Hendrix v. Louisiana Public Service Commission

263 So. 2d 343, 262 La. 420, 1972 La. LEXIS 5035
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 7, 1972
Docket52053
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 263 So. 2d 343 (Hendrix v. Louisiana Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendrix v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 263 So. 2d 343, 262 La. 420, 1972 La. LEXIS 5035 (La. 1972).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Justice.

Since colonial days bar pilots have performed an essential service for passage of ships through the entrances of the Mississippi River at the confluence of these outlets with the Gulf of Mexico. Pilots have been and remain vital cogs in the river’s commerce.

The organization and the operations of pilots engaged in this service have varied with changing times. As long ago as 1720 *423 pilots operated from a base on a small island stronghold known as the Balize near the river’s mouth. Their work in these early times was closely related to the military defense. Under France, under Spain, under the early United States, these men, also known as branch pilots, have performed this difficult and exacting task with skill and with an intimate knowledge of the channels, currents, bars and winds. Changing their headquarters and base of operations from time to time, their status and reputation rose and fell often influenced by the wielders of power at the passes. Always, however, they somehow served the vital function of moving vessels through the difficult channels of the river.

Finally, in 1837, because of desultory practices, the legislature found it necessary to impose regulations upon pilots and to define their duties and responsibilities — an activity much in need of improvement, and of such overriding importance to commerce on the Mississippi, 1 must maintain reliable standards. By Act 106 of that year the Governor was empowered to appoint as many as 50 branch or bar pilots, no more. A board of three pilot examiners was created, members to be appointed from the pilots themselves. Qualifications were fixed and the pilots were required to provide a pilot boat of not less than 50 tons in constant readiness for service. They were also required to answer every request for a pilot upon penalty of losing their commission. These requirements prevail today. La.R.S. 34:941-34:963.

Since this time all seagoing vessels moving between New Orleans and foreign ports must be navigated through the Mississippi River approaches to the Port of New Orleans by these pilots. See Kotch v. Board of River Port Pilot Comm’rs, 330 U.S. 552, 67 S.Ct. 910, 91 L.Ed. 1093 (1946).

As a result of the 1837 Act, a Pilots Association was chartered, and from this time a noticeable improvement in pilotage service and the caliber of men composing the Association became evident. The Association has been, from the beginning, unconsciously cooperative and guild-like with strong traditions and high standards. Each man owns an equal share in the property holdings and profits of the Association. It has all the, legal attributes of a partnership. Labor, voting power, and earnings are all equally shared by the members. Membership is restricted; when a member-pilot is admitted he must pay $25,000 for his share of the physical facilities. This amount is deducted from his earnings over a three-year period. Recruitment of new personnel is entirely under the control of the pilots.

An apprenticeship program has been inaugurated in order that pilot replacements *425 may meet the exacting standards of the work. Trainees must develop through three stages — the boatman, apprentice pilot and cub pilot. 2

Until 1968 the legislature fixed the rates chargeable by Associated Branch Pilots (bar pilots) engaged in piloting vessels in and out of the entrances of the Mississippi River between Pilottown and the Gulf of Mexico. La.R.S. 34:943, 34:944. Another association known as River Port Pilots is separately constituted and organized. La. R.S.. 34:991-34:1008. By legislative act river, port pilots are granted the exclusive right to pilot vessels between Pilottown and New Orleans. A third pilot group designated as the New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots was later created. Their duty is to pilot seagoing vessels from the port of New Orleans to, and including, the port of Baton Rouge and intermediate ports and return. La.R.S. 34:1041-34:1050. A ship entering the Mississippi from the Gulf of Mexico is piloted the twenty miles distance from the mouth of the river to Pilottown by bar pilots through the “passes”. Between Pilottown and New Orleans, a distance of approximately ninety miles, ships are piloted by river pilots. From New Orleans to Baton Rouge, a distance of 140 miles, the New Orleans-Baton Rouge pilots have sole authority to pilot foreign vessels.

Fees and rates were, until 1968, fixed by the legislature for each these pilot associations. Historically, under this system, bar pilots received the highest compensation for their services. In recent years, however, compensation of the other pilot groups gradually increased reducing the disparity.

By Act 579 of 1968 (La.R.S. 34:1121-34:1127) a Pilotage Fee Commission was created for each pilot association. These commissions are composed of four members of the particular pilot association and four members representing the steamship industry they serve. They are known as pilot and industry commissioners'. ' The Louisiana Public Service Commission serves as a member of each pilotage fee commission in the event that the pilot and industry commissioners arc unable to resolve any dispute as to rates. Commissioners representing either pilots or industry may certify any proper issue to the Public Service Commission for adjudication when they cannot agree. The decision of the Public Service Commission constitutes the decision of the pilotage commission.

No change in the. rates charged:by the bar pilots has been granted by legislation •since 1960. On the'other hand, increases have been granted by the- Pilots. Fee Commission to the river port pilots and the New Orleans-Baton Rouge pilots to the ex *427 tent that the earnings oí river pilots rose above that of bar pilots, and the Baton Rouge pilots now earn as much.

Accordingly, in early 1969 the pilot commissioners of the Associated Branch Pilots requested a meeting of the entire Pilots Fee Commission to consider a proposal for an increase in rates and charges for services rendered by the bar pilots. A counter proposal by the industry commissioners aimed at equalizing the earnings of the bar pilots and river pilots was also submitted to the Pilot Fee Commission. When a majority of the Pilot Fee Commission could not agree upon a revision of existing rates, the industry commissioners certified the question to the Public Service Commission.

After a series of hearings in January, February and March of 1970 the Public Service Commission issued its order in November 1970 fixing the following fees for pilotage services of the bar pilots:

The said Bar Pilots shall be entitled to ask and to receive the following fees for their pilotage services:

$8.15 per foot of water drawn in fresh water by vessels piloted by them, provided that should any vessel have a draft of 15 feet or less, the pilotage charge shall be $120.00 which shall be the minimum charge for such service.

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Bluebook (online)
263 So. 2d 343, 262 La. 420, 1972 La. LEXIS 5035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrix-v-louisiana-public-service-commission-la-1972.