166 A. 283 | N.H. | 1933
The parties have agreed upon certain facts in the case for the purpose of ascertaining their rights thereunder in advance *207 of a trial. Those facts are that the plaintiff was employed in breaking down coal from a chute into a hopper, whence it was to be run into the tenders of interstate and intrastate locomotives indiscriminately. It was stated at the argument that under normal conditions the coal would drop by gravity into the hopper from the chute. That is, the hopper and chute were parts of a single structure, from which coal ran automatically into an engine tender below, whenever the shutter at the bottom of the hopper was open.
The top of the chute was open, and the combination of rain, snow and coal with thawing and freezing weather had formed a frozen crust at the top of the contents of the chute. The plaintiff was engaged in breaking down this crust when the accident occurred.
The problem of what employments are or are not within the scope of the federal employers' liability act has given rise to much litigation, and illustrative cases are very numerous. The supreme court of the United States has refrained from undertaking the impossible task of stating any test which would without doubt put each case in one class the other. Beyond the general principle that the act applies if the work is so directly and immediately connected with interstate transportation as substantially to form part of it, or to be a necessary incident thereto (New York Central Railroad v. Carr,
In Erie Railroad Company v. Collins,
On the other hand, employees engaged in moving coal to the receptacle from which it is to be taken later by interstate locomotives are not within the act. Chicago c. Railroad Co. v. Harrington,
But in a later case, which was not called to our attention at the argument, the court in terms overruled the Collins and Szary cases. Chicagoc. Railroad Co. v. Industrial Commission,
"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 `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 Northwestern Ry v. Bolle, ante p. 74, and they are now definitely overruled."
Judged in the light of this decision, it seems more probable that it should be held that the plaintiff was not within the act. His work of breaking down the frozen crust at the top of the hopper was, in the approved language of the Harrington case "nothing more than the putting of the coal supply in a convenient place from which it could be taken as required for use."
It is true that the earlier placement would have been sufficient but for the action of the elements. That action had caused the placement to be deficient. Without further labor upon it the coal was not in a condition to be delivered by the opening of the shutter. The plaintiff was not aiding a defective delivery from the chute, but putting *209 the coal in order for some future delivery. Such work does not come within the act, as its application is limited by the latest decision of the court of last resort.
The agreed facts negative the defendant's claim that the plaintiff was engaged in interstate transportation.
Case discharged.
All concurred.