James Odell Smith was employed by Baker Drive-Away Company, Inc., which unloaded Chrysler cars for Norfolk and Western Railway Company at a place in North Carolina. While moving around on the top tier of an automobile-carrying railroad car, in the process of releasing the restraining chains on the Chryslers, Smith fell from the railroad car to the ground and was injured. In his damage suit against the railroad brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 U.S.C. § 51 et seq.) the district court entered summary judgment for Smith on the question of the applicability of the Act, drawing from the undisputed facts and his own inferences the conclusion that Smith was an “employee” of the railroad within the meaning of the Act. After final judgment entered upon a jury verdict for Smith, the railroad appealed the entry of summary judgment for Smith and the denial of its own motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
Though the Act in terms applies to “[a]ny employee of a carrier,” it is settled that its protection extends in some circumstances to those injured workers not directly employed by the railroad itself. Though employees of independent contractors are not accorded coverage under the Act, e.
g.,
Chicago, R. I. & P. R. R. Co. v. Bond,
In Sinkler v. Missouri Pacific R. R. Co.,
We need not decide whether the
Sinkler
doctrine of “operational activity” properly extends to protect one who is not directly employed by the railroad.
See
Hetman v. Fruit Growers Express Co.,
One of the standard tests of agency is “whether or not the work is part of the regular business of the employer.” Restatement (Second) of Agency § 220(h) (1957). “Regular business” and “operational activity” are labels that obviously may be pinned on the same facts. They are not even sharply distinct in theory — for the first is one of the many tests of agency while the latter is alone sufficient basis for finding the agency relationship. Operational activity aside, we think the nature of the work being done by Baker for the railroad here militates toward a finding of agency on standard agency principles. As Baker was unloading automobiles which the railroad had undertaken a contractual duty to unload, to that extent Baker was engaged in the regular business of the railroad.
Though historically and traditionally the railroad is responsible neither for loading nor for unloading,
see
Casella v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
Affirmed.
