MEMORANDUM ORDER
Plаintiff alleges jurisdiction in this Court under the provisions of 45 U.S. C.A. § 51 etc., the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. He alleges he is an employee of Lambert’s Point Docks, Inc. (Lambert’s) an “assembly and rеdistribution depot for railroad cargo of defendant;” that Lambert’s “performs operational activities and railway functions of the defendant * * * in the handling of its railroad cars, including the loading and unloading of cargo from said railroad cars * * * and such compаny, in law, is an adjunct and agent of defendant.” He further alleges that at the time of his injury, plaintiff “was assisting in the loading of a railroad ear, belonging to, or under the control * * * of defendant,” and that “defendant, through its agent, Lambert’s * * * furnished a steel shoe connecting the railroad car with the raised floor of the terminal;” that plaintiff’s injuries were “caused by the negligence and wrongdoing on the part of the defendant railway and its agent.” Railway filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, asserting plaintiff was not its employee within the meaning of the Fеderal Employers’ Liability Act. With its motion the Railway filed exhibits and other supporting information. In оpposition, plaintiff filed an affidavit asserting that the docks upon which the accidеnt occurred have tracks of railway built .therein to handle freight of Railway; that the business of Lambert’s is “to act and be a warehouse and assembly area for redistribution, assembly and shipment of Norfolk & Western Railway cargo;” that at the time of injury, plaintiff was “working on a railroad car which had been brought in to Lambert’s * * * by defendant * * * and which car * * * was taken away with its cargo” by defendant; that Lambert’s has a service agreement with Railway “for the loаding and unloading of railroad cars which the railroad brings onto Lambert’s” and that the movemеnt of cargo in and out of Lambert’s is “under the sole control of defendant;” that the business of Lambert’s “is to engage in operational activity” of the Railway “by loading and unloading its cars through the use of plaintiff and other employees.”
The Federal Employers’ Liability Act “does not use the terms ‘employee’ and
In Smith v. Norfolk and Western Railway Company,
The facts in this case are quite different from those in Ruffin, Administratrix v. Norfolk and Western Railway Company, et al., Civil Action No. 7032-N, decided by Judge MacKеnzie July 14, 1969.
In keeping with Baker v. Texas & Pacific Railway Company, supra, the case “contains factual elements such as to make it one for the jury” as to whether plaintiff was an employee of the railway within the meaning of the Act. The motion will therefore be denied.
