The Georgia Employers' Liability Act, Georgia Code of 1911,
2783, eliminates the defenses of assumed risk and contributory
negligence when a violation of the federal Safety Appliance Acts
contributes to cause the injury.
Under the federal Safety Appliance Acts, carriers in Interstate
Commerce are liable in damages to their employees, injured in the
discharge of duty, whenever the failure to comply with those acts
is the proximate cause of injury and without reference to the
physical position occupied by the employee or the nature of the
work upon which he is engaged at the time when the injury
occurs.
So
held in a case where failure of couplers to work
automatically in a switching operation resulted in a collision of
cars from one of which the plaintiff was thrown to his injury while
preparing to release brakes.
145 Ga. 886 affirmed.
Page 243 U. S. 618
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff below was a switchman in the employ of the
defendants when he suffered the injury for which he recovered the
judgment which was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Georgia, and
which is here for review on writ of error.
The facts essential to an understanding of the question
presented for decision are as follows:
A train of many cars standing on a switch was separated by about
two car lengths from five cars on the same track loaded with coal.
An engine, pushing a stock car ahead of it, came into the switch,
and failed in an attempt to couple to the five cars, but struck
them with such force that, although the engine with the car
attached stopped within half a car length, the five loaded cars
were driven over the two intervening car lengths and struck so
violently against the standing train that the plaintiff, who was on
one of the five cars for the purpose of releasing the brakes, was
thrown to the track, with the result that his right arm was crushed
by the wheels and was amputated below the elbow.
The recovery in the case was on the first count of the petition,
which alleges that the defendants were carriers of interstate
commerce, and that they were negligent, among other things, in
permitting the use of the car attached to the engine and of the car
to which the attempt was made to couple it, without such cars'
being equipped
Page 243 U. S. 619
with automatic couplers, which would couple by impact, as
required by law, the claim being that, if the cars had coupled when
they came together, the five cars of coal would not have run down
against the others, causing the shock which threw the plaintiff
under the wheels.
The purpose of this allegation with respect to automatic
couplers was to make applicable to the case the Georgia Employers'
Liability Act, which provides that an injured employee shall not be
held guilty of either contributory negligence or of having assumed
the risk when the violation of any statute enacted for his safety
contributed to his injury.
The defendants admit that they were interstate carriers of
commerce, and that the plaintiff was in the performance of his duty
when he was thrown the car, as he claims, or fell, as the
defendants claim, but they deny all allegations of negligence.
On this state of pleading and of fact, the court charged the
jury that, before the plaintiff could recover on his allegation
that the cars were not properly equipped with automatic couplers,
"he must have shown to your satisfaction, by a preponderance of the
evidence," either that the cars had never been equipped with proper
couplers or that, if they had been so equipped, they were in such
condition that they would not couple automatically by impact, and
that such failure to so equip them contributed to cause the
injury.
Upon this charge of the court, the verdict was against the
defendant, and on it is based the only claim of error of sufficient
substance to be noticed.
It is admitted by the defendants that the reference in the
Georgia Employers' Liability Act to "any statute enacted for the
safety of employees" is to the Federal Safety Appliance Act, and
that the charge is a proper one if that act, as amended, is
applicable to a switchman engaged as the plaintiff was when he was
injured; but the
Page 243 U. S. 620
claim is that it is not so applicable because it is intended
only for the benefit of employees injured when between cars for the
purpose of coupling or uncoupling them. This claim is based wholly
upon the expression, "without the necessity of men going between
the ends of cars," following the automatic coupler requirement of
§ 2 of the Act of 1893, and it is urged in argument that this
case is ruled by
St. Louis & San Francisco R. Co. v.
Conarty, 238 U. S. 243. In
that case, however, it was not claimed that the collision resulting
in the injury complained of was proximately attributable to a
violation of the Safety Appliance Acts, and therefore the claim
made for it cannot be allowed.
The declared purpose of the Safety Appliance Act of 1893 (c.
196, 27 Stat. 531), and of the amendatory Acts of 1903 and of 1910
is "to promote the safety of employees . . . upon railroads, by
compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip
their cars with automatic couplers . . . and for other purposes,"
and, at the time the plaintiff was injured, these acts made it
unlawful for any carrier engaged in interstate commerce to use on
its railroad any car not so equipped.
Southern Railway Co. v.
United States, 222 U. S. 20;
Southern Railway Co. v. Railroad Commission of Indiana,
236 U. S. 439. By
this legislation, the qualified duty of the common law is expanded
into an absolute duty with respect to car couplers, and if the
defendant railroad companies used cars which did not comply with
the standard thus prescribed, they violated the plain prohibition
of the law, and there arose from that violation a liability to make
compensation to any employee who was injured because of it.
St.
Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Taylor,
210 U. S. 281,
210 U. S. 295;
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Ry. Co. v. United States,
220 U. S. 559;
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Rigsby, 241 U. S.
33;
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Williams,
242 U. S. 462.
Page 243 U. S. 621
While it is undoubtedly true that the immediate occasion for
passing the laws requiring automatic couplers was the great number
of deaths and injuries caused to employees who were obliged to go
between cars to couple and uncouple them, yet these laws as written
are by no means confined in their terms to the protection of
employees only when so engaged. The language of the acts and the
authorities we have cited make it entirely clear that the liability
in damages to employees for failure to comply with the law springs
from its being made unlawful to use cars not equipped as required
-- not from the position the employee may be in, or the work which
he may be doing at the moment when he is injured. This effect can
be given to the acts and their wise and humane purpose can be
accomplished only by holding, as we do, that carriers are liable to
employees in damages whenever the failure to obey these Safety
Appliance Laws is the proximate cause of injury to them when
engaged in the discharge of duty. The jury found that the
plaintiff's case came within this interpretation of the statute,
and the judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia must be
Affirmed.