Sabine Pilots Ass'n v. Lykes Brothers Steamship, Inc.

346 S.W.2d 166, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1961
Docket10867
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 346 S.W.2d 166 (Sabine Pilots Ass'n v. Lykes Brothers Steamship, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabine Pilots Ass'n v. Lykes Brothers Steamship, Inc., 346 S.W.2d 166, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2283 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

GRAY, Justice.

This is a suit for declaratory judgment. It was brought by twenty-three named per *167 sons individually and as Sabine Pilots Association against four steamship-companies operating vessels under registry and which vessels customarily dock at one or more, or all, of the ports along the Sabine-Neches Waterway. The purpose of the suit is to construe arts. 8267, 8268 and 8224, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., to determine the legality of the schedule of rates fixed by the Board of Commissioners of Pilots for the Sabine District, and to determine the rights of the parties hereto in connection with pilotage fees heretofore charged in accordance with said schedule. The prayer is that the court find and determine that the schedule of rates and fees fixed by the Board are legal under art. 8274, and that the court make a full and complete declaration of the rights, liabilities, duties and legal relations of the parties with regard to such rates, fees and statutes, and for general relief.

The steamship companies answered, interposed a defense of res judicata, that the schedule of rates fixed by the Board are unlawful because contrary to the express provisions of the statute, and that the statutes are clear and unambiguous and are not susceptible to any construction permitting a charge in excess of the rates set out in the statute. They prayed that art. 8274 be declared clear and unambiguous and that pilotage rates and fees exceeding the rates fixed by that article be declared unlawful.

A nonjury trial was had and a judgment was rendered to the effect that the decision in Bloomfield Steamship Co. et al. v. Sabine Pilots Ass’n, 5 Cir., 262 F.2d 345, is not res judicata of this suit and that this suit is not a collateral attack on that judgment; that art. 8274 is clear and unambiguous and fixes the maximum rates and fees and that the same are applicable to the Sabine District; that the Board derives its authority from the statutes of Texas; that the schedule of rates and fees published by the Board violates art. 8274 as applied to nonstop vessels passing through Port Arthur to ports along the Sabine-Neches Waterway above that port; that arts. 8267 and 8268 authorize the Board to hear and determine disputes as to pilotage rates and fees; that an aggrieved party has the right to appeal from a decision of the Board to a court having cognizance of the case, which is a district court of Texas; that a suit to recover pilot-age fees is premature until the jurisdiction of the Board is invoked and the administrative remedy is exhausted; that the Sabine Pilots had the right to rely on the rates fixed by the Board until such rates were attacked and the administrative remedies exhausted; that the charge of the rates fixed by the Board does not constitute illegal exaction and that the charges of such rates are not void but voidable and are not recoverable by the steamship companies. ¡

All parties have appealed from the above judgment and will be here referred to as they were in the trial court; the pilots as plaintiffs and the steamship companies as defendants.

The following statement will help understand the questions presented.

The Sabine-Neches Waterway as it now exists extends from the Gulf of Mexico upstream along the Sabine and the Neches Rivers. Originally the only port on the waterway was the port of Sabine located only a few miles from the whistle buoy in the Gulf. However, by dredging the rivers, ports upstream to Orange on the Sabine and Beaumont on the Neches have been opened to ocean going vessels. Port Arthur is located upstream from Sabine and vessels going to or from upstream ports pass through Port Arthur. In May 1951 and in May 1955 the Board published a schedule of pilotage charges based on the gross tonnage of the vessel being piloted. The 1955 schedule of charges ranged from $6.50 to $8 per draft foot of the vessel being piloted.

In 1956 the defendants filed suit against the plaintiffs in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas to recover the difference in the fees actually charged and paid to plaintiffs under the schedule fixed by the Board to the extent *168 that the same were in excess of the maximum fixed by art. 8274. That court rendered a judgment for the plaintiffs but its judgment was reversed. Bloomfield Steamship Co. v. Sabine Pilots Ass’n, supra. It was there held that the charges violated art. 8274 and the cause was remanded for a determination of the damages. Plaintiffs filed petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court. That petition is now pending.

The parties here say that because art. 8274 has never been construed by the Texas appellate courts the Supreme Court of the United States has delayed action on plaintiffs’ petition for writ of certiorari pending construction of that statute by Texas courts. See: 42 Tex.Jur., Sec. 3, p. 814.

We quote, in order, the provisions of arts. 8267, 8268 and 8274 as amended in 19SS, applicable here:

“The board shall have authority, within the limits provided in this subdivision, to fix rates of pilotage * * * of which proceedings a record shall be kept; * * *
“The board shall be authorized and required to hear and determine all disputes that may arise respecting pilots and pilotage; * * * but from any decision of said board an appeal may be taken to the court having cognizance of the case. * * *
“The rate of pilotage, which may be fixed under Articles 8267 and 8269, on any class of vessels shall not, in any port of this state with the exception of the Port of Galveston, exceed Six ($6.00) Dollars for each foot of water which the vessel at the time of piloting draws and such rate shall not, in the Port of Galveston, exceed Five and 50/100 ($5.50) Dollars for each foot of water which the vessel at the time of piloting draws; * * * ”

Art. 8269 applies to small ports and its provisions are not applicable here.

It is to be noticed that art. 8268 provides for an appeal from the Board’s order but does not fix the time in which the appeal must be taken.

The defendants, by points, contend and the plaintiffs, by points, deny, that the trial ' court erred in holding that the defendants were not entitled to recover pilotage charges illegally exacted because they did not exhaust their administrative remedy under art. 8268 and did not appeal from the decision of the Board.

The defendants say that in fact they protested the Board’s decision and appealed from it. In view of our disposition of the above points it is not necessary to decide this contention of defendants and it will not be further noticed.

It is our opinion that the Board acted without lawful authority in fixing the rates of pilotage above $6 per foot of water which the vessel draws at the time of piloting. This is true because art. 8267 authorizes the Board to fix rates of pilot-age “within the limits provided in this subdivision” and art. 8274 provides that the rate of pilotage “which may be fixed * * *» shall not exceed $6 per each foot of water the vessel draws at the time of piloting. The Board derives its authority to fix rates from the statutes and those statutes clearly limit that authority to the maximum rate stated in art. 8274.

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Bluebook (online)
346 S.W.2d 166, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabine-pilots-assn-v-lykes-brothers-steamship-inc-texapp-1961.