1. A judgment for damages cannot stand in an action under the
Federal Employers' Liability Act if, under the applicable
principles of law as interpreted by the federal courts, the
evidence was not sufficient in kind or amount to warrant a finding
that the negligence alleged was the cause of the injury. P
275 U. S.
457.
2. A brakeman, in seeking to board the caboose of a local
freight train moving at ten miles per hour, ran to it from where he
had
Page 275 U. S. 456
thrown a switch, and, as he caught a grab-iron, turned his foot
on a piece of coal, went down, was thrown loose from the train,
fell to the ground, and was inured.
Held, that his
testimony to the effect that the loss of his hold was due to an
unusual jerk given by the engine, more severe than any he had
experienced or seen on a local freight train, could not sustain an
inference of negligence upon the part of the engineer (1) because
there was no evidence that the engineer knew or should have known
that he was not on the train, but was attempting to get on it after
it had started and was in a situation in which a jerk of the train
would be dangerous to him; (2) because, in view of the brakeman's
position at the side of the caboose, ten car-lengths from the
engine, his statement that the jerk was given by the engine was
mere conjecture; (3) because, considering his situation at the
time, his opinion that the jerk was unusual was without substantial
weight. P.
275 U. S.
458.
Reversed.
Certiorari, 271 U.S. 654, to a judgment of the Supreme Court of
Mississippi sustaining a judgment for personal injuries in an
action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by Wells in a circuit court of
Mississippi to recover damages for injuries suffered by him while
employed as a brakeman on a freight train of the railroad company.
The declaration alleged that these injuries were caused by the
negligence of the engineer in giving a very sudden and unnecessary
jerk to the train when it was moving and Wells was undertaking to
get on it, which threw him on the ground. At the conclusion of the
evidence, the railroad company requested that the jury be
instructed to find for the defendant. This was refused. The jury
found for the plaintiff, and the
Page 275 U. S. 457
judgment entered on the verdict was affirmed by the supreme
court of the state without opinion.
It is unquestioned that Wells was at the time employed in
interstate commerce, and that the case is controlled by the federal
Employers' Liability Act.
* Hence, if it
appears from the record that, under the applicable principles of
law as interpreted by the federal courts, the evidence was not
sufficient in kind or amount to warrant a finding that the
negligence of the engineer was the cause of the injury, the
judgment must be reversed.
Seaboard Air Line v. Padgett,
236 U. S. 668,
236 U. S. 673;
Chicago, M. & P. Railroad v. Coogan, 271 U.
S. 472,
271 U. S.
474.
Wells, who had been employed as an extra brakeman for a few
months, was on the day of the injury the rear brakeman on a local
freight train containing ten cars. After stopping at a station
where some switching was done, the train was coupled up on the main
track, on a downgrade, in readiness to proceed on its journey. The
engineer, fireman, and head brakeman were in the cab of the engine.
The engineer was on the right side and the fireman on the left, it
being his duty to take signals from that side and pass them to the
engineer. The conductor and flagman were in the caboose at the rear
of the train, and Wells was standing on the left of the train, near
the caboose. Wells gave a signal to the fireman for the train to go
ahead, and the fireman then went down into the deck of the engine
to shovel in coal. Just after this signal was given, Wells was told
by the conductor to throw a derail switch on the left of the main
track, some fifty feet from the caboose. After doing this, finding
that the train had already started, he ran back. When he reached
the train, it had gone about fifty feet, and was moving from eight
to ten miles an hour. The cars had then passed him, and he started
to get on the caboose. He testified
Page 275 U. S. 458
that, as he caught the grab iron, he stepped on a big piece of
coal, his foot turned, and he "went down and the engine gave an
unusual jerk" which threw him loose from the train, and he fell on
the ground, his knee striking on the cross ties, breaking the
kneecap and otherwise injuring him. He also testified on
cross-examination that, while the running in of slack on freight
trains jerks or lurches them to a certain extent, this was a severe
jerk such as he had never experienced before on a train, and
finally, that, although he had seen such jerks on through freight
trains, he had never seen them in local freights. The plaintiff
offered no other evidence as to the cause of the injury.
All the other members of the train crew were introduced as
witnesses by the defendant. Their testimony was to the effect that
it was not the duty of the engineer, before starting, to look out
for the men who might be on the other side of the train, that being
the duty of the fireman; that, when the engineer pulled out, he did
not know where Wells was; that he started in the ordinary way, with
open throttle, and did nothing in operating the engine that could
cause a sudden or unusual lurch of the train; that, after a freight
train starts, there are usually jerks or lurches caused by the
running out of the slack between the cars; that, after the slack
runs out, the engineer cannot give any jerk or lurch to the train,
even by suddenly putting on steam, and that, at the time of the
injury, there was in fact no unusual jerk or lurch of the train. No
rebuttal evidence was offered.
It is urged here in behalf of Wells that, despite this evidence,
the question of the engineer's negligence was property submitted to
the jury because of an inference to be drawn from Well's own
statement that "the engine gave an unusual jerk" which was more
severe than any he had ever experienced or seen on a local freight
train. We cannot sustain this contention. In the first place,
there
Page 275 U. S. 459
was no evidence that the engineer knew or should have known that
Wells was not on the train, but was attempting to get on it after
it had started, and was in a situation in which a jerk of the train
would be dangerous to him.
See Texas & Pacific Railway v.
Behymer, 189 U. S. 468.
Aside from this, Wells' statement that the jerk was given by the
engine was obviously a mere conjecture, as he was then at the side
of the caboose, ten car lengths away, where he could not see what
occurred on the engine. And his opinion that the jerk was unusual
and severe as compared with those which he had previously
experienced on local freight trains had no substantial weight, his
situation on the ground by the side of the moving train, after his
foot had turned on the piece of coal and he had gone "down" being
plainly one in which he could not compare with any accuracy the
jerk which he then felt with those he had experienced when riding
on freight trains.
In short, we find that, on the evidence and all the inferences
which the jury might reasonably draw therefrom, taken most strongly
against the Railway Company, the contention that the injury was
caused by the negligence of the engineer is without any substantial
support. In no aspect does the record do more than leave the matter
in the realm of speculation and conjecture. That is not enough.
Patton v. Texas & Pacific Railway, 179 U.
S. 658,
179 U. S. 663;
Chicago, M. & St. P. Railway v. Coogan, supra,
271 U. S.
478.
As the jury should have been instructed to find for the
defendant, we have no occasion to consider other questions which
have been argued in reference to the charge to the jury.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the Supreme
Court of Mississippi for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
Reversed.
* 35 Stat. 65, c. 149.