the Governor for appointment as such. But, in so asking, plaintiffs fail to show the need for additional pilots and that they have served an apprenticeship of six months as required by the statute. What plaintiffs are seeking, in the final analysis, is the right to become pilots upon the Mississippi River under the provisions of Act
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
HAWTHORNE, J., takes no part.
O'NIELL, C. J., recused.