That provision of the "Blow-Post" law of Georgia (Civil Code,
1910, §§ 2675-2677) which requires railroad companies to
check the speed of trains before public road crossings so that
trains may be stopped in time should any person or thing be
crossing the track there is a direct and unconstitutional
interference with interstate commerce as applied to the state of
facts specifically pleaded by the defendant interstate carrier in
this case, whereby it appears that, to comply with the requirement,
the interstate train in question would have been obliged to come
practically to a stop at each of 124 ordinary grade crossings
within a distance of 123 miles in Georgia extending from Atlanta to
the South Carolina line, and that more than six hours would thus
have been added to the schedule time of four hours and thirty
minutes.
Southern Railway Co. v. King, 217 U.
S. 524, distinguished.
16 Ga.App. 504, reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the court:
This writ of error is directed to a judgment entered upon a
verdict for the sum of $1,000 in the City Court of Elberton,
Georgia, for the death of a son of defendant in error, alleged to
have been caused by the railway company.
Page 244 U. S. 311
The judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of
Georgia.
The facts as charged are: that the deceased was driving a horse
and buggy along a public road in the County of Elbert, and while
crossing the railroad track of the railway company at a public
crossing outside of the City of Elberton, he was struck by the
engine of one of the company's passenger trains and received
injuries from which he died three days later.
That the employees of the company in charge of the train failed
to blow the engine whistle at the blow post 400 yards south of the
crossing, failed to keep blowing it until the train arrived at the
crossing, and failed to check the speed of the train at such blow
post and keep it checked until the train reached the crossing, and,
so failing, the company was guilty of negligence.
That the employees of the company failed to keep the train under
control, and approached the crossing at a high and dangerous rate
of speed, so that they could not stop the same in time to save the
life of the deceased, and that such conduct was negligence. And
that
"such conduct was negligence if they saw said deceased on the
crossing, and it was negligence if they did not see him, and it was
negligence under the blow-post law,
* and it was
negligence regardless of the blow-post law. "
Page 244 U. S. 312
The company, by its answer, denied the various acts of
negligence charged against it and its employees and denied "that
the failure to comply with said blow-post law was negligence on its
part relatively to the transaction in question."
The company set out the applicable sections of the law and
alleged that its train was running in interstate commerce between
the states, and especially between Georgia and South Carolina. That
between the City of Atlanta, Georgia, and the Savannah River, a
distance of 123 miles, where the same is the boundary line of
Georgia, there are 124 points where the line of the railroad
crosses public roads of the different counties of the state,
established pursuant to law, and that all of such crossings are at
grade.
That, in order to comply with the law, the speed of a train
would have to be so slackened that there would be practically a
full stop at each of the road crossings; that the time required for
such purpose would depend upon various conditions, which might or
might not exist at the time and at the crossings, among others, the
state of the weather and the percentage of grade, but it would not
be less than three minutes for a train composed of an engine and
three cars, and for a train of a greater number of cars the time
would be greater, for an average freight train, not less than five
minutes.
That the train alleged to have caused the death of the deceased
was composed of an engine, a mail car, and two coaches, and that,
if the blow-post law had been complied
Page 244 U. S. 313
with on the day in question, at least three minutes would have
been consumed at each crossing -- more than six hours between
Atlanta and the Savannah River. That the running time between those
points according to the adopted schedule was four hours and thirty
minutes. That if the law had been complied with, the time consumed
between those points would have been more than ten and one-half
hours.
That, for freight trains, the time consumed would be more than
sixteen hours, the maximum speed of such trains on the company's
road being twenty miles an hour.
That the crossings are the usual and ordinary grade crossings,
and there are no conditions which make any one of them peculiarly
dangerous other than such danger as may result from the crossing of
a public road by a railroad track at grade.
That between the City of Atlanta and the Savannah River, the
line of the company's railroad crosses the tracks of two other
railroads, and that, under the laws of the state, a train is
required to come to a full stop fifty feet from the crossing, and
that the time so consumed would increase the time required to
operate between the points referred to.
That the law as applied to the train in question is an
unreasonable regulation of interstate commerce, and a violation of
Paragraph 3, § 8, Article I, of the Constitution of the United
States, and that therefore the company is not guilty of the various
acts of negligence charged against it.
Upon demurrer to the answer of the company, the averments in
regard to the law were struck out except the denial that the
failure to comply with the law was negligence on the company's part
"relatively to the transaction in question."
The case so went to the jury, including the defense that the
deceased failed to exercise ordinary care and diligence
Page 244 U. S. 314
for his own safety. The jury returned a verdict for the sum of
$1,000.
A motion for a new trial was denied. The railway company then
took the case to the court of appeals of the state, and that court
invoked the instruction of the supreme court upon the question
whether that part of the law (Civil Code of the state, § 2675)
which requires the engineer to check the speed of the train on
approaching a public crossing, so as to stop in time should any
person or thing be crossing the railroad track on its road, is
unconstitutional so far as an interstate train is concerned, under
the conditions set forth in the answer of the company, for the
reason that, as thus applied, the statute is a regulation of
interstate commerce, and repugnant to the commerce clause of the
Constitution of the United States.
The supreme court answered the question in the negative. The
opinion of the court is very elaborate, but the basis of it is that
the law is a valid exercise of the police power of the state, that
there was no displacement of its exercise by congressional action,
and that, by its exercise in the law in question, it did not
directly burden interstate commerce.
The court of appeals accepted necessarily the views of the
supreme court and sustained the ruling of the trial court upon the
demurrer to the plea of the company that the law violated the
commerce clause of the Constitution.
To the contention of the company that the deceased had not
observed ordinary care for his own safety, and could have avoided
the injury which resulted in his death, the court answered that it
was a jury question, and said:
"In view of the evidence as to the defendant's failure to comply
with the provisions of the 'blow-post law,' there is sufficient
testimony as a whole to support the jury's findings in favor of the
plaintiff."
The court hence affirmed the judgment.
It will be observed, therefore, from this statement, that
Page 244 U. S. 315
the law of the state was an element in the decisions of the
state tribunals, and its constitutionality was sustained against
the attacks of the railway company. The question is therefore
presented for our consideration. In its consideration, we need not
descant upon the extent of the police power of the state and the
limitations upon it when it encounters the powers conferred upon
the national government. There is pertinent exposition of these in
Southern Railway Co. v. King, 217 U.
S. 524, in which the law now under review was passed
upon. The case is clearer as to the relation of the powers and that
the power of the state cannot be exercised to directly burden
interstate commerce. It was recognized that there might be
crossings the approach to which the state could regulate. But, on
the other hand, it was said there might be others so numerous and
so near together that to require the slackening of speed would be
practically destructive of the successful operation of interstate
passenger trains, and therefore
"statutes which require the speed of such trains to be checked
at all crossings so situated might not only be a regulation, but
also a direct burden upon interstate commerce, and therefore beyond
the power of the state to enact."
That case went off on a question of pleading. An answer was
filed that did not invoke the federal Constitution. This was
attempted to be done by an amended answer which was very general,
and to which a demurrer was sustained. At the trial of the action,
there was an offer of evidence of the specific effect of the law
upon the operation of trains as showing the impediment of the law
to interstate commerce. The evidence was excluded. This Court
sustained the ruling on the ground that the evidence was not
admissible under the pleadings. The ruling upon the demurrer to the
answer was sustained on the ground that the answer contained only
general averments constituting "mere conclusions." It was said that
the averments
Page 244 U. S. 316
"set forth no facts which would make the operation of the
statute unconstitutional. They do not show the number or location
of the crossings at which the railway company would be required to
check the speed of its trains so as to interfere with their
successful operation. For aught that appears as allegations of fact
in this answer, the crossing at which this injury happened may have
been so located and of such dangerous character as to make the
slackening of trains at that point necessary to the safety of those
using the public highway, and a statute making such requirement
only a reasonable police regulation, and not an unlawful attempt to
regulate or hinder interstate commerce. In the absence of facts
setting up a situation showing the unreasonable character of the
statute as applied to the defendant under the circumstances, we
think the amended answer set up no legal defense, and that the
demurrer thereto was properly sustained."
The facts so specified, and which it was decided would give
illegal operation to the statute, are alleged in the present case,
and, assuming them to be true, and we must so assume, compel the
conclusion that the statute is a direct burden upon interstate
commerce, and, being such, is unlawful. The demurrer to the answer
averring them was therefore improperly sustained.
We express no opinion on the third defense of the company.
Reversed and case remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE PITNEY, and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS
dissent on the ground that the regulation in question was within
the class which the state is entitled to enact in the absence of
congressional action, and until such action. There having been no
action by Congress, there is therefore no ground for holding the
state action void as a regulation of interstate commerce.
*
"Sec. 2675.
A post to be erected. There must be fixed
on the line of said roads, and at the distance of 400 yards from
the center of each of such road crossings, and on each side
thereof, a post, and the engineer shall be required, whenever he
shall arrive at either of said posts, to blow the whistle of the
locomotive until it arrives at the public road, and to
simultaneously check and keep checking the speed thereof, so as to
stop in time should any person or thing be crossing said track on
said road."
"Sec. 2676.
Neglecting to erect such posts. Should any
company fail or neglect to put up said posts, the superintendent
thereof shall be guilty of a misdemeanor."
"Sec. 2677.
Failing to blow whistle. If any engineer
neglects to blow said whistle as required, and to check the speed
required, he is guilty of a misdemeanor: Provided, that within the
corporate limits of the cities, towns, and villages of this state,
the several railroad companies shall not be required to blow the
whistle of their locomotives on approaching crossings or public
roads in said corporate limits, but in lieu thereof the engineer of
said locomotives shall be required to signal the approach of their
trains to such crossings and public roads in said corporate limits
by tolling the bell of said locomotive, and on failure to do so,
the penalties of this section shall apply to such offense."