AppellanVplaintiff Rashool Bashir 1 filеd this wrongful death suit in state court against defendants/appellees, the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) and the CSX corporation. Appellant’s son was struck and killed by an Amtrak train 2 at a crossing in Lakeland, Florida. 3 On appeal, we address only an issue relating to аppellant’s claim that appellees operated the train at an excessive speed. 4
BACKGROUND 5
After removing the case to federal court and filing an answer, appellees filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that federal preemptiоn pursuant to the Federal Railroad Safety Act of 1970 (FRSA), 45 U.S.C. § 421,
et seq.
6
barred appellant’s claims. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of appellees. The court applied the Supreme Court’s decision in
CSX Transportation, Inc. v. Easterwood,
In Easterwood, the Court held that ... the federal regulation setting maximum operating speeds, 49 C.F.R. § 219.9(a), also covers the applicable subject matter and therefore preempts conflicting state laws. [507 U.S. at 673-74 ,]113 S.Ct. at 1742-43 . Accordingly, § 213.9(a), which sets maximum speed of eighty miles per hour for trains traveling through the Interlachen Crossing, preеmpts state tort laws to the extent they impose contrary maximum speeds on such trains. Plaintiffs excessive speed claims are therefore preempted unless the evidence demonstrates that the train was traveling in excess of eighty miles per hоur when it struck Decedent.
The district court concluded that appellees had upheld their initial burden under the summary judgment standard by offering evidence to negate appellant’s claim that the train exceeded 80 mph. The court looked to the testimоny of the train’s engineer, Richard Mascio; the assistant engineer, Leonard Cooke; and the conductor, Charles Fowler. All three of these witnesses testified that the train was traveling at a speed of 70 mph at the time it struck decedent. 7 The court found that аppellant had failed to offer evidence of the tram’s speed. The court considered and rejected appellant’s argument that an issue of fact existed on the excessive speed claim because appellees hаd failed to *931 preserve the portion of the speed recorder tape 8 which documented the trip from Tampa, Florida to Jacksonville, Florida, and thus would have recorded the train’s speed at the time it struck appellant’s son. 9 According to appellant, the speed recorder tape was the most reliable indicator of the train’s speed, and the absence of the speed recorder tape raised a question of fact as to the actual speed of the train at the moment of impact. In other words, appellant urged an adverse inference from the loss of the tape.
ISSUE
The only issue we address on appeal is whether the district court should have applied the adverse inference rule and found that an issue of fact existed as to whether the train was traveling abоve the 80 mph speed limit at the time it struck decedent.
DISCUSSION
In this circuit, an adverse inference is drawn from a party’s failure to preserve evidence only when the absence of that evidence is predicated on bad faith.
Vick v. Texas Employment Comm’n,
In engineer Mascio’s deposition testimony, he testified that at the time of impact, his reflexes caused him to glance at the spеedometer and apply the brakes all at once. 11 At that time, Mascio was seated in the locomotive console, where the illuminated, eight-inches-in-diameter speedometer was within his field of vision. The rest of Mascio’s deposition testimony is сonsistent with his testimony that he saw the speed at the time of impact, as he had been closely monitoring the speed prior to the accident. Approximately 900 feet before the intersection where the accident occurred, the train had crossed an overpass and then had rounded a curve. Mascio estimated that the train traveled over the last small overpass at roughly 63 mph, and then proceeded into the curve at about 65 mph. Mascio explained that the downhill grade сaused the train to speed up from the overpass to the curve. He further explained that his experience had taught him that if the train’s speed entering the curve was 65 mph, then coming out of the curve and headed back uphill, the rear car would be going 70 mph.
In addition to Mascio’s deposition testimony, assistant engineer Cooke stated in an affidavit that he looked at the speedometer at the time of impact, and noted that the tram’s speed was 70 mph. Furthermore, the train’s *932 conductor, Fowler, reported in his Unusual Occurrence Report that the train’s speed was 70 mph. In his deposition testimony, Fowler explained that his report of the train’s speed was based on statements by both Mascio and Cooke subsequent to the accident. Cookе and Mascio had also reported to Police Officer Timothy Vickers that the train had been traveling at 70 mph.
Finally, it is undisputed that neither Maseio nor Cooke had control over the content or fate of the speed tape, or had any contact with anyone who did have control over the tape; that both of these witnesses knew that the speed of the train was routinely recorded and that the tape would thus show the speed of the train at the time of the accident; and thus that at the timе these two witnesses reported 70 mph to the police officer and to Fowler for his Unusual Occurrence Report, they necessarily would have thought that the speed tape would also evidence the speed of the train at the time of thе accident. These circumstances constitute exceedingly strong evidence that the train was in fact going 70 mph.
Appellant has adduced absolutely no evidence that the train was traveling at a speed other than 70 mph. The only evidence аdduced by appellant is the unexplained absence of the speed tape. As noted above, however, an adverse inference from the missing speed tape is permissible only if the circumstances surrounding its absence indicate bad faith (e.g., tampering). Appellant has adduced absolutely no evidence of bad faith or tampering.
Under all the circumstances of this case, we agree with the district court that the missing tape gives rise to no adverse inference, and that no reasonable jury could conclude that the train was traveling in excess of 80 mph. We recognize that this case is somewhat different from
Vick.
There was an innocent explanation for the destruction of the evidence in
Vick
— i.e., “the records were destroyed under routinе procedures without bad faith.”
The circumstances of this case are somewhat similar to those in
Williams v. CSX Transportation, Inc.,
The present case is distinguishable from the case relied on by appellant,
Stanton v. National Railroad Passenger Corp.,
First, in
Stanton
the subject train’s engineer testified that at the time of the accident, the train was traveling only one mile per hour under the speed limit set by the federal regulations.
Stanton,
CONCLUSION
Under the particular circumstances of this case, we think appellant presented insufficient evidence to create an issue of fact as to the subject train’s sрeed. We therefore affirm the district court’s grant of appellees’ motion for summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellant is the personal representative of the estate of Warith Dean Bashir.
. The CSX corporation owned the railroad tracks.
. The sad facts involving the death of this eleven year old boy are hеart-wrenching. However, the only issue which is close enough to warrant discussion is a strictly legal issue.
. Appellant's other arguments on appeal are without merit and warrant no discussion.
. Parts of this opinion directly quote the district court's version of the undisputed fаcts or procedural background.
. The FRSA was revised in 1994, and is now codified at 49 U.S.C. § 20101 et seq.
. We discuss the facts in more detail below.
. The subject train was equipped with a speed recording device mounted to the engine; that device contained a tape which continuously documented the train's speed.
. The accident occurred in Lakeland, Florida, which lies en route between Tampa and Jacksonville. The portion of the tape covering the trip from Jacksonville to Washington, D.C. was recovered.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
.Mascio, who has over twenty years of experience, explained that his automatic reflex before striking an object, whеther it be a person, a deer or a dog, is to apply the brakes while simultaneously glancing at the speedometer. He explained that, although right before the accident he was looking straight ahead at the crossing’s green proceed signal, when he realized he was going to hit someone, he glanced at the speedometer.
