In an action under the Employers' Liability Act brought by an
engineer of an interstate electric road for injuries resulting from
a collision, the jury found a general verdict for plaintiff, and,
in accordance with the practice of the state, made special findings
that the violation by plaintiff of orders received before starting
was the proximate cause of the collision, and that, immediately
before the collision, the brakes on the train were insufficient to
enable him to control the speed of the train.
Held
that:
On the record, the jury must have found that the defective air
brakes were a proximate cause of the collision.
Under the Safety Appliance Act, if the equipment was defective
or out of repair, the question of whether it was attributable to
the company's negligence or not is immaterial.
An electric interstate road is not exempted from the
requirements of the Safety Appliance Act because its terminals run
over street railways.
Spokane &c. v. United States,
ante, p.
241 U. S. 344.
The fact that an employee may have violated an order does not
take him from the protection of the Safety Appliance Act if, as an
actual fact, the brakes were defective and such defectiveness was a
proximate cause of the injury.
Proof that an employee violated an order is not proof that he
did so willfully, and where willfulness is not found, such
violation is only negligence, and not a departure from the course
of employment.
The right of an employee of an interstate carrier by rail to
recover for an injury depends upon the Acts of Congress, to which
all state legislation affecting the subject matter yields.
Where the contributory negligence of the injured employee and
the defendant's violation of the Safety Appliance Act are
concurrent proximate causes, the Employers' Liability Act requires
the former to be disregarded.
Quaere whether, under the conformity act (Rev.Stats.
914), the federal trial court is required to adhere to the state
practice governing the effect of a general verdict and special
findings.
17 F. 518 affirmed.
Page 241 U. S. 498
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
Employers' Liability Act and the Safety Appliance Act and the
validity of a judgment for damages for personal injuries against a
company operating an interstate electric railway, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by Campbell in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Washington to recover
damages for personal injuries, and was based upon the Federal
Employers' Liability Act of April 22, 1908 (c. 149, 35 Stat. 65),
and the Safety Appliance Act of March 2, 1893, as amended March 2,
1903 (c. 196, 27 Stat. 531; c. 976, 32 Stat. 943). A judgment in
plaintiff's favor was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals (217
F. 518), and the case comes here on writ of error.
At the time of Campbell's injury, July 31, 1909, the company was
operating a single track electric railway between the City of
Spokane, in the State of Washington, and the Town of Coeur d'Alene,
in the State of Idaho. It was operated under standard railroad
rules. The running time of regular trains was fixed by a timetable,
upon which they were designated by numbers. Special trains were run
by telegraphic orders given by a train dispatcher, whose office was
in Spokane. Under the rules, regular trains were superior to
special trains, and specials were required to look out for and keep
out of the way of
Page 241 U. S. 499
the regulars. Unless a special train had orders from the train
dispatcher fixing a meeting point with the regular train or in some
other way giving it a right to disregard the time when the latter
was due according to the timetable, it was required to be clear of
the main line at any point five minutes before the regular train
was due at that point according to the timetable. Campbell was an
experienced motorman, had been in the company's employ for several
years, and was conversant with its rules and its methods of train
operation. On the day he was injured, he was the motorman in charge
of a special train running between Spokane and Coeur d'Alene, made
up of a combined motor and passenger car and two trailers, and
referred to in the train orders as Motor 5, that being the number
of the motor car. The train was equipped with Westinghouse air
brakes. After several trips between the termini, it was at Coeur
d'Alene about 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon, ready to start for
Spokane when ordered to do so. Regular train No. 20 was about due
to arrive. Under orders presently to be mentioned, the nature of
which was in dispute, Campbell started his train west from Coeur
d'Alene, and had proceeded some distance when he discovered a train
approaching on the same track from the opposite direction. Upon
seeing this, he applied the brakes, without success, and there was
a collision, in which he received serious personal injuries. The
train with which he collided was regular No. 20.
His complaint in the action counted upon two grounds of
recovery: (a) that the company, through its agents and employees,
negligently instructed him to proceed with his train from Coeur
d'Alene to Spokane, and to meet and pass No. 20 at the Town of
Alan, a station west of the point of collision, and (b) that the
collision was directly due to the failure of the company to furnish
him with a motor and train supplied with proper air brakes
Page 241 U. S. 500
in working condition. The action was tried before the district
court and a jury, when evidence was introduced to the following
effect:
Campbell testified that, having arrived in Coeur d'Alene with
his train about 4:20 p.m., and brought it into position to return
to Spokane, he received through the conductor, Whittlesey, orders
both written and oral for the running of the train; that the
written order said that "motor 5 would run special Coeur d'Alene to
Spokane and would meet Number 20 at Alan;" that, when the written
order was received, Campbell was in his cab, ready to start, and
that the conductor, on delivering the order to him, said: "All
right, go ahead; get out of town." Campbell was unable to produce
the written order. If its contents were as he testified, he was
justified in at once leaving Coeur d'Alene and running to Alan, the
order giving him a right of way over all trains to that point. But
defendant's evidence was to the effect that the written order
actually read: "Motor 5 will run spl. C. d'Alene to Spokane, meet
spl. 4 east at Alan." Campbell admitted that, if this was in fact
the order, it did not authorize him to leave Coeur d'Alene before
No. 20 came in, for it made no mention of that train, and did not
supersede the right given to it by rules and timetable. Nor was it
contended in his behalf that the conductor's verbal order could in
any way modify the written order. It appeared that there was a land
registration in progress at Coeur d'Alene, and, because of the
resulting rush of travel, incoming trains stopped at the west end
of the yard and went on a Y switch, where the train was turned and
then backed down to the Coeur d'Alene station, while trains ready
to leave Coeur d'Alene, upon the arrival of an incoming train,
would run to the end of the yard, between the legs of the Y, wait
there for the incoming train, and pull out as soon as it headed in
on the Y. Whittlesey testified that he intended the train to go to
the Y and
Page 241 U. S. 501
wait there for No. 20. Because, as Campbell testified, his
orders were to go to Alan to meet No. 20, he did not stop at the Y.
He testified that, soon after passing this point, and while running
at about 30 miles per hour (there was a slight descending grade),
he saw an east-bound train (it was proved to be No. 20) coming on
the same track at a distance which, from his testimony and that of
others, might have been found to be upwards of 800 feet. He
immediately shut off the power, and then "dynamited her" -- that
is, threw his air brake into emergency so as to apply the air
pressure upon the train brakes to the full capacity. He testified
in effect that the brakes took hold properly, and held for
approximately 35 or 40 feet, when the air released (another witness
said it "leaked off"), and after that there was nothing he could do
to stop the train except to reverse, which he endeavored to do, but
without success. There was no hand brake. He testified that, if the
air brakes had worked properly, he could have stopped his train and
avoided a collision; that, when they took hold, they reduced the
speed to about 20 miles per hour; that, when released, the train
shot forward at approximately 18 or 20 miles an hour; "then I
stopped it a little bit with my reverse, so that, at the moment of
collision, I think we were going about 15 miles an hour." No. 20
meanwhile had been brought almost, if not quite, to a stop.
Under instructions from the trial court, the jury, besides
returning a general verdict, which was in favor of the plaintiff,
with $7,500 damages, made three special findings in writing: (1)
that Campbell, before leaving Coeur d'Alene, received a train order
reading as follows: "Motor 5 will run Spl. C. d'Alene to Spokane,
meet special 4 east at Alan;" (2) that the air brakes on Campbell's
train immediately before the collision were insufficient to enable
him to control the speed of the train; (3) that Campbell's leaving
Coeur d'Alene in violation of
Page 241 U. S. 502
his orders was the proximate cause of the accident. There was a
motion for judgment in favor of defendant on the special findings
notwithstanding the general verdict, which was denied, and it is to
this ruling, as well as to certain instructions given and refused
to be given, that the assignments of error are addressed.
The general verdict and the special findings were taken pursuant
to the state practice prescribed by certain sections of the Code,
permitting the trial judge to instruct the jury, if they render a
general verdict, to find upon particular questions of fact, to be
stated in writing, and providing that,
"when a special finding of facts shall be inconsistent with the
general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court
shall give judgment accordingly."
1 Rem. & Bal. Anno.Code, §§ 364, 365. The rule
established by decisions of the supreme court of the state is that,
where the general verdict and the special findings can be
harmonized by taking into consideration the entire record of the
cause, including the evidence and the instructions to the jury, and
construing it liberally for that purpose, it is the duty of the
court to harmonize them, and that, where a special finding is
susceptible of two constructions, one of which will support the
general verdict and the other will not, that construction shall be
adopted which will support the general verdict.
Pepperall v.
City Park Transit Co., 15 Wash. 176, 180, 183;
Mercier v.
Travelers' Ins. Co., 24 Wash. 147, 153-154;
McCorkle v.
Mallory, 30 Wash. 632, 637;
Crowley v. Nor. Pac. Ry.,
46 Wash. 85, 87-88;
Sudden & Christenson v. Morse, 55
Wash. 372, 375;
Cameron v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co., 68
Wash. 539, 544.
Whether, under the Conformity Act (Rev.Stats. § 914), the
trial court was required to adhere to the state practice governing
the effect of the general verdict and the special findings may not
be free from doubt.
See Nudd v.
Burrows,
Page 241 U. S. 503
91 U. S. 426,
91 U. S. 441;
Indianapolis &c. R. Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S.
291,
93 U. S. 300;
Mutual Accident Ass'n v. Barry, 131 U.
S. 100,
131 U. S.
119-120;
Lincoln v. Power, 151 U.
S. 436,
151 U. S. 442;
Ex Parte Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co., 128 U.
S. 544,
128 U. S.
5540;
United States v. U.S,
Fidelity Co., 236 U. S. 512,
236 U. S. 529;
Bond v. Dustin, 112 U. S. 604,
112 U. S. 609;
Glenn v. Sumner, 132 U. S. 152,
132 U. S. 156;
Central Transp. Co. v. Pullman's Car Co., 139 U. S.
24,
139 U. S. 40;
Knight v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 180 F. 368, 372.
The court of appeals held (217 F. 523) that the federal courts
are not bound by local rules of practice with respect to submitting
special findings along with a general verdict, or with respect to
interpreting such verdicts, and that, in this case, it must be
determined as matter of law, and without reference to the
testimony, whether the special findings entitled defendant to
judgment notwithstanding the general verdict.
We find it unnecessary to decide the question of practice, and,
laying aside all technicalities, will assume, in favor of plaintiff
in error, that the verdict is to be interpreted according to the
local rule -- that is, by reading the special findings in the light
of the issues and the evidence, but in the light also of the
general verdict, so as to arrive at the true intent and meaning of
the jury. So considered, the findings establish that there was no
negligence on the part of the company in giving Campbell his
running orders; that he received the order to meet Special 4 east
at Alan, which, according to the admitted effect of the rules of
the company, meant that he should not leave Coeur d'Alene until the
arrival of regular No. 20; that he left Coeur d'Alene in disregard
or violation of his orders, and that this was "the proximate cause"
of the accident. At the same time, the special findings establish
that the air brakes on his train immediately before the collision
were insufficient to enable him to control the speed of the train.
And the general verdict, so far as
Page 241 U. S. 504
it is supported by the evidence, must be taken as establishing
every other fact in issue not eliminated by the instructions of the
trial court that may be necessary to sustain the recovery. To quote
from the brief of plaintiff in error: "The special findings
establish that the general verdict was based solely upon the theory
of negligence in the air-brake equipment of the train." But the
general verdict, interpreted in the light of the instructions given
by the trial court to the jury, means not merely that the braking
equipment was defective, but that this was a proximate cause of the
collision. The instruction upon this point was:
"If . . . you find from a preponderance of the testimony that
the air brakes on the car and train operated by the plaintiff were
defective and out of repair at and immediately prior to the time of
the collision, and that the defective condition of the air brakes
was the direct and proximate cause of the collision, or contributed
directly and proximately to the collision, and to the injury to the
plaintiff, your verdict will be for the plaintiff. . . . And before
you can return a verdict for the plaintiff based on the allegation
that the brakes were defective and out of repair, you must be
satisfied from a preponderance of the testimony not only that the
brakes were in fact defective or out of repair, but that their
defective condition was the direct or proximate cause of the
collision, as I have defined that term to you."
It is true that other parts of the charge indicate that the
trial court entertained the view that the proximate cause must be
either Campbell's disobedience of orders or the defective air-brake
equipment, and that these two things could not concur as proximate
causes. But he did not bind the jury by instructions to that
effect, and, viewing the general verdict and the special findings
together in the light of the issues, the evidence, and the entire
charge, it is evident, we repeat, that the jury must have found
that the defective air brakes were a proximate cause of
Page 241 U. S. 505
the collision. In view of the testimony already mentioned, to
the effect that Campbell, after discovering train No. 20, would
have had ample time to avoid the collision had the train-brake
equipment been adequate, the conclusion of the jury was in this
respect not unreasonable.
It is insisted that there was no evidence that the provision of
the Safety Appliance Act respecting train brakes was violated. It
is, of course, settled that, if the equipment was in fact defective
or out of repair, the question whether this was attributable to the
company's negligence is immaterial.
St. Louis &c. R. Co. v.
Taylor, 210 U. S. 281,
210 U. S. 294;
Chicago &c. Ry. v. United States, 220 U.
S. 559,
220 U. S. 575;
Tex. & Pac. Ry. v. Rigsby, ante, 241 U. S. 33.
Hence, the argument is that, according to all of the evidence, the
equipment was not defective or out of repair. It appeared without
dispute that it consisted of the Westinghouse standard automatic
air brake, such as is in general use throughout the country upon
passenger trains. A witness in defendant's employ testified that,
shortly before Campbell took the train out from Coeur d'Alene on
the trip in question, he inspected the air brakes and found them in
perfect order. But there was much evidence besides that of Campbell
himself to the effect that, when he applied the emergency, the
brakes took hold and then leaked off, so as to release the brakes.
The jury was warranted in finding from the testimony as a whole
that Campbell properly applied the air when 600 feet or more from
the place where the collision occurred, and that the brakes refused
to work. Expert witnesses called by defendant testified in effect
that the train could have been stopped inside of 300 feet if the
brakes had been in proper order. The air-brake equipment was
wrecked in the collision, so that there was no explanation of the
cause of its failure to operate properly, but it was a reasonable
inference that there was some defect or want of repair in the
valves or packing.
Page 241 U. S. 506
Next it is insisted that Campbell's train was not such as the
Safety Appliance Acts require to be equipped with air brakes. In
Spokane & Inland Empire R. Co. v. United States, ante,
p.
241 U. S. 344, we
held that this same railroad, with respect to its interurban
traffic, is subject to the provisions of those acts respecting
automatic couplers and hand-holds or grab-irons at the ends of the
cars. In that case, the particular reliance of the company was upon
the concluding cause of the first section of the 1903 amendment (32
Stat. 943), which excepts trains, cars, etc., "which are used upon
street railways." In the present case, a distinction is sought to
be drawn between steam and electric roads, the argument being that
the provision requiring power brakes, when read in connection with
the context, indicates that trains drawn by steam locomotives and
operated by a locomotive engineer were alone within the
contemplation of Congress. It is true that, in the Act of 1893, the
provision was closely associated with the mention of a locomotive
engine as the motive power, the words of § 1 being:
"It shall be unlawful for any common carrier engaged in
interstate commerce by railroad to use on its line any locomotive
engine in moving interstate traffic not equipped with a power
driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake
system, or to run any train in such traffic [after a specified
date] that has not a sufficient number of cars in it so equipped
with power or train brakes that the engineer on the locomotive
drawing such train can control its speed without requiring brakemen
to use the common hand brake for that purpose."
Section 6, prescribing penalties, also uses the words
"locomotive engine" and "locomotives." But the 1903 amendment,
which, as frequently pointed out, was enacted for the purpose of
enlarging the scope of the act (
Southern Ry. v. United
States, 222 U. S. 20,
222 U. S. 26;
Southern Ry. v. Crockett, 234 U.
S. 725,
234 U. S.
735), in its first section, declares
Page 241 U. S. 507
that the provisions relating to train brakes (among others)
shall be held to apply to
"all trains, locomotives, tenders, cars,
and similar
vehicles used on any railroad engaged in interstate commerce .
. . and to all other locomotives, tenders, cars,
and similar
vehicles used in connection therewith,"
subject to exceptions not now pertinent. The second section
declares that, whenever any train is operated with power or train
brakes,
"not less than fifty percentum of the cars in such train shall
have their brakes used and operated by the engineer of the
locomotive drawing such train."
Of course, an important object of having a train equipped with a
system of brakes under the single control of the engineer is to
permit of a prompt and effective reduction of speed when the man
driving the train is notified of danger. The importance of this is
precisely the same whatever be the motive power, and, in view of
the beneficial purpose of the act and the evident intent of
Congress to enlarge its scope so far as necessary to guard against
the dangers in view, the term "similar vehicles" must be held to
have the effect of bringing electric motors and trains drawn by
them within the provision respecting power or train brakes. The
very exemption of trains, cars, and locomotives "used upon street
railways" indicates that electric cars were in contemplation.
And see Omaha Street Ry. v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 230 U. S. 324,
230 U. S. 337;
Kansas City Ry. v. McAdow, 240 U. S.
51,
240 U. S.
54.
It is said that, conceding the power-brake provision applies to
electric trains, the duty imposed was not owed to Campbell under
the special circumstances established by the jury's findings. The
argument is that the purpose of the brake requirements is to place
control of the train in the hands of the engineer, so that the
safety of passengers and employees may be conserved, not that the
engineer should be able to escape injury from peril to which he had
wrongfully exposed himself, and that Campbell cannot
Page 241 U. S. 508
bring himself within the class intended to be protected by
pointing out that the situation created by his disobedience of
orders was one that Congress contemplated as possible and the
consequences of which it desired to guard against. This gives
altogether too narrow a meaning to the Safety Appliance Act, and is
inconsistent with the provisions of the Employers' Liability Act,
as we shall see.
It is most earnestly insisted that the findings established that
Campbell was not in the course of his employment when he was
injured, and consequently that judgment could not properly be
entered in his favor upon the cause of action established by the
general verdict. This invokes the doctrine that, where an employee,
voluntarily and without necessity growing out of his work, abandons
the employment and steps entirely aside from the line of his duty,
he suspends the relation of employer and employee, and puts himself
in the attitude of a stranger or a licensee. The cases cited are
those where an employee intentionally has gone outside of the scope
of his employment or departed from the place of duty. The present
case is not of that character, for Campbell, as the jury might and
presumably did find, had no thought of stepping aside from the line
of his duty. From the fact that he disregarded and in effect
violated the order as actually communicated to him, it, of course,
does not necessarily follow that he did this willfully. The jury
was not bound to presume -- it would hardly be reasonable to
presume -- that he deliberately and intentionally ran his train out
upon a single track on which he knew an incoming train with
superior rights was then due. However plain his mistake, the jury
reasonably might find it to be no more than a mistake attributable
to mental aberration, or inattention, or failure for some other
reason to apprehend or comprehend the order communicated to him. In
its legal effect, this was nothing more than negligence on his
part, and not a departure from the course of his employment.
Page 241 U. S. 509
To hold otherwise would have startling consequences. The running
of trains on telegraphic orders is an everyday occurrence on every
railroad in the country. Thousands of cases occur every day and
every night where a failure by conductor or engineer to comprehend
or to remember the message of the train dispatcher may endanger the
lives of employees and passengers. We are not aware that in any
case it has been seriously contended that, because an engineer
violated the orders, he went outside of the scope of the
employment. If he did so, in the sense of absolving the employer
from the duty of exercising care for his safety, it is not easy to
see upon what principle the employer's liability to passengers or
to fellow employees for the consequences of his negligence could be
maintained. The unsoundness of the contention is so apparent that
further discussion is unnecessary.
Plaintiff in error refers to the fact that the wreck occurred in
Idaho, and cites two sections of the Criminal Code of that state,
one rendering a willful violation or omission of duty on the part
of one in Campbell's position, whereby human life or safety is
endangered, punishable as a misdemeanor, the other making willful
or negligent conduct which causes a collision of trains, and the
resulting death of a human being, a criminal offense. 2 Idaho
Rev.Codes §§ 6926, 6909. Whether Campbell was or is
punishable criminally under either of these sections we are not
called upon to say. But his right to recover against his employer
depends upon the acts of Congress, to which all state legislation
affecting the subject matter must yield.
Tex. & Pac. Ry. v.
Rigsby, ante, p.
241 U. S. 33.
Upon the whole case, we have no difficulty in sustaining his
right of action under the Employers' Liability Act. That act
(§ 1, 35 Stat. 65) imposes a liability for injury to an
employee
"resulting
in whole or in part from the negligence of
any of the officers, agents, or employees of such carrier, or by
reason of any defect or insufficiency due
Page 241 U. S. 510
to its negligence in its cars, engines, appliances, . . . or
other equipment."
As was held in
San Antonio & Aransas Pass Ry. v. Wagner,
ante, p.
241 U. S. 476, a
violation of the Safety Appliance Act is "negligence" within the
meaning of the Liability Act. And, by the proviso to § 3 of
the latter act, no employee injured or killed shall be held to have
been guilty of contributory negligence in any case where a
violation of the Safety Appliance Act "
contributed to the
injury or death of such employee." It is too plain for argument
that, under this legislation, the violation of the Safety Appliance
Act need not be the sole efficient cause in order that an action
may lie. The circuit court of appeals (217 F. 524) held that the
element of proximate cause is eliminated where concurring acts of
the employer and employee contribute to the injury or death of the
employee. We agree with this, except that we find it unnecessary to
say the effect of the statute is wholly to eliminate the question
of proximate cause. But where, as in this case, plaintiff's
contributory negligence and defendant's violation of a provision of
the Safety Appliance Act are concurring proximate causes, it is
plain that the employers' liability act requires the former to be
disregarded.
The assignments of error that are based upon the instructions
given and refused to be given to the jury raise no question other
than those which have been disposed of.
Judgment affirmed.