245 Pa. 443 | Pa. | 1914
Opinion by
On February 1, 1910, William J. Hogarty, an employee of the Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, while working on a freight train, met with an accident which caused him to lose his right arm. The plaintiff charged in his declaration that the casualty was due to' the negligent construction and maintenance of the defendant’s road. The trial court first gave binding instructions for the defendant, and then entered judgment in its favor; the plaintiff has appealed.
The uncontradicted evidence was sufficient to go to the jury on all the issues usually involved in a case of this character; but the defendant proved that the plaintiff had accepted benefits as a member of its relief association, and contended that this was a bar to his recovery; citing Reese v. Railroad Co., 229 Pa. 340, and other cases. The plaintiff rejoined by formally calling attention to the Act of Congress of April 22, 1908 (35 Stat. 65, Chap. 149), which, inter alia, forbids the de
In Second Employers’ Liability Cases, Mondou v. R. R. Co., 223 U. S. 1, the court disposed of four different appeals, and determined many general points, among others (1) That “The United States is not a foreign sovereignty as regards the several states, but is a concurrent and, within its jurisdiction a paramount sovereign”; (2) “Until Congress acted on the subject, the laws of the several states determined the liability of interstate carriers for injuries to their employees while engaged in interstate commerce, but Congress having acted, its action supersedes that of the states, so far as it covers the same subject”; (3) “When Congress, in the exertion of a power confided to it by the Constitution, adopts an act, it speaks for all the people and all the states, and thereby establishes a policy for all, and the courts of a state cannot refuse to enforce the act on the ground that it is not in harmony with the policy of the state......or on the grounds of inconvenience or confusion.” The case we are discussing involved the same Federal statute which is now before us; and it expressly
St. Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Hesterly, 228 U. S. 702, was commenced in a state court, and recovery was had by the personal representative of a deceased employee, which included an item not allowed by the Federal statute. The statute was not formally pleaded; and so far as the report shows there was nothing in the plaintiff’s declaration to indicate that her decedent was engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the accident. The defendant contended that the Act of Congress controlled; but the trial court held that it did not apply, and the Supreme Court of the State subsequently decided that the Federal statute was “only supplementary and the judgment could be upheld under the State law.” The United States Supreme Court reversed,
In Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. Wulf, 226 U. S. 570, the plaintiff, in her individual capacity, commenced an action in a Circuit Court of the United States to recover' damages for the death of a son killed in the employ of the defendant company. The case was in the United
The last reported case touching upon the subject before us is Taylor v. Taylor, U. S. Sup. Ct. Adv. Opinions, 1913, p. 350, 351, (Issue of March 15, 1914); which decides that the proceeds of a judgment recovered in a state court, by an administratrix, in a personal injury case, within the Act of Congress, must be distributed under the Federal law and not under the law of the state where the accident happened and the decedent resided. Most of the recent Federal cases are reviewed in the course of this opinion, the court stating, in connection with Second Emp. cases, supra, that the statute and its amendments “having been enacted......state laws must give away to them; they established the policy for all..... .and the courts of a state cannot refuse to enforce them on the ground that they are not in harmony with the policy of the state. Congress having acted ......the laws of the states, in so far as they cover the same field, are superseded; for necessarily that which is not supreme must yield to that which is.” Later, in discussing Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Wulf, supra, it is said, “Notwithstanding the original petition asserted a cause of action......without making reference to the Act of Congress, the court was presumed to be cognizant of the Federal enactment, and to know that, with respect to the responsibility of interstate carriers by railroads to their employees injured in such commerce after its enactment, it had the effect of superseding state laws upon the subject.”
These United States decisions establish that this broad, general Act of Congress supersedes the laws of the states upon all matters within its scope; and that, so
In the Allen Case the statute was. not of the character of the one at bar, which ordains broad, general rules of public policy, and within its field not only supersedes the common law but all relevant state enactments; on the contrary, the statutory provision there relied upon ordered a minute regulation, to wit, that a certain kind of mechanical contrivance, or coupler, be used upon all cars engaged in interstate commerce. The plaintiff in that case first declared upon a liability arising from common law negligence, and then, after the statute of limitations had run, he desired to amend by pleading the Act of Congress, so that he might prove a breach of this specific regulation, as a substantive part of his case in chief. We determined that this could not be done, as the amendment would present not only a departure from “law to law” but from “fact to fact”; and our decision was based largely upon the Wyler Case, which is distinguished in the Wulf Case. But in the present instance the plaintiff simply relied upon the relevant general principles, or rules of law, whatever their source, applicable to the whole class of cases to which his cause belonged; and, as we have already pointed out, since those established by the Federal statute cover the field
The federal statute was not brought into the case at bar until a special defense was entered upon, and then the plaintiff promptly drew attention to its express prohibition of all defenses of the character of the one offered; just as in the ordinary industrial accident case, although not formally pleaded, a plaintiff may claim the benefit of any particular provision in our Fellow Servant Act of June 10, 1907, P. L. 523, or our Factory Act of May 2,1905, P. L. 352, if the circumstances call for it. True, the law depended upon at bár happened to be a Federal statute, but since the Supreme Court of the United States has decided that this statute must be treated by State Courts, in each instance, as though an act of their own legislature, for all practical purposes it is a Pennsylvania statute, in the same category as the two acts to which we refer; and its provision that “any contract, rule, regulation, or devise whatsoever” the purpose of which is to enable a common carrier to exempt itself from liability for negligence to its employees, “shall to that extent be void,” is the announcement of a broad rule of public policy applicable to all cases within the scope of the statute, with like effect as though promulgated by one of our acts.
The question before us has been made strictly a Federal one, by the Act of Congress and the relevant United States Supreme Court decisions; and thereunder, when we consider that the plaintiff’s case in chief did not depend upon any specific and peculiar statutory regula: tion, such as in the Allen Case, that he is a person bound by and entitled to all the benefits of the Federal statute,
In this particular instance, it is evident that no one can suffer any real harm, or plead surprise, even in the strict legal sense of that term, if the case is treated as though expressly .brought under the Act of 1908, supra; for the defendant is an interstate road, and it admitted at trial that the plaintiff was an employee engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the accident, so we may fairly assume that it had this knowledge from the first.
The learned court below erred in giving binding in: structions for the defendant; the assignments are sustained and the judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.