Treakle v. Pocahontas Steamship Co.

273 F. Supp. 608
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedOctober 4, 1967
DocketNos. 8523, 8531
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 F. Supp. 608 (Treakle v. Pocahontas Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Treakle v. Pocahontas Steamship Co., 273 F. Supp. 608 (E.D. Va. 1967).

Opinion

WALTER E. HOFFMAN, Chief Judge.

MEMORANDUM

These consolidated actions, standing on exceptive allegations to the libels (final action on which will determine the merits), raise rather novel questions in the admiralty field.

The various libelants were, during all pertinent times,1 pilots2 of tug boats owned and operated by Perry Towing Company and Coal Terminal Towing Corporation. The tugs were used, for the purpose of this proceeding, in assisting in the docking and undocking of oceangoing vessels at the Norfolk and Western Railway Company Coal Piers in the port of Hampton Roads. The tugs were permanently assigned to this facility. In docking and undocking it is frequently necessary to employ the motive power of the oceangoing vessel, together with its steering apparatus, along with the concurrent assistance of tugs made fast at varying positions alongside the vessel. The peculiarity of local tide conditions, and other factors in and around the docks, makes it appropriate for the ship’s master to relinquish the helm to a local pilot more familiar with docking conditions. The pilot is required, in boarding a vessel, to ascend a ladder from the tug to the ship’s main deck. From there he proceeds to the flying bridge where he assumes control of the navigation subject, of course, to the ultimate control of the master.

The pilots here involved differ from those who are members of the Virginia Pilot Association. The latter are engaged to bring oceangoing vessels, excluding Government vessels, to a point off the docks at the coal piers. Where the master of the oceangoing vessel is properly licensed, it is unnecessary to engage the services of a pilot from the Virginia Pilot Association to bring the vessel from Cape Henry to a point off the dock.

[610]*610The pilots are required to possess special licenses. In each instance they are the masters of the particular tug employed to assist in the docking operations. The tugs are frequently referred to as “pier boats” and their activities are limited to docking 3 vessels at the Norfolk and Western Coal Piers.

Under their employment contracts with Perry Towing Company — and later with Coal Terminal Towing Corporation — the pilots, in addition to their hourly wage rate, received $8.50 per day “to cover the service of docking and undocking ships.”4 Additional compensation was likewise provided for the mates as observed in the footnote.

The pilots contend, in these actions, that the shipowners, as their secondary employer, are responsible for an individual pilotage fee for each operation when aboard the oceangoing vessel. They base their claim at the rate of $7.50 for each vessel boarded.

As between Perry and Coal Terminal on the one hand, and the shipowner on the other, the tug owners required the shipowner to assume full responsibility for the pilot’s actions while aboard the vessel being docked. In recognition of the increased hazard to the entire tug crew occasioned by a greater accident exposure in docking and undocking, the entire crew received additional compensation from Perry and Coal Terminal known as a “Pier Rate.”

The pilots who institute these actions were aboard the respondents’ vessels solely by reason of their employment by Perry Towing Company and its successor, Coal Terminal Towing Corporation, the latter being affiliated with Curtis Bay Towing Corporation. The pilots do not contend that the additional compensation provided by Rule 6 remains unpaid. They received this compensation, together with their regular hourly rate of pay, from Perry and Coal Terminal.

It is conceded that no separate pilotage fee has ever been paid by a shipowner to a docking pilot with respect to vessels docking or undocking at any coal pier.5

While we feel that the special provisions of the agreement are sufficiently clear to establish the fact that the pilots never contemplated making an express or implied contract with the shipowners, we need not determine the rights of the parties by the express wording of the agreement. The evidence submitted in support of and in opposition to the exceptive allegations abundantly establishes the course of dealings between the parties and the interpretations placed [611]*611upon the agreement. As stated in Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Sherwood Distilling Co., 200 F.2d 672 (4 Cir., 1952):

“It is well established that the interpretation placed upon a contract by the parties themselves, before a dispute has arisen, is entitled to the greatest weight.”

The service performed by the pilots is the usual and customary work done by masters of docking tugs. If there are two tugs assisting, the master of one tug boards the ship and takes control of her engines and steering for the purpose of maneuvering the vessel into or out of a berth alongside the pier. If there is only one tug involved, the master performs the same duties. He also serves in legal control of the engines and steering of the tug or tugs, in that he gives the orders to the tug.

In the port of Hampton Roads, some towing companies do not pay extra compensation to the docking master, but permit him to charge and collect a docking fee from the shipowner. However, with respect to rail carriers and towing companies operating tugs specifically and exclusively assigned to docking and undocking ships at coal piers, extra, compensation has been allowed and paid by the rail carrier or tug company as an integral part of its labor contract. This practice has prevailed in this area for approximately 48 years.

Collective bargaining agreements have specified the flat monthly or daily rate to be paid as extra compensation for docking and undocking ships. It has not been dependent upon the number of ships actually handled. On occasions, tugs owned and operated by Curtis Bay Towing Company are used to dock and undock at the Norfolk and Western Coal Piers and these pilots are paid a pilotage fee by Curtis Bay, as they are employed under different agreements negotiated by a different union. When the Curtis Bay pilots dock and undock ships at places other than the coal piers, they are permitted to collect pilotage fees from the shipowner, but such is not permitted when docking and undocking at the coal piers.

The original collective bargaining agreement involving the pilots herein concerned was negotiated by Local No. 10 of the International Order of Masters, Mates & Pilots and Perry Towing Corporation. It was modeled after like agreements between the same Local, in behalf of masters and mates employed by the former Virginian Railway Company and that rail carrier. Prior to that time the masters and mates, then not unionized, were employed with the understanding that they would receive the same compensation as the masters and mates of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company tugs; the latter group being represented by the aforesaid Local No. 10, and even before then by the National Organization.

Dependent upon the volume of business at the Norfolk and Western Coal Piers, the pilots stand to benefit or lose if permitted to collect a separate docking fee from the shipowner. Earlier agreements involving the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company provided for flat extra

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Bluebook (online)
273 F. Supp. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treakle-v-pocahontas-steamship-co-vaed-1967.