In an action by representatives of an employee for his death,
from negligence of an interstate carrier by rail, defendants are
entitled to insist upon the applicable federal Law as the exclusive
measure of liability, whether plaintiff presents his case under the
federal or state law.
In the absence of a showing bringing the injury within the
federal act, the question whether the declaration permits a
recovery at common law is a state, and not a federal, question.
Where there is no evidence showing that the deceased was engaged
in interstate commerce when killed, the court cannot supply the
deficiency by taking judicial notice of that fact,basing its
knowledge on facts such as that the location of the accident was
near the border of the state and the direction from which the cars
came.
An interstate carrier, defendant in an action for death of an
employee, is bound to know the actual movement of its trains and
whether they were interstate, and if it fails to inform the court
on this point, it cannot complain that it is deprived of a federal
right because the court does not take judicial notice of facts
bearing thereon.
The facts, which involve the validity of a verdict under the
Employers' Liability Act, are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 18
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought, in the year 1908, by Jennie B. Gray to
recover damages for the death of her husband, who was employed in
the operation of the railroad of which the plaintiff in error and
another were receivers. The original declaration sought recovery
for negligence at common law, and did not allege that the deceased
was injured while engaged in interstate commerce. The plaintiff was
permitted to file an additional count, and this was subsequently
amended so as to allege the interstate character of the employment
of the deceased at the time of his injury. The action was first
tried in November, 1912; the jury rendered a verdict in favor of
the plaintiff of $10,000, and judgment was entered accordingly.
Thereupon, the trial judge granted a new trial upon the ground that
he had erred in his instructions
Page 241 U. S. 19
to the jury with respect to the burden of proof. At the second
trial, in 1913, a verdict was directed for the defendants (the
plaintiffs in error), and judgment in their favor was entered. The
court of civil appeals reversed this judgment and reinstated the
judgment entered upon the verdict at the first trial. The court of
civil appeals did not consider the record of the second trial, but
was of the opinion that the verdict first rendered in favor of the
plaintiff should not have been set aside. This decision was
affirmed by the section supreme court of the state, without
opinion.
The plaintiff in error presents for our consideration these
assignments of error: (1) that the court erred in not holding that
both counts of the declaration stated a case controlled by the
federal employers' liability act, and that therefore the widow
could not recover in a suit begun in her own name, and (2) that the
court erred in not holding that the evidence on the first trial
made a case within the federal act.
In support of the first assignment, it is insisted that the
amendment inserting the allegation that the injury was sustained
while the decedent was engaged in interstate commerce amended both
counts of the declaration. The state court treated it as an
amendment of the second count, and thus the declaration on which
the case was tried was deemed to contain two counts, "one under the
common law of Tennessee and the other charging negligence under the
employers' liability act." From a federal standpoint, the question
is not important, for if it had been shown that the injury had been
received in interstate commerce, the defendants would have been
entitled to insist upon the applicable federal law as the exclusive
measure of their liability, and they would not have lost this right
merely because the plaintiff had seen fit to present the claim "in
an alternative way," by means of separate counts.
Wabash R.
Co. v. Hayes, 234
Page 241 U. S. 20
U.S. 86,
234 U. S. 90.
And, in the absence of a showing bringing the injury within the
federal act, the question whether the declaration permitted a
recovery at common law was a state question.
It was distinctly stated by the court of civil appeals that, if
the proof showed "that the deceased was engaged in interstate
commerce when he was injured," the court would "be compelled to
hold that the trial judge was not in error in setting aside the
verdict." But it was found that there was no basis in the evidence
for such a conclusion, and the second assignment of error
challenges this ruling. The court of civil appeals thus stated the
facts:
"The proof indicates that the deceased came into Alton Park on a
passenger train, and, as a part of this train, there were three
cars loaded with peaches. These cars were taken out of the
passenger train at Alton Park, when the train went on to the
Chattanooga depot. After these fruit cars were taken out of the
passenger train, the deceased was directed by one of his superiors
to have them reiced and then taken to Cravens and delivered to the
N., C. & St.L. Railroad Company. The proof does not show that
the passenger train on which the deceased came into Alton Park, and
a part of which the fruit cars were, came from another state, and
in fact fails to show where it came from. The proof likewise fails
to show how far through or into what part of Tennessee the railroad
of defendant company is located, and to what point it operates
trains. . . . The fruit cars which he was ordered to take and
deliver to the Nashville road, so far as his record discloses, were
taken out of a passenger train in Alton Park. The proof does not
indicate where they came from, whether from another state, or
whether they were picked up in Tennessee. . . . We do not know
where the passenger train came from, nor where these fruit cars
come from; all we do know is, they were
Page 241 U. S. 21
cut out of the passenger train at Alton Park, and the deceased
was ordered to take them down into Chattanooga and deliver them to
the N., C. & St.L. Railroad Company. That being true, the
deceased and these cars were engaged in intrastate commerce when he
received his fatal injury, and not in interstate commerce."
The evidence has not been printed, but by stipulation between
the parties it is agreed that the testimony also showed that the
passenger train in question had left Chattanooga at 7 o'clock in
the morning of the day of the accident, and that it had come into
Alton Park from the south, on its return trip, late in the
afternoon. But this still leaves undisclosed the origin and
destination of the cars in the movement of which the decedent was
employed.
It is apparent that there was no evidence requiring the
conclusion that the deceased was engaged in interstate commerce at
the time of his injury, and we are asked to supply the deficiency
by taking judicial notice that the cars came from without the
state. This contention we are unable to sustain. The makeup of
trains and the movement of cars are not matters which we may assume
to know without evidence. The state court, with its intimate
knowledge of the local situation, thought that such an assumption
on its part would be wholly unwarranted, and we cannot say that it
erred in this view. The fact that Chattanooga and its suburb, Alton
Park, were near the state line, did not establish that the cars had
crossed it. The defendants knew the actual movement of the cars,
and, failing to inform the court upon this point, cannot complain
that they have been deprived of a federal right.
Judgment affirmed.