53 S.W.2d 884 | Mo. | 1932
Lead Opinion
Elmer A. Allen, an employee of the defendant Railway Company, was killed while engaged, in the course of his employment, in doing certain repair work at defendant's railroad yards in Kansas City, Missouri. The widow, Elsie Allen, as administratrix brought this action, under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, to recover damages for Allen's death, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. The defendant operated a railroad business for the transportation of passengers and freight in interstate and intrastate commerce. At the conclusion of all the evidence the Railway Company moved for a directed verdict upon the ground that under the facts Allen was not, at the time he received the injury which caused his death, engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Federal Employers' Liability Act. The trial court overruled the motion and the verdict and judgment, in an amount giving this court jurisdiction of the appeal, was for plaintiff. The Railway Company appealed.
It is conceded that if the facts make out a cause of action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act the evidence is sufficient to take the case to the jury on the question of defendant's negligence. Appellant contends, however, that plaintiff has no cause of action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act but redress or compensation for Allen's death must be had under the Missouri Workmen's Compensation Act. An understanding of the facts is necessary to a determination of the question. Appellant maintains extensive terminal yards in Kansas City wherein are located a roundhouse, the office building of the superintendent of terminals, a carpenter shop, boiler shop, power house, mill shop and other buildings necessary to the operation of a large railroad terminal. There were also, within the yards, numerous tracks upon which passenger coaches used in both interstate and intrastate service and Pullman cars used in interstate service were stored when trains having the terminus of their run at Kansas City arrived there. These coaches and cars were cleaned and made ready for service and then placed in passenger trains made up for runs out of Kansas City. Locomotives were kept in the roundhouse, or in these yards, between trips on the road. Repairs of varied character were made upon engines and cars while same were in these terminal yards. To take care of sewage appellant had constructed a private sewer main of vitrified tile, twenty-four inches in diameter and some twenty-four hundred feet in length. north and south, with lateral lines to the several buildings. This sewer connected at the south end of the yards with the city sewer *465 system. The terminal yard sewer was approximately eleven feet below the surface of the ground. It served the building used as offices for the superintendent of terminals, where a clerical force was maintained, the offices of the yard master, store room, carpenter shop, mill shop, roundhouse, restaurant and other buildings. In the power house were two large stationary boilers by means of which steam was generated and supplied, by a system of pipes, to the yards and buildings. In this manner the buildings were heated. The steam was also piped to the various tracks throughout the yards upon which coaches were stored. Trains with Kansas City as a terminus would be broken up on arrival there and the coaches placed upon these tracks. During cold weather the coaches were heated, while standing on the storage tracks, by steam piped from the power house but when a train was made up to go out of the yards the coaches were disconnected from the pipe carrying steam from the power house and were thereafter heated by steam from the locomotive. When an engine came into the terminal yards at the end of its regular run the fire was extinguished. In firing a locomotive engine preparatory to sending it out of the yards it was necessary to create a draft in addition to that produced by the smoke stack. When the fire was started and until steam in the boiler of the locomotive attained a pressure of 30 or 35 pounds, after which time the engine created its own draft, a draft was obtained by forcing steam, generated in the power house, into the front of the engine. After sufficient steam was generated in the boiler of the locomotive that steam was used to create the draft and keep the fire burning and the connection with the pipes carrying steam from the power house was then discontinued. Steam generated by means of the two boilers at the power house was not used to propel the locomotives or any other machinery. The boilers in the power house were in continuous service and were in charge of three stationary engineers, each working an eight hour shift. In order to keep the boilers free of sediment it was customary, two to three times during each eight hour shift, for the engineer to open a blow-off valve, forcing steam and scalding water out of the boilers which was carried off through a six inch pipe leading from the boiler room, underground, to and entering a manhole which was located some 75 feet from the boiler room. The six inch pipe entered the manhole about five feet below the surface of the ground. This manhole was twenty-four inches in diameter and was constructed of vitrified tile, the lower end rested on the sewer main and the top extended to about the surface of the ground. A hole had been made in the top of the sewer main, within the manhole so that the water coming into the manhole through the pipe leading from the boilers would flow into the sewer. There was *466 no other pipe carrying any form of sewage into this manhole. Allen was employed by appellant as a carpenter in the bridge and building department in its Kansas City yards. On the day he was injured, the crew, of which he was a member, was engaged, under the direction of the foreman, in cleaning out the sewer main. It was found, or at least thought, that there was a partial stoppage, or the lodgment of some substance, in the sewer line about three or four feet below or south of the manhole into which the six inch pipe from the boilers entered. The foreman directed Allen to go down into the manhole by means of a ladder and enlarge the hole in the sewer main at the bottom of the manhole in order to facilitate the work of cleaning the sewer line. However before permitting Allen to enter the manhole the foreman went to the boiler room and notified the engineer in charge thereof of his intention to send a workman into the manhole and told the engineer not to open the blow-off vale on the boilers, which would cause steam and scalding water to flow from the boiler into the manhole, until notified that the work at the manhole was completed. After this notice was given Allen entered the manhole and worked there for some time. While Allen was so engaged the engineer at the boiler room opened the blow-off valves and a quantity of steam and scalding water flowed into the manhole. Allen was seriously burned and scalded resulting in his death shortly after he was removed from the manhole. There was at no time a complete stoppage of the flow in the sewer main or any serious interference therewith and there was no stoppage of any kind whatsoever, or interference in, the six inch pipe running from the boiler room to the manhole.
The Federal Employers' Liability Act declares that, "every common carrier by railroad while engaging in commerce between any of the several states . . . shall be liable in damages to any person suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce, or in case of the death of such employee to his or her personal representative," etc., if the injury results in whole or in part from the negligence of the carrier or any of its officers, agents or employees. In determining the applicability of the Act we must be governed by the interpretation thereof as made by the Supreme Court of the United States which necessitates a review of certain decisions of that court.
The test now recognized and applied was announced in Shanks v. Delaware, Lackawanna Western Railroad Company,
"Coming to apply the test to the case in hand, it is plain that Shanks was not employed in interstate transportation, or in repairing or keeping in usable condition a roadbed, bridge, engine, car or other instrument then in use in such transportation. What he was doing was altering the location of a fixture in a machine shop. The connection between the fixture and interstate transportation was remote at best, for the only function of the fixture was to communicate power to machinery used in repairing parts of engines some of which were used in such transportation. This, we think, demonstrates that the work in which Shanks was engaged, . . . was too remote from interstate transportation to be practically a part of it, and therefore that he was not employed in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Employers' Liability Act."
Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad Company v. Harrington,
The Shanks case was followed by the Supreme Court of the United States in Illinois Central Railroad Company v. Cousins,
In Chicago Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Bolle,
"It will be observed that the word used in defining the test is `transportation,' not the word `commerce.' The two words were not regarded as interchangeable, but as conveying different meanings. Commerce covers the whole field of which transportation is only a part; and the word of narrower signification was chosen understandingly and deliberately as the appropriate term.
"The business of a railroad is not to carry on commerce generally. It is engaged in the transportation of persons and things in commerce; and hence the test of whether an employee at the time of his injury is engaged in interstate commerce, within the meaning of the act, naturally must be whether he was engaged in interstate transportation or in work so closely related to such transportation as to be practically a part of it. . . .
"The applicable test thus firmly established is not to be shaken by the one or two decisions of this court where, inadvertently, the word `commerce' has been employed instead of the word `transportation.'
"Plainly, the respondent in the present case does not bring himself within the rule. At the time of receiving his injury he was engaged in work not incidental to transportation in interstate commerce, but purely incidental to the furnishing of means for heating the station and other structures of the company. His duty ended when he had produced a supply of steam for that purpose. He had nothing to do with its distribution or specific use. Indeed, what he produced was not used or intended to be used, directly or indirectly, in the transportation of anything. It is plain that his work was not in interstate transportation and was not so closely related to such transportation *471 as to cause it to be practically a part of it. Certainly that work was no more closely related to transportation than was that of the employee in the Harrington case, who placed coal in the chutes for the use of locomotives engaged in interstate transportation; or that of the employee in the Cousins case, who supplied coal for heating the shop in which cars used in interstate traffic were repaired. The work of the employees in those cases and that of the respondent here are, in fact, so nearly alike in their lack of necessary relationship to interstate transportation, as to be in principle the same."
We now refer to two cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States subsequent to the Shanks, Harrington and Cousins cases and prior to the decision in the Bolle case, viz., Erie Railroad Company v. Collins,
"Thomas, an employee of the railroad company, in attempting to oil an electric motor while it was running, was injured by having his hand caught in the gears. The railroad was engaged in both intrastate and interstate commerce. The motor furnished power for hoisting coal into a chute, to be taken therefrom by, and for the use of, locomotive engines principally employed in the movement of interstate freight." *472
The court says:
"The contention that Thomas was employed in interstate commerce at the time of the injury, rests upon the decisions of this court in Erie R.R. Co. v. Collins,
"But in Chicago, B. Q.R. Co. v. Harrington,
"We are unable to reconcile this decision with the rule deducible from the Collins and Szary cases, and it becomes our duty to determine which is authoritative. From a reading of the opinion in the Collins case, it is apparent that the test of the Shanks case was not followed (see p. 85), the words `interstate commerce' being inadvertently substituted for the words `interstate transportation.' The Szary case is subject to the same criticism, since it simply followed the Collins case. Both cases are out of harmony with the general current of the decisions of this court since the Shanks case, Chicago North Western Ry. Co. v. Bolle, ante, p. 74, and they are now definitely overruled. The Harrington case furnishes the correct rule." *473
[1] Considering the provisions of the Federal Employers' Liability Act whereby a common carrier by railroad "while engaging in commerce between any of the several states" is made liable in damages for injury suffered by any person through the negligence of the railroad company "while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce," as construed and interpreted by the Supreme Court of the United States in the cases which we have reviewed, no right of recovery arises thereunder unless the employee was "at the time of the injury engaged in interstate transportation or in work so closely related to it as to be practically a part of it." Citing the Shanks case and Chicago
E.I.R. Co. v. Industrial Comm., supra, it is said in New York, New Haven Hartford Railroad Co. v. Bezue,
[2] It is held that where an employee is injured while engaged in work upon or directly in connection with an instrumentality which itself is being used in interstate transportation, such as tracks, roadbeds and bridges, or locomotives or cars, embarked upon or immediately about to embark upon the transportation of interstate traffic, the act applies. [Pedersen v. D.L. W. Railroad Co.,
In the Bolle case, supra, Bolle was in charge of and operating the agency by which steam was generated for the purpose of heating the railroad buildings, and interstate passenger coaches while standing in the yards and "sometimes" this steam was used "to prevent freezing of a turntable" used by interstate locomotives, but the Supreme Court of the United States said: "It is plain that his work was not in interstate transportation and was not so closely related to such transportation as to be practically a part of it." If Bolle was not engaged in interstate transportation or the work he was doing was not so closely related thereto as to be considered practically a part thereof, by no refinement of reasoning can Allen be said to have been so engaged. The work Allen was doing was still further removed and much more remote from interstate transportation.
A review of the facts of the instant case, in the light of the decisions we have cited and referred to and by which we are bound, demonstrates, we think, that the work in which Allen was engaged at the time of the injury "was too remote from interstate transportation to be practically a part of it and therefore that he was not employed in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Employers' Liability Act." Shanks v. Delaware, L. W. Railroad Co., supra.
The judgment must be reversed. It is so ordered. Hyde andSturgis, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur. *475