I. INTRODUCTION
George Straub, an employee of BNSF Railway Company ("BNSF"), injured his back and neck when, in the course and scope of his duties, he attempted to adjust the engineer's chair of Locomotive #6295. Straub brought suit, asserting BNSF was, inter alia, strictly liable for his injuries under the provisions of the Federal Locomotive Inspection Act ("LIA"),
II. BACKGROUND
A. General Legal Background
Congress enacted the Federal Employers' Liability Act ("FELA"),
*1283
Kernan v. Am. Dredging Co.
,
LIA is an amendment to FELA and the two statutes are to be construed together.
See
Urie v. Thompson
,
LIA does not create a private right of action.
*1284
Urie
,
B. Factual Background
The relevant facts, as set out in Straub's First Amended Complaint, are as follows.
See
Peterson v. Grisham
,
The adjustment mechanism on the engineer's seat is intended to allow the engineer to move the seat forward or backward, thereby providing a safe and a comfortable position for the engineer to operate the locomotive. The defective condition of the adjustment mechanism made it unsafe to operate and created a risk of injury because, among other things, the seat moved some distance then stopped unexpectedly while pressure was being applied to move the heavy engineer's seat in a bent-over position. The seat and its adjustment mechanisms are one unit, and an essential and integral part of the locomotive. Attached to the operative complaint are pictures of the engineer's chair.
See
Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.
,
C. Procedural Background
Straub filed this action alleging five "claims" for relief. His first "claim" for relief alleged negligence under FELA. The second "claim" alleged a violation of LIA. The third, fourth, and fifth "claims" for relief alleged violations of regulations promulgated by the FRA,
The district court granted BNSF's motion to dismiss. Focusing exclusively on the seat adjustment mechanism, the district court concluded it was merely for comfort and not, therefore "an integral or essential part of a completed locomotive." In reaching that conclusion, the district court relied on this court's decision in
King
,
Thereafter, the parties conducted discovery regarding Straub's negligence-based FELA claim. During that discovery, Straub developed significant evidence supporting the assertion in his First Amended Complaint that the engineer's chair and the seat adjustment mechanism were part *1287 of one, single integrated unit. See supra n.5. Accordingly, Straub filed a motion to file an amended complaint to include additional allegations related to that evidence. The district court denied Straub's motion on the ground that proposed amendments were futile. This was so, according to the district court, because "the relevant seat adjustment mechanism is a legally inessential element of a completed locomotive."
III. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
The legal sufficiency of a complaint is a question of law and a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal is reviewed de novo.
Moore v. Guthrie
,
B. Merits
Straub argues the district court made a series of interrelated errors in granting BNSF's motion to dismiss. First, according to Straub, the district court erred when it applied LIA's "parts and appurtenances" language to a part or function of the engineer's chair-the seat adjustment mechanism-rather than to the engineer's chair itself. Second, Straub argues, the district court erred in relying on case law analyzing "failure to install" claims, when the instant case alleges a "failure to maintain." Finally, Straub asserts the district court erred when if failed to separately consider whether, even assuming the defect set out in his complaint did not fall within the general duties set out in LIA, the complaint stated a claim under the duties set out in
*1288
In concluding the facts alleged in Straub's complaint failed to state a violation of the general statutory duty to maintain a safe locomotive, the district court focused exclusively on the question whether the seat adjustment mechanism, as either a feature or fixture of the engineer's chair, was an essential or integral part of a complete locomotive.
9
See, e.g.
, District Court Order at 4 (noting BNSF's argument was that "seat adjustment mechanisms are neither an integral nor essential part of a completed locomotive");
The district court did not cite in its order, and BNSF does not identify on appeal, any authority for the proposition that it is appropriate to disregard the integrated nature of the engineer's chair and, instead, focus on its component parts in analyzing whether a complaint states a viable violation of LIA. On the other hand, there exist numerous cases focusing their LIA statutory analysis on the engineer's chair, not on its component parts.
See, e.g.
,
Oglesby v. S. Pac. Transp. Co.
,
Nor is the district court's analytical approach supported by this court's decision in
King.
In
King
, a railroad brakeman was injured when a locomotive collided with a cattle truck.
On the brakeman's appeal, this court began by recognizing that "a carrier cannot be held liable under [LIA] for failure to install equipment on a locomotive unless the omitted equipment (1) is required by federal regulations ..., or (2) constitutes an integral or essential part of a completed locomotive."
occurs when the railroad fails to maintain the locomotive or its parts and appurtenances so that the locomotive cannot be operated without unnecessary peril to life or limb. [ 11 ] Such "failure to *1290 maintain" claims have been widely recognized as meritorious. However, those claims are entirely different from claims that a railroad is liable for failing to install additional safety devices which the [FRA] has not seen fit to require. Such "failure to install" claims have been rejected.
While it was perfectly natural in a failure to install case to focus narrowly on the safety item that it is alleged the railroad improperly omitted from a locomotive, nothing in
King
supports the notion that courts should break down an engineer's chair into its component parts or subsidiary functions when it is alleged an already-installed engineer's chair on a locomotive was not "safe to operate without unnecessary danger of personal injury."
Once BNSF installed an engineer's chair with a seat adjustment mechanism,
IV. CONCLUSION
For those reasons set out above, the order of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado granting BNSF's motion to dismiss Straub's FELA claim to the extent it depends on LIA-based *1291 strict liability is, hereby, REVERSED . The matter is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
APPENDIX
*1292 --------
Notes
See
Consol. Rail Corp. v. Gottshall
,
Urie
, as well as many other cases cited in this opinion, were decided under the provisions of the predecessor to LIA, the Federal Boiler Inspection Act ("BIA"),
LIA provides as follows: "A railroad carrier may use or allow to be used a locomotive ... on its railroad line only when the locomotive ... and its parts and appurtenances ... are in proper condition and safe to operate without unnecessary danger of personal injury...."
The FRA is an "Operating Administration" within the Department of Transportation.
Because of the way this case proceeded through litigation, the record contains significant additional information about the engineer's chair.
See
infra
Section II.C. (describing the procedural history of this case). Notably, the district court considered this information in denying, on the basis of futility, Straub's motion to file a Second Amended Complaint.
The engineer's chair is secured and mounted to the locomotive by a wall-mounted seat adjustment mechanism (i.e., a metal channel). That is, the chair is mounted to a channel on the wall of the locomotive and suspended in the air; it does not come into contact with the locomotive's floor. The chair consists of the seat, the base of which attaches to a tripod pedestal assembly, and the footrest. The seat-footrest-tripod pedestal mechanism slides forward and backward in the channel of the seat adjustment mechanism. The seat adjustment mechanism, thus, performs several integrated functions: (1) it permits the seat to be moved forward and backward, allowing proper entry and exit; (2) it allows safe and comfortable access to the engineer's control panel for tall and short engineers; and (3) it securely fixes the seat in place during operation. BNSF admitted: (1) the adjustment mechanism is a "component on a locomotive"; (2) the adjustment mechanism is the "component that securely mounts and braces [the seat]" to the locomotive; and (3) if the seat were in proper condition, it would not have stuck when Straub attempted to operate it to move the seat backward. The BNSF mechanic who responded to Straub's report that the seat did not function properly stated the condition of the seat was such that if the maintenance he performed had not corrected the problem, the locomotive would have been taken out of service so the seat would not be used.
BNSF asserts it is inappropriate to consider this evidence in the context of reviewing a motion to dismiss.
Cf. generally
Gee v. Pacheco
,
Straub's complaint sets out five discrete "claims," specifically including four LIA "claims." The parties litigated the validity of Straub's LIA "claims" in district court through the lens of BNSF's motion to dismiss. On appeal, the parties continue to refer to LIA "claims." As noted above, however, LIA does not create a private cause of action.
See
supra
Section II.A. It is only FELA that provides such a cause of action.
The Court notes ... [Straub's] Claims 2-5 appear to seek recovery of damages resulting from violations of the LIA and certain regulations governed by the LIA. But, the LIA does not provide a private right of action to employees injured by defective equipment; rather, an injured employee must bring an action against his employer under [FELA]. [Straub] concedes as much in his brief responding to the present motion. Thus, while [Straub] may not seek damages under the LIA, he may cite a violation of the LIA to establish negligence per se against railroad carriers. Accordingly, the Court will construe Claims 2-5 as negligence per se theories by which [Straub] seeks to recover under the FELA ( see Claim 1).
Appellant's App. at 113-14 (citations and footnote omitted).
In a later order directed to BNSF's motion for summary judgment on Straub's negligence-based FELA claim, the district court concluded
Because Mr. Straub is able to advance his FELA claim past the motion to dismiss stage by alleging that the seat adjustment mechanism was an improperly maintained part and appurtenance of the locomotive for purposes of
To be clear, in analyzing LIA, the Supreme Court has explicitly held Congress did not intend "that every gadget placed upon a locomotive by a carrier, for experimental purposes, should become part thereof within the rule of absolute liability."
S. Ry. Co. v. Lunsford
,
The record evidence adduced in this case while Straub's negligence-based FELA claim was litigated fully supports the contention that the seat adjustment mechanism is not an independent item of locomotive equipment but is, instead, an essential and integral part of the engineer's chair. See supra n.4.
Although the BIA prohibited use of a locomotive unless all its parts and appurtenances were safe to operate "without unnecessary peril to life or limb,"
see
Lunsford
,
In noting § 229.7 supports the conclusion that an engineer's chair is a part or appurtenance of a complete locomotive for purposes of LIA, we express no opinion as to whether the regulations would independently support sending a LIA-based strict liability claim to the jury. See supra n.6 (discussing nature of the "claims" in Straub's complaint). That is, it is unnecessary to decide whether the regulation could reasonably be read as imposing strict liability for the unsafe condition of all parts and appurtenances of an operating locomotive.
