This case, tried twice, is now under review on the second writ of error. For the facts in detail we refer to our opinion on the first writ of error. Auchenbach v. P. & R. Ry. Co. (C. C. A.)
A coupling was about to be made between two drafts of freight ears, one standing alone аnd the other attached to an engine. The plaintiff, rear brakeman of the train crew, stood ready to complete the connection. It was dark. When the moving draft came against the standing draft, the contacting couplers did not couple. The plaintiff, discovering that the pin had not dropped, reached in and worked on it ineffectually for abоut three minutes, when he gave the “go ahead” signal, which was taken up by the head brakeman and by him relayed to the engineer. After the forward draft had drawn ahead a short distance and had stopped, the plaintiff went between the cars with his 'lantern in his right hand and tried to work the coupler with his left hand. As the pin would not go down he reached “inside the coupler to see whаt was the matter” and “worked [the coupler] in and out and in and out.” While so engaged, the forward draft moved back in response to a signal, given by the rear brakeman of a train on the next track, which the head brakeman on the plaintiff's train, mistaking it for a signal from him, repeated to his engineer. The left hand of the plaintiff was caught between the two couplers. Thеy did not couple. After the plaintiff had been removed the crew attempted-a third coupling. This was effected on impact.
In this action under the Federal _mployers’ Liability Act (Cоmp. St. §§ 8657-8665), the plaintiff charged against the defendant several acts of negligence, among them a violation of the Safety Appliance Act. Section 2, 27 Stat. 531. Comp. Stat. § 8606. At the trial the plaintiff withdrew all charges of negligence against the defendant save its violation of the Safety Appliance Act and went to trial on that issue alone. The defendant rаilroad company, declining to be held to this sin *551 gle issue, took the position that, “Even assuming the existence of evidence of violation of the Act, such evidence or proоf by themselves would not attach legal responsibility to the Railroad Company unless such violation was the proximate cause of the injury suffered and that the question of proximate causation should be submitted to the jury along with evidence of the violation of the Act,” and it offered to prove that under one of its rules the plaintiff when going between cars at night shоuld have left his lantern outside on the ground in view of other members of the crew and that his violation of this rule constituted negligence on his part which was the proximate and sole cause of his injury.
The learned trial judge conformed his rulings on evidence and instructions in the charge to what he conceived to be this court’s direction in its opinion on the first writ of error and, аccordingly, restricted the trial to the issue of the defendant’s alleged violation of the Safety Appliance Act (Comp. St. § 8605 et seq.) and instructed the jury that if they" should find there was a violation of the Act, liability would thereby attach to the defendant without regard to negligence on the part o£ the plaintiff.
We think, in the circumstances, the learned trial judge was right. But we shall nоt stop here and thus summarily dispose of the ease, for the law in given situations does raise the question of liability for violating the Safety Appliance Act according as the violаtion is or is not the proximate cause of the injury. We reviewed at length cases of this kind in our opinion in P. & R. R. Co. v. Eisenhart (C. C. A.)
But in the ease at bar, viewed from the kind of work in which the plaintiff was engaged — a coupling operation — there can be no question that he was squarely within the class of employees to whom, when doing that wоrk, the law intends to insure protection. Chicago G. W. R. R. Co. v. Schendel,
The plaintiff in the instant ease went between the cars to prepare for another attempt to couple only because the couplers did not at first couple automatically by impact, that is, “Because the equipment of the ear which it was necessary to [couple] did not meet the statutory rеquirements especially intended to protect him in his position.” Chicago G. W. R. R. Co. v. Schendel, supra; Tennessee A.
&
G. R. R. Co. v. Drake (C. C. A.)
Returning to the position which the court assumed and maintained at the trial, that the only issue for the jury was the negligence of the defendant in violating the Safety Appliance Act, the defendant says, even so, there was no evidence of negligence on which to submit the case; while there was evidence that the couplers were in good condition and that on the next impact after the aeeident they coupled automatically.
The defendant’s negligence, if any, consisted in violating a duty imposed by statute. The statute made it obligatory upon the defendant to equip its ears with safety appliances of a kind defined by-their operation, namely, couplers that will couple automatically by impact. That duty is absolute and unqualified and contemplates the maintenance of such appliances in working condition “at all times.” P.
&
R. R. Co. v. Eisenhart (C. C. A.)
Tо the remaining assignments of error we have given careful consideration. As they relate to this particular trial and present no questions of general law, we resolve them against the plaintiff in error without discussion.
‘ The judgment is affirmed.
