224 N.W. 429 | Mich. | 1929
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *401
This is an action, brought by an injured railroad employee, to recover damages under the Federal employers' liability act (
Exhaustive briefs have been furnished, case law and text-books have been examined, and, upon due *402 consideration, we think plaintiff failed to establish the fact that, at the time he was injured, he was engaged in interstate commerce.
Plaintiff was a member of a switching crew engaged, at Port Huron, in moving to and placing cars of freight at manufacturing plants, and returning empty cars to the main railroad yard, where a yard switching crew later assembled cars for train movement under general, customary, or special direction or billing. In the movement of two empty cars toward the railroad yard from a manufacturing plant, to which the cars had conveyed interstate shipments, plaintiff was injured. The cars then being moved had finished their interstate run to place of consignment, and shipments therein had been removed, and they had not started upon their home journey. The cars were engaged in interstate commerce until they reached the destination to which they were consigned, and then ceased to bear such character until billed or designated for return. To bring the empty cars again into interstate commerce service, the burden rested upon plaintiff to show that, at the time of the accident, they had commenced predetermined interstate movement. It was not enough to show that the cars were in fact thereafter billed, consigned, or actually moved interstate. Whether cars bringing freight into this State regain interstate character depends upon predetermination of their use and movement, and not upon their use and movement after injury sustained by an employee. The "home route" card, accompanying cars bringing freight into this State, acts as a guide for the return thereof to the owning road, but does not predetermine their use and movement after delivery to the consignee and their unloading. Predetermination of use and movement may be exercised *403 by the owning road. If not so exercised by the owning road, the use and movement of such empty cars is left with the carrier in possession of them, and, until determined, the cars are not engaged in interstate commerce in any movement of them in switching or placement upon side tracks in the meantime, except in act of assembly in a train for interstate movement.
It does not aid plaintiff to assume that the empty cars, being switched when he received injury, were foreign owned and had been engaged in interstate transportation, or later again entered upon interstate transportation. The question is not whether the cars had so served, or might again, under designation of return, be so considered, but, Was plaintiff engaged in interstate commerce in their movement at the very time he was injured? The Federal act comprehends exclusion of its operation as well as inclusion, leaving determination in each case an issue of fact from a practical consideration of circumstances.
The hauling of empty cars from one State to another is interstate commerce. North Carolina R. R. Co. v. Zachary,
Had plaintiff been engaged in switching the empty cars under predetermined assembly and for immediate removal out of the State, he would have been employed in interstate commerce.Bruckshaw v. Railway Co.,
The opinion in Philadelphia, etc., R. Co. v. Cannon, 296 Fed. 302, is helpful, for the reasoning thereof applies to the facts in the case at bar. So applied, the empty cars, being moved at the time of injury to plaintiff, had ended their transportation service in bringing freight into the State, and had not entered upon designated transport interstate.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to defendant.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, FELLOWS, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred. *405