25 F.2d 297 | 6th Cir. | 1928
Plaintiff in-error, also plaintiff below, brought this action'
Of the exceptions, one car was loaded with brake beams. It apparently should be assumed that it had been loaded at Franklin, because at the time of the accident it was not yet billed. If was later .that day hilled to Buffalo, N. Y.; but there is no proof that at this time its destination was definitely fixed by the shipper, mueh less was known to the railroad. Clearly, the handling of this ear at this" time was not 'interstate commerce. The other exception was a ear loaded with' coke, which had come from a Pennsylvania point and was for delivery to- a factory having a yard track at Franklin. A vacant ear, also unassigned, Was standing' on this side track and was in the way. The immediate Movement of' this last cut of ears, which was hacking into the side track with the coke ear leading, contemplated that it back in, couple the empty car to the coke ear and pull it out, push the empty car onto another track, and then .push the coke car into its plant destination. In the course of this movement the. derailment occurred.
We think it clear that the plaintiff cannot recover. If the characteristic dominance is to be found in the immediate movement, having reference to setting out this coke car, plainly it was .intrastate. If, on the other hand, we may look to a larger unit and consider the whole matter of spotting this cut of, ears where they respectively belonged (a hypothesis which we do. not pass upon) still the interstate character of the movement fails to appear. Amobg our recent decisions, this case is to he classified with Grigsby v. Southern, 3 F.(2d) 988, and Baldesarre v. Penn. R. R., 24 F.(2d) 201, February 17, 1928, rather than with Youngstown v. Halverstodt, 12 F.(2d) 995, and Sullivan v. Wabash, 23 F.(2d) 323, January 3, 1928.
The judgment is affirmed.