In the courts of North Carolina in an action under the
Employers' Liability Act, there was a trial in which, under the
state practice, the jury returned a special verdict finding that
the Railroad Company was negligent and that plaintiff was not
guilty of contributory negligence. The appellate court, on account
of errors in the charge relating
Page 238 U. S. 270
exclusively to the subject of damages, granted a partial new
trial limited to the amount of damage, and on which the court
refused to admit evidence as to plaintiff's contributory
negligence.
Held that:
A substantive right or defense under the federal law cannot be
lessened or destroyed by a state rule of practice, and ordinarily
damages and contributory negligence are so blended that only in
rare instances can the question of amount of damages be submitted
to the jury without also submitting the conduct of the
plaintiff.
In this case, however, as defendant had not asked for a
modification of the special verdict or to introduce newly
discovered evidence, nor offered any such evidence on the second
trial, the question of damages could be considered without also
considering that of plaintiff's contributory negligence, as that
question had been entirely eliminated from the case, and the
defendant was not deprived of any federal right.
The practice of granting a partial new trial in actions under
the Federal Employers' Liability Act is not to be commended.
167 N.C. 290 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
Federal Employers' Liability Act and the validity of a verdict and
judgment in an action thereunder against the carrier, are stated in
the opinion.
Page 238 U. S. 271
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
Ferebee was employed by the Norfolk Southern Railroad Company as
a train hand on a passenger train running from Raleigh, North
Carolina, to Norfolk, Virginia. During the night at some place on
the journey, the steps to the platform of one of the cars were torn
away by coming in contact with some unknown obstruction. The
consequence was that, when Ferebee attempted to alight at a
station, he stepped from the platform to the ground, and received
personal injuries for which he brought suit in the Superior Court
of Wake County, North Carolina, under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act (35 Stat. 65). The company defended on the ground
that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence in
attempting to leave the car while it was in motion, in failing to
hold on to the hand rail, in failing to use his lantern, and in
failing to discover that the steps were missing. There was a trial
in which, under the North Carolina practice, the jury returned a
special verdict, finding, among other things, (1) that the railroad
company was negligent, and (2) that the plaintiff was not guilty of
contributory negligence.
Page 238 U. S. 272
The case was then taken to the supreme court of the state,
which, because of an error in the charge on the subject of damages,
granted a partial new trial and remanded the case for a hearing in
which the only question to be considered was the amount to be
awarded the plaintiff. 163 N.C. 351.
At the second trial, the plaintiff, on cross-examination,
testified that, when he left the car for the purpose of assisting
passengers, he had in his hand a railroad lantern, and, by holding
it beneath the platform and "making an examination like a car
inspector," he could have seen that the steps had been torn away.
He testified that he made no such examination, and owing to the
construction of the lantern -- throwing light from the side instead
of from the bottom -- he did not see that they were missing. On
motion of the plaintiff, this evidence was excluded. Later, the
objection was withdrawn and the testimony admitted. On further
cross-examination, the plaintiff was asked if the rules did not
require him to make such examinations. This evidence was excluded
on the ground, among others, as stated in the argument here, that
the rules themselves were the best evidence. The court refused to
submit to the jury the question as to how much should be deducted
from the damages sustained because of the plaintiff's contributory
negligence, for the reason that the Supreme Court of North Carolina
had granted a new trial to assess damages, and had thereby excluded
the issue of contributory negligence from the case.
The jury found for the plaintiff -- the amount being somewhat
larger than that named in the first verdict. The judgment thereon
was affirmed. 167 N.C. 290. The company then brought the case here
by writ of error, in which it contends that it was error for the
supreme court to grant a partial new trial in which the question of
damages only could be considered, inasmuch as the Employers'
Liability Act entitles the defendant in all cases
Page 238 U. S. 273
to prove contributory negligence in mitigation of damages. On
the other hand, the defendant in error contends that the question
as to whether there should have been a partial new trial was a
matter of procedure, to be governed by the practice of the State of
North Carolina.
But a substantive right or defense arising under the federal law
cannot be lessened or destroyed by a rule of practice. Damages and
contributory negligence are so blended and interwoven, and the
conduct of the plaintiff at the time of the accident is so
important a matter in the assessment of damages, that the instances
would be rare in which it would be proper to submit to a jury the
question of damages without also permitting them to consider the
conduct of the plaintiff at the time of the injury.
But this record, in connection with the special finding first
verdict, shows that, in this case, the two matters were in fact
separable, so that the splitting up the issues and granting a
partial new trial did not, in this particular instance, operate to
deprive the defendant of a federal right. For it appears that
Ferebee had nothing to do with the loss of the steps, and was not
guilty of contributory negligence in failing to see that they were
missing. His conduct at the time of his fall could not, therefore,
affect the amount of the verdict, so that it was possible, on the
second trial, to award damages without considering the conduct of
the plaintiff or retrying the question of contributory
negligence.
The new trial was granted at the instance of the railway
company. It did not ask the supreme court for a rehearing, or for a
modification of the mandate, or for permission to introduce newly
discovered evidence, nor was there any offer of such newly
discovered evidence on the second trial. That offered and excluded
was not in the nature of newly discovered evidence, and the ruling
of the trial court in reference to such evidence was in
Page 238 U. S. 274
accordance with the mandate of the supreme court. The other
matters relied on here for a reversal involve no construction of
the federal act, and are not of a nature to warrant this Court in
granting a new trial.
Seaboard Air Line v. Duvall,
225 U. S.
486.
Under the facts, therefore, it cannot be said that the decision
operated to deprive the railway company of a federal right. But we
recognize that the practice is not to be commended. Before granting
partial new trials in any case under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act, it should, as said by the Supreme Court of North
Carolina,
"clearly appear that the matter involved is entirely distinct
and separable from the other matters involved in the other issues,
and . . . that no possible injustice can be done to either party.
In cases of this character, we do not know that the practice is
generally to be commended."
The North Carolina court further said in that case:
"An examination of all the evidence relating to the injury and
its cause and the conduct of the plaintiff, as well as of
defendant's agents, might show that it is so interwoven with that
relating to damage that to fairly ascertain what is a just
compensation the plaintiff should receive, if he is entitled to
recover at all, can best be determined by trying the whole case
before one judge and one jury instead of 'splitting it up' between
different judges and different juries."
Jarrett v. High Point Trunk & Bag Co., 144 N.C.
299, 302.
See also Simmons v. Fish, 210 Mass. 568.
Kennon v. Gilmer, 131 U. S. 22,
131 U. S. 28,
deals with the federal practice in somewhat similar cases.
Judgment affirmed.