Adolfo Campos v. Puerto Rico Sun Oil Company, Inc.

536 F.2d 970, 1976 A.M.C. 2629, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 8347
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 24, 1976
Docket75-1320
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 536 F.2d 970 (Adolfo Campos v. Puerto Rico Sun Oil Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adolfo Campos v. Puerto Rico Sun Oil Company, Inc., 536 F.2d 970, 1976 A.M.C. 2629, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 8347 (1st Cir. 1976).

Opinion

LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, a licensed ship pilot, brought this action to recover pilotage fees. The dispute centers around a single question: whether a pilot’s license held by another pilot, Fructuoso Reyes, for the Port of Yabucoa (the Port), Puerto Rico, properly authorizes Reyes to pilot across the one- and-a-half mile portion of the Sound of Vieques (the Sound) that separates the Port from the open sea. Ruling that it did not, the district court granted summary judgment for plaintiff. 1

Puerto Rico is a compulsory pilotage jurisdiction. Under 23 L.P.R.A. § 2412 (1974 Supp.),

“No alien ship nor any ship of the United States navigating under registration [with certain exemptions not here relevant] may enter or leave a harbor without obtaining pilot service from a pilot licensed by the [Puerto Rico Ports] Authority for the said harbor.” 2

Defendant, which has an oil refinery at the Port, has operated tankers to and from the Port since 1971. To comply with section 2412, defendant engaged Reyes, who was licensed by the Authority and the Coast Guard for the Port, to pilot all its ships within the Port. The journey between the Port and the open sea, however, necessarily involves crossing the Sound of Vieques, in which the Port itself lies. 3 Ships can sail either to the north, thereby transiting the full length of the Sound, or to the south, thus crossing only a narrow one-and-a-half mile stretch of the Sound before reaching the open sea. In every instance, defendant’s ships have taken the shorter southern route across the Sound. Although Reyes held no license expressly issued for the Sound, and licenses are valid only for the port for which issued, § 2403, defendant *972 kept Reyes on board as pilot rather than employ a second pilot for the short leg across the Sound. Reyes would thus pilot defendant’s ships beyond the entrance of the Port to and from a boarding point which was in the open sea approximately two miles away and one half a mile outside the Sound’s southern boundary.

In this action plaintiff asserted that he was a licensed pilot for the Sound, although not for the Port, and that Reyes’ Port license did not properly authorize him to pilot through the Sound on this approach to the Port. Under the theory advanced by plaintiff, defendant is in effect operating its ships in the Sound without a licensed pilot, in violation of section 2412. Since plaintiff himself had allegedly offered defendant his services, 4 which defendant refused, plaintiff claimed that defendant was liable to him for the statutory pilotage fees. 5

Both parties filed in the district court motions for summary judgment, accompanied by affidavits, exhibits, and stipulations as to certain facts. On this record, the court in a written decision and order found for plaintiff on the issue of liability. See note 1 supra. Defendant then filed a “motion to vacate judgement and for reconsideration”, 6 on the grounds of mistake, inadvertence, and excusable neglect. In support thereof, it submitted additional affidavits and exhibits and purportedly disputed facts to which it had earlier stipulated. A hearing was held and the motion was subsequently denied in a second, more comprehensive written order. Defendant appeals from both the order of summary judgment and the denial of its subsequent motion. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we disagree with the judgment below.

We begin by considering Reyes’ licenses. Reyes’ Authority license, issued on October 1, 1971, certified that he “ha[d] given satisfactory evidence . . . that he is a skillful Pilot of Steam and/or motor vessels and can be entrusted to perform such duties in the waters of Yabucoa, Puerto Rico.” Jose Ysern de la Cruz, chief of the Maritime Department of the Authority, stated in an affidavit that by issuing this license the Authority considered Reyes “skillful to bring in and take out vessels into the harbor entrance from three miles at sea”. He also stated that “it has always been the policy of the Ports Authority, when licensing its pilots, that they be licensed for whatever port to board and unboard the vessels from sea to the port.”

Reyes’ Coast Guard license was issued on October 29, 1971, 7 for several Puerto Rico *973 provided harbors, including the Port, that

“Fructuoso Reyes having been duly examined and found competent by the undersigned, is licensed to serve as . first class pilot of steam and motor vessels of any gross tons upon Puerto de Yabucoa, Puerto Rico.”

Another endorsement was later added, which read, “First class pilot from sea to Puerto de Yabucoa, Puerto Rico.” Harry Oldford, who was at that time the Coast Guard officer responsible for the examination of pilot’s license applicants, 46 C.F.R. §§ 10.02-l(b) and 10.02-5(g)(l) & (h)(1), stated, also by affidavit, that he had examined Reyes and that this license “automatically” authorized Reyes to pilot “through that section of the Sonda de Vieques on the Yabucoa range to the line of demarcation”. The later endorsement, he added, did not broaden but merely clarified the original grant of authority. Thus, responsible officials of both the commonwealth and the federal agencies rather plainly believe that Reyes’ license includes pilotage within the disputed territory in the Sound. 8

Despite these interpretations, the district court concluded that Reyes’ license did not authorize pilotage outside the entrance of the Port. It rested its conclusion on two grounds. It found first that, in the course of the application procedure for his Port license, Reyes had never been examined as to his knowledge of the Sound by either the federal or the commonwealth agencies. And although he had taken preliminary steps to procure a license for the Sound, he had not yet been examined for that application. The court noted that Coast Guard regulations, 46 C.F.R. §§ 10.05-42(a) and 10.05^i3(a), require a written examination, and Puerto Rico statutes, 23 L.P.R.A. §§ 2406, 2404 (1974 Supp.), a “careful examination”, of an applicant’s knowledge of the route and waters applied for. The court therefore concluded that the agencies did not have authority to license Reyes for the Sound and that any statement or endorsement which did so was ultra vires. Alternatively, the court found that the endorsement on Reyes’ Coast Guard license, “from sea”, referred only to the “sea buoy No. 2 marking the entrance to Yabucoa’s channel”, and so concluded that even on its face, the license did not authorize pilotage on the Sound outside the Port. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we respectfully differ with the court as to both conclusions.

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Bluebook (online)
536 F.2d 970, 1976 A.M.C. 2629, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 8347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adolfo-campos-v-puerto-rico-sun-oil-company-inc-ca1-1976.