This is а writ of error to a judgment upon the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff for damages and costs in the sum of $25,057.31, for loss of left hand and of left leg below the knee, sustained by him while in the defendant’s employment. The action, is brought under the federal Employers’ Eiability Act (Comp. St. §§ 8657-8665). At the time he sustained the injuries in question the plaintiff was one of the local switching crew at Delawаnna Station, N. J., and was setting the brake on an open coal car which was being switched from a siding back of the station known as the “Old Switch” to another siding on the other side of the main tracks known
Saturday morning, September 16, 1916, at 5 a. m., the car arrived at Delawanna and was put on a siding known as the “Old Switch.” Between 9:30 and 10 a. m. the superintendent of the Hart Company directed the car to be placed at the stub end of that switch, which was done.
On Monday, September 18, the superintendent directed the car to be moved to Hart’s Siding and the accident happened while this was being done. These movements were within the yard limits of Delawanna. The Hart Company receipted for the coal September 16 and paid demurrage in accordance with the defendant’s rules of one dollar a day after the expiratiоn of 48 hours from 7 a. m. of that date until the car was unloaded. Upon the undisputed facts we think the plaintiff was not engaged in interstate commerce, that the interstate journey had еnded at least when 'the car was placed by the direction of the Hart Company at the stub end of the old switch, and that the judge should have so held as matter of law.- All switching thereafter in the yard for the convenience of the consignee was intrastate commerce. This is in accordance with our understanding of the decision of the Supreme Court in Lehigh Valley Railroad Co. v. Barlow,
“Basing his claim upon the federal Employers’ liability Act, defendant in error sought damages for personal injuries. The New Xork Court of Appeals affirmed a judgment in his favor (214 N. Y. 116 [107 N. E. 814 ]), and the question. now presented is whether there is evidencе tending to show that he was injured while engaging in interstate commerce. The accident occurred July 27, 1912, when, as member of a switching crew, he was assisting in placing three cars containing supply coal for plaintiff in error on an unloading trestle within its yards! at Cortland, N. X. These cars belonged to it and with their contents had passed over its line from Sayre, Pa. After being rеceived in the Cortland yards — one July 3 and two July 10 — they remained there upon sidings and switches until removed to' the trestle on the 27th.
“We think their interstate movement terminated before the cаrs left the sidings, and that while removing them the switching crew was not employed in interstate commerce. The essential facts in Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. Co. v. Harrington,241 U. S. 177 [36 Sup. Ct. 517,60 L. Ed. 941 ], did not materially differ from those now presented. There we sustained a recovery by*263 an employ?, holding he was not engaged in interstate commerce; and that decision is in conflict with the conclusion of the Ctmrt of Appeals. The judgment under review must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.”
The plaintiff relies greatly on Penna. v. Donat,
The plaintiff’s employment and injury both tоok place in the state of New Jersey. His theory is that for injuries resulting from a violation of this act he may recover damages in a common-law action brought wherever hе can serve the defendant. But master and servant together constitute a relation or status, which involves many mutual rights and duties not expressed in the specific contract of employment. That contract fixes, among other things, the kind, place, and time of employment, and the compensation. The definition and extent of the relation itself are fixеd by the law of the state where it was established, but Congress has written into it, in the case of railroad companies and their employés, this additional feature on which the plaintiff relies. The state of New Jersey has defined the rights and duties of the relation of master and servant by the Workmen’s Compensation Act (chapter 95, Laws 1911, as amended by chaptér 174, Laws 1913), which wе regard as excluding all other jurisdictions.
The answer sets up this act as a defense, and alleges that there was no provision in the contract that sеction II should not apply, and that the plaintiff had given no such notice to the defendant before the accident ; wherefore he could not maintain tire action. At the triаl the defendant offered to prove these allegations, but the court refused to permit it, and the defendant excepted. We think this was error. The New Jersey act creates a system to be enforced by the court of common pleas of the county of New Jersey which would have jurisdiction in a civil case. The employe is required to give nоtice of the injury to the employer within a fixed time. The compensation to be paid for the loss of a leg or of a hand is a fixed proportion of the employé’s daily wages for a fixed number of weeks, and this compensation may be commuted by the court of common pleas into one or more lump sums. That court is also to settle, at the request of either of the parties, any dispute about compensation. For these reasons we are of tire opinion that the plaintiff cannot maintain this action in the District Court for the Southern District of New York. There are some decisions of the courts of New York to a similar effect. Albanese v. Stewart,
The judgment is reversed.
