1. Statutes in derogation of the common law and penal statutes
are not to be construed so strictly as to defeat the obvious
intention of Congress as found in the language actually used
according to its true and obvious meaning.
2. Locomotive engines are included by the words "any car"
contained in the second section of the Act of March 2, 1893, 27
Stat. 531, c.196, requiring cars engaged in interstate commerce to
be equipped with automatic couplers. And although they were also
required by the first section of the act to be equipped with power
driving wheel brakes, the rule that the expression of one thing
excludes others does not apply, inasmuch as there was a special
reason for that requirement, and in addition the same necessity for
automatic couplers existed as to them as in respect to other
cars.
3. A dining car regularly engaged in interstate traffic does not
cease to be so when waiting for the train to make the next
trip.
4. The equipment of cars with automatic couplers which will not
automatically couple with each other so as to render it unnecessary
for men to go between the cars to couple and uncouple is not a
compliance with the law.
5. The Act of March 2, 1903, 32 Stat. 943, c. 976, treats as
correct the view herein expressed, and is declaratory thereof.
Johnson brought this action in the District Court of the First
Judicial District of Utah against the Southern Pacific Company to
recover damages for injuries received while employed by that
company as a brakeman. The case was removed to the Circuit Court of
the United States for the district of Utah by defendant on the
ground of diversity of citizenship.
The facts were briefly these: August 5, 1900, Johnson was acting
as head brakeman on a freight train of the Southern Pacific Company
which was making its regular trip between San Francisco,
California, and Ogden, Utah. On reaching the Town of Promontory,
Utah, Johnson was directed to uncouple the engine from the train
and couple it to a dining car belonging to the company which was
standing on a side track for the purpose of turning the car around
preparatory to its being picked up and put on the next westbound
passenger train. The engine and the dining car were equipped,
respectively, with the Janney coupler and the Miller hook,
so-called, which would not couple together automatically by impact,
and it was therefore necessary for Johnson, and he was ordered, to
go between the engine and the dining car to accomplish the
coupling. In so doing, Johnson's hand was caught between the engine
bumper and the dining car bumper and crushed, which necessitated
amputation of the hand above the wrist.
On the trial of the case, defendant, after plaintiff had rested,
moved the court to instruct the jury to find in its favor, which
motion was granted, and the jury found a verdict accordingly, on
which judgment was entered. Plaintiff carried the case to the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and the judgment
was affirmed. 117 F. 462.
Page 196 U. S. 13
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was brought here on certiorari, and also on writ of
error, and will be determined on the merits, without discussing the
question of jurisdiction as between the one writ and the other.
Pullman's Car Company v. Transportation Company,
171 U. S. 138,
171 U. S.
145.
The plaintiff claimed that he was relieved of assumption of risk
under common law rules by the Act of Congress of March 2, 1893, 27
Stat. 531, c. 196, entitled
"An Act to Promote the Safety of Employees and Travelers upon
Railroads by Compelling Common Carriers Engaged in Interstate
Commerce to Equip their Cars with Automatic Couplers and Continuous
Brakes and their Locomotives with Driving-Wheel Brakes, and for
Other Purposes."
The issues involved questions deemed of such general importance
that the government was permitted to file brief and be heard at the
bar.
The act of 1893 provided:
"That from and after the first day of January, eighteen hundred
and ninety-eight, it shall be unlawful for any common carrier
engaged in interstate commerce by railroad to use on its line any
locomotive engine in moving interstate traffic not equipped with a
power driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the
train-brake system. . . ."
"SEC. 2. That on and after the first day of January, eighteen
hundred and ninety-eight, it shall be unlawful for any such common
carrier to haul or permit to be hauled or used on its line any car
used in moving interstate traffic not equipped with couplers
coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled
without the necessity of men going between the ends of the
cars."
"SEC. 6. That any such common carrier using any locomotive
engine, running any train, or hauling or permitting to be hauled or
used on its line any car in violation of any of the
Page 196 U. S. 14
provisions of this act shall be liable to a penalty of one
hundred dollars for each and every such violation, to be recovered
in a suit or suits to be brought by the United States District
Attorney in the district court of the United States having
jurisdiction in the locality where such violation shall have been
committed, and it shall be the duty of such district attorney to
bring such suits upon duly verified information being lodged with
him of such violation having occurred."
"SEC. 8. That any employee of any such common carrier who may be
injured by any locomotive, car, or train in use contrary to the
provision of this act shall not be deemed thereby to have assumed
the risk thereby occasioned, although continuing in the employment
of such carrier after the unlawful use of such locomotive, car, or
train had been brought to his knowledge."
The circuit court of appeals held, in substance, Sanborn, J.,
delivering the opinion and Lochren, J., concurring, that the
locomotive and car were both equipped as required by the act, as
the one had a power driving-wheel brake and the other a coupler;
that section 2 did not apply to locomotives; that, at the time of
the accident, the dining car was not "used in moving interstate
traffic," and, moreover, that the locomotive as well as the dining
car was furnished with an automatic coupler, so that each was
equipped as the statute required if section 2 applied to both.
Thayer, J., concurred in the judgment on the latter ground, but was
of opinion that locomotives were included by the words "any car" in
the second section, and that the dining car was being "used in
moving interstate traffic."
We are unable to accept these conclusions, notwithstanding the
able opinion of the majority, as they appear to us to be
inconsistent with the plain intention of Congress, to defeat the
object of the legislation, and to be arrived at by an inadmissible
narrowness of construction.
The intention of Congress, declared in the preamble and in
Page 196 U. S. 15
sections one and two of the act, was
"to promote the safety of employees and travelers upon railroads
by compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to
equip their cars with automatic couplers and continuous brakes and
their locomotives with driving-wheel brakes,"
those brakes to be accompanied with "appliances for operating
the train brake system," and every car to be "equipped with
couplers coupling automatically by impact, and which can be
uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the ends of
the cars," whereby the danger and risk consequent on the existing
system was averted as far as possible.
The present case is that of an injured employee, and involves
the application of the act in respect of automatic couplers, the
preliminary question being whether locomotives are required to be
equipped with such couplers. And it is not to be successfully
denied that they are so required if the words "any car" of the
second section were intended to embrace, and do embrace,
locomotives. But it is said that this cannot be so, because
locomotives were elsewhere, in terms, required to be equipped with
power driving-wheel brakes, and that the rule that the expression
of one thing excludes another applies. That, however, is a question
of intention, and as there was special reason for requiring
locomotives to be equipped with power driving-wheel brakes, if it
were also necessary that locomotives should be equipped with
automatic couplers, and the word "car" would cover locomotives,
then the intention to limit the equipment of locomotives to power
driving-wheel brakes, because they were separately mentioned, could
not be imputed. Now it was as necessary for the safety of employees
in coupling and uncoupling that locomotives should be equipped with
automatic couplers as it was that freight and passenger and dining
cars should be -- perhaps more so, as Judge Thayer suggests, "since
engines have occasion to make couplings more frequently."
And manifestly, the word "car" was used in its generic sense.
There is nothing to indicate that any particular kind
Page 196 U. S. 16
of car was meant. Tested by context, subject matter, and object,
"any car" meant all kinds of cars running on the rails, including
locomotives. And this view is supported by the dictionary
definitions and by many judicial decisions, some of them having
been rendered in construction of this act.
Winkler v.
Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, 4 Penn. 387;
Fleming v. Southern Railway Company, 131 N.C. 476;
East St. Louis Connecting Railway Company v. O'Hara, 150
Ill. 580;
Kansas City &c. Railroad Company v. Crocker,
95 Ala. 412;
Thomas v. Georgia Railroad & Banking
Company, 38 Ga. 222;
Mayor &c. v. Third Ave. R.
Co., 117 N.Y. 404;
Benson v. Railway Company, 75
Minn. 163.
The result is that, if the locomotive in question was not
equipped with automatic couplers, the company failed to comply with
the provisions of the act. It appears, however, that this
locomotive was in fact equipped with automatic couplers, as well as
the dining car, but that the couplers on each, which were of
different types, would not couple with each other automatically by
impact so as to render it unnecessary for men to go between the
cars to couple and uncouple.
Nevertheless, the circuit court of appeals was of opinion that
it would be an unwarrantable extension of the terms of the law to
hold that, where the couplers would couple automatically with
couplers of their own kind, the couplers must so couple with
couplers of different kinds. But we think that what the act plainly
forbade was the use of cars which could not be coupled together
automatically by impact by means of the couplers actually used on
the cars to be coupled. The object was to protect the lives and
limbs of railroad employees by rendering it unnecessary for a man
operating the couplers to go between the ends of the cars, and that
object would be defeated not necessarily by the use of automatic
couplers of different kinds, but if those different kinds would not
automatically couple with each other. The point was that the
Page 196 U. S. 17
railroad companies should be compelled, respectively, to adopt
devices, whatever they were, which would act so far uniformly as to
eliminate the danger consequent on men going between the cars.
If the language used were open to construction, we are
constrained to say that the construction put upon the act by the
circuit court of appeals was altogether too narrow.
This strictness was thought to be required because the common
law rule as to the assumption of risk was changed by the act, and
because the act was penal.
The dogma as to the strict construction of statutes in
derogation of the common law only amounts to the recognition of a
presumption against an intention to change existing law, and as
there is no doubt of that intention here, the extent of the
application of the change demands at least no more rigorous
construction than would be applied to penal laws. And, as Chief
Justice Parker remarked, conceding that statutes in derogation of
the common law are to be construed strictly, "They are also to be
construed sensibly, and with a view to the object aimed at by the
legislature."
Gibson v. Jenney, 15 Mass. 205.
The primary object of the act was to promote the public welfare
by securing the safety of employees and travelers, and it was in
that aspect remedial, while for violations a penalty of $100,
recoverable in a civil action, was provided for, and in that aspect
it was penal. But the design to give relief was more dominant than
to inflict punishment, and the act might well be held to fall
within the rule applicable to statutes to prevent fraud upon the
revenue, and for the collection of customs -- that rule not
requiring absolute strictness of construction.
Taylor v.
United States, 3 How. 197;
United States v.
Stowell, 133 U. S. 1,
133 U. S. 12, and
cases cited.
And see Farmers' and Merchants' National Bank v.
Dearing, 91 U. S. 29,
91 U. S. 35;
Gray v. Bennett, 3 Met. 529.
Moreover, it is settled that,
"though penal laws are to be construed strictly, yet the
intention of the legislature must
Page 196 U. S. 18
govern in the construction of penal as well as other statutes,
and they are not to be construed so strictly as to defeat the
obvious intention of the legislature."
United States v. Lacher, 134 U.
S. 624. In that case, we cited and quoted from
United States v. Winn, 3 Sumn. 209, in which Mr. Justice
Story, referring to the rule that penal statutes are to be
construed strictly, said:
"I agree to that rule in its true and sober sense, and that is
that penal statutes are not to be enlarged by implication or
extended to cases not obviously within their words and purport. But
where the words are general, and include various classes of
persons, I know of no authority which would justify the court in
restricting them to one class or in giving them the narrowest
interpretation where the mischief to be redressed by the statute is
equally applicable to all of them. And where a word is used in a
statute which has various known significations, I know of no rule
that requires the court to adopt one in preference to another
simply because it is more restrained, if the objects of the statute
equally apply to the largest and broadest sense of the word. In
short, it appears to me that the proper course in all these cases
is to search out and follow the true intent of the legislature, and
to adopt that sense of the words which harmonizes best with the
context and promotes in the fullest manner the apparent policy and
objects of the legislature."
Tested by these principles, we think the view of the circuit
court of appeals, which limits the second section to merely
providing automatic couplers, does not give due effect to the words
"coupling automatically by impact, and which can be uncoupled
without the necessity of men going between the cars," and cannot be
sustained.
We dismiss as without merit the suggestion which has been made
that the words "without the necessity of men going between the ends
of the cars," which are the test of compliance with section 2,
apply only to the act of uncoupling. The phrase literally covers
both coupling and uncoupling, and if
Page 196 U. S. 19
read, as it should be, with a comma after the word "uncoupled,"
this becomes entirely clear.
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway Company v. Voelker, 129 F. 522;
United States v.
Lacher, supra.
The risk in coupling and uncoupling was the evil sought to be
remedied, and that risk was to be obviated by the use of couplers
actually coupling automatically. True, no particular design was
required, but, whatever the devices used, they were to be
effectively interchangeable. Congress was not paltering in a double
sense. And its intention is found "in the language actually used,
interpreted according to its fair and obvious meaning."
United
States v. Harris, 177 U. S.
309.
That this was the scope of the statute is confirmed by the
circumstances surrounding its enactment, as exhibited in public
documents to which we are at liberty to refer.
Binns v. United
States, 194 U. S. 486,
194 U. S. 495;
Holy Trinity Church v. United States, 143 U.
S. 457,
143 U. S.
463.
President Harrison, in his annual messages of 1889, 1890, 1891,
and 1892, earnestly urged upon Congress the necessity of
legislation to obviate and reduce the loss of life and the injuries
due to the prevailing method of coupling and braking. In his first
message, he said:
"It is competent, I think, for Congress to require uniformity in
the construction of cars used in interstate commerce and the use of
improved safety appliances upon such trains. Time will be necessary
to make the needed changes, but an earnest and intelligent
beginning should be made at once. It is a reproach to our
civilization that any class of American workmen should, in the
pursuit of a necessary and useful vocation, be subjected to a peril
of life and limb as great as that of a soldier in time of war."
And he reiterated his recommendation in succeeding messages,
saying in that for 1892:
"Statistics furnished by the Interstate Commerce Commission show
that, during the year ending June 30, 1891, there were forty-seven
different styles of car couplers reported to be in use, and that,
during the same period, there were 2,660 employees killed and
26,140 injured.
Page 196 U. S. 20
Nearly 16 percent of the deaths occurred in the coupling and
uncoupling of cars, and over 36 percent of the injuries had the
same origin."
The Senate report of the first session of the Fifty-second
Congress (No. 1049) and the House report of the same session (No.
1678) set out the numerous and increasing casualties due to
coupling, the demand for protection, and the necessity of automatic
couplers coupling interchangeably. The difficulties in the case
were fully expounded, and the result reached to require an
automatic coupling by impact so as to render it unnecessary for men
to go between the cars, while no particular device or type was
adopted, the railroad companies being left free to work out the
details for themselves, ample time being given for that purpose.
The law gave five years, and that was enlarged by the Interstate
Commerce Commission, as authorized by law, two years, and
subsequently seven months, making seven years and seven months in
all.
The diligence of counsel has called our attention to changes
made in the bill in the course of its passage, and to the debates
in the Senate on the report of its committee. 24 Cong.Rec. pt. 2,
pp. 1246, 1273
et seq. These demonstrate that the
difficulty as to interchangeability was fully in the mind of
Congress, and was assumed to be met by the language which was used.
The essential degree of uniformity was secured by providing that
the couplings must couple automatically by impact without the
necessity of men going between the ends of the cars.
In the present case, the couplings would not work together;
Johnson was obliged to go between the cars, and the law was not
complied with.
March 2, 1903, 32 Stat. 943, c. 976, an act in amendment of the
act of 1893 was approved, which provided, among other things, that
the provisions and requirements of the former act
"shall be held to apply to common carriers by railroads in the
territories and the District of Columbia, and shall apply in all
cases, whether or not the couplers brought together are of the
Page 196 U. S. 21
same kind, make, or type,"
and "shall be held to apply to all trains, locomotives, tenders,
cars, and similar vehicles used on any railroad engaged in
interstate commerce."
This act was to take effect September first, nineteen hundred
and three, and nothing in it was to be held or construed to relieve
any common carrier "from any of the provisions, powers, duties,
liabilities, or requirements" of the act of 1893, all of which
should apply except as specifically amended.
As we have no doubt of the meaning of the prior law, the
subsequent legislation cannot be regarded as intended to operate to
destroy it. Indeed, the latter act is affirmative and declaratory,
and, in effect, only construed and applied the former act.
Bailey v.
Clark, 21 Wall. 284;
United
States v. Freeman, 3 How. 556;
Cope v.
Cope, 137 U. S. 682;
Wetmore v. Markoe, 196 U. S. 68. This
legislative recognition of the scope of the prior law fortifies,
and does not weaken, the conclusion at which we have arrived.
Another ground on which the decision of the circuit court of
appeals was rested remains to be noticed. That court held by a
majority that, as the dining car was empty and had not actually
entered upon its trip, it was not used in moving interstate
traffic, and hence was not within the act. The dining car had been
constantly used for several years to furnish meals to passengers
between San Francisco and Ogden, and for no other purpose. On the
day of the accident, the eastbound train was so late that it was
found that the car could not reach Ogden in time to return on the
next westbound train according to intention, and it was therefore
dropped off at Promontory, to be picked up by that train as it came
along that evening.
The presumption is that it was stocked for the return, and as it
was not a new car, or a car just from the repair shop, on its way
to its field of labor, it was not "an empty," as that term is
sometimes used. Besides, whether cars are empty or loaded, the
danger to employees is practically the same, and we agree with the
observation of District Judge Shiras in
Voelker v. Railway
Company, 116 F. 867, that
"it cannot
Page 196 U. S. 22
be true that, on the eastern trip, the provisions of the act of
Congress would be binding upon the company because the cars were
loaded, but would not be binding upon the return trip because the
cars are empty."
Counsel urges that the character of the dining car at the time
and place of the injury was local only, and could not be changed
until the car was actually engaged in interstate movement or being
put into a train for such use, and
Coe v. Errol,
116 U. S. 517, is
cited as supporting that contention. In
Coe v. Errol, it
was held that certain logs cut in New Hampshire, and hauled to a
river in order that they might be transported to Maine, were
subject to taxation in the former state before transportation had
begun.
The distinction between merchandise which may become an article
of interstate commerce, or may not, and an instrument regularly
used in moving interstate commerce which has stopped temporarily in
making its trip between two points in different states, renders
this and like cases inapplicable.
Confessedly this dining car was under the control of Congress
while in the act of making its interstate journey, and, in our
judgment, it was equally so when waiting for the train to be made
up for the next trip. It was being regularly used in the movement
of interstate traffic, and so within the law.
Finally, it is argued that Johnson was guilty of such
contributory negligence as to defeat recovery, and that therefore
the judgment should be affirmed. But the circuit court of appeals
did not consider this question, nor apparently did the circuit
court, and we do not feel constrained to inquire whether it could
have been open under section 8, or, if so, whether it should have
been left to the jury, under proper instructions.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is reversed;
the judgment of the Circuit Court is also reversed, and the cause
remanded to that court with instructions to set aside the verdict,
and award a new trial.