Vessels engaged in trade between Porto Rican ports and ports of
the United States are engaged in the coasting trade in the sense in
which those words are used in tile New York pilotage statutes, and
steam vessels engaged in such trade are coastwise steam vessels
under Revised Statutes, section 4444.
This was a libel filed in the District Court for the Southern
District of New York to recover spoken pilotage upon the American
built steamship
Ponce, belonging to the defendant, a New
York corporation.
The facts were that libellant, on June 25, 1900, offered his
service as a Sandy Hook pilot to the master of the
Ponce,
then about entering the harbor of New York, her port of
destination, from the port of San Juan, in the Island of Porto
Rico. Libellant, who was a duly licensed Sandy Hook pilot, was the
first and only one to offer his services. These services were
declined by the master of the vessel, who was himself a licensed
pilot for the harbor of New York under the laws of the United
States. The steamship was at the time duly enrolled and licensed
for the coasting trade under the laws of the United States, and was
engaged in trade between Porto Rico and New York. The libel was
dismissed by the district court, 105 F. 74, an appeal taken to the
circuit court of appeals, which certified to this Court the
following questions of law, concerning which it desired
instructions:
"1. Since the proclamation of the treaty of peace between the
United States and the Kingdom of Spain, and the passage of the Act
of Congress entitled 'An Act Temporarily to Provide
Page 182 U. S. 393
Revenues and a Civil government for Porto Rico, and for Other
Purposes' (approved April 12, 1900), do Porto Rican ports remain
foreign ports in the sense in which those words are used in the
statutes of the State of New York regulating pilotage?"
"2. Are vessels engaged in trade between Porto Rican ports and
ports of the United States engaged in the coasting trade in the
sense in which those words are used in the statutes of the State of
New York regulating pilotage?"
"3. Are steam vessels engaged in trade between Porto Rican ports
and ports of the United States coastwise steam vessels in the sense
in which those words are used in section 4444 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States?"
MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Conceding it to be within the power of Congress to assume
control of and regulate the whole system of pilotage as applied to
vessels engaged in foreign or interstate commerce, it has for
obvious reasons left to the several states the power to legislate
upon this subject and to prescribe rules for the licensing and
government of pilots, the collection of their fees and such other
incidental matters as the nature of their services in the
particular localities may require. The power to do this was
recognized by this Court in
Cooley v. Board of
Wardens, 12 How. 299, though it was subsequently
said to be subject to such restrictions as Congress might see fit
to impose.
Spraigue v. Thompson, 118 U. S.
90.
By Rev.Stat. sec. 4235, it is expressly enacted that,
"until further provision is made by Congress, all pilots in the
bays, inlets, rivers, harbors, and ports of the United States shall
continue to be regulated in conformity with the existing laws of
the states respectively wherein such pilots may be,"
subject,
Page 182 U. S. 394
however, to a prohibition (section 4237) against
"any discrimination in the rate of pilotage or half-pilotage
between vessels sailing between the ports of one state and vessels
sailing between the ports of different states, or any
discrimination against vessels propelled in whole or in part by
steam,"
and to a further restriction (section 4401) that
"all coastwise seagoing vessels . . . shall be subject to the
navigation laws of the United States, . . . and every coastwise
seagoing steam vessel subject to the navigation laws of the United
States, and to the rules and regulations aforesaid, not sailing
under register, shall, when under way, except on the high seas, be
under the control and direction of pilots licensed by the
inspectors of steamboats."
To further effectuate its control over coastwise seagoing
vessels, it is provided by sec. 4444 that
"no state or municipal government shall impose upon pilots of
steam vessels any obligation to procure a state or other license in
addition to that issued by the United States. . . . Nor shall any
pilot charges be levied by any such authority upon any steamer
piloted as provided by this title, . . ."
although
"nothing in this title shall be construed to annul or affect any
regulation established by the laws of any state requiring vessels
entering or leaving a port in any such state,
other than
coastwise steam vessels, to take a pilot duly licensed or
authorized by the laws of such state, or of a state situated upon
the waters of such state."
The general object of these provisions seems to be to license
pilots upon steam vessels engaged in the
coastwise or
interior commerce of the country, and at the same time to leave to
the states the regulation of pilots upon all vessels engaged in
foreign commerce.
This view was evidently accepted by the Legislature of New York,
which, in section 2119 of the Consolidated Act of 1882, declares
that
"no master of any vessel navigated under a coasting license and
employed in the coasting trade by way of Sandy Hook shall be
required to employ a licensed pilot when entering or departing from
the harbor of New York,"
but reserving its own control of vessels engaged in the foreign
trade by enacting further in the same section that
"all masters of foreign
Page 182 U. S. 395
vessels and vessels from a
foreign port, and all
vessels sailing under register bound to or from the port of New
York by the way of Sandy Hook, shall take a licensed pilot, or, in
case of refusing to take such pilot, shall himself, owners or
consignees, pay the said pilotage as if one had been employed, and
such pilotage shall be paid to the pilot first speaking or offering
his services as pilot to such vessel,"
with a final proviso that
"this section shall not apply to vessels propelled wholly or in
part by steam, owned or belonging to citizens of the United States,
and licensed and engaged in the coasting trade."
As the statement of facts connected with the question certified
show that the
Ponce was an American-built steamship,
sailing from New York, belonging to a New York corporation,
enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade, navigated by a master
duly licensed to act as pilot in the bay and harbor of New York,
under the laws of the United States, and was engaged in trade
between the Island of Porto Rico and the port of New York, the only
question remaining to be considered is whether she was a
coastwise seagoing steam vessel under Rev.Stat. sec. 4401,
and actually employed in the coasting trade by way of Sandy Hook
under sec. 2119 of the New York Consolidation Act.
Under the commercial and navigation laws of the United States,
merchant vessels are divisible into two classes: first, vessels
registered pursuant to Rev.Stat. sec. 4131; these must be wholly
owned, commanded, and officered by citizens of the United States,
and are alone entitled to engage in foreign trade; and, second,
vessels enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade or fisheries.
Rev.Stat. sec. 4311. These may not engage in foreign trade under
penalty of forfeiture. Section 4337. This class of vessels is also
engaged in navigation upon the Great Lakes and the interior waters
of the country -- in other words, they are engaged in domestic,
instead of foreign, trade.
The words "coasting trade," as distinguishing this class of
vessels, seem to have been selected because, at that time, all the
domestic commerce of the country was either interior commerce
Page 182 U. S. 396
or coastwise, between ports upon the Atlantic or Pacific coasts,
or upon islands so near thereto, and belonging to the several
states, as properly to constitute a part of the coast. Strictly
speaking, Porto Rico is not such an island, as it is not only
situated some hundreds of miles from the nearest port on the
Atlantic coast, but had never belonged to the United States or any
of the states composing the Union. At the same time, trade with
that island is properly a part of the domestic trade of the country
since the treaty of annexation, and is so recognized by the Porto
Rican or Foraker Act. By section 9, the Commissioner of Navigation
is required to
"make such regulations . . . as he may deem expedient for the
nationalization of all vessels owned by the inhabitants of Porto
Rico on April 11, 1899, . . . and for the admission of the same to
all the benefits of the coasting trade of the United States, and
the coasting trade between Porto Rico and the United States shall
be regulated in accordance with the provisions of law applicable to
such trade between any two great coasting districts of the United
States."
By this act, it was evidently intended not only to nationalize
all Porto Rican vessels as vessels of the United States, and to
admit them to the benefits of their coasting trade, but to place
Porto Rico substantially upon the coast of the United States, and
vessels engaged in trade between that island and the continent as
engaged in the coasting trade. This was the view taken by the
executive officers of the government in issuing an enrollment and
license to the
Ponce, to be employed in carrying on the
coasting trade, instead of treating her as a vessel engaged in
foreign trade.
That the words "coasting trade" are not intended to be strictly
limited to trade between ports in adjoining districts is also
evident from Rev.Stat. sec. 4358, wherein it is enacted that
"the coasting trade between the territory ceded to the United
States by the Emperor of Russia and any other portion of the United
States shall be regulated in accordance with the provisions of law
applicable to such trade between any two great districts."
These great districts were, for the more convenient regulation
of the coasting trade, divided by the Act of March 2, 1819, 3 Stat.
492, c. 48, as amended by Act of May 7, 1822,
Page 182 U. S. 397
3 Stat. 684, c. 62, Rev.Stat. sec. 4348, as follows:
"The first to include all the collection districts on the
seacoast and navigable rivers between the eastern limits of the
United States and the southern limits of Georgia; the second to
include all the collection districts on the seacoast and navigable
rivers between the River Perdido and the Rio Grande, and the third
to include all the collection districts on the seacoast and
navigable rivers between the southern limits of Georgia and the
River Perdido."
A provision similar to that for the admission of the Territory
of Alaska was also adopted in the act to provide a government for
the Territory of Hawaii (31 Stat. 141, sec. 98), which provides
that all vessels carrying Hawaiian registers on August 12, 1898,
and owned by citizens of the United States or citizens of
Hawaii,
"shall be entitled to be registered as American vessels, . . .
and the coasting trade between the islands aforesaid and any other
portion of the United States shall be regulated in accordance with
the provisions of law applicable to such trade between any two
great coasting districts."
This use of the words "coasting trade" indicates very clearly
that the words were intended to include the domestic trade of the
United States upon other than interior waters. The district court
was correct in holding that the
Ponce was engaged in the
coasting trade, and that the New York pilotage laws did not apply
to her.
The second and third questions are therefore answered in the
affirmative. An answer to the first question becomes
unnecessary.