A writ of error will lie to a judgment of the Superior Court of
Pennsylvania upholding a law of the state against an objection
based on the federal Constitution, if the supreme court of the
state refuses to allow an appeal. P.
250 U. S.
568.
Want of power in a state commission to consider the
constitutionality of a law which it seeks to enforce cannot limit
the right of a party affected to raise the question in the state
courts.
Id.
As applied to an interstate train terminated by a mail car, the
law of Pennsylvania (Laws 1911, p. 1053, § 7) forbidding the
operation
Page 250 U. S. 567
of any train consisting of United States mail or express cars
without the rear end of the rear car's being equipped with a
platform of thirty inches in width, with guard rails and steps,
invades a subject of regulation fully occupied by Congress through
the rules of the Postmaster General respecting the construction of
mail cars and their equipment when used as end cars, and under the
commerce clause, as is evinced by the Safety Appliance Act and the
regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission thereunder,
particularly those permitting the employment of caboose cars, which
are constantly used as end cars, without platforms.
Id.
67 Pa.Super.Ct.Rep. 575 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was begun by a complaint to the Public Service
Commission of Pennsylvania that the plaintiff in error, the
Pennsylvania Railroad, ran a specified train the last car of which
was not equipped at its rear end with a platform thirty inches in
width, guard rails and steps, as required by a statute of
Pennsylvania. Act of June 19, 1911, § 7. The train was moving
in interstate commerce. The Railroad Company admitted the facts,
but contended that it was not bound by the statute because the rear
car was a mail car constructed in accordance with the regulations
of the Post Office Department, and because the government of the
United States had assumed control of the matter so far as to
exclude such intermeddling on the part of a state. The Commission
made an order that the Railroad
Page 250 U. S. 568
Company should operate its train with the rear end of the rear
car equipped as required by the state law. The Railroad Company
appealed to the superior court, setting up that the order violated
the commerce clause of the Constitution (Art. 1, § 8) and
that, in view of the federal legislation and rules, including the
order of the Interstate Commerce Commission dated March 13, 1911,
and made under the Safety Appliance Act, and other matters referred
to, the State Commission had no power to do what it did.
The superior court sustained the order holding itself bound by
what it took to be the decision of the supreme court in
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Ewing, 241 Pa. 581, to the effect
that nothing had been done by the United States inconsistent with
the continued effect of the state law. An appeal to the supreme
court was refused. On the strength of this, it now is argued that
the refusal must have been upon the ground that the Commission was
a purely administrative body; that it had no judicial power to
declare the statute unconstitutional; that therefore no question of
the constitutionality of the Act was before the superior court, and
that this is implied because an appeal to the supreme court was a
matter of right if the case had involved such a question. But
whatever powers a state may deny to its commissions, it cannot give
them power to do what the laws of the United States forbid, whether
they call their action administrative or judicial. The superior
court treated the question as open. The supreme court merely denied
an appeal upon a point that probably was thought to have been
decided already by the court.
We pass to the merits of the case. If all that had been done on
behalf of the United States in the way of regulation had been to
determine how mail cars should be built, and to exclude a
thirty-inch platform, it might be said that the state law could be
obeyed by putting a different
Page 250 U. S. 569
car at the end of the train. It would be a tax upon the railroad
when the company wished to run a mail train wholly made up of mail
cars, but it could be done, and it is not necessary to say that the
state could not require it. But when the United States has
exercised its exclusive powers over interstate commerce so far as
to take possession of the field, the states no more can supplement
its requirements than they can annul them.
Southern Ry. Co. v.
Railroad Commission of Indiana, 236 U.
S. 439,
236 U. S. 446;
Charleston & Western Carolina Ry. Co. v. Varnville
Furniture Co., 237 U. S. 597,
237 U. S. 604;
New York Central R. Co. v. Winfield, 244 U.
S. 147. In the present instance the rules for the
construction of mail cars, admitted to be valid, not only exclude
the wide platform but provide an equipment for them when used as
end cars. The Safety Appliance Act, with its careful requirements
for the safety of the men, was followed by most elaborate
regulations issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission which
include three large pages of prescriptions for "Caboose Cars
without Platforms." Caboose cars constantly are used as end cars,
and these pages, like the Post Office order as to mail cars,
recognize the lawfulness of an end car such as the Pennsylvania
statute forbids.
The question whether Congress and its commissions acting under
it have so far exercised the exclusive jurisdiction that belongs to
it as to exclude the state must be answered by a judgment upon the
particular case. The subject matter in this instance is peculiarly
one that calls for uniform law, and in our opinion regulation by
the paramount authority has gone so far that the statute of
Pennsylvania cannot impose the additional obligation in issue here.
The Interstate Commerce Commission is continually on the alert, and
if the Pennsylvania law represents a real necessity, no doubt will
take or recommend steps to meet the need.
Judgment reversed.
Page 250 U. S. 570
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE dissenting.
Of course, I agree with the majority of the Court that, if the
United States had taken possession of the field involved in this
controversy, the state could not supplement or annul its
requirements or regulations, and it is because it seems to me clear
that it has done nothing of the kind that I dissent from the
conclusion of the Court.
The Interstate Commerce Commission has never assumed control
over the manner in which trains shall be made up, or manned, or
moved, so far as I know; certainly there is nothing in the record
in this case to indicate that it has done so.
The section of the state statute held invalid has to do not with
individual cars, but with high speed trains of cars in operation,
and it does not prescribe what the construction of mail or express
cars shall be, but only that the rear car of trains made up of mail
or express cars shall be equipped with a platform as prescribed,
with "exits free from obstruction." It may be a mail car, or an
express car, or a passenger coach, or a caboose; the only
requirement is that it shall have a platform with guard rail and
steps.
For the reason that federal authority had not occupied the
field, this Court has upheld state laws prescribing the number of
men who must be employed to operate trains,
Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Arkansas, 219 U.
S. 453, the manner in which the cars of passenger trains
shall be heated,
New York, New Haven & Hartford R. Co. v.
New York, 165 U. S. 628, the
kind of headlight which engines shall carry,
Atlantic Coast
Line R. Co. v. Georgia, 234 U. S. 280, and
that trainmen shall be subject to state examination as to their
qualifications,
Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.
S. 465,
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Ry.
v. Alabama, 128 U. S. 96.
In this case, the action of the court is rested chiefly on the
single circumstance that the Interstate Commerce
Page 250 U. S. 571
Commission has prescribed requisites for "Caboose Cars without
Platforms," and since caboose cars are constantly used as end cars,
therefore it is concluded the Commission recognizes as lawful a
type of end car which the state statute condemns.
If the construction prescribed for "Caboose Cars without
Platforms" at all resembled or was even approximately the
equivalent of the construction of express or mail cars in the
respects essential to the safety and promptness of service on the
rear end of fast trains, or if it appeared that such cabooses are
or could be used on such trains, the inference might be justified,
but the difference between the two is radical and fundamental. As
thus: the illustrations in the record show that mail and express
cars have only narrow stirrups and single handholds at the side
doors and at their ends, and the ends are equipped with vestibule
frames, which render access difficult and dangerous to the brake
wheel and markers (signal lights and flags) and to the handholds
and stirrups for mounting or alighting. But the requisites
prescribed for a "Caboose without Platform" are a curved and a
straight handhold on opposite sides of each side door and
"Side-Door Steps" under each door, with a minimum length of five
feet, a minimum width of six inches, a minimum height of backstop
of three inches, and hung a maximum height of only twenty-four
inches from the top of rail. Such handholds, with such a long,
wide, and low-hanging step, give facilities for mounting or
alighting from such a caboose when in motion comparable in safety
to those of an end platform, and are obviously much better and
safer than those on mail or express cars.
The importance of rear end signals cannot be overstated, yet the
construction of the ends of express and mail cars, as shown in the
illustrations in the record, is such that such signals can be
observed by trainmen with difficulty when the train is moving, and
can be put in place
Page 250 U. S. 572
or removed only with great risk of injury, especially in time of
storm of wind or rain or when the precarious foothold on the narrow
ledge of the slightly extended end sill is covered with ice or
snow. Such danger is entirely obviated by use of the inexpensive
platform prescribed by the state statute.
To this we must add that a caboose is used only on slowly moving
freight trains, while the state act deals only with fast trains,
which start so rapidly that mounting them is especially dangerous
for men who, in the discharge of duty, must usually be on the
ground to the last moment for observation and for signalling, and
with whom a few moments in alighting, when the emergency signal is
given may mean the difference between safety and disaster to
themselves and to passengers and property on such and other
trains.
It was to furnish facilities to employees for prompt and
reasonably safe mounting and alighting from these fast trains and
for the discharge of other duties without excessive danger that the
statute was enacted, and it seems to me, for the reasons stated,
that permitting the use of cabooses without platforms does not
cover the rear end requirements of fast express and mail trains,
and that the Court, in its decision, makes a misapplication of that
permission.
It will excite surprise in many minds that the plaintiff
railroad company does not make, as it is believed many carriers do
make, such provision as this statute requires, or its equivalent,
from motives of economy, as a protection from injury to employees
and danger to property as well as from the humanitarian motive so
obviously involved.
Believing, as I do, that the section of the state statute is a
humane, reasonable, and intelligent provision for promoting the
safety of employees, passengers, and property arising from special
conditions on the lines of railway, and
Page 250 U. S. 573
that there is no federal provision having a like purpose, I
decline to share in striking down as unconstitutional a law passed
by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, approved by the Public Service
Commission of that state as reasonable and necessary and, as I
think, by its highest court, as constitutional.