The freedom of the states to establish and apply their own laws
and policies touching the validity of contracts exempting carriers
from liability to passengers for injuries due to negligence was not
affected by the Carmack Amendment, which deals only with shipments
of property. P.
248 U. S. 363.
An employee of a circus was injured by the negligent operation
of a passenger train of a railroad company while traveling upon a
train owned by the circus, which was being hauled over the tracks
of the railroad company by its locomotive and crew pursuant to a
special contract declaring the company not a common carrier
therein, and not liable for negligence.
Held that the
employee was not a passenger of the railroad company, and that his
cause of action was based on the general right not to be injured by
the negligence of another.
Id.
Writ of error to review 100 Neb. 237 dismissed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 248 U. S. 361
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Barnum & Bailey, who owned rolling stock adapted to carrying
their circus equipment and personnel, made, in 1913, a special
contract with the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway
Company concerning transportation on its lines. The railway agreed,
for a sum fixed, to give the right to use its tracks and
locomotives, fully manned and supplied, to haul the circus trains.
Barnum & Bailey agreed, among other things, that the railway
was not acting therein as a common carrier; that it should not be
liable for any injury, though arising from negligence, either to
their own person or property, or to that of any other of their
Page 248 U. S. 362
employes, and that they would indemnify the railway against any
such injury.
While the circus train was being moved in Nebraska, from
Lincoln, to Atlantic, Iowa, it was crashed into by one of the
railway's regular passenger trains, and Maucher, an employee of the
circus, was injured. He had, by his contract of employment, agreed
to release all railroad companies from any claim for injuries
suffered while traveling with the circus on their lines, but he
brought, in a state court of Nebraska, an action against the
railway for damages, alleging that he had been injured by its
negligence. The railway defended on the ground that its contract
with Barnum & Bailey, and thus with the plaintiff, operated to
release it from all liability; that, since the contract related to
a movement in interstate commerce, its validity was to be
determined by the federal law, and that, by the federal law, the
contracts were valid, although undertaking to release the railway
from liability, since it was not acting as common carrier.
Santa Fe, Prescott & Phoenix Ry. Co. v. Grant Bros.
Construction Co., 228 U. S. 177. The
trial court held that the liability was to be determined by the law
of Nebraska, and entered judgment for plaintiff, which was affirmed
by the supreme court of the state. 100 Neb. 237. The case came here
on writ of error under § 237 of the Judicial Code.
The railway admits that, prior to the enactment of the Carmack
Amendment (Act June 29, 1906, c. 3591, § 7, pars. 11, 12, 34
Stat. 584, 595), Congress had not dealt with the right of carriers
to limit by contract their liability for injuries occurring in
interstate transportation, and that consequently the state were
free to establish their own laws and policies and apply them to
such contracts.
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Hughes,
191 U. S. 477. But
it contends that this power of the states was superseded by the
Carmack Amendment, since that amendment dealt with the power of
carriers to contract in respect to such liability,
Page 248 U. S. 363
Adams Express Co. v. Croninger, 226 U.
S. 491;
Boston & Maine Railroad v. Hooker,
233 U. S. 97, that
it was the intention of Congress to deal with the whole subject,
and that the rights of plaintiff in respect to personal injuries
are governed by the federal law. But the Carmack Amendment deals
only with the shipment of property. Its language is so clear as to
leave no ground for the contention that Congress intended to deal
with the transportation of persons. Furthermore, plaintiff was not
even a passenger on the railway. His claim rests not upon a
contract of carriage, but upon the general right of a human being
not to be injured by the negligence of another.
Compare
Southern Pacific Co. v. Schuyler, 227 U.
S. 601,
227 U. S. 613. The
case presents no substantial federal question. The writ of error
is
Dismissed.