The Glaramara

10 F. 678, 8 Sawy. 22, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedFebruary 28, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. 678 (The Glaramara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Glaramara, 10 F. 678, 8 Sawy. 22, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38 (D. Or. 1882).

Opinion

Deady, D. J.

This suit is brought by the libellant, W. A. Betts, a river pilot, to recover the sum of $34 as half pilotage for a tender of services as such pilot to the bark Glaramara.

The libel alleges that on September 18,1881, the Glaramara, a foreign ship of 800 tons burden, was in the Columbia river below Astoria, bound on a voyage to Portland, when the libellant, a duly-qualified and licensed pilot for the Columbia and Wallamet rivers above Astoria, duly offered his services to the master of said vessel to pilot her to Portland, which offered was refused, although said vessel had no river pilot on board, nor had she then been spoken by anj*- one; and that said vessel made the voyage to Portland and arrived here about six days thereafter.

The master, Robert Morton, on behalf of the owners and claimants, George Nelson & Sons, White Haven, England, excepts to the libel because it does not appear therefrom that the libellant is entitled to have any sum as pilotage from said bark. The exception does not state specifically, as it ought, wherein the libel is defective, but upon the argument it was contended (1) that the tender of services being made below Astoria, off the libellant’s pilot-ground, was therefore insufficient and of no effect; and (2) that it does not appear whether said voyage of said vessel to this port was made under sail or in tow. “

[679]*679By the law of Oregon (Sess. Laws 1865, p. 33; Or. Laws, p. 707, § 12) it is provided that any river pilot “who shall first speak any seagoing vessel ascending or descending the river above Astoria,” shall be entitled to half pilotage therefor. The pilot-groand of the Columbia and Wallamet river pilots reaches “from Astoria to the head of navigation,” but from Astoria to the open sea beyond the bar is the pilot-ground of tho bar pilots. Or. Laws, pp. 706-7, §§ 6, 7, 11. Anto-ría is a port of entry where foreign vessels bound to Portland stop to enter, and usually change the bar tag for a river one.

The argument of the libellant is that a competent and enterprising body of pilots is necessary to the security and convenience of commerce on these rivers, and to this end tho law allows half pilot-age to the pilot who first tenders his services to a vessel “ascending or descending” the same, and for the same reason will permit the tender of such services to be made before such vessel has reached Astoria, and as soon as she is inside the bar of the Columbia. In support of this proposition and argument, counsel cites Steam-ship Co. v. Joliffe, 2 Wall. 456; Wilson v. McNamee, 102 U. S. 572; Horton v. Smith, 6 Ben. 264; The Traveler, Id. 280; The Georgia D. Loud, 8 Ben. 392.

It is not denied that claims for pilotage are within the admiralty jurisdiction, and that a valid offer and refusal of pilotage service under the law giving half pay therefor establishes a claim for piiotage that may be enforced in this court. The Glenearne, 7 Fed. Rep. 604, and cases there cited. But the necessity of compulsory pilotage botween Astoria and Portland, where sail-vessels are usually towed by steam-boats with licensed pilots on hoard, may well be questioned. Neither do I think that the usual arguments in favor of half pilotage as a means of encouraging and maintaining an active and competent body of pilots upon and about bars and other dangerous waters in the vicinity of or immediate approach to frequented harbors and ports, apply to the pilot-grounds botween Astoria and Portland. The duties of the river pilots, though requiring skill and local knowledge, are comparatively simple and free from danger. A vessel at Astoria does not require a pilot until she is ready to ascend tho river, and in the mean time can remain at anchor or the dock'in comparative safety.

From tho nature of the case, then, I am of the impression that a tender of pilot services by a river pilot to an ascending vessel below Astoria, on the bar pilotage ground, is invalid and of no effect.

[680]*680The cases of Horton v. Smith, The Traveler, and The Georgia D. Loud, supra, cited in support of the sufficiency of the libellant’s tender below Astoria, all relate to vessels bound through the passage in the Bast river called Hell Gate. By the law of New York, as construed by the court in these cases, the pilot-ground of a Hell Gate pilot extends at least from a point 17 miles eastward of Sands point on the sound to the city. For taking a vessel through the Gate channel certain fees are allowed, and for an offer and refusal of such pilot service half such fees' are allowed. An additional compensation is also allowed for taking a vessel over any portion of the rest of this pilot-ground, which appears to extend east as far as the sound, before entering or leaving the channel, but nothing for a tender or refusal of services thereon.. The tenders in the cases cited appear to have been made within the pilotage ground of the pilots making them, and to .vessels bound through the Hell Gate channel, though not then in it, and upon that ground they appear to have been upheld.

But in the case of The S. & B. Small, 8 Ben. 523, the same court held that a tender of services by a Hell Gate pilot to a vessel then S. S. E. of Block island, “bound to the sound, ” and through Hell Gate, was invalid. In support of this conclusion Judge Benedict says:

It seems reasonable to say that the master of a vessel canziot be required to determine whether he will or will not accept the services of a pilot when his vessel is so far distant from the channel, as to which the pilot is supposed to be informed, and for which his services are needed, that the presence of a pilot on board for the purpose of navigating those channels would, under all possible circumstances, be absurd,”

River pilots are not required to keep a pilot-boat, or cruise for vessels. There is no necessity for incurring such expense, and the compensation allowed them does not or ought not to warrant it. But, if a river pilot is allowed to make a valid tender of his services below Astoria, on the bar pilot’s ground, the result will be an unfair combination between certain of the river pilots and the bar pilots, by which the former would be allowed practically to cruise on the bar-tugs or pilot-boats for vessels bound to Portland, and tender their services as pilots above Astoria, and thus be enabled to monopolize the business.

But beyond all question this exception is well taken upon the second ground assigned on the argument; for by section 1 of the act of October 25, 1870, (Sess. Laws, p. 51; Or. Laws p. 710, § 27,) it is provided “that n,o sea-going vessel, while navigating the Columbia or [681]*681Wallamet river, shall be required to take a pilot or pay half pilotage, if such vessel be towed by a tug or steamer.” .

It is not alleged in the libel that the G-laramara made the voyage in question to Portland under sail, or that she was not towed here by “a tug or steamer.” It would probably be better pleading to have raised this question by a peremptory exception, analogous to a plea in bar at common law, containing an allegation that the vessel made the voyage in tow of a steamer.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. 678, 8 Sawy. 22, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-glaramara-ord-1882.