Plaintiff-Appellant Jesus Trinidad seeks review of an adverse jury verdict in his personal injury suit against Southern Pacific Transportation Company. This case *188 presents us with a question of first impression: whether the brake provisions of the Safety Appliance Act (the Act), 45 U.S.C. §§ 1-16, apply to trains during predepar-ture inspection. Because we find the sections inapplicable, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Appellant, a carman fоr Southern Pacific, was performing the final steps of a routine brake inspection on the night he was injured. The inspection was performed in accordance with the Code of Federal Regulations, which requires that after a train is made up, its brakes must be tested for air leaks. 49 C.F.R. § 232.12(a)(l)(i) (1988). The regulation sets a specific procedure for testing for leaks. Id. §§ 232.12(c) & (d). If an air leak is detected, a carman must repair it and notify the engineer, who then repeats the test. Once the inspection is complete, “the engineman and conductor must be notified that train is in proper сondition to proceed.” Id. § 232.12(g).
During the inspection in question, Appellant detected and repaired an air leak in the brake system of a tank car. Pursuant to inspection procedure, Appellant proceeded to inform the engineer of the problem. Appellant drоve to the head of the train, left his truck, and as he walked across a set of tracks between his truck and the stationary train, he was hit by a “cut” of сars being moved up this track.
Appellant asserted a negligence claim under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60, and strict liability claims under the Safety Appliance Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 1-16, and the Boiler Inspection Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 17-23. Later Appellant dropped his FELA and Boiler Inspection Act claims and advаnced on the strength of his Safety Appliance Act claim alone.
Appellant argued that because he was injured while attempting to nоtify the engineer of an air leak, the air leak (an alleged defect under the Act) was a legal cause of his injury. The train inspected by Apрellant, not the cars that hit him, thus, was the subject of the trial. At the close of arguments, the judge read to the jury sections 1 and 9 of the Act, the sections gоverning brakes, and 49 C.F.R. § 232.12, the regulation governing inspections. The jury returned a verdict for Southern Pacific, finding no violation of the Act.
Appellant seeks review of the jury verdict, alleging that 1) Southern Pacific’s closing argument was prejudicial, 2) the judge improperly instructed the jury, and 3) the judge respondеd incorrectly to the jury’s inquiries about its instructions. We need not address these challenges because we find that the Act’s brake provisions are inapplicable to the train inspected by Appellant. Because Appellant’s case rested solely on the Act, we affirm the judgment аgainst him.
The Safety Appliance Act imposes strict liability on railroads for violations of the Act’s safety standards.
Crane v. Cedar Rapids & I.C. Ry.,
Congress amended the Act in 1988.
1
Prior to that, section 1 referred to locomotives “in moving interstate commerce.” Consequently, most of the cases discussing the Act’s applicability do so in terms of “movement.” But though the statute referred to “movement,” the courts’ application of the law has turnеd on the nature of the trains’ activities rather than the presence of motion alone. Generally, courts have not applied the Aсt to trains involved in switching operations — those procedures
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by which the cars and engines are uncoupled, moved, and reassembled — evеn though such trains are in motion.
See United States v. Northern P. Ry.,
Although the Act’s language has changed, the distinction between switching and train operations established in older cases remains relevant in determining whether a train is “in use” or “being run” for the purposes of the Act. The initial inspection of a train, however, appears to fall squarely between the switching and post-departure catеgories. Surprisingly, courts have not previously examined the nature of initial inspections. And though Appellant proffers two cases seemingly on рoint, we are not persuaded that they control the outcome of this case.
Appellant asserts that the holding in
Brady v. Terminal R. Ass’n,
The second inspection case cited by Appellant, Ang
ell v. Chesapeake & O. Ry.,
Like many courts before us that have examined this statute, we are without precedents “оf any clear and controlling effectiveness.”
United States v. Panhandle & S.F. Ry.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Rail Safety Improvement Act of 1988, 102 Stat. 624, 630 (1988). The parties and the court were unaware of the amendment at the time of trial.
