United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit
2d 1
1990 A.M.C. 1475, 29 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 1103
Shortly after 8 p.m. (2012 hours) on August 15, 1985, the tanker Manhattan
Prince, while in the process of docking, collided with a pier. The allision
occurred in the Army Terminal Turning Basin, Puerto Nuevo Channel, San
Juan Harbor, Puerto Rico. An in rem action against the vessel was brought by
the Puerto Rico Ports Authority (PRPA) and the Puerto Rico Electric Authority
for damages caused to facilities on the pier owned by both authorities. Shortly
thereafter, Sujeen Trading PTE., LTD., (Sujeen), the owner of the tanker,
brought an action for damage to the tanker's bow incurred in the allision and
damages due to loss of hire against Crowley Towing and Transportation
Company (Crowley) and against Captain Oscar Camacho, the compulsory pilot.
Crowley was the owner of two tugboats, the Borinquen and El Morro, which
had been hired by the tanker to help her dock. The claim against Crowley by
the tanker was based on the alleged negligence of the tug Borinquen; the tug El
Morro is not involved in the case. In both cases, the defendants filed cross
claims and counterclaims against each other.
2
The cases were consolidated for trial and a bench trial was held in August,
1987.1 The district court found the vessel and the pilot "jointly, severally and
equally liable" for damages to the pier facilities, which amounted to $53,000. It
found Crowley and the Electric Authority not liable to Sujeen for damages to
the tanker. It found the pilot, Comacho, liable to Sujeen for half of the vessel's
damages. These amounted to $194,723.40 for repairs to the bow of the tanker
and $142,951.49 for loss of hire. The court further found that the PRPA was
not liable for the negligence of the pilot. The court addressed the vicarious
liability of the PRPA in an opinion published at 669 F.Supp. 34 (D.P.R.1987).
Sujeen has appealed the holding that the ship was at fault for the allision and
the ruling that the PRPA was not vicariously liable for the negligence of the
pilot. The pilot has not appealed, and there has been no appeal on the
computation of damages. There are, therefore, two basic issues to be reviewed:
whether the tanker was 50% at fault for the allision, and whether the PRPA is
responsible for the negligence of the pilot. We start with the negligence issue.
I.
A. Standard of Review
4
We review the district court's finding of fact under the clearly erroneous
standard, the same as that set forth in Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). McAllister v. United
States, 348 U.S. 19, 20, 75 S.Ct. 6, 8, 99 L.Ed. 20 (1954). "A finding is clearly
erroneous when 'although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on
the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake
has been committed....' " Id. (citations omitted). See DiMillo v. Sheepscot
Pilots, Inc., 870 F.2d 746, 749 (1st Cir.1989); EAC Timberlane v. Pisces Ltd.,
745 F.2d 715, 722 (1st Cir.1984); Capt'n Mark v. Sea Fever Corp., 692 F.2d
163, 166 (1st Cir.1982).
In United States v. Reliable Transfer Co., 421 U.S. 397, 95 S.Ct. 1708, 44
L.Ed.2d 251 (1975), the Court jettisoned the old rule of divided damages in
Id. at 411, 95 S.Ct. at 1715-16 (emphasis added). In this case, the court
explicitly found: "Because it is impossible to fairly allocate proportional
degrees of fault, the damages shall be equally divided between the 'Manhattan
Prince' and Oscar Camacho. United States v. Reliable Transfer, 421 U.S. 397
[95 S.Ct. 1708, 44 L.Ed.2d 251] (1975)."
10
We end our exposition of the standard of review by noting that a district court's
application of an improper standard to the facts is to be corrected as a matter of
law. United States v. Singer Mfg. Co., 374 U.S. 174, 194 n. 9, 83 S.Ct. 1773,
1784 n. 9, 10 L.Ed.2d 823 (1963).
B. The Facts
11
Most of the facts are undisputed; it is the conclusions drawn from them by the
district court that has drawn Sujeen's fire. The tanker, Manhattan Prince, was
carrying 34,800 metric tons of fuel oil to San Juan. The vessel is 805 feet long,
has a 124 foot beam, and at the time of the allision had a draft of approximately
32 feet, since she was fully loaded. The vessel was powered by a diesel engine
with one righthand screw.
12
The Manhattan Prince was manned by Polish officers and crew. Neither the
captain nor the two mates had been to San Juan Harbor prior to August 15,
1985, the date of the allision. None of the ship's officers spoke or understood
Spanish. The compulsory pilot, Oscar Comacho, did not speak or understand
Polish. He boarded the ship about 2 1/2 miles from the entrance to San Juan
Harbor at 7:12 p.m. (1912 hours). The pilot had never before docked a ship of
the size of the Manhattan Prince. He did not know when he first went on board
where the ship was to dock. He obtained this information by radio from Port
Control.
13
At the time the pilot boarded the ship, darkness had fallen. After a discussion
with the captain about the maneuverability and other characteristics of the
vessel and the layout of San Juan Harbor, the pilot stationed himself in the port
wing of the bridge. The captain moved back and forth across the bridge as
conditions dictated. The pilot guided the ship by giving course and speed
orders to the captain in English who relayed them in Polish to the crew member
responsible for carrying them out. At times the pilot gave orders directly to a
crew member. The second mate of the Manhattan Prince was on the bow. His
responsibility was to act as a lookout and count down the distances as the ship
approached the dock.
14
The course the ship followed was through the mouth of San Juan Harbor, down
the Bar Channel to Anegado Channel, then a turn to port and down Anegado
Channel to Army Terminal Channel. The ship then turned to starboard and
followed Army Terminal Channel to the Army Terminal Turning Basin where
it docked.
15
The tugs owned by Crowley, the Borinquen and El Morro, tied onto the tanker
in Anegado Channel before she turned into Army Terminal Channel. The
Borinquen was secured to the starboard bow with two lines; the El Morro was
made fast to the starboard quarter. The tugs were manned by Puerto Ricans so
the only one who could talk to the tug captains was the pilot which he did via a
VHF radio in Spanish and "Spanglish," a combination of Spanish and English.
From his position on the port wing of the bridge, the pilot was unable to see the
Borinquen. The second mate who was stationed on the bow could see the tug
but could not talk to its crew because of the language barrier and because his
VHF radio, which enabled him to talk with the tanker captain, was on a
different frequency from the radios of the pilot and the tug captains. This meant
that the pilot could not hear the communications between the bow and the
captain of the tanker, the tug captains could not hear the communications
between the tanker's captain and the bow, and the bow could not hear the
communications between the tug captains and the pilot.
16
17
The tanker and tugs proceeded down Army Terminal Channel to the turning
basin. The basin is at the south end of the channel, which runs almost directly
from north to south. At its widest point, the basin measures about 200 yards.
The distance from the basin entrance to the pier at which the ship was to dock
was approximately 400 yards.
18
Two piers jutted out into the water at the southern terminus of the basin. The
Army Terminal pier, which was where the tanker was to dock, lay to the west
of Catano pier. Both piers are about 150 yards long. The Catano pier is
considerably narrower than the Terminal pier. The piers are about 100 yards
apart. The depth of the basin is between twenty-eight and thirty-nine feet. On
the west side of the Terminal pier, where the ship was to be docked, the water
depth is thirty-six to thirty-seven feet.
19
There are two buoys on the east side of the basin, numbered 7 and 9, marking
the beginning of shallow water (3 to 5 feet). It must be kept in mind that the
ship was a little more than 268 yards long, its beam was 41.3 yards and it had a
draft of about 32 feet. There was not much room for maneuvering.
20
When the tanker entered the turning basin, it was moving forward. The
estimates of its speed vary from less than 1 knot to 4 knots. The first task for
the ship and tugs was to keep the stern from going aground in the shallow
waters marked by buoys 7 and 9. This was accomplished. The ship, which
continued to move forward, had to be positioned so that it would dock with its
port side next to the Terminal pier. This meant that it had to be moved to the
starboard (west) of the Catano pier and then just past the Terminal pier so its
port side could be nudged against the pier. The ship continued its forward and
sidewards motion past the Catano pier. At some point, the pilot asked the
captain of the tug Borinquen how far the ship was from the pier. When it was
about fifty feet from the Terminal pier, the tug Borinquen cast off its lines and
backed off. There is a dispute as to how far and in what direction the tug
moved. The ship continued forward and struck the front of the Terminal pier at
a 90% angle--head on. The Borinquen picked up the lines and the ship, which
was now dead in the water, was brought alongside the Terminal pier and
docked.
The district court found that the allision occurred because the vessel was
travelling too fast down Army Terminal Channel and was not slowed down
sufficiently for a safe docking. The court did not credit the testimony of the
pilot that he had ordered slow astern at buoy number 6 in the channel, which is
about 900 yards from the dock. The court's conclusion as to the pilot's
negligence was as follows:
23
The pilot's negligence and failure to exercise due care in docking the vessel was
a proximate cause of the allision which caused damages to the
"MANHATTAN PRINCE" and the dock facilities. The pilot was negligent in
attempting to dock the vessel at an excessive speed. Due to the large size of the
vessel, the restricted space in the turning basin, and the pilots, [sic] lack of
previous experience in docking a vessel the size of the "MANHATTAN
PRINCE," the proper method would have been to stop the tanker dead in the
water before attempting the final maneuvers to the dock. A prudent pilot would
have proceeded with extreme caution given the situation.
24
The court's assessment of liability on the part of the ship was stated thus:The
Court has found that distances were not relayed to the pilot by the master even
though the bow watch was relaying the distances of the master upon
approaching the dock. The pilot was forced to request a distance report from the
captain of the "BORINQUEN" at a time when the vessel was too close to
impact to matter. Whether this lack of communication resulted from the mishmash of languages being spoken over the various radios, from the inconsistency
occurring in the pilot sometimes giving commands through the master and
sometimes directly, as evidenced by the statement of the chief officer who was
stationed on the lee helm on the bridge, or from sheer negligence on the part of
the master, this crucial information did not reach the pilot's ears. Responsibility
for this omission must be attributed to the "MANHATTAN PRINCE." Thus,
the ship's failure to report distances to the pilot, under these circumstances, was
also a proximate cause of the allision. Had the pilot been better apprised of the
ship's proximity to the dock and of the rate of the rapidly decreasing distances
he could have better judged the ship's speed and distance and taken appropriate
maneuvers to avoid allision.
25
In concluding that the tug Borinquen's actions were not a proximate cause of
the allision, the court found that the tug was "in extremis." It stated:
26 extremely close passage by the Catano Oil Dock, her [the tug's] position near
The
the bow of the tanker, and the tanker's massive size and continued forward way and
90? angle to the dock at a position only 30-50 feet from the dock, all conspired to
put the "BORINQUEN" in extremis. The captain of the "BORINQUEN" was
reasonable in letting go the lines. Whether the allision could have been avoided or
mitigated if the "BORINQUEN" had held steady is mere speculation. The captain of
the "BORINQUEN" cannot be held negligent for not choosing to risk his tug or the
lives of his crew by holding fast to the ship while it allided with the dock.
D. The Issues
27
28
We note at the outset that although appellant pays lip service to the clearly
erroneous standard, its brief is written as if we were reviewing the facts de
novo; its oral argument also proceeded on the same tack.
29
30
The doctrine of in extremis has long been a part of admiralty law. In The Blue
Jacket, 144 U.S. 371, 392, 12 S.Ct. 711, 719, 36 L.Ed. 469 (1892), the rule was
stated as follows:
31
As was held in The Bywell Castle, 4 Prob.Div. 219, "where one ship has, by
wrong manoeuvres, placed another ship in a position of extreme danger, that
other ship will not be held to blame if she has done something wrong, and has
not been manoeuvred with perfect skill and presence of mind."
32
The doctrine was invoked again by the Court in The Oregon, 158 U.S. 186,
204, 15 S.Ct. 804, 812, 39 L.Ed. 943 (1895), where it stated, "the judgment of a
competent sailor in extremis cannot be impugned." In Bucolo, Inc. v. S/V
Jaguar, 428 F.2d 394, 396 (1st Cir.1970), we stated: "This doctrine is
applicable only when the party asserting it was free from fault until the
emergency arose." One of the most recent applications of the doctrine was in a
case remarkably similar to this one, Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Vessel J. Louis,
702 F.Supp. 887 (M.D.Fla.1988). The court there found that the allision
occurred because of "the negligence of the pilot and vessel master in navigating
the vessel at an excessive rate of speed so that she ran aground...." Id. at 891.
As here, there was a tug tied to the vessel, and it loosened its line to the vessel
to avoid being crushed against the dock. The court found the tug to be without
fault, stating:
33 tug was placed, by the pilot and master of the vessel, in a position of sudden
The
peril and emergency, which situation did not arise as a result of the tug's own
previous fault. Therefore, even if the Court were to decide that the Tampa was
somehow negligent in failing to keep the towline from slipping as it backed full
astern, as the pilot ordered, such alleged negligence must be excused under the in
extremis doctrine.
34
Id. at 891.
35
There was no misapplication of the in extremis doctrine here. The captain of the
tug Borinquen testified in effect as follows: He had no problem communicating
with the pilot. After the ship cleared the Catano dock, the pilot told him to stop
pushing. At that time, the tug was between the head of the Catano dock and the
bulkhead of the terminal pier. He told the pilot that he was about 50 feet from
the pier, that there would be a collision, and he was going to release the lines
because the tug was in danger. It was his judgment that if the tug had not
backed away from the tanker, it would have been sandwiched between the
tanker and the Catano pier.
36
Robert Leith, shipping agent for the Manhattan Prince, was on the pier waiting
for it to dock. He testified that the ship approached the pier at a steady speed of
between four and seven knots. He had seen vessels dock at this pier for thirty
years and they approached at much less speed and much less under the control
of tugs. Leith testified that the bow tug (Borinquen) "got out of there" when its
captain saw that there was going to be a collision with the dock. It was Leith's
testimony that the tug dropped its lines and backed away from the tanker, when
the vessel was 50 to 60 feet from the pier.
37
It was the opinion of expert witness John Deck III that even if the tug
Borinquen had not dropped the lines, the tanker would still have hit the pier.
38
39
From this evidence the court could have found that the tug did not do anything
to create the emergency, that the safety of the tug and its crew was put in peril
as the ship continued forward towards the piers and that casting off the lines
was a reasonable response to the danger thrust upon the tug by the tanker.
40
The testimony is more than sufficient to sustain the district court's finding that
the tug Borinquen was in extremis when it cast off the lines and therefore did
not act negligently.
41
42
43
44
The streamer Flushing being aground on Hampton Bar, out of the channel or
course of vessels navigating the bay or harbor, and incapable of motion, cannot
be justly charged with any participation in causing the collision.
45
The collision being caused by the Louisiana drifting from her moorings, she
must be liable for the damages consequent thereon, unless she can show
affirmatively that the drifting was the result of inevitable accident, or a vis
major, which human skill and precaution, and a proper display of nautical skill
could not have prevented.
46
Id. at 173. See Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Atropos Island, 777 F.2d 1344, 1347 (9th
Cir.1985). Although the circumstances here did not involve a vessel that had
broken loose from her moorings as in The Louisiana and Atropos Island, it was
not error to invoke the presumption against the Manhattan Prince. When a fully
manned vessel accompanied by two tugs strikes a pier head-on, it ought to be
presumed, unless the vessel proves otherwise, that the vessel was negligent.
Under the facts here, however, considering especially the communication
obstacles between the pilot, the ship's officers and the tug and the evidence of
the speed of the ship in the turning basin, no presumption of negligence was
needed; with or without such presumption the pilot and the ship were clearly
negligent.
47
48
49
The United States Coast Guard investigated the accident. Its report of the
accident was admitted in evidence. The report gives three conclusions as to the
cause of the accident: the use of improper speed by the pilot, the failure of the
master of the Manhattan Prince to take over command and control of the vessel
from the pilot, and the action of the tug Borinquen in dropping its lines.
Appellant argues that the admission of the report in evidence was error.
50
Both sides agree that Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 109 S.Ct.
439, 102 L.Ed.2d 445 (1988), controls the admissibility of the report. Rainey
concerned the admission in a jury trial of an investigative report by the Navy of
a plane crash. The court held:
53
Although the report here states, "a narrative report will not be submitted," there
is no doubt that the Coast Guard made a full investigation of the allision. That a
narrative report was not submitted does not mean that an investigation was not
made. The deposition of Wilfredo Aleman, the Coast Guard officer who
investigated the accident, was admitted in evidence. He questioned the ship's
officers, the pilot, and the captain of the tug Borinquen within a short time after
the accident. There can be no serious question as to the trustworthiness of the
report.
54
appellant argues, there is another factor to the equation. In its opinion the
district court dropped a footnote with the signal at the end of the following
sentence: "The pilot was negligent in attempting to dock the vessel at an
excessive speed." The footnote reads: "Though the Coast Guard report on the
allision came to the same conclusion, and was admitted into evidence, the
Court made its own conclusion based on all the evidence submitted and
presented at trial. Only the fact-based portions of the report were considered by
the Court." We accept, of course, the court's statement that it relied on the trial
evidence, not the report, for its conclusions. We point out that except as to the
pilot, the court's negligence conclusions differed markedly from those of the
Coast Guard. Thus, even were the admission of the report error, it was
harmless.
55
56
Because this issue was not raised below, we do not reach it. See Clauson v.
Smith, 823 F.2d 660, 666 (1st Cir.1987); United States v. Ven Fuel, Inc., 758
F.2d 741, 760 (1st Cir.1985); McPhail v. Municipality of Culebra, 598 F.2d
603, 607 (1st Cir.1979); Johnston v. Holiday Inns, Inc., 595 F.2d 890, 894 (1st
Cir.1979). Moreover, it seems obvious that the in extremis finding, which we
have upheld, swallows this issue completely.
The district court ruled that the defense of sovereign immunity was not
available to the PRPA. It also held that the PRPA was not vicariously liable to
Sujeen, owner of the Manhattan Prince, under the doctrine of respondeat
superior, for the negligence of the pilot. Puerto Rico Ports Authority v. M/V
Manhattan Prince, 669 F.Supp. 34 (D.P.R.1987). For the reasons that follow,
we hold that the shield of sovereign immunity as embodied in the eleventh
amendment insulates the PRPA against liability. This does not mean that the
district court labored in vain because we have found its findings and rulings
pertinent to the question of sovereign immunity.
59
Congress or waiver by the state, the eleventh amendment insulates states from
damage suits in federal court. Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 U.S. 445, 96 S.Ct. 2666,
49 L.Ed.2d 614 (1976); Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 94 S.Ct. 1347, 39
L.Ed.2d 662 (1974). And the protection of the eleventh amendment is in no
way altered or reduced when the suit is based on admiralty jurisdiction. Lane v.
First Nat. Bank of Boston, 871 F.2d 166, 173 (1st Cir.1989).
60
61
We now move from the general to the specific: is the PRPA entitled to eleventh
amendment immunity. The factors going into this determination and the case
law establishing them have been summarized in Ainsworth Aristocrat Intern.
Pty. v. Tourism Co., 818 F.2d 1034, 1037 (1st Cir.1987): local law and
decisions defining the nature of the agency involved; whether payment of any
judgment will come out of the state treasury; whether the agency is performing
a governmental or proprietary function; the agency's degree of autonomy; the
power of the agency to sue and be sued and enter into contracts; whether the
agency's property is immune from state taxation and whether the state has
insulated itself from responsibility for the agency's operations. See also
Figueroa-Rodriquez v. Aquino, 863 F.2d 1037, 1044 (1st Cir.1988).
62
We first examine the Puerto Rico statute establishing and defining the authority
of the PRPA. The PRPA consists of the Governor of Puerto Rico, the Secretary
of Transportation and Public Works of Puerto Rico and the Secretary of
Agriculture and Commerce of Puerto Rico. The members of the PRPA are not
entitled to compensation for their services. The PRPA is a successor to the
Puerto Rico Transportation Authority. It is a governmental instrumentality and
public corporation. P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 23, ch. 25 Sec. 333(a) & (b). The
executive powers of the PRPA are exercised by the Economic Development
Administrator. Id. Sec. 334. The purpose of the PRPA is to "develop and
improve, own, operate and manage any and all types of transportation facilities
and marine services in, to and from ... Puerto Rico and to make available the
benefits thereof in the widest economic manner; thereby promoting the general
welfare...." Id. Sec. 336. Following this general statement is a detailed listing of
the PRPA's specific powers. Id. Among its powers are: "to sue and be sued,
Sec. 336(e); to raise revenue through rents and fees, Sec. 336(l )(1), or through
the issuance of bonds, Sec. 336(o ) and Sec. 342, and to acquire real and
personal property for its use. Sec. 336(h)-(j). Section 338 provides in pertinent
64
65
Id. Sec. 2303(b). "The pilot service in the harbors of Puerto Rico shall be under
the control of the Authority." Id. Sec. 2401. The PRPA has the power to issue,
suspend and revoke pilot licenses. Id. Secs. 2406 & 2407. Puerto Rico is a
compulsory pilot jurisdiction. No ship, with specific exemptions not applicable
in this case, may enter or leave a harbor of Puerto Rico "without obtaining pilot
service from a pilot licensed by the Authority for said harbor." Id. Sec. 2412.
66
The following undisputed findings were made by the district court based on a
stipulation filed by the parties and evidence introduced at trial.
67
PRPA does not have the power to control the actions of the pilot while he is on
the bridge. For the services of the pilot, the shipowner or agent pays a fee
directly to the pilots and also into a trust fund, created by PRPA, for the pilots'
pension. Fees are set by PRPA after a public hearing before a Hearing Officer
named by the Secretary of Transportation and Public Works. The pilots set
their own monthly schedule in advance and notify PRPA of it. Any last minute
changes in the schedule are made among the pilots themselves. Ships have no
choice between pilots. The pilots pay rent to PRPA for the use of their pilot
house. Pilots provide their own pilot boats and other equipment.
68
Puerto Rico Ports Authority v. M/V Manhattan Prince, 669 F.Supp. at 37.
69
After examining the pertinent statutes, we conclude that whether the PRPA is
entitled to eleventh amendment protection depends upon the type of activity it
engages in and the nature of the claim asserted against it. The specific question
here is whether the PRPA's relationship with ship pilots is a proprietary
function or one exercised as an arm of the state.
70
The district court in denying the defense of sovereign immunity to the PRPA
simply stated that the issue was "resolved" by Canadian Transport Co. v. Puerto
Rico Ports Authority, 333 F.Supp. 1295 (D.P.R.1971). While the court in
Canadian Transport held that the PRPA was a "public corporation with
sufficient identity and distinction, vis-a-vis the Commonwealth government, so
as to be liable to be sued herein," id. at 1297, the court also recognized that such
may not always be the case. The court stated that the PRPA "did not
demonstrate that its specific activities which gave rise to this case are
governmental actions, vis-a-vis proprietary actions, to use the dichotomy
resorted to in defendant Authority's memorandum. Rather, the allegations
merely point out that some of the Authority's activities are governmental." Id. at
1296. Unfortunately, the court failed to include any of the underlying facts on
which it based its holding, thereby rendering its precedential value minimal for
our purpose.
71
The district court held that the PRPA's function of providing harbor pilots was
proprietary. It based this holding on a Ninth Circuit case, City of Long Beach v.
American President Lines, 223 F.2d 853 (9th Cir.1955), the facts of which are
similar to the case at bar. A shipping company sued both the compulsory pilot
and the City of Long Beach for damages arising from an allision between one
of the company's ships and a pier. Id. at 855. The court determined that Long
Beach in maintaining and operating its harbor, which included the compulsory
use of harbor pilots, was engaged in a proprietary function. Id. at 856. In part,
this determination stemmed from the fact that the city received full payment
from the ships for the pilot service and then remitted the company furnishing
the pilots service sixty percent of the payment and retained forty percent for
itself. Id. at 857 n. 4.
72
The Ninth Circuit later distinguished this holding in Kitanihon--Oi S.S. Co. v.
General Const. Co., 678 F.2d 109 (9th Cir.1982). In Kitanihon, a shipping
company claimed that the city port authority should be liable for the negligent
actions of a compulsory pilot. The issue before the court did not involve
eleventh amendment immunity3 but was whether there was an "implied
warranty of nonnegligent performance" between the port authority and the
ships using the pilot service. Id. at 110. In addressing this issue, the court
examined whether the port authority's compulsory pilotage requirement was
proprietary in nature. In finding the port authority not liable, the court
distinguished the City of Long Beach:
73
The present case differs from City of Long Beach in one significant way. Here,
Shipowner paid the pilot directly, and the Port itself paid no fees to the pilot.
The Port commissions a limited number of pilots in order to protect the earning
capacity of those commissioned, who in February 1977 numbered eight. The
standard pilot's fee schedule is arrived at by negotiations between the Bay Area
pilots and the maritime steamship associations conducted at meetings which
the Port attends. Shipowners must use a commissioned ship's pilot to comply
with the compulsory pilotage clause of the Port's tariff. The Port's primary
relationship with the pilot is as the source of his commission, which the pilot
holds at the pleasure of the Port through its Pilot Advisory Board. While the
Port's power to decommission a pilot temporarily or permanently at its sole
discretion gives teeth to its rules and regulations governing commissioned
pilots and use of the Channel, the Port does not hire the pilot either directly or
indirectly.
74
Id. at 111 (footnotes omitted). This arrangement between the port authority and
the pilots is strikingly similar to the one in Puerto Rico.
75
Appellant makes two arguments for holding the PRPA liable for the negligence
of the pilot. It first contends that the PRPA should be found to be a surety of the
pilots because it failed to comply with the statutory mandate requiring the
posting of a sufficient bond. The argument runs as follows: Under The Dock &
Harbor Act, P.R.Laws ann. tit. 123, ch. 101 Sec. 2405, the PRPA is forbidden
to issue a pilot's license or renew one unless the applicant "renders a bond to the
satisfaction of the director [of the PRPA] for a reasonable sum ... to answer for
the faithful compliance of his duties as pilot." Section 2410 of the Act provides
that any pilot causing damages to another person or to the PRPA shall be civilly
responsible, and section 2411 provides that the damage liability of a pilot shall
be a lien against his bond. The amount of a pilot's bond required by the PRPA
at the time of this accident was $5,000, an amount appellant contends was
totally inadequate. Moreover, appellant avers, the bond was useless because it
stated: "It is further understood and agreed that this bond guarantees the faithful
Appellant argues that the amount of the bond and its exculpatory clause
violated the purpose and requirements of a bond for pilots, and, therefore, the
PRPA must become surety for the pilots. It cites as authority for this
proposition, Hanover Insurance Company v. Liberian Oceanway Corp., 398
F.Supp. 104 (D.P.R.1975). In Hanover, a pilot had not been required to post a
bond by the PRPA, contrary to the requirements of section 2405 of The Dock &
Harbor Act. The ship the pilot was guiding hit the cassion gate of a dry dock
while maneuvering to dock. The court held:
77 the Ports Authority, through its negligent omission has, in effect, waived the
Since
bond requirement for harbor pilots, then it is only fair and equitable that it warrants
to vessel owners and operators, and the owners of pier's [sic] facilities within Puerto
Rico, that it (Ports Authority) will guarantee payment of damages caused by the
improper performance of a harbor pilot in carrying out his duties.
78
Id. at 108. Appellee PRPA states baldly that Hanover "is bad law and should be
overturned."
79
We find it hard to square this holding with P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 23, ch. 101, Sec.
2303(b) stating that a negligent act or omission of a member of the PRPA,
while acting in his official capacity and within the scope of his function as an
agent of the government of Puerto Rico, is attributable only to the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Moreover, there is no discussion in the case of
the eleventh amendment and sovereign immunity. We decline to follow
Hanover and reject appellant's surety argument.
80
81
PRPA's
control is aimed at ensuring safe passage through the harbor. Its functions
are related to licensing and the competency of pilots. PRPA acts like a public service
commission, setting and enforcing standards within the industry (harbor services in
general and pilotage in particular).
82
Puerto Rico Ports Authority v. M/V Manhattan Prince, 669 F.Supp. at 37.
83
We hold, however, contrary to the district court, that in its relationship with
pilots, the PRPA acts as an arm of the state and not in a proprietary manner.
The PRPA, under The Dock & Harbor Act, has the duty to license pilots. Its
sanction for the negligence of a pilot is suspension or revocation of a pilot's
license. Although the PRPA has the duty to examine the qualifications of a pilot
before issuing a license, it does not train pilots. It has no control over pilot ship
assignments. The PRPA derives no revenue from the compulsory pilot system.
84
After consideration of PRPA's enabling statute, The Dock & Harbor Act of
1968 and the pertinent case law, we hold that in its relationship with pilots the
PRPA acts as arm of the Commonwealth. It follows that the eleventh
amendment is a bar to the action by appellant against it.
85