Whether the injured person was or was not an employee of the
railway company causing the injury is a question of fact, and if
there is a finding supported by the record that he was not, this
Court cannot review the judgment of the state court under §
237, Judicial Code, as being invalid because the case was not tried
under the Employers' Liability Act.
St. Louis & Iron Mtn.
Ry. v. McWhirter, 229 U. S. 265;
St. Louis & San Francisco Ry. v. Seale, 229 U.
S. 156, distinguished.
The decision of the state court, based on substantial ground,
being that the injured person was the employee of the express
company, and not the railway company, although performing certain
duties for the latter, there is no denial of a federal right in the
refusal of the state court to apply the Federal Employers'
Liability Act, and this Court must dismiss the writ of error and it
is not necessary to notice other errors assigned.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237, Judicial Code, to review a judgment of the state court
of Oklahoma against a railroad company for damages for death of an
express messenger and the application of the Federal Employers'
Liability Act to such a case, are stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 683
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action for damages, brought by defendant in error against
plaintiff in error (herein called the railway company) for the
death of William B. West, husband of the defendant in error, caused
by the collision of two trains of the railway company. The case was
tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for
defendant in error in the sum of $15,000. The judgment was affirmed
by the supreme court of the state, and error was prosecuted from
this Court.
There is no dispute about the collision, the cause of it, or
that it resulted in the death of the deceased. He and the plaintiff
below were residents of Kansas, and she brought the suit, as she
alleged in her complaint, as his widow, and for the benefit of
herself as such widow and their three minor children. No personal
representative of his estate was appointed.
She alleged that the deceased at the time of his death was
employed by the American Express Company as express messenger upon
the express cars operated by the railway company over its line of
railroad from Parsons, Kansas, through the State of Oklahoma, to
points in the State of Texas. That, in addition to his duties as
express messenger he was also engaged in handling passenger baggage
upon the express cars of the railway company. The plaintiff then
alleged the deceased came to his death in the course of his
employment while riding in the express car, by reason of a head-on
collision of the train with a freight train between certain
stations in Oklahoma.
A demurrer was filed which attacked the legal capacity of the
plaintiff to sue for her minor children, and the sufficiency of the
complaint, and alleged as well that there was a defect of parties.
The demurrer was overruled, and the case put at final issue by a
third amended answer
Page 232 U. S. 684
(amended again at the trial) filed by the railway company. It
denied negligence on its part, and alleged negligence on the part
of the deceased, and that it was engaged in moving interstate
commerce. It alleged also that the deceased had made application to
the American Express Company at Parsons, Kansas, for a position as
a driver of one of its wagons, and was engaged by the express
company in pursuance of a written application (copy of which was
attached to the answer), that he was employed by the express
company (a copy of the contract being attached to the answer), and
in consideration of his employment he assumed all risk of accident
and injury which he should meet with or sustain in the course of
his employment, whether occasioned by or resulting from the gross
or other negligence of any corporation or person engaged in any
manner in operating any railroad or vessel or vehicle, or of any
employee of any such corporation or person, or otherwise, and
whether resulting in his death or otherwise. That, in case of
injury, he would at once and without demand execute and deliver a
good and sufficient release of all claims, demands, and causes of
action arising out of such injury, or connected with or resulting
therefrom. That, by the terms of his contract, he ratified all
agreements made by the express company and any such corporation or
person that its employees should have no cause of action for
injuries sustained in the course of their employment, and agreed to
be bound by such agreements as though he were a party thereto, and
authorized the express company to contract for him that neither he
nor any of his personal representatives, nor any person claiming
under him, should claim compensation because of injury sustained by
him, whether resulting from gross or other negligence of such
corporations, persons, or employees. That such contract should
inure to the benefit of any corporation or person over whose
railroads or steamboat lines the express company should forward
merchandise,
Page 232 U. S. 685
and this in consideration of his employment by the express
company. That, in pursuance of his contract of employment by the
express company, he was in the express car of the railway company,
and that he was barred from maintaining the action.
The answer concluded with the following paragraph:
"Further answering, defendant admits that, at and prior to the
death of said William B. West, deceased, he was employed by the
American Express Company as express messenger upon the express cars
operated by the defendant railway company over its line of road . .
. , and admits that the deceased, William B. West, in addition to
his employment as express messenger by the said American Express
Company, was also engaged in handling passenger baggage upon the
express car of said defendant railway company, and . . . in
performing said duties in handling said baggage was doing so under
and by virtue of his said employment by the said American Express
Company, and that such handling of such baggage by said West was
for and in behalf of and under the direction of said railway
company."
Defendant in error filed a reply to the answer in which she
affirmed the allegations of her complaint and denied those of the
answer, and alleged besides that, at the time the contracts set out
in the answer were made and ever since, the statutes of Kansas
provided as follows:
"That railroads in this state shall be liable for all damages
done to persons or property when done in consequence of any neglect
on the part of the railroad company."
"Every railroad company organized and doing business in the
State of Kansas shall be liable for all damages done to any
employee of such company in consequence of any negligence of its
agents, or by any mismanagement of its engineers or other
employees, to any person sustaining such damage. Provided that
notice in writing that an injury
Page 232 U. S. 686
has been sustained, stating the time and place thereof, shall
have been given by or on behalf of the person injured to such
railroad company within eight months after the occurrence of the
injury."
A demurrer to the reply was overruled.
The simple question which is presented here is whether the
deceased was employed at the time of his death by the railway
company or by the American Express Company. On those alternates
depends the jurisdiction of this Court, and defendant in error,
asserting that such employment was a question of fact decided by
the state courts against the railway company, makes a motion to
dismiss the writ of error.
There were two opinions delivered by the supreme court of the
state. In its first opinion, the court said that the railway
company contended that the defendant's liability was controlled by
the "Employers' Liability Act," but the court, after quoting its
provisions, decided that the pleadings and evidence demonstrated
that the deceased was in the employment of the American Express
Company at the time of his death, and that therefore the national
act did not apply. The court also noticed the other rulings which
were called to its attention -- among others, one based on the
action of the trial court refusing to admit in evidence the
contracts attached to the answer. The court declined to consider
the latter ruling, holding that, under the practice of the court,
the error was not properly before it for review, and for the
further reason that in the brief and argument of the railway
company the ruling was "not attempted to be insisted upon or urged
as error," citing
Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 22 Okl. 48.
And the court said the omission could not be cured by a reply brief
when the same was not predicated upon a specification of error,
permission not having been first obtained for the purpose of
amending the specifications of error.
Page 232 U. S. 687
The court was also of opinion that the contract of the deceased
by which, it was contended, he assumed the risk of injuries and
released all rights of action for them was "void as against public
policy, on account of being in contravention of the laws of the
State of Kansas, and against the public policy" of Oklahoma.
The second opinion was delivered upon a petition for rehearing
in which the railway company earnestly combated the conclusions of
the court, expressed in the first opinion, repeated its
contentions, and insisted that the case was tried on the theory
that the issue made by the pleadings was whether the deceased was
an employee of the railway company, and that the evidence showed
that he was such employee. The court rejected the contentions and
decided that the pleadings alleged, and the evidence was consistent
with the allegation, that West was employed by the express
company.
There is therefore a sharp antagonism between the views of the
court and of the railway company, and yet there is not much dispute
over the elements of the controversy, but rather in the inferences
from them.
The essential facts pleaded we have given. The allegation of the
complaint is that West, "at and prior to the time" of his death,
"was employed by the American Express Company as express messenger
upon the express cars operated by said defendant company," and
"that, in addition to his duties and employment as messenger," he
was "also engaged in handling passenger baggage upon" such cars,
and "in the course of his employment . . . was riding in one of the
express cars" of the railway company. The direct averment,
therefore, is that West was employed by the express company, and
that he handled baggage and was riding in the express cars in the
course of this employment and as part of its duties. A relation
with the railway company is, it is true, averred. He handled its
baggage and rode in its cars. But this did not
Page 232 U. S. 688
make him its employee. If he was, such is not disclosed by the
complaint, nor is it alleged in the answer of the railway company.
Indeed, his employment by the express company is emphasized by the
contracts attached to the answer, and a defense is based upon them.
It is averred that West, by these contracts, assumed all the risks
of his employment by the express company, ratified the contracts of
the latter, authorized it in his name to release any demand he
might have for injuries, agreed to be bound by whatever covenants
the company should make, and that neither he nor any of his
personal representatives would claim compensation for injuries,
whether resulting from negligence or otherwise. These contracts are
explicitly averred, as constituting the consideration for West's
"employment by said express company," and it is alleged that he was
"being transported by this defendant . . . in pursuance of said
contract, hereinbefore referred to as
Exhibit B,'" and "that
plaintiff is therefore now barred from maintaining this
action."
These allegations do not deny, but rather aver, the employment
of West by the express company, and were intended as a security to
that company, and through it to any transportation company or
person. Their basis distinctly is that injury might result to West
in his employment, and they were intended to prevent legal
liability for it. Whether they had that effect is not a federal
question.
The railway company, however, contends that the evidence
conclusively shows that the deceased was an employee of the railway
company, and that certainty of proof is no doubt asserted for it to
countervail the combined judgments of the jury and of the trial and
supreme courts. The latter court, in its second opinion, however,
considering the effect of the contracts between the express company
and the deceased, and the oral evidence upon which the railway
company relied, said:
"We therefore find with the court below that the pleadings and
the evidence conclusively
Page 232 U. S. 689
show that the deceased suffered the injuries that resulted in
his death while he was employed by the express company, and not
while he was employed by the railway company in interstate commerce
within the meaning of the federal employers liability act."
The court hence decided that the action was governed by the
statutes of Oklahoma.
What the pleadings alleged and what the contracts showed we have
already adverted to. The testimony relied on is that of one of the
superintendents of the express company, who, in testifying as to
the relation between the deceased and the railway company, said
that the deceased was "agent, messenger, and baggageman," and by
this was meant that he "worked for both companies," and that the
proportion of payment by the companies was an "equal division."
That his duties were that he "received the baggage at the stations,
made a record of it, and put it off at its destination in the same
manner any baggageman did." The witness further said that the
deceased knew that he was to handle the baggage of the railway
company and act as joint employee of it and the express company,
and was "told to post himself in the work of both companies." On
cross-examination, however, the witness testified that all of the
salary of the deceased "came from the express company." The railway
company "paid us one half of his salary; we drew a bill against
them in his name and the other baggageman."
Counsel for the railway company urge that the strength of this
testimony is such that it needs no reinforcement from argument, and
they say that it has confirmation besides in a circular letter
addressed by the superintendent of the express company to all of
the messengers of the company. The letter, however, was not
admitted in evidence, and no error was assigned in the supreme
court upon the ruling. We are unable, therefore, to consider it,
notwithstanding counsel's complaint, often repeated, that
Page 232 U. S. 690
they were deceived by their conception, justified, it is
insisted, that the case was tried upon the theory that the deceased
was an employee of the railway company.
This theory the railway company makes a great deal of. It
constituted the basis of the petition for rehearing, and, by
disregarding it, it was contended and is contended, the court was
led into error. The court, however, rejected the theory, deciding
that it was not justified by the pleadings, complaint, or answer,
nor by the evidence in the case.
The court grouped the contentions of the railway company under
four heads: (1) plaintiff in the action (defendant in error here)
was not the proper party to maintain the action; (2) error in
instructions; (3) error in excluding the three written contracts
attached to the answer; (4) amount of damages.
The first contention is the determining one, as we have already
said. Upon it depends the federal question -- that is, whether the
laws of Oklahoma controlled the action or the Employers' Liability
Act. And this turns necessarily upon the other question, whether
the deceased was employed by the railway company or by the express
company, a question of fact found in the first instance by the jury
against the present contention of the railway company and sustained
by the trial court on motion for a new trial and the supreme court
in two opinions.
The finding having support in the record, it is contended that
this Court cannot question it, and that therefore the writ of error
should be dismissed. The railway company cites in resistance the
case of
St. Louis & Iron Mountain Ry. Co. v.
McWhirter, 229 U. S. 265, and
St. Louis & S.F. Ry. Co. v. Seale, 229 U.
S. 156. The cited cases are not like the case at bar. In
the
McWhirter case, the action was in express terms based
on a statute of the United States, the hours of service Act of
1907. It was contended that the pleadings embraced as well an
action at common law, and that such cause of action was sustained
and was
Page 232 U. S. 691
broad enough to support the judgment irrespective of what may
have been decided concerning the statute of the United States, and
a motion to dismiss was made. The contention was rejected and the
motion was denied. It was recognized that the case coming from a
state court, the power to review was controlled by Revised
Statutes, § 709, but it was said, however, that,
"where in a controversy of a purely federal character, the claim
is made and denied that there was no evidence tending to show
liability under the federal law, such ruling, when duly excepted
to, is reviewable because inherently involving the operation and
effect of the federal law."
In the
Seale case, the question was whether the
plaintiff in error in the case (the railway company) was engaged in
interstate commerce. There was no question of the employment by the
railway company. The state court decided the question in the
negatively, holding that the evidence did not bring the case within
the Employers' Liability Act. The case was brought here by writ of
error and jurisdiction entertained against a motion to dismiss,
and, after examining the evidence, we reversed the ruling of the
state court.
In the case under review, the pleadings state a cause of action
under the state law, and there is no question of the character of
the commerce in which the railway company was engaged; the only
question is whether the deceased was its employee or that of the
express company. If the answer to the question depended upon
evidence, it might be said that the cited cases are the same in
principle, both the fact of interstate commerce and the fact of
employment by the railway company of the deceased being conditions
which would bring the case under the federal enactment, or that
such employment was one of those subsidiary or connecting facts
into which this Court will inquire as determining its jurisdiction,
of which there are examples.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co.
v. Albers Commission Co.,
Page 232 U. S. 692
223 U. S. 573;
Cedar Rapids Gas Co. v. Cedar Rapids, 223 U.
S. 655;
Brinkmeier v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co.,
224 U. S. 268;
Creswill v. Knights of Pythias, 225 U.
S. 246. At any rate, we might, if the fact turned on the
evidence, say that the federal question asserted was not manifestly
lacking in color of merit, and follow therefore the ruling in
Swafford v. Templeton, 185 U. S. 487.
But the supreme court of the state rested its decision upon the
allegation of fact of employment of the deceased by the express
company, and the admission of the fact in the answer of the railway
company, and held that there was nothing in the course of the trial
which obviated the effect of the allegations and admissions of the
pleadings. The court, after quoting the paragraph of the answer
which we have given above, said that its
"admissions are in entire harmony with the balance of the
answer, which contains allegation after allegation positively
stating that the deceased was employed by the express company
continuously for a great many years prior to his death, and the
contracts of employment between the express company and the
deceased are attached to the answer and made a part thereof, and
certain waivers contained therein are relied upon as a
defense."
And, further,
"From the pleadings alone it is clear that the deceased suffered
the injuries which resulted in his death while he was employed by
the express company, and not while he was employed by the railway
company, and that the parties did not attempt to join an issue of
fact upon that question."
The expression in the opinion was that, if the evidence
disclosed a case different from that alleged in the pleadings, the
federal statute would control and
St. Louis & S.F. Ry. Co.
v. Seale, 229 U. S. 156,
would be applicable. But the court said that the testimony of
Adams, the superintendent of the express company, relied on by the
railway company, was "in no way inconsistent with the allegations
of the petition and the admissions of the answer," because
Page 232 U. S. 693
"the witness merely drew erroneous conclusions from admitted
facts, and that his testimony as a whole supplemented the
allegations of the petition and the admissions of the answer by
more fully disclosing the relations existing between the express
company and the deceased, and the express company and the railway
company, and made it more clearly apparent that the decedent was
rightfully on the train."
The court therefore considered the case distinguishable from the
cases cited by the railway company (
M., K. & T. Ry. Co. v.
Reasor, 28 Tex.Civ.App. 302;
Vary v. C. B. R. & M. Ry.
Co., 42 Ia. 246;
Oliver v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 196
F. 432), and made no comment upon them except to say that they in
no way conflicted with the conclusion reached.
The state court having decided, with substantial grounds for the
decision, that the pleadings and evidence show an action under the
employment by the express company, no denial of federal right is
involved, and therefore motion to dismiss must be granted. And, as
the action was brought under the state law, and not under the
federal law, it becomes unnecessary to notice errors assigned by
the railway company, including that based on the instruction of the
trial court that a verdict could be rendered by three-fourths of
the jury.
Dismissed.