Writ of error to review the judgment of state court, in an
action for personal injuries based on the Safety Appliance Law of
the state substantially identical with the federal law, and
affirmed by the intermediate appellate and the highest court of the
state without opinion, dismissed for want of jurisdiction under
§ 237, Judicial Code. Even if the highest court of the state,
after affirmance, certified a part of the record, the fact that it
had been necessary to consider the Federal Safety Appliance Act and
to determine whether the Ohio Safety Appliance Act, as construed by
the trial court, is not repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment, the
federal questions suggested as the basis for the writ of error in
this case are so frivolous a not to afford jurisdiction under
§ 237, Judicial Code.
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
Safety Appliance Act and the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237, Judicial Code, are stated in the opinion.
Page 237 U. S. 429
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Solomon, the defendant in error, sued to recover for personal
injuries suffered by him while he was working as a brakeman on a
switch engine in the yard of the defendant company at Youngstown,
Ohio. The negligence charged was that the tender of the engine had
a defective coupler in that the knuckle and pin on the same could
not be worked without going between the cars, and that the drawbar
had so much side play that it would not meet the couplers of other
cars, and therefore would not
Page 237 U. S. 430
automatically couple by impact. The first defect may be put out
of view, as the jury found it did not exist. As to the second, the
respective contentions at the trial were, on the part of the
plaintiff, that the play of the drawbar was so great as to cause
the coupler to be defective, and, on the part of the defendant,
that while the drawbar may have had some side play, it only existed
to the degree which was essential in such an appliance, and
therefore there was no defect. The trial court submitted the case
to the jury on the theory that the coupler was defective if it had
an unusual side play, and conversely that it was not if it did not
have such a degree of side play. From the pleadings and the course
of the trial there is no room for dispute that the case was tried
upon the theory that the right to recover was based on the Safety
Appliance Law of Ohio, substantially identical in its terms with
the Safety Appliance Law of the United States. The judgment on the
verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff was affirmed without
opinion by the circuit court, and again affirmed without opinion by
the Supreme Court of Ohio, to which judgment the writ of error now
before us was prosecuted.
Confining the case to the statement just made, it is beyond
dispute that there is no jurisdiction to review, but it is insisted
that the case is not so confined because, after affirmance, the
court below entered an order which it directed should be made part
of the record, certifying that, in deciding the case, it became
necessary for it to consider whether the United States Safety
Appliance Law was applicable, and whether, as construed by the
trial court, the state law, if applicable, was not repugnant to the
due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. But assuming that
the recited federal questions are in the record and require
consideration, they are so without merit and frivolous as not to
give basis for jurisdiction: first, because such plainly is the
result of the contention that error to
Page 237 U. S. 431
the prejudice of the defendant company concerning the United
States Safety Appliance Law, if that law applied, was committed by
instructing that it exacted a usual, that is, ordinary, degree of
care in the appliances to which that act related. And second,
because a like view inevitably is necessary concerning the
contention that the state Safety Appliance Law, if it applied,
would be repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment if it exacted a
usual and ordinary degree of care. But this is not adequate to
dispose of the case, since the argument is that error as to the
recited federal question directly arose from the refusal of the
court to instruct a verdict for the railroad company on the ground
that there was no proof tending to show an unusual or any defect in
the coupler, thereby permitting the jury to find a liability under
the law of the United States where none existed, and under the
theory of the application of the state law, causing such law to
impose a liability for an appliance which was not defective, and
hence to take property without due process of law. But while the
proposition changes the form of the contention, it does not change
the substance of things, since we are of the opinion, after an
examination of the record, that the contention that the case should
have been taken from the jury on the ground stated is so wholly
devoid of merit and wanting in substance as to afford no basis for
jurisdiction. As a proposition which is unsubstantial and frivolous
cannot be made substantial by asserting another proposition of the
same character, it results that there is no ground for the exercise
of jurisdiction, and the writ of error is therefore dismissed for
want of jurisdiction.