151 P. 277 | Cal. | 1915
The Industrial Accident Commission of California entertained jurisdiction in the case where an employee of the petitioner met his death by accident while engaged in his usual occupation. It made an award in conformity with our law to the widow of the deceased. The probative facts are not in controversy. The deceased was a truck builder and a repairer of trucks for locomotives. He was so employed in petitioners' roundhouse No. 1 at Roseville, California. At the time of the accident which caused his death he was engaged in repairing switch engine No. 1173 in roundhouse No. 1. This roundhouse was used for housing switch locomotives, which switch locomotives were operated in the yards at Roseville Junction in handling both inter and intrastate commerce. About seventy per cent of the work of the switch engines in the Roseville yard is interstate commerce work. Seventy per cent of the cars moved through the yard are used in connection with interstate commerce. At the time of the accident the petitioner was not using switch engine 1173 in interstate commerce. It had been withdrawn from service in the operating department on January 13th and was not returned to the operating department until January 19th, three days after the accident occurred. The yardmaster at Roseville Junction resumed control of the operation of the engine on January 19th, when it was restored to service. The Industrial Accident Commission concluded from these facts that the deceased at the time he sustained his injury, while in the employ of petitioner, was not engaged in interstate commerce work.
No question is here presented as to the finality of this last finding of the commission. But, indeed, that finding is not, in strictness, a finding of pure fact, but rather is it a conclusion of law drawn from a consideration of the admitted facts, to which consideration have been applied principles of law of more or less intricacy. In this respect it may be compared to a finding of ownership of land. It may be and often it is *784
said that it is a mere statement of fact to declare that one owns a piece of land. But, after all, it is the ultimate conclusion arrived at from the consideration of many facts, such as written instruments and their recordation, which facts necessarily have to be considered in connection with principles and propositions of law often abstruse and difficult of determination, such as the sufficiency of the recordation and the legal meaning of the instrument asserted to convey title. (Savings Loan Society v.Burnett,
It needs no citation of authority to show that if the case of the deceased comes within the purview of the federal act, the state accident board is without jurisdiction, and this proposition is of course conceded.
The federal act deals with common carriers by railroads engaged in interstate commerce. It deals with them only while engaged in interstate commerce, since of course Congress has no control over the purely intrastate operations of such roads. It provides that these common carriers "shall be liable in damages to any person suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such (interstate or foreign) commerce." Was the deceased at the time of his death so employed?
No fixed rule for the construction of this statute has been laid down by the supreme court of the United States. Perhaps *785
none can be. However that may be, in the present condition of the law an intelligent answer to the question necessitates a consideration, at least, of the federal decisions bearing upon this statute. In Zikos v. Oregon etc. Navigation Co., 179 Fed. 893, a section hand, injured while engaged in repairing a main-line track, used both for inter and intrastate commerce, was held to come within the purview of the federal statute, and thus to have been engaged in interstate commerce. The circuit court there said: "No doubt there may be situations, indeed we have the highest authority for it (Employer's Liability Cases,
Turning from these decisions to those of the highest court of the land, the court which alone can speak with finality upon the construction of this statute, in Johnson v. Southern PacificCompany,
"But the crucial question remains whether the engine at the time the work in question was being done, was so far withdrawn from commerce as that the work of repair was not a part of the interstate commerce in which the defendant was engaged. The authorities so far cited are not directly decisive of this specific question. In the Colasurdo case the switch and track were still in use. The bridge in the Pedersen case does not affirmatively appear to have been actually out of use. In the Walsh case the car was apparently still upon a track in the railroad yards, although it was of course temporarily out of use during the replacement of the drawbar. *790
"In the instant case the engine was in the shop for what is called `roundhouse overhauling.' It had been dismantled at least 21 days before the accident. Up to the time it was taken to the shop it was actually in use in interstate commerce. It was designed for return thereto upon completion of repairs. It actually was so returned the day following the accident. It clearly did not lose its interstate character from the mere fact that it was not at the time actually engaged in interstate movement, no more than did the dining car in Johnson v. SouthernPacific R.R. Co.,
What rule of interpretation can be deduced from these decisions? None other than that first declared in the Colasurdo case, 180 Fed. 832, where it is said: "One man might have duties including both interstate and intrastate commerce, and he would be subject to the act while engaged in one and not the other. This being so, the question is whether his repair of a switch is such employment when the switch is used indifferently in both kinds of commerce?" This is affirmed and restated by the supreme court in the Pedersen case, in the following language: "The true test always is: Is the work in question a part of the interstate commerce in which the carrier is engaged?" This principle of construction is repeated and once more declared in Illinois Cent.R.R. Co. v. Behrens,
But while this principle aids materially in the solution of the question, the application of it does not resolve all difficulties, for in the multifarious forms in which employees engaged by railroads find occupation, there will always be questions of difficulty and doubt as to whether or not the particular occupation is in fact "a part of interstate commerce." And this difficulty, indeed, is recognized by the federal courts as in the Darr case, where it is said: "Doubtless in the administration of this act it will be necessary often to draw some very fine distinctions." But our review of the federal decisions forces the conclusion that while certain of the cases contain intimations which might be construed unfavorably to petitioner's contention here that the deceased was engaged in interstate commerce, the adjudications directly in point sustain its position, and no adjudication of the federal court is a denial of its position. Thus in the quotation from Employers' Liability Cases,
The first of these is the Law case, from which quotation has been made. It was a decision by the circuit court of appeals. It holds that where an engine, engaged in interstate commerce, has been taken to the railroad shops for repairs, has there remained for twenty-one days before the injury occurred, and after the occurrence of the injury has been restored to use in interstate commerce, the men employed in making those repairs were engaged in interstate commerce within the contemplation of the federal act. Nothing really differentiates that case from the one at bar, saving one circumstance. The engine in the Law case was "regularly used in interstate commerce." The engine in the instant case was used indifferently in both kinds of commerce. But we are bound to hold that this distinction is without significance, especially in view of the fact that if we are to measure these different uses by their quantity a greater precentage of the use of the engine was interstate commerce use.
The other case to which reference has been made is NorthernPacific Railway Co. v. Maerkl, 198 Fed. 1, [117 C.C.A. 237], and, as we have said, the legal parallelism between that case and the one at bar is exceptionally exact, the one immaterial difference being that in the Maerkl case it was a car which was undergoing repairs instead of an engine. But the car in that and the engine in this case were both in the shops undergoing repairs. Both were indifferently used in intra and interstate commerce. Both were returned to use after the injury and after the repairs were made. If the employee engaged in his work upon the refrigerator car was engaged in interstate commerce, it is impossible to escape the conclusion that the repairer in this case was equally so engaged.
Were this question one solely of state cognizance we would be disposed to hold that a man so employed was not engaged in interstate commerce. But the pronouncements of the federal courts upon their statutes are those of highest authority *793
and the state courts are in duty bound to accept those pronouncements. We have not the light of the views of the supreme court upon the exact question here presented and failing that we must take the views of the next highest federal tribunal. Those views from two circuit courts of appeal are identical. They leave room for no other conclusion than that the injured employee in this case was engaged in interstate commerce. We are not unmindful in saying this, that the appellate division of the supreme court of the state of New York in a similar case has held that the federal statute did not apply. (Parsons v. Delaware Hudson Co., [
For these reasons the award of the Industrial Accident Commission is annulled.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.