delivered the opinion of the court;
The right of the plaintiff who is defendant in error here to recover for an alleged personal injury, was stated in two counts. In both, the wrong was alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the railway company, while it was engaged in сarrying on interstate commerce and while the plaintiff was employed by it in such commerce. In the first count, however, the act of Congress known as the Safety Appliance Act was expressly declared on. For the purposes of the writ of errоr which was prosecuted by the railroad company from the Circuit Court of Appeals, numerous assignments of error were made and were all disposed of by the court in a full opinion. (201 Fed. Rep. 836.) In view of the complexion of the case as herе presented we need address ourselves to only one of such assignments and to state the facts only so far as essential to its consideration.
The proof showed that the plaintiff was one of a crew working a switch engine, and that in a yard near Chiсago such engine coupled with four loaded freight cars moving
Among the errors assigned in the court below was the refusal of the trial court to give an instruction relating to the action of the switchman in entering between the cars and his supposed giving of the come-ahead signal. This instruction, while leaving to the jury the determination of whether the switchman in going between the cars to examine the coupling mechanism gave a come-ahead signal,
“If after he startеd to go between the' cars he has done something which was carelessly done or which you can say from a preponderance of the evidence contributed approximately to the accident, then he cannot recover. ... If there be contributory negligence at all, it depends not upon his assuming the risk under the circumstances in evidence in this case but upon the care with which he acted while in the performance of the work which he assumed.
“You are further instructed that if you beliеve from’ the preponderance of the evidence, that the plaintiff gave a ‘come-ahead’ signal to the switchman or engineer, — one or both — and after that went- between the cars añd was injured, then you have a right to consider whether thе giving of the 'come-ahead ’ signal by the plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury as distinguished from the condition of the coupler, and if you find that under the circumstances the 'come-ahead’ signal was the proximate cause of the injury, then your verdiсt must be for the defendant.
“You are also instructed that where there is a safe and a dangerous way of doing an act, and the servant uses a dangerous way and is injured thereby, he is charged with negligence on his part and may not recover.”
The court belоw disposed of the refusal of the trial court to charge as a matter of law that there was no right to recover if the proof showed that the switchman had given the 'come-ahead’ signal, upon the ground that there
“If, under thе Employers’ Liability Act, plaintiff’s negligence, contributing with defeiidant’s negligence to the production of the injury, does not defeat the cause of action, but only lessens the damages, and if the cause of action is established by showing that the injury resulted ‘in whole оr in part’ from defendant’s negligence, the statute would be nullified by calling plaintiff’s act the proximate cause, and then defeating him, when he could not be defeated by calling his act contributory negligence. For his act was the same act, by whatever name it be called. It is only when plaintiff’s act is the sole cause— when defendant’s act is no part of the causation — that defendant is free from liability under the act.”
As in the argument at bar reliance is solely placed except in one particular, upon error which is assumed to have arisen from the refusal of The trial court to give the charge previously referred to and the judgment of the court
(a) In the trial court it is insisted the operation and effect-of the Employers’ Liability Act upon the rights of the parties was not involved because that act was not in express terms referred to in the pleadings or pressed at the trial and was hence not considered by the court in acting upon the requested charge and therefore it is urged it was error in the reviewing court to test the correctness of the ruling of the trial court by the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act instead of confining the subject exclusively to the Safety Appliance Law and the rules of the common law governing negligence. But the want, of foundation for this contention becomes apparent when it is considered that in the complaint it was expressly alleged and in the.proof it was clearly established that the injury complained of was suffered in the course of the operation of interstate commerce, thus bringing the case within the Employers’ Liability Act. It is true that to avoid the irresistible consequences arising from this situation it is insisted in argument that as no express claim was made under the Employers’ Liability Act, therefore there was no right in the plaintiff to avail of the benefits of its provisions or in the court to apply them to the casе before it. But this simply amounts to saying that the Employers’ Liability Act may not be applied to a situation which is within its provisions unless in express terms the provisions of the act- be formally invoked. Aside from its manifest unsoundness considered as an original proposition the contention is not open as it was expressly foreclosed in
Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co.
v.
Duvall,
(b) Coming to consider the proposition that although the case be governed by the Employers’ Liability Act error
“Provided, That no such employé who may be injured or killed shall be held to have been guilty of cоntributory negligence in any case where the violation by such common carrier of any statute enacted for the safety of employés contributed to the injury or death of such employé.”
The only other objection pressed in the argument at bar concerns an instruction asked and refused by the trial court with referénce to the weight to be attributed to the testimony of a car inspector who inspected the coupler in question before the accident. The subject of this asserted error was evidently cárefully considered by the trial court and was adversely disposed of by the court below, both in its original and in the opinion on the rehearing. Under these circumstances without going into detail in view of the doctrine to be applied to cases of this chаracter as announced in
Chicago Junction Ry. Co.
v.
King,
Affirmed.
