Joseph "Ted" Davisson Versus Board of Examiners for New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots for the Mississippi River and Casey E. Clayton

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 2023
Docket22-CA-519
StatusUnknown

This text of Joseph "Ted" Davisson Versus Board of Examiners for New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots for the Mississippi River and Casey E. Clayton (Joseph "Ted" Davisson Versus Board of Examiners for New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots for the Mississippi River and Casey E. Clayton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Joseph "Ted" Davisson Versus Board of Examiners for New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots for the Mississippi River and Casey E. Clayton, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

JOSEPH "TED" DAVISSON NO. 22-CA-519

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR NEW COURT OF APPEAL ORLEANS AND BATON ROUGE STEAMSHIP PILOTS FOR THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND STATE OF LOUISIANA CASEY E. CLAYTON

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 823-705, DIVISION "C" HONORABLE JUNE B. DARENSBURG, JUDGE PRESIDING

May 24, 2023

JUDE G. GRAVOIS JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Stephen J. Windhorst, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

REVERSED AND REMANDED JGG SJW JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, JOSEPH "TED" DAVISSON David J. Schexnaydre Robert A. Barnett

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE-2ND APPELLANT, NEW ORLEANS BATON ROUGE STEAMSHIP PILOTS ASSOCIATION E. John Litchfield Michael J. Marsiglia

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR NEW ORLEANS - BATON ROUGE STEAMSHIP PILOTS FOR THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER Jack M. Capella Robert E. Couhig, Jr. Jason A. Cavignac Blair C. Constant

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, CASEY E. CLAYTON Jarred P. Bradley GRAVOIS, J.

Plaintiff/appellant, Joseph “Ted” Davisson, and intervenor, New Orleans

Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots Association (“NOBRA”), appeal the trial court’s

July 18, 2022 judgment which granted the exception of no right of action filed by

defendant, the Board of Examiners for New Orleans Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots

for the Mississippi River (“the Board of Examiners”), and dismissed with prejudice

plaintiff’s case against the Board of Examiners and the intervention of NOBRA.

Mr. Davisson, a state-commissioned Mississippi River pilot who attained the age

of 70 in 2020, alleged in his suit that the Board of Examiners, without proper legal

authority or due process, ordered NOBRA to take him off piloting rotations and

effectively forced his retirement as a river pilot, based upon its interpretation of

language found within Section 4 of Act 902 of 2004,1 which ostensibly sets a

mandatory retirement time for commissioned river pilots at the end of the calendar

year in which they attain the age of 70.

On appeal, Mr. Davisson argues that the trial court committed legal error in

granting the Board of Examiners’ exception of no right of action, wrongfully

relying on the aforementioned portion of Section 4 of Act 902. Mr. Davisson

asserts that the central question in this case is whether Section 4 of Act 902, that

the Board of Examiners claims purports to enact a mandatory retirement age of 70,

in fact actually does so. He argues that because the relied upon language is not

found in the text of any statute amended or enacted by Act 902 of 2004, but rather

is found in “comments” to the statutes, it does not legally establish a mandatory

retirement age for river pilots.

1 See RIVER PILOTS, 2004 La. Sess. Law Serv. Act 902 (H.B. 1708) (WEST), which provides, in Section 4, in pertinent part: “… No state pilot shall retain their state commission beyond the end of the calendar year in which they reach the age of seventy years old.”

22-CA-519 1 NOBRA, who intervened in Mr. Davisson’s suit against the Board of

Examiners and whose intervention was also dismissed with prejudice, argues on

appeal that the efficacy of the language in Act 902 does not affect a right of action

to challenge that efficacy, and that the retirement language contained in Act 902

does not carry the effect of law.

The Board of Examiners responds in brief that Act 902 of 2004 does in fact

establish a valid mandatory retirement age for river pilots, and thus the trial court

was correct in sustaining its exception of no right of action. The Board of

Examiners argues that Mr. Davisson has no right of action against the Board of

Examiners because he is admittedly past the end of the calendar year in which he

turned 70. The Board of Examiners argues, therefore, that he is not in the class of

persons—those river pilots who have not reached the end of the calendar year in

which they turned 70—who have the right under the law to retain their commission

as a river pilot.

For the following reasons, we reverse and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

As explained by NOBRA in its appellate brief, NOBRA is an association of

men and women who have each been commissioned by the State of Louisiana to

pilot vessels along the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge

(and all intermediate ports and anchorages). NOBRA itself does not pilot vessels

and the only employees it has are administrative in nature, nor does it employ

pilots. One of the essential services provided by NOBRA is to dispatch pilots to

particular and specific pilotage jobs which are required by industries in order to

ultimately move product safely along NOBRA’s route. Pilots are put on a list to be

assigned and are assigned as their name or turn comes up in rotation.

Defendant, the Board of Examiners, is a state agency which generally

oversees pilotage along NOBRA’s route. Each of the other two pilotage groups

22-CA-519 2 which pilot vessels along other designated Mississippi River routes has its own

state agency which provides oversight. According to NOBRA’s brief, NOBRA

relies upon the Board of Examiners to inform it when a pilot is not eligible to

receive a work assignment, for any reason.

Plaintiff, Mr. Davisson, is a state-commissioned river pilot, and according to

his petition, was eligible at the time suit was filed to be put into the ordinary

rotation in order to receive pilotage work assignments. Mr. Davisson attained the

age of 70 on September 27, 2020. According to the record, he was informed by

Captain Casey E. Clayton, president of the Board of Examiners, around August 1,

2021, that as he had turned 70 in 2020, he was in violation of Act 902 because he

had not retired his state commission, despite receiving notice in 2021 that the

Board of Examiners had determined that it was necessary to move forward with

enforcing the “law as dictated” in Act 902. According to his pleadings, Captain

Clayton removed Mr. Davisson from the pilot rotation around the same time,

which prevented him from receiving pilot assignments, effectively functioning as a

constructive or forced retirement. According to the pleadings, Captain Clayton

acted on the wording in Section 4 of Act 902 of 2004, which states, in pertinent

part: “No state pilot shall retain their state commission beyond the end of the

calendar year in which they reach the age of seventy years old.”2

2 In its entirety, Section 4 of Act 902 of 2004 provides: Section 4. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act, the provisions of the latest rate orders of the Public Service Commission shall be null and void as of the effective date of this Act only with respect to funding of any new pilots for the Associated Branch Pilots for the Port of New Orleans and the River Port Pilots for the Port of New Orleans. The approval and funding of six pilots on July 1, 2004, and six pilots on July 1, 2005, shall remain in effect from the rate order of the Public Service Commission for the New Orleans Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots Association. The pilotage fee commission shall fund no less than fourteen pilots for the Associated Branch Pilots of the Port of Lake Charles until December 31, 2006.

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Joseph "Ted" Davisson Versus Board of Examiners for New Orleans and Baton Rouge Steamship Pilots for the Mississippi River and Casey E. Clayton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-ted-davisson-versus-board-of-examiners-for-new-orleans-and-baton-lactapp-2023.