163 A. 70 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1932
Lead Opinion
KELLER, J. dissents.
Argued October 10, 1932. Defendant is a common carrier by railroad engaged in the interstate and intrastate transportation of passengers and freight. Claimant was employed by it as a conductor of a shifting crew. He was on duty in defendant's Ontario Street freight yard in Philadelphia when he was injured. In the course of his work he handled cars engaged in both interstate and intrastate transportation. A car loaded with lumber, consigned to the Kline Stove Company, arrived at the yard on September 22, 1930. It was delivered to the consignee's private siding on September 23, 1930, at 9:15 A.M. and was wholly unloaded at 5:15 P.M. on that day. On September 22, 1930, another car, loaded with steel and consigned to the Kline Stove Company from West Virginia arrived in the yard. This car was also to be put on consignee's private siding. In proceeding to place this car there claimant found the above mentioned empty lumber car on the siding. While walking toward it in order to determine whether or not it was unloaded and could be removed before placing the car of steel on the siding, he sustained an accidental injury. He filed a claim for compensation under the state law. The referee and the Workmen's *358 Compensation Board awarded compensation. The court below sustained the award made by the board and held that claimant was engaged in intrastate transportation at the time he sustained the injury. Defendant appeals.
The judgment must be reversed. The question is whether claimant was engaged in interstate or intrastate transportation at the time he was injured. The question is a federal one, and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are controlling: Mayers v. Union R.R. Co.,
In the case before us one of the purposes for which the movement of the empty car was contemplated was to permit the interstate car to reach its final destination. The wheels of the interstate car were yet in motion in interstate transportation. The act of moving the empty car from the siding was incidental to, and so closely connected with, the interstate transportation of the other car as to be "practically a part of it." Shanks v. D.L. W. Ry. Co.,
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted to the court below for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
I would agree with the opinion of the majority of the court, if it had been necessary to remove the empty lumber car (the intrastate car) from the siding in order to put the loaded steel car (the interstate car) on it, but it was not; there was room on the siding for both of them. Claimant's orders were "to take out an empty car and place a loaded car on the siding," but the order to move the empty car was not dependent on the placing of the loaded car, except that it could not be done after the loaded car was placed on the siding.
To prevent the incurring of delay charges it was in the line of claimant's duty to remove cars from sidings after they were unloaded and put them back into the yard for use again. This duty was intrastate transportation. It was while he was engaged on this work that the claimant was hurt. No element of interstate transportation was involved in it. The fact that just before he began his work of taking out the empty car he had been engaged in shifting the loaded steel car, and would continue it after the empty car was out, did not make them parts of one movement in interstate transportation, nor render the taking out of the empty car merely incidental to the delivery of the loaded car on the siding, or so closely related to it as to be practically a part of it.
I think President Judge FINLETTER correctly applied the law to the facts in the case. *362