150 N.Y.S. 512 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The primary question is whether the defendant, a common carrier, “ while engaging in commerce between any of the several States,” injured the plaintiff while “ employed by such carrier in such commerce,” within the meaning of the act of Congress of April 22, 1908 (35 U. S. Stat. at Large, 65, chap. 149), commonly called the “ Federal Employers’ Liability Act.”
In my judgment, the plaintiff at the time of the accident was not engaged in interstate commerce. The defendant’s railroad extended from Weehawken, N. J., to Buffalo, N. Y. The tracks were devoted to interstate and intrastate traffic. The tracks could not be intrastate one day and interstate another day. If they needed mending, all acts therefor related to a plant permanently appropriated to the two kinds of traffic. It was not so with equipment. It could be employed for interstate or intrastate traffic, or both, as occasion required. For instance, on the second day before the accident it ran from Weehawken, N. J., to Eavena, N. Y., near Albany. I will assume that the purpose was for the two varieties of transportation. The day before the accident it was used for a round trip from Eavena to Kingston and return. That operation was all intrastate and the freight was not interstate, so far as I discover. So, in no proper sense was it returning from a trip devoted to intrastate and interstate transportation, or alone to interstate carriage. Nothing was returning but the locomotive, tender and caboose—the appliance for motive power and shelter for the crew. It was going to Weehawken. For eight hours thereafter the plaintiff would be off duty, as is contended. Then he might return to his locomotive and caboose. What goods it would take, and for what destination, does not appear, even if it was then known. It might take no goods for delivery in the State of New York until it reached that State. Then the goods taken might be for destinations in New York. The dispatcher said that it was returning to Weehawken for another load. That was a statement based on the obvious fact that Weehawken was the southerly terminal. But when would the hew freight be loaded ? For what State or States would the load be destined ? That
The State of New York created the defendant for the public purpose to which its property within this State is devoted. Taking presumably from the southern terminal of the railway persons and property in some large degree received over waters falling under the municipal law of New York, it carries them
Inasmuch as the learned trial justice left the question of contributory negligence of the plaintiff to the jury, at least in part, under the terms of the Federal statute, the verdict cannot be sustained upon our holding that this was not within the Federal act of 1908.
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event. ,
Jenks, P. J., and Putnam, J., concurred; Stapleton, J., voted to affirm, being of opinion that the evidence that the regular run of the plaintiff was between Weehawken, in the State of New Jersey, and Eavena, in the State of New York, and that at the time of the casualty the plaintiff’s train, consisting of an engine, tender and caboose, and carrying a full crew, was moving from Eavena to Weehawken to return, with
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.