1. The Director General of Railroads was not suable generally as
operator of all railroads under federal control, but only with
reference to the particular transportation system or carrier out
of
Page 269 U. S. 115
whose operation the liability in question arose.
Davis v.
Donovan, 265 U. S. 257. P.
269 U. S.
116.
2. Where one railroad company actually controlled another and
operated both a a single system, and the Director General, after
taking them over, pursued the same practice, damage to freight
shipped over the system during federal control and occurring on the
subsidiary line are recoverable in an action against the Federal
Agent when sued and served as in charge of the dominant carrier. P.
269 U. S.
117.
93 Okla. 159
affirmed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma which
affirmed a recovery of damages for negligent injury to livestock in
an action against the Agent appointed under § 206a of the
Transportation Act, 1920.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Cattle shipped during federal control over the Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific System from stations in New Mexico through
Texas to Oklahoma City were negligently injured in transit. To
recover the damages suffered, this suit was brought in a state
court of Oklahoma against James C. Davis, as Agent designated by
the President, pursuant to § 206(a) of Transportation Act
February 28, 1920, c. 91, 41 Stat. 456, 461. The injury was
inflicted partly in New Mexico, partly in Texas, and partly in
Oklahoma. The main controversy was whether plaintiffs could recover
for the injury suffered in Texas. The jury returned a verdict for
the entire damages. Judgment entered thereon was affirmed by the
highest court of the
Page 269 U. S. 116
state. 93 Okl. 159. A petition for a writ of certiorari was
granted under § 237 of the Judicial Code as amended. 265 U.S.
577.
The lines of the Rock Island in Texas were owned by a
subsidiary, the Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf Railway Company, a
Texas corporation. The petition described Davis as Agent, United
States Railroad Administration, in charge of Chicago, Rock Island
& Pacific Railroad and Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf
Railroad. In the trial court, it was assumed that effective service
of the summons pursuant to § 206(b) was made only upon Davis
as Agent in charge of the Pacific. There, the shippers sought to
recover against him as such on the ground that the transportation
service undertaken was for the system; that, under federal control
as before, the Pacific was the dominant carrier, and operated,
either alone or jointly with the Gulf, the whole system, including
the Gulf lines, and that recovery for all damages suffered could
therefore be had against Davis as Agent in charge of the Pacific.
The defendant insisted that the Director General had operated the
Pacific and the Gulf not as parts of a single system, but as
individual and distinct entities. The shippers introduced
substantial evidence in support of their allegations. The case was
submitted to the jury under instructions which made it clear that
the verdict must be limited to the damage suffered on lines owned
by the Pacific unless the jury should find that the Gulf lines were
being operated with the other Rock Island lines as part of a single
system.
To these instructions, exceptions were duly taken, but the
Supreme Court of Oklahoma deemed it unnecessary to pass upon their
correctness. It affirmed the judgment on the ground that the
Director General operated all the railroads of which the President
took control as a single national system, not as separate companies
or systems; that the Director General was liable in damages for
Page 269 U. S. 117
negligent operation regardless of the relation of the different
lines to one another, and that, under § 206(b), service of
process on the service agent for any railroad gave jurisdiction
over the Agent of the President in respect to all railroads under
federal control in the operation of which the damages complained of
resulted. Its opinion was delivered November 6, 1923. Later, this
Court held, in
Davis v. Donovan, 265 U.
S. 257, that, under § 10 of the Federal Control Act
and General Order 50-A, the Director General was not suable
generally as the operator of all the railroads, but only with
reference to the particular transportation system or carrier out of
whose operations the liability in question arose. The rule declared
in the
Donovan case has been applied in suits brought,
under Transportation Act 1920, against the Agent of the President
on causes of action arising during federal control.
Manbar Coal
Co. v. Davis, 297 F. 24. The Supreme Court of Oklahoma reached
the same conclusion in
Davis, Federal Agent v. Benson, 105
Okl. 41, 231 P. 536, overruling its decision in the case at
bar.
While the ground on which the Supreme Court of Oklahoma rested
its decision was thus unsound, the judgment of affirmance was
right. Where one railroad company actually controls another and
operates both as a single system, the dominant company will be
liable for injuries due to the negligence of the subsidiary
company.
Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Dupont, 128 F. 840;
Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Delachesa, 145 F. 617;
Wichita
Falls & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Puckett, 53 Okla. 463.
There was no error in the instructions excepted to.
Affirmed.