184 A. 295 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1935
Argued December 18, 1935.
In this workmen's compensation case the referee made an award in favor of the plaintiff for the death of her husband. On appeals, the award was affirmed by the board and the court of common pleas. A final decision depends upon whether the claimant's husband was engaged at the time of the accident in interstate or intrastate commerce. If the employee was engaged in interstate commerce, the federal Employer's Liability Act applies and recovery cannot be had under the state compensation laws: New York C.R. Co. v. Winfield,
Wilson Peak was injured while working on a switch controlling the tracks between the engine house, the terminal hump, the produce yards, and wharf at a point about 75 feet east of Broad Street in the South Philadelphia Terminal yards of the defendant company, and, it is conceded, while in the course of such employment. It appeared that locomotives passed over the switch going to and from the round house, that cars with coal and brick passed over it on their way to the terminal hump and that it was sometimes used by tank cars *375
loaded with oil. There was no evidence which indicated that the switch or connecting tracks were used in interstate commerce. The appellant, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, in its argument asks us to take judicial notice of or assume that some of the rolling stock which moved over this switch was engaged in interstate commerce. The kind of work performed in the South Philadelphia yards is not of such notoriety that we may take judicial notice of it. Particularly, we may not assume that the switch on which Peak was working was one over which interstate commerce passed. "It is apparent that there was no evidence requiring the conclusion that the deceased was engaged in interstate commerce at the time of his injury, and we are asked to supply the deficiency by taking judicial notice that the cars came from without the state. This contention we are unable to sustain. The make-up of trains and the movement of cars are not matters which we may assume to know without evidence": Osborne v. Gray,
Since there was not any evidence showing the character of transportation in which Peak was employed at the time and there was an absence of any evidence as to whether the traffic which passed over this switch *376 was interstate or intrastate, it becomes necessary to consider upon whom the burden of proof lay or who was required to "go ahead."
In the case of Di Donato v. Phila. R. Ry. Co.,
In Polk v. Phila. R. Ry. Co.,
We deem these cases to be authority for the proposition that where from the evidence produced it appears that there are present in an occurrence of the character we are now considering constituents of interstate commerce, the burden of explanation and avoidance is upon him who asserts the claim and not on the railroad company, and no more. Such constituents were present in the Di Donato and the Polk cases. They were likewise present in Lamlein v. Director Gen. of R.R.,
The United States Supreme Court in deciding the Polk case indicated very clearly that they were not overruling the case of Osborne v. Gray, supra. That case is authority for the position that we have taken. There was involved a question as to whether the proofs had shown that the plaintiff was injured while engaged in interstate transportation, and just as here, there was no direct proof that he was so engaged. *378
We are urged to take a step much farther forward than is warranted by the Di Donato and Polk cases. Although there was no proof that the defendant at times engaged in both interstate and intrastate transportation, it is a fact known to all and we may take judicial notice of it. Assuming such to be the fact, it does not follow that that railroad company may not engage in activities that are strictly intrastate, and that some employees may never engage in interstate transportation and others may frequently be engaged for the time in intrastate transportation. We have here no proof that the defendant was at the time of the accident engaged in interstate transportation or any facts from which such an inference may be drawn. We do not believe the correct rule to be that in every compensation case arising under the state laws, the burden is cast upon the claimant to show that he was not engaged in interstate commerce when it appears merely that the employer is at other times engaged in transportation of each class.
The appellant correctly states the law to be that the burden of proof is upon a claimant in a compensation case to establish that the employee met with an accident within the provisions of the compensation law (O'Neill v. Lehigh C. N. Co.,
In discussing burden of proof, Professor Wigmore (5 Wigmore on Evidence, § 2486) says: "The truth is that there is not and cannot be any one general solvent for all cases. It is merely a question of policy and fairness based on experience in the different situations."
In addition we are here dealing with a negative assertion and one peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant. While these are not conclusive tests, they are at least sign posts. We do not believe that either policy or fairness would support the rule contended for by the appellant and compel a claimant, when he makes a claim against a public carrier, to prove in every case that the occurrence did not involve interstate commerce.
The appellant cites Hart v. Central R. Co. of N.J. (N.J.),
We therefore hold that in cases arising under the compensation laws of this state, even though it appears that the employer at times engages in both interstate and intrastate transportation, the burden is on the employer to show at least that there are involved in the occurrence constituents of interstate commerce. If such constituents appear from the evidence, the burden of "explanation and avoidance" then shifts to the claimant.
As the facts essential to a correct determination of the claim were not developed at the hearing, we are all of the opinion that the record should be returned to the board for the purpose of taking further testimony. This appears to us the proper course and is peculiarly so by reason of the conclusion that we reach in the case of Komar v. Penna. R.R., supra.
Judgment reversed with directions to remit the record to the Workmen's Compensation Board for the purpose of further hearing and findings in accordance with this opinion.