70 So. 655 | Ala. | 1915
The plaintiff (appellant) was permanently injured in consequence of being hit in the left eye by a piece of metal that was chipped off of a steel or iron bar with a cold chisel and a hammer in the hands of one Baumgartner, then in the service of appellee in the repair of the grate bars in a loco-' motive. The action is to recover damages for this injury.
The federal Employers’ Liability Statute is only applicable or available to the employees it prescribes and defines, viz., those in the employment of interstate carriers who at the time of the injury are engaged in work or service immediately related, directly contributory to interstate commerce. Such relation exists not only when the injured employees service was in or about the act of transporting persons or things, but also when his service was in or about the maintenance or repair of agencies already devoted to or immediately capable of facilitating some essential feature of interstate commerce. The repair of a track over which interstate commerce is being, or is to be, moved in the usual course of the carrier’s business is an instrumentality of such commerce; and an employee of an interstate carrier who is engaged, when injured, in a service immediately productive of the maintenance or repair of intimately connected and essential, indispensable features of interstate commerce is within, and his rights are governed by, the federal statute. — Pederson v. D., L. & W. R. R., 229 U. S. 146, 33 Sup. Ct. 648, 57 L. Ed. 1125, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 153; Ruck v. C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co.,
Through a recent deliverance made in response to writ of error procured by the railway company to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin (C. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Gray, 237 U. S. 399, 35 Sup. Ct. 620, 59 L. Ed. 1018) the Supreme Court of the United States declined to express an opinion on the question whether or not the trial court should have found that the injured employee was engaged in interstate commerce, where the error, if any, did the appellant, railway company, no harm; the court affirming
This particular provision of the Wisconsin law is identical with the provision of the federal Employers’ Liability Act relating to contributory negligence, and its effect upon the measure of a recovery. The identity of the two statutes was the basis, - — the sole basis — for the stated declination of the Supreme Court in Gray’s Case, supra, to express an opinion in the premises. The pertinent laws of both sovereignties being the same, the defending carrier could not have been prejudiced in any substantial right in that instance. That cannot be said of the Alabama Employers’ Liability Statute; for the Alabama law recognizes, accepts, and applies contributory negligence as a bar to a recovery for personal injuries, or for death from wrongful act or commission inflicted upon an employee.
It is manifest that the purpose in this instruction was to as-simulate the rule formulated in the Trammel, 93 Ala. 450, 9 South. 587, and McAdory, 94 Ala. 272, 10 South. 507, cases for the ascertainment of the productive value of a life that has.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.