delivered the opinion of the court.
The Northern Pacific Railway Company owns and uses in interstate commerce a terminal railroad along the waterfront of .¡Duluth extending from Rice’s Point to Furnace, a distance of four miles. It was sued in the District Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota for violating the Safety Appliance Act
1
by operating over the whole of this road, in September, 1916, two transfer trains, without complying with the requirement that 85 per cent, of the train brakes be coupled so as to be under engine control. One train consisted of a locomotive and forty-eight cars, the other of a locomotive and forty cars. The company contended that the provision of the Safety Appliance Act did not control the operation because this terminal road was not part of a main line; that neither passenger nor freight trains, through or local, moved on it; that on it trains are not operated by time-tables, train
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orders, or time-cards, nor is the use of the track controlled by block signals; that on it no train has right of way over another; but that there the single operating rule applies which requires all trains to move at such speed that they can be stopped at vision, and that trains are under the yardmaster’s orders. The company’s contention was sustained by the District Court which directed a verdict for defendant; and the judgment entered thereon was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. 255 Fed. Rep. 655. The case comes here on writ of certiorari.
These additional facts are material: The road for a distance of a mile at the beginning and for less at the end is single track. It crosses at grade two streets on one of which run street cars. It crosses at grade, at five places in all, lines of three independent railroad companies which run freight trains to piers situated between Rice’s Point and Furnace. One of these companies also runs passenger trains across defendant’s tracks. In addition, two other independent companies use, under the usual traffic-right agreements, about a mile of this railroad as á part of their freight lines to piers situated between Rice’s Point and Furnace. These four miles of railroad owned by the Northern Pacific are not used by it for switching or assembling cars. The switching, assembling and classification of cars for its through and local freight is done in the Rice’s Point yard where there are fifty-five tracks, each four thousand feet long and at Furnace, where there are fifteen tracks, cars are also switched and assembled. At Berwind and Boston, two intermediate points, where there áre respectively nine and six tracks, cars are frequently set out or picked up by transfer trains. The transfer trains here in question appear to have run solid between Rice’s Point and Furnace. Trains are run by the Northern Pacific on this line at a speed varying from three to eighteen miles an hour. .
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The company contends that the rule applied in
United States
v.
Erie R. R. Co.,
The judgment of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Notes
Act of March 2, 1893, c. 196, § 1, 27 Stat. 53Í, as amended by Act of March 2, 1903, c. 976, § 2, 32 Stat. 943; .and order of Interstate Commerce Commission dated June 6, 1910.
That case was decided by this court, April 21, 1919. The decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the case at bar was rendered January 15, 1919.
