95 N.J.L. 98 | N.J. | 1920
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action is based upon the Federal Employers’ Liability act, 8 Fed. Stat. (2d ed.) 1208. It was brought to recover compensation for injuries received by the plaintiff,' who was employed as a car repairer by the defendant in the New Durham yards of the West Shore Kail-way Company. This yard was used for the- making- up of freight trains, both interstate and intrastate, for the storage of cars, and also for the repair thereof. Tracks 25 and 27 were known as deadhead tracks, and were used for the storage of freight cars which required repair. These cars, when in. service, were used' indiscriminately in interstate and intrastate commerce. On the day of the accident the plaintiff was engaged in repairing a freight car which, had been placed upon track 27. He was called away from bis work by the assistant foreman, his immediate superior, to look at a car on track 21, which had just been repaired. After some conversation with the assistant foreman, relating to this car he started to go back to resume' his work of repair on the car standing
The judgment of nonsuit was properly ordered, the ruling of the trial judge being in accord with the late decisions of the United States Supreme Court.
Tn Erie Railroad Co. v. Welsh, 242 U. S. 303, the true test to be applied in determining whether or not a given case was within the federal statute was declared to be the nature of the work being done at the time of the injury; and it was hold that the fact that the plaintiff, who was a yard conductor in the company’s employ, had shortly before the accident been engaged in superintending the shifting of an interstate ear, and that he was returning to the yardmaster’s office, after he had completed this task, for instructions as to what work he should next engage in, when the accident occurred, and the further fact that, had he reached the jarcl-in aster’s office safely, he would then have been directed to assist in making up an interstate train, were not sufficient to bring the case within the act.
Although the facts of the cited case are quite unlike those which are presented in that now before us, the test laid down is applicable — that is, was the work being done by the plaintiff at the time of the injur}' a task in interstate commerce? We think it plain that it was not. The repair work was being done to an instrument of commerce, it is true, but at that time the ear was entirely out of commission, and was not being used for any purpose whatever. In this respect the case
There are other and later decisions of the federal tribunal where the test declared in the Welsh case was applied in cases quite similar in their facts to that now before us. In Minneapolis, &c., Railroad Co. v. Winters, 242 U. S. 353, the injury occurred while the plaintiff was repairing a locomotive engine. The engine had been used in interstate commerce before the accident happened, and was so used afterward. There was nothing, however, to show that it was permanently devoted to such commerce. It was held that the facts did not present a case within the federal act, the court saying: “It is not like the matter of repairs upon a road permanently devoted to commerce among the states. An engine, as such, is not permanently devoted to any kind of traffic, and it does not appear that this engine was destined especially to anything more definite than, such business as it might be needed for. It was not interrupted in an interstate haul to be repaired and go on. It simply had finished some interstate business and had not yet begun upon' any other. Its next work, so far as appears, might be interstate or confined to Iowa, as it should happen. At the moment it was not engaged in either. Its character as an instrument of commerce depended on its employment at the time, not upon remote -probabilities or upon accidental later events.” In Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. v. Branson, 242 Id. 623, the plaintiff was injured while engaged in painting an engine in the defendant company’s round house, the work which he was doing being that for which he was employed. It was held that the ease was not within the statute. So, too, in the case of Chicago, &c., Railroad Co. v. Kindlesparker, 246 Id. 657, the court again 'applied the test declared in the Welsh case, holding that a plaintiff who was injured while repairing an engine which, when in use, was devoted indiscriminately to the movement of interstate and intrastate traffic, was not engaged at
These cases are controlling upon state tribunals. The three just above cited, as we read them, establish the principle that an employe of a common carrier who is injured while at work in repairing rolling stock of the carrier, and which is out of use for the purpose of having the repairs made, is not injured “while engaged in interstate commerce,” and, consequently, is not entitled to the remedy afforded by the Federal Employers’ Liability act.
The judgment under review will be affirmed.