Exceptions from the general policy which the law embodies are to
be strictly construed, and are to be so interpreted as not to
destroy the remedial purpose intended.
The exception contained in § 6 of the Safety Appliance Act
of March 2, 1893, as amended April 1, 1896, and March 2, 1903,
exempting from its operation cars which are used upon street
railways, does not exempt cars used in regular interstate traffic
which are also to some extent used on street railways. Such cars
are covered by the general provisions of the statute.
Cars used on an electric railway doing an interstate business on
a standard gauge track according to standard railroad rules
held, in this case, to be subject to the Safety Appliance
Acts in regard to grab-irons and hand-holds, notwithstanding they
were used at the terminals of the roads upon street railways.
The Safety Appliance Acts may not be violated with impunity by
omitting grab-irons and hand-holds from cars because the
railroad
Page 241 U. S. 345
company operating them deem the provision of the act onerous or
because it considers that it has adopted methods to protect the
employees in coupling the cars that are more expedient than those
required by the statute.
Whether methods substituted for grab-irons and hand-hold in
coupling cars used in interstate commerce other than those
prescribed by the Safety Appliance Acts offer the same, or better,
or adequate protection to employees is not a question for expert
testimony.
210 F. 243 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction of the Safety
Appliance Act and its application to suburban electric Railroads,
are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States brought this suit against the railroad company
to recover penalties for fifteen alleged violations of the Safety
Appliance Act. The violations consisted in hauling in interstate
commerce on October 23, 1911, twelve cars which were not provided
with hand holds or grab irons at the ends, as required by the act,
and three cars which were not equipped with automatic couplers. The
answer admitted that, at the time named, all fifteen cars had been
used in interstate commerce, and that three of them were not
equipped with automatic couplers, but denied that the other twelve
were not provided with hand holds or grab irons as required by the
act, and denied that it had in any respect violated the act,
because all fifteen cars were used by the company upon its line of
street railway, and were therefore expressly excepted from the
operation of the act. A verdict and judgment against
Page 241 U. S. 346
the company on all fifteen charges was affirmed by the court
below.
We briefly state the material facts. The railroad company
operated a street railway system in Spokane, Washington, and
several interurban electric lines, one of which extended from
Spokane to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, a distance of about 40 miles. Over
this line, passenger trains composed of two or more cars were
operated, starting at a station near the center of Spokane and
running for a mile and a quarter on the street railway tracks to
the company's yards near the city limits, and thence over its
private right of way to Coeur d'Alene. The road was standard gauge,
with rails of standard weight, and the passenger trains were made
up according to standard railroad rules, with markers to designate
the trains, and were run on schedules and by train orders.
Passengers traveled on tickets entitling them to ride to and from
designated stations at which regular stops were made, and express
matter and baggage were carried on the passenger trains. The
streetcar business was entirely separate from that done by the
interurban line, the employees of the one having nothing whatever
to do with the other, and although stops were made by interurban
trains within the city limits, and while on the street railway
tracks, they were made solely for the purpose of taking on and
letting off passengers to or from stations outside the city. In
addition to its passenger trains, the interurban line also operated
freight trains, which, however, started from the company's yards
and ran directly to Coeur d'Alene, and did not therefore enter upon
the street railway tracks.
The fifteen cars here in question were passenger cars, and on
the day named were used in passenger trains which were run from the
station in Spokane to the city limits, and thence over the
company's right of way to Coeur d'Alene. Twelve of them (those
which it was charged were not equipped at the ends with grab irons
or hand-holds)
Page 241 U. S. 347
were cars regularly used on the interurban lines, and were
rounded at the ends and equipped with radial couplers to enable the
trains to make sharp turns. As the swinging of these couplers from
one side to the other across the ends of the cars would break off
grab irons of the type ordinarily used on the ends of cars, they
were not used. It was claimed, however, that the requirements of
the safety appliance act with respect to hand holds or grab irons
were in substance complied with by a different, and what was
asserted to be an equivalent, appliance -- that is, openings in the
top of the buffer or sill extending across the ends of the cars,
just above the couplers. To support this claim the company offered
testimony of experienced railroad men to the effect
"that the hand-holds or grab-irons in the buffers or sills of
such cars were sufficient to protect men who might be required to
go between the cars in coupling or otherwise handling them, that
they were sufficient to accomplish purposes intended to be
accomplished by the provisions of the Safety Appliance Act
requiring hand holds or grab irons to be placed upon the ends of
cars used in interstate commerce, and that they were better than
those commonly used upon cars engaged in interstate commerce."
The United States objected to the introduction of the testimony,
and it was excluded on the ground "that it was not a question for
expert testimony, but was a matter of common knowledge." During the
trial (at whose request it does not appear), the jury were taken to
inspect the openings in some of the cars.
The other three cars were large street cars which were regularly
used only on the street railway tracks, but which, because of
unusually heavy traffic on the day named, were coupled together
with link and pin couplers and operated as a train to Coeur
d'Alene.
The assignments of error present two questions which we consider
separately.
Page 241 U. S. 348
1. It is urged that error was committed in construing the Safety
Appliance Act, since, when correctly interpreted, the fifteen cars
in question were expressly excepted from its requirements. To
appreciate the contentions based upon this proposition, it is
necessary to recur to the text of the original act and the
amendments thereto. By the act of March 2, 1893 (c. 196, 27 Stat.
531), it was made unlawful for any 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" (§ 2), or
"to use any car in interstate commerce that is not provided with
secure grab-irons or hand-holds in the ends and sides of each car
for greater security to men in coupling and uncoupling cars"
(§ 4), with the proviso that the prohibitions of the act
should not apply to "trains composed of four-wheel cars or to
locomotives used in hauling such trains" (§ 6). By the Act of
April 1, 1896 (c. 87, 29 Stat. 85) the proviso of § 6 was
amended as follows:
"That nothing in this act contained shall apply to trains of
four-wheel cars or to trains composed of eight-wheel standard
logging cars . . . or to locomotives used in hauling such trains
when such cars or locomotives are exclusively used for the
transportation of logs."
By the amendment of March 2, 1903 (c. 976, 32 Stat. 943), the
provisions of the act relating to automatic couplers, grab-irons,
etc., were extended and made applicable to
"all trains, locomotives, tenders, cars, and similar vehicles
used on any railroad engaged in interstate commerce, and in the
territories and the District of Columbia, and to all other
locomotives, tenders, cars, and similar vehicles used in connection
therewith,"
and to the exceptions from the requirements of the original act
and the Amendment of 1896 were added "trains, cars, and locomotives
. . . which are used upon street railways."
The contention is that as the trains in which the fifteen cars
were hauled were operated over the street railway
Page 241 U. S. 349
tracks from the station in Spokane to the yards of the company,
they were "used upon street railways," and were hence expressly
exempted from the requirements of the act by the amendment of 1903.
This, it is said, results from the unambiguous text of the
exception contained in that amendment, and is from a two-fold point
of view made additionally certain by the context of the act which
we have quoted. The argument is that the word "used" in the
amendment of 1903, excepting cars, etc., "used upon street
railways," must be construed as having the same significance as the
same word in the amendment making the act applicable to all cars,
etc., "used on any railroad engaged in interstate commerce." From
this premise it is insisted that, as the latter provision has been
construed as enlarging the scope of the act by causing it to
embrace all cars used on interstate commerce railroads, although at
the particular time the cars are employed in intrastate commerce
(
Southern Railway v. United States, 222 U. S.
20), it must follow that the word "used" in the street
railway excepting clause under consideration must have the same
construction, and therefore exclude from the operation of the act
all cars used upon street railways, however temporary such use and
however frequent or material may be their use in interstate
commerce on other than street railways. Again, it is urged that the
judgment of the court below can be affirmed only by construing the
word "used" in the exception as meaning exclusively used -- a
construction which, it is said, would be wholly unwarranted in view
of the amendment of 1896, excepting from the act certain cars,
etc., "exclusively used for the transportation of logs," and the
demonstration thereby afforded that, if such a meaning had been
contemplated by Congress in the amendment of 1903, the word
"exclusively" would have been employed. But we think the want of
merit in the contentions is clear, and the unsoundness of the
argument advanced
Page 241 U. S. 350
to sustain them apparent. We say this because, while it is
conceded that the obvious purpose of Congress in enacting the law
and its amendments was to secure the safety of railroad employees,
and that the amendment of 1903 sought to enlarge and make that
purpose more complete, yet it is insisted that the exception in the
act should receive such a broad construction as would destroy the
plain purpose which caused the act to be adopted. But to so treat
the act would be in plain disregard of the elementary rule
requiring that exceptions from a general policy which a law
embodies should be strictly construed -- that is, should be so
interpreted as not to destroy the remedial processes intended to be
accomplished by the enactment. That the meaning contended for would
be in direct conflict with this rule would seem free from doubt,
since the inevitable result of sustaining the contention would be
to put it in the power of a railroad, by operating a train for a
trifling distance over tracks within the exception, to thereby
secure the right thereafter to operate such train over long
distances without regard to compliance with the safeguards of the
statute which otherwise would be controlling. And this reasoning
disposes of the contention deduced from the use of the word
"exclusively" in the provision excepting cars used on logging
railroads, and its absence in the street railway clause, since, on
the face of the statute, the object of both provisions was to
exempt both the logging and street railway cars from the operation
of the act only when used for logging, on the one hand, and on
street railways, on the other, and not to exempt them when not so
used.
The suggestion is made in argument that, in any event, the
railroad company was not liable for the penalties because of the
difficulty of equipping the twelve cars with grab irons which would
not interfere with the lateral movement of the radial couplers, and
because the other three cars were so constructed that they could
not be
Page 241 U. S. 351
provided with automatic couplers, and were used only on the one
day because of unusually heavy traffic. But this merely asserts
that the statute may be violated with impunity if only the railroad
finds its provisions onerous, or deems it expedient to do so.
2. It is contended that error was committed in rejecting the
testimony of experts offered by the railroad company as to the
protection afforded to employees by the openings in the buffers at
the ends of the twelve cars. Without stopping to point out the
inappositeness of the many authorities cited in support of the
contention, we think the court was clearly right in holding that
the question was not one for experts, and that the jury, after
hearing the testimony and inspecting the openings, were competent
to determine the issue, particularly in view of the full and clear
instruction given on the subject, concerning which no complaint is
made.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.