Plaintiff, employed by defendant corporation as switchman, brought this action for damages for injuries suffered when the impact of cars shunted by a switch engine precipitated him from the roof of a freight car to the ground below. Negligence of defendant in two particulars was alleged, viz., that the string of freight cars upon which plaintiff was working was equipped with faulty handbrakes, in violation of the Federal Safety Appliance Act, and that unusual force and violence, without warning to plaintiff, were used by his fellow employees in shunting other cars against the one upon which he was working. A jury heard the evidence, but the court directed it to find for the defendant, and from the judgment on such directed verdict plaintiff appeals.
Respondent seeks to uphold the directed verdict, upon two grounds: That the evidence is insufficient to justify submission of the case to the jury, and that appellant, because he procured his employment by fraud practiced upon respondent, vitiated his contract of employment and precluded himself from maintaining an action for damages arising out of his relation as respondent’s employee.
There was evidence before the court that as to the car upon which appellant was riding “the brake chain wouldn’t wind up properly, it wouldn’t hold properly”; that the string of cars was shunted against the ear upon which appellant was riding with unusual force and violence, throwing him to the ground and moving the ears forward an unusual distance; that no rider was upon the string of shunted cars, that no *456 warning was given appellant, and that the movement of ears at the time of the accident was not in the normal and customary manner.
It is true that much evidence was offered by respondent, and elicited by cross-examination of appellant’s own witnesses, to contradict appellant’s showing, but it is not the province of the trial court upon motion for directed verdict to weigh the evidence. The court may examine it only to determine whether or not there is substantial evidence which, if believed by the jury, would sustain a verdict. Respondent argues that the federal rule as to a directed verdict rather than that of our state courts should control in such a case as this involving injuries under the Safety Appliance Act and the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. But even admitting respondent’s contention and adopting the pronouncement of the federal court in
Chicago etc. Ry. Co.
v.
Coogan,
When appellant applied for work with respondent he had a record of having been discharged from several previous railroading employments. Concealing these facts, he made application under the name of his brother, whose record was without fault, was accepted as an employee under the assumed name and continued in respondent’s employ for eleven years before the date of the injury which is the basis of this suit. It was appellant’s testimony that shortly after the date *457 of his employment, and many years prior to the date of the accident here in question, respondent had knowledge of his deception; that he ivas confronted with the facts and admitted the subterfuge, and was told that he would be given “a chance”. That any such conversation took place was denied by respondent’s witnesses.
Although cases such as
Minneapolis etc. Ry. Co.
v.
Rock,
*458 In the present case there appears to be no causal connection between the false statements in appellant’s application for employment and the injury which forms the basis of his claim for damages. If in fact respondent’s negligence was the proximate cause of the accident, it should not be absolved from blame upon the claim that because of appellant’s false statements in procuring employment he was in fact not an employee, where, as here, there was no showing that there was a causal connection between the false representations and the accident. At the most the question of causal connection was a question of fact for submission to the jury.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Wood, J., and Grail, P. J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on July 2, 1936, and an application by respondent to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on August 3, 1936.
