The appellant was employed by the ap-pellee as a kitchen man at its wоrk camp at Geneva, N. Y. This camp consisted of ten cars in line; some used for sleеping purposes, a bath car, two which had been used as diners, though one of these dining сars was simply standing unused when the appellant’s alleged cause of action arose, and one kitchen car.
He sued the appellee under the provisions of thе Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq., to recover damages for personal injuriеs received in the following way. One night after supper had been served he carried some mail to the sleeping cars. As he was on a platform built between a sleeping car and the unused dining car, which was the last car he would go through in going back to the dining car in use, the cook pushed a laborer employed by the railroad out of the unused dining cаr and onto the platform where the appellant was. The cook was in chargе of the dining car and was the superior of the appellant. The identity of the laborеr was not disclosed in this record.
The laborer was resisting the cook who suddenly shoved the аppellant off the platform, and engaged in a fist fight with the laborer. The appellant was injured when he fell to the ground after being pushed by the cook.
The court denied the appellee’s motion for the direction of a verdict at the close of the еvidence based on the ground that the cook was not shown to have been engagеd in the course of his employment when he caused the injury to the appellant. He submitted the case to the jury which returned a general verdict for the appellant and а special verdict in which it found that the cook was acting within the scope of his employment by the railroad when he pushed the appellant to the ground.
The appellee then moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The motion was granted and this appeal is from the judgment then entered for the appellee.
In granting the motion, the judge assumed bоth that the cook had supervision over the unused dining car as well as over the used one and that he negligently caused the appellant to fall. Why he granted the motion is exрlained by the following excerpt from his decision. “There was no direct proof that the cook, in ejecting the laborer from the car, was exercising supervision over the car. But the plaintiff urges that the cook had control of the diner and had the right to ejеct or refuse admission to any of the laborers who violated any of his regulations. His argumеnt is that the cook and the laborer were fighting and the cook was ejecting the labоrer in the exercise of his supervisory duties for violation of some regula
That the plaintiff had this burden of proof is clear enough. Davis v. Green,
However, we apparently lack jurisdiction to decide this casе on the merits since the appeal appears not to have been takеn within the time limited by Rule 73, Federal Rules Civil Procedure 28 U. S.C.A. Final judgment was entered on March 16, 1948; the notiсe of appeal was not filed until May 14, 1948. There was no extension of the orginal thirty day period within which an appeal could be taken; and no reason for the apрlication of the saving clause of Rule 86(b) F. R. C. P., appears.' Counsel for the appеllant had ample time after the amended rule became effective on March 19, 1948 — nearly the entire thirty days — in which to file notice of appeal and admitted on the argument that the delay was not due to any lack of knowledge of the rule but to indecision as to whether an appeal would be taken.
Appeal dismissed.
