77 Pa. Super. 534 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1921
Opinion by
This appeal must be determined by the rule applied in the decision of Martini v. Director General of Railroads, in which an opinion was filed to-day. Appellee’s son was killed while employed as a brakeman. Claiming to be dependent, appellee filed a petition for compensation under the state law. Appellant answered first, that the relation of the parties was controlled by the federal law, and second, denied that appellee was dependent. The referee found for claimant on both points; the compensation board affirmed; the common pleas dismissed an appeal and the case was brought here. As the judgment must be reversed on the first ground, we need not consider the second. We take the following statement of facts from the opinion filed by the board: “On July 3, 1919, Philip Lamlein was employed as a brakeman by the defendant company on a local freight train operating between Bethlehem, Pa., and Philadelphia, Pa. The duties of the local freight crew, of which Lamlein was a member, consisted of doing all the shifting, loading and unloading of freight at the various stations between Bethlehem and Philadelphia. On the day in question this train had proceeded south from Bethlehem, Pa., and consisted of engine No. 770 and five cars back of the engine, some of which contained interstate shipments. When the train arrived at Perkasie, the first stop north of Sellersville, Pa., a car of hay, P. & R. No. 16694, was picked up and placed ahead of the engine. At Sellers-ville, Pa., the first car back of the engine, N. C. & St. L.
The evidence shows that this local freight train, operated by a train crew of which decedent was a member, was carrying freight consigned to or from more than half a dozen different states and Canada. The constituents of interstate commerce were therefore present. The fact that it was a local freight train operating between points in Pennsylvania is neither controlling nor even significant. The inquiry is, what did the train carry? Did it carry interstate shipments? The fact that with interstate freight it also carried intrastate shipments, which of necessity had to be disposed of enroute as consigned, could not eliminate from the general operation the “constituents of interstate commerce” present in virtue of interstate shipments, or disintegrate the “unity and indivisibility of the service of the train crew.” In discussing a train movement between points in the same state carrying both intrastate and interstate freight, the Supreme Court through the late Chief Justice White said, “This transportation was interstate commerce, and the train was an interstate train, despite the fact that it may also have been carrying some local freight. In view of the unity and indivisibility of the service of the train crew and the paramount character of the authority of Congress to regulate commerce, the act of Congress was exclusively controlling”: Railway Co. v. State of Washington, 222 U. S. 370, at 375. In New York Central R. R. Co. v. Carr, 238 U. S. 260, it appeared that a brakeman was injured while switching to a siding a car containing only intrastate freight. The car had been part of a local or “pick-up” train operating between two points in the State of New York. Some cars in the train contained interstate freight. Two of them contained only intrastate freight to be left at North Tonawanda, New York. “On arriving at that point they were uncoupled from the train, pulled by the engine down the track, and then backed into a siding. It was the duty of
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted for proceedings consistent with this opinion.