Williams v. Potter

210 F. 318, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedNovember 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 210 F. 318 (Williams v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Potter, 210 F. 318, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039 (N.D.N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

On or about the 21st day of December, 1908, the plaintiff, Frank R. Williams, made a written application to Robert Chestnut and John R. Molther, constituting the board of local inspectors of steam vessels at Oswego, N. Y., for an examination for a license as pilot, master, and mate correspondingly, on steam vessels under 100 tons, running from Ogdensburg to Detroit on the St. Lawrence river, Lake Ontario, Niagara river, Lake Erie, and the Detroit river. This application for examination on its face showed that the applicant had not had three years’ experience in the deck department of a steam vessel, motor vessel, sail vessel, or barge consort, as required by sections 42 and 46 of rule 5 of the board of supervising inspectors approved by the department, and which rule was adopted under and pursuant to section 4405, United States Revised Statutes. That section reads as follows:

“Sec. 4405. (Meetings of board; assignment of districts.) The supervising inspectors and the Supervising Inspector General shall assemble as a board once in each year, at the city of Washington, District of Columbia, on the third Wednesday in January, and at such other times as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe, for joint consultation, and shall assign to each of the supervising inspectors the limits of territory within which he shall perform his duties. The board shall establish all necessary regulations required to carry .out in the most effective manner the provisions of this title, and such regulations, when approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, shall have the force of law. The supervising inspector for the district embracing the Pacific Coast shall not be under obligation to attend the meetings of the board oftener than once in two years; but when he does not attend such meetings he shall make Ms communications thereto, in the way of a report, in such manner as the board shall prescribe.” U. g. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3017.

Sections 42 and 46 of rule 5 provide as follows:

“42. No original license as second-class pilot shall be issued to any person who has not had three years’ experience in the deck department of a steam vessel, motor vessel, sail vessel, or barge consort. The local inspectors shall, before granting a license as second-class pilot, satisfy themselves that the ap[320]*320plicant is qualified to steer; provided, that on the Mississippi and territory rivers one year of such required experience must have been in the pilot house as steersman.”
“46. No original license for pilot of any route shall be issued to any person, except for special license for steamers of 10 gross tons and under, who has not served at least three years in the deck department of a steamer, motor vessel, sail vessel, or barge consort, one year of which experience must have been obtained within the three years next preceding the date of api>lication for license, which fact the inspectors may require, when practicable, to be vertified by the certificate, in writing, of the licensed master or pilot under whom the applicant has served, such certificate to be filed with the application of the candidate.”

Section 4442' of the Revised Statutes of the United States reads as follows:

“Sec. 4442. (License of pilot.) Whenever any person claiming to be a skillful pilot of steam vessels offers himself for a license, the inspectors shall make diligent inquiry as' to his. character and merits, and if satisfied, from xsersonal examination, of the applicant, with the proof that he possesses the requisite knowledge and skill, and is trustworthy and faithful, they shall grant him a license for the term of one year to pilot any such vessel within the limits prescribed .in the license; but such license shall be suspended or revoked upon satisfactory evidence of negligence, unskillfulness, inattention to the duties of his station, or intemperance, or the willful violation of any provision of this title.” U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3037.

Another rule or regulation, viz., regulation 7, provides that:

“Any applicant for license who has been duly examined and refused may come before any local board for examination after one year has expired”— meaning after one year has expired from the date of the first examination.

Acting under and in pursuance of sections 42 and 46 of rule 5, Chestnut and Molther refused to give Williams an examination as it appeared. on his own statement in writing that he had not had the requisite experience. Thereupon the plaintiff, Williams, brought suit in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of New York for a decree compelling such inspectors to give him an examination. The case was heard on the agreed state of facts, and the single question was presented of the validity of that regulation. The Circuit Court held that the regulation was' reasonable and proper and that, as it was predetermined by the duly adopted rules and regulations of the department that a pilot’s license should not issue to a person who had not had the requisite experience, an examination was not necessary to determine that fact when it appeared by the application itself that the applicant had not had the necessary experience. The- opinion of the Circuit Court is found in 189 Fed. 700.

On appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals the decision of the lower court was reversed (Williams v. Molther et al., 198 Fed. 460, 117 C. C. A. 220), and the court held:

“While no citizen has the inherent right to a pilot’s license, every citizen has a right to be examined for it. The local inspectors are to determine the applicant's qualifications. They may hold in any case that he has not had sufficient deck experience. That, however, is quite different from refusing him an examination for this reason.”

The court thereupon held that sections 42 and 46 of rule 5 were invalid inasmuch as they denied an examination, although it appeared from the application itself that the applicant had not had the neces[321]*321sary or sufficient deck experience. The court expressly held that the board of local inspectors might hold in any case that the applicant had not had sufficient deck experience, but in effect held that an arbitrary rule that three years’ experience was necessary was illegal and improper and that an examination must be held in every case to ascertain whether or not the applicant had had sufficient deck experience. The court in that case held that sections 42 and 46 of rule S were invalid, and the court below was directed to enter a decree declaring sections 42 and 46 invalid and directing the defendants to examine the complainant Williams.

The lower court entered a decree accordingly, and hence as between Williams and the defendants here John Molther and Robert Chestnut the sections of rule 5 referred to must be deemed and held to be invalid. It has been so adjudicated. As to the defendants Charles Potter, Frederic Pope, William Nolan, and Niles Nelson, they have not attempted to enforce against this plaintiff the provisions of sections 42 and 46 of rule 5, and until they do there is no occasion or justification for entering a decree or judgment restraining or prohibiting them from recognizing the validity of such sections and enforcing them in other cases. The decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals is not res ad judicata as to them, and if occasion arises they will be at liberty to assert the validity of rule 5 and have the question submitted for adjudication.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 F. 318, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-potter-nynd-1913.