57 F.2d 1004 | 4th Cir. | 1932
This aetion at law for personal injuries was before this court on a prior occasion, and the opinion of the court, reported at 49 F.(2d) 692, may be referred to for a full statement of the facts and the issues involved. Hall was injured hv the fall of an iron stanchion in a railway storage mail ear and brought suit against the Norfolk & Western ■Railway Company and also against the American Railway Express Company. Ho was employed and paid by the express company as an express messenger, a position which he had held for more than three years; hut he was furnished by the express company to the railway company, which reimbursed the former for his entire salary. Ho was in turn furnished by the railway company to the United States to assist in the transportation of the mails. The railway company also furnished to the'United States a storage mail car to carry mail between Cincinnati, Ohio, and Norfolk, Va. Hall’s duties required him to ride on the car from Blue-field, W. Va., to Norfolk, taking on and discharging mail, and making the necessary separations of the mail en route. He obtained a judgment against both defendants at the former trial, and both appealed. The former opinion of this court shows that the plaintiff then relied upon three matters to support the judgment. They were (a) that his employers had failed to exercise ordinary care to provide him a safe place and safe appliances with which to work; (b) that they had put him in charge of dangerous equipment and had failed to instruct him as to the uses and dangers thereof; and (c) that his fellow employees, who had packed the mail car before it was intrusted to his care, negligently left the stanchion in an unsafe condition, so that it fell and injured him.
We reached the conclusion on the former appeal that the evidence submitted at the trial was not sufficient to warrant the submission of the first two issues to the jury; but that there was evidence from which the jury might have inferred that the stanchion had been improperly placed by the fellow employees of Hall, who loaded the ear before he took charge. The jury had been instructed, over the objection of the defendants, that it might base a verdict on the alleged dangerous character of the devices, or on the failure of the defendants to instruct their employee. Sinee it was impossible to determine whether the verdict was based on one or both of these untenable grounds, or on the ground of negligence of fellow servants, the judgment was reversed and the case was sent hack for a new trial. We said that, if it had clearly appeared that the verdict of the jury had been based on the negligence of the men ■who stored the car with mail at Cincinnati, the judgment against the railway company would have been sustained; hut the judgment against the express comx>any would have been reversed because it was not a common carrier by railroad, subject to the terms of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 IT. S. C. § 51 (45 USCA § 51), but was still entitled to rely upon the fellow-servant rule.
When the now trial was had, the ease was dismissed as to the express comx>any on its motion, at the conclusion of the evidence,
The evidence for the defendant, on the other hand, showed that at the time of the former trial on January 28, 1939, 28 ears of the railway company, 'equipped like the one in which Hall was injured, had travelled 4,920,898 miles without other accident, and that from that date until June 29,1931, when the second trial took place below, these ears had traveled an additional 1,836,226 miles without accident of any kind. The ear was built according to specifications furnished by the Post Office Department of the United States. The specifications did not cover every detail of construction, but expressly called for the kind of equipment with stanchions swinging from swivel joints, to be supported when out'of use, by hooks and brackets of the kind used in the ear in question. It was the legal duty of the railway company to build the ear in accordance with the instructions of the Post Office Department. Congress has declared that all railway common carriers shall transport such mail matter as may be offered for transportation by the United States, in the manner, under the conditions, and with the service prescribed by the Postmaster General, 39 U. S. C. § 541 (39 USCA § 541); and also that all ears or parts of ears used for the railway mail service shall be of such construction, style, length, and character, and furnished in such manner as shall be required by the Postmaster General, and shall be constructed, fitted up, maintained, heated, lighted, and cleaned by and at the expense of the railroad companies. 39 U. S. C. § 537 (39 USCA § 537). See, also, Regulations of the Postmaster General, See. 1272, (24), (27).
In Southern Pac. Co. v. Berkshire, 254 U. S. 415, 418, 41 S. Ct. 163, 163, 65 L. Ed. 335, the Supreme Court held that the installation of railway mail cranes within fourteen inches of passing engines was not negligence on the part of the railway company, as respeets its employees, since the placing of the cranes was done by direction of the Post Office Department. Mr. Justice Holmes said: “It equally is impossible to condemn railroads as wrongdoers simply for adopting the device with the conditions imposed by the Post Office Department.”
Since there was no substantial change in the evidence at the second trial favorable to the plaintiff as to the character of the equipment of the ear, or the need to instruct the plaintiff in its use, it was incumbent upon the trial court to apply the law of the case on these matters as it had been determined on the former appeal. The plaintiff asked the District Judge to submit to the jury the question as to whether the railway company had used due care to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work, and with reasonably safe and secure equipment, and also whether the situation was such that due diligence on the part of the railway company required it to instruct the plaintiff as to the use of the equipment. The judge refused to grant these instructions, but granted another instruction offered by the plaintiff in which the jury was told that, if the injury oecurred.because the employees at Cincinnati had carelessly misplaced one of the rods or stanchions by which, on the following day, the plaintiff, without negligence on his part, was injured in unloading the car, then he was entitled to recover against the railway company unless the danger was known and appreciated by him. But, at the same time, the judge refused to instruct the jury as prayed by the defendant railway company that it had fully complied with its duty to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe
We think that the refusal of these instructions offered by the defendant amounted to prejudicial error. The jury should have been expressly told that there was no legally sufficient evidence to support the charge that the railway company had failed in its duty in respect to the character of tho equipment, or the instruction of the plaintiff. The necessity for these rulings was the more clear since some of the plaintiff’s witnesses were permitted to express the opinion that the equipment of the car was dangerous. Hence the jury was allowed to speculate on this point, without proper instructions from the court, and the basis of the verdict is left in the same condition of uncertainty as on the first trial. It cannot be determined whether the verdict was based on the finding that the men who packed the ear at Cincinnati had done their work negligently and thereby caused the plaintiffs injury, or on the ground that the railway company had failed in the performance of a primary duty to the plaintiff.
Additional light has been recently thrown on tho questions involved in this ease, which was not available in the District Court or in this court at the time of the presentation of the second appeal. On January 4, 19*32, the Supreme Court handed down a decision in Jesse H. Denton v. Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Ry. Co., 284 U. S. 305, 52 S. Ct. 141, 142, 76 L. Ed. -, and held that a railway company is not responsible for an injury caused by the negligence of a porter in its general seiviee who, at the time of the injury, was engaged in loading a United States mail car under the direction of a United States postal transfer clerk. The court said: “When one person puts his servant at the disposal and under the. control of another for tho performance of a particular service for the latter, the servant, in respect of his acts in that service, is to be dealt with as the servant of the latter and not of the former. This rule is elementary and finds support in a large number of decisions.”
This decision suggests the question whether the railway company was Hall’s master in respect to the work he was doing when he was injured. In our former opinion, we said that, while the evidence on the point was not as explicit as it might be, Hall must be considered a railway employee. The present record is more clear. We gather from it that the express company had no agreement with the United States and no connection with the transportation of storage mail. It had no relaiionship with the railway company or with Hall in this respect, except that it furnished Hall to the railway company and paid his salary, for which the railway company reimbursed it in full. The railway company had no contract witli the United States for the transportation of the mails. It furnished the cars and tho men to handle the mail, in conformity with the Act of Congress, 39 U. S. C. § 541 (39 USCA § 541), and the regulations promulgated undex'its authority. The railway company had no power or authority over Hall in the handling of the mails. He himself testified at the second trial that, during the three years of his, employment, he received no directions from the railway company and made no report to it. The United States directed and controlled the men who handled the mail in the railway company’s cars under the following regulation of the Postmaster General, which seemed significant to the Supreme Court in Denton v. Yazoo & Miss. Valley R. Co., supra: “Section 1293. * * * 2. Railroad companies shall furnish the men necessary to handle the mails, to load them into and receive them from the doors of railway post office cars, and to load and pile the mails in and unload them from storage and baggage cars, under the direction of the transfer clerk, or clerk in charge of the car, if one is on duty, except as provided in Section 1290. Mails intended for delivery to postal clerk shall never be placed in a postal car unless there is a clerk on duty to receive and care for them.”
Transfer clerks are located at railway stations to superintend tho loading and unloading of the mail. Clerks in charge ride on the train with the mail. Both are employees of the Post Office Department, and, as such, they supervise and control the express messengers a,nd other men like Hall who are furnished by the railway company to do the work.
These appear to be the facts of the case as now disclosed; and it will expedite matters to announce the rules of law applicable thereto, reserving, however, to the parties to the cause the right to introduce additional evidence bearing on all questions involved, if a new trial shall ensue. Assuming the facts recited to be correct, it follows that the United States and not the railway company was the master of Hall at the time of his injury, and that the former, and not
It may be added that, even if it be considered that the circumstances were such that a duty to instruct the plaintiff as to the use of the appliances arose, it devolved upon the postal authorities who directed his work. It is certain that Hall did not look to the railway company as his employer, and did not accept any directions or instructions from it. The gravamen of his complaint was that he was sent into a new ear so fully packed with mail that he could not see the equipment or familiarize himself with its proper usé. But this situation arose, through no fault or neglect of the railway company, in the course of the routine use of the ear after it had been furnished by the railway company to the Post Office Department, and was under the latter’s control. It is true that the railway company moved the car in railroad transportation and had such eontrol as was necessary for the performance of its functions as a common carrier. But these circumstances did not constitute the plaintiff its employee at the time, nor subject him to its authority. Robinson v. Balt. & Ohio R. Co., 237 U. S. 84, 35 S. Ct. 491, 59 L. Ed. 849; Wells Fargo & Co. v. Taylor, 254 U. S. 175, 41 S. Ct. 93, 65 L. Ed. 205.
Nor is the railway company responsible for the negligent acts of the men who stored the car with mail at Cincinnati, if it he “true, as the present record seems to indicate, that these men like Hall were the employees of the Post Offiee Department, furnished to it by the railway company in accordance with Regulation 1293 (2). That was the question decided in Denton v. Yazoo & Miss. Valley R. Co., supra.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed.