Morse v. . Heide

68 S.E. 173, 152 N.C. 625, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 25, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 173 (Morse v. . Heide) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. . Heide, 68 S.E. 173, 152 N.C. 625, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 331 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

Walker, J.

This action was brought by tbe plaintiff to recover pilotage fees alleged to be due him, and wbicb were beld by tbe defendant to abide tbe judgment of tbe court as to whether said Morse is entitled to recover tbe same. Tbe -suit was commenced in tbe 'court of a justice of tbe peace. Tbe defendant filed an answer, to wbicb the plaintiff demurred. Tbe justice gave a judgment for tbe plaintiff, and the defendant ajipealed to tbe Superior Court, where tbe case was beard upon tbe answer and demurrer.

Tbe facts disclosed by tbe record are, that tbe plaintiff, who was a duly licensed pilot of tbe Cape Fear bar and river, sailed from Southport for Charleston, S. 0., on tbe boat Herman Oelrichs, and that at or near Charleston and far beyond the bounds or station established by tbe Board of Commissioners of Navigation and Pilotage for tbe Cape. Pear bar and river, and pretending to be in tbe performance of bis duty as a pilot, spoke tbe ship Soutra off tbe lightship near Charleston harbor, and tbe plaintiff was taken aboard said ship for tbe purpose of piloting her over tbe Cape Pear bar at tbe mouth of tbe river. When tbe said vessel bad reached tbe cruising grounds established by tbe said board of commissioners for the Cape Fear-River and bar, L. J. Pepper, who was also a licensed pilot of tbe said river and bar, spoke tbe vessel Soutra and demanded tbe right to pilot her in, wbicb demand was refused, on tbe ground that tbe Soutra already bad a pilot on board, that is, tbe i>laintiff T. M. Morse. When tbe Soutra bad passed over tbe bar, certain licensed pilots, including L. J. Pepper, filed a complaint against' tbe plaintiff for violating tbe rules and regulations of the said board of commissioners with reference to tbe station or cruising grounds for pilots and their boats, and tbe matter was beard, and tbe commissioners decided that the plaintiff bad violated said rules and regulations, and ordered that tbe plaintiff. should not pilot tbe said vessel1 out to sea, and further decided that be was not entitled to tbe pilotage fees, either inward or outward, and adjudged that L. J. Pej)per was entitled to pilot tbe vessel out to sea, which was done by him. By agreement, tbe amount of tbe fees was deposited with tbe defendant, who was tbe agent of tbe ship, to await tbe result of tbis action.

*627 It is conceded that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover if the commissioners acted within the scope of their power in making the rules and regulations as to the station of pilots and their cruising grounds, because the plaintiff had transgressed these rules and regulations, which are as follows:

“1. No pilot will be permitted to leave his station to go to a neighboring port for the purpose of piloting a vessel bound from that port for the Cape Fear Eiver, unless under peculiar circumstances, at the discretion of the chairman of this board. And eveiy licensed pilot is expected and required to provide the means of boarding and leaving vessels at sea by pilot boats or cutters. Arrangements with tugboats or fishing boats or any other means of approaching or leaving vessels at sea will not be permitted-under penalty of the revocation of license at the discretion of the board.
“2. The cruising grounds of the Cape Fear 'pilots shall in future (after 24 April, 1908) be restricted to that area bounded on the south by Little Eiver and an imaginary line drawn directly southeast from Little Eiver, and bounded on the north by Bogue Inlet and an imaginary line drawn directly southeast from Bogue Inlet, and in such area only shall Cape Fear pilots cruise and offer their services for pilotage.”

The defendant contended that the Legislature had conferred authority upon the Board of Commissioners of Navigation and Pilotage, by Laws 1907, ch. 625 (Pell’s Eevisal, ch. 104, sec. 4957b), to adopt said rules and regulations. That section is as follows: “The commissioners shall from time to time make and establish such rales and regulations respecting the arrangement and station of pilots, for the purpose of compelling them to be on duty at all times, as to them shall seem advisable, and shall impose reasonable fines, forfeitures and penalties for the purpose of enforcing the execution of such' rales and regulations.”

We have held in St. George v. Hardie, 147 N. C., 88, that the act of 1907 is constitutional and is a lawful exercise of the power vested in the Legislature. It is customary to confer upon such boards of navigation and pilotage the power to- make reasonable and proper rules and regulations for the government of those who are licensed as pilots, and we can see no reason why this custom is not sanctioned by law, of why the Board of Commissioners of Navigation and Pilotage may not, in the exercise of the power thus vested in them, prescribe the limits of cruising grounds and the stations of pilots. 30 Cyc., p. 1611. Nor do we see how any person who accepts a license which confers upon him the privilege of piloting ships on their *628 inward or outward passage on the river and over the bar can .well complain of the. conditions upon wbicb such license is granted, provided they are reasonable; and it must necessarily be that the rules and regulations adopted by the Board of Navigation and Pilotage for the Cape Fear river and bar, to which we have referred, were not only reasonable, but necessary for the safety of vessels and the convenience of navigation. The plaintiff’s counsel, in his brief, as we construe it, deems the general policy of the law to be that there should be an early tender of pilotage services, and that a pilot may, therefore, in the absence of statutory prohibition, cruise for incoming vessels beyond the pilot waters or pilotage grounds of his port. He argues that this prohibition must be by statute directly, but no reason appears to us why the Legislature, if it has the right to prescribe the limit of cruising or pilotage grounds, may not confer authority upon a local board, better acquainted than itself with the nature of the service to be rendered and the conditions and circumstances of the particular case, to carry out the legislative will by marking out the grounds and adopting such rules and regulations as in its judgment will best promote the object and purpose of providing for such a service. No authority was cited to us which sustains the contention of the plaintiff that the Legislature cannot confer such power upon a local board.

The only question, therefore, which is now presented for our consideration, is whether such authority was conferred by Laws 1907, ch. 625, and of this we have no doubt. It is true that, as said in some of the decisions, the policy of the law is to induce pilots to cruise somewhat largely, for the purpose of speaking incoming vessels at an early period; but it is also true that it is more important they should not cruise so far afield as to be absent from their post of duty — that is, the proper cruising ground at the mouth of the Cape Fear River— so that there may not be a sufficient number always present to pilot vessels which require their services to cross the bar.

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Related

Davis v. Heide & Co.
77 S.E. 691 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 173, 152 N.C. 625, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-heide-nc-1910.