In an action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act to
recover damages for a death claimed to have been proximately caused
by the breaking of an automatic coupler, the complaint mingled in a
single cause of action charges of general negligence and a specific
charge that defendant "carelessly and negligently" violated the
Safety Appliance Act by operating a car not equipped with the
prescribed coupler. The trial court denied plaintiff's request for
instructions that the breaking of the coupler was negligence
per se, and submitted the whole case to the jury
indiscriminately as a negligence case. The jury found for
defendant.
Held: as to the claim based on the Safety Appliance
Act, plaintiff was entitled to a peremptory instruction that to
equip a car with a coupler which broke in a switching operation was
a violation of the Act, which rendered defendant liable for
injuries proximately resulting therefrom, and that neither evidence
of negligence nor of diligence and care was to be considered on the
question of this liability. Pp.
338 U. S.
385-394.
(a) The Safety Appliance Act requires couplers which, after a
secure coupling is effected, will remain coupled until set free by
some purposeful act of control. Pp.
338 U. S.
387-389.
(b) A failure of equipment to perform as required by the Safety
Appliance Act is, in itself, an actionable wrong, in no way
dependent upon negligence and for the proximate results of which
there is liability that cannot be escaped by proof of care or
diligence. Pp.
338 U. S.
389-392.
(c) Pleadings will serve their purpose of sharpening and
limiting the issues only if claims based on negligence are set
forth separately from those based on violation of the Safety
Appliance Act. P.
338 U. S.
392.
(d) Even though no objection be made to an improper pleading in
a case such as this, it is almost indispensable to an intelligible
charge to the jury that a clear separation between claims based on
negligence and those based on violation of the Safety Appliance Act
be observed and impressed. P.
338 U. S.
393.
Page 338 U. S. 385
(e) Evidence pertinent to negligence is immaterial to issues
raised by a claim based on violation of the Safety Appliance Act.
Pp.
338 U. S.
393-394.
171 F.2d 973 reversed.
The Court of Appeals affirmed a judgment for the defendant in an
action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. 171 F.2d 973.
This Court granted certiorari. 337 U.S. 929.
Reversed, p.
338 U. S.
394.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought under the Federal Employers' Liability
Act, 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60. The complaint mingled in a
single count or cause of action charges of general negligence and a
specific charge that defendant "carelessly and negligently"
violated the Safety Appliance Act, 45 U.S.C. § 2, by operating
a car not equipped with the prescribed coupler. The jury found
against plaintiff, and judgment for defendant was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals. 171 F.2d 973. This result must stand if the jury
was properly instructed, as to which the Court of Appeals
divided.
O'Donnell, whose administratrix is petitioner here and was
plaintiff below, met an unwitnessed death while working in
defendant's yards as a member of its switching crew. When last
seen, he was going to adjust the couplers on certain cars which
previously had failed to couple by impact. Shortly after his
departure, as the result of the breaking of a coupler, two cars
broke loose from a cut of cars that was being moved in a
switching
Page 338 U. S. 386
operation. Running free, they collided with other standing cars
and drove them against those whose couplers decedent had said he
was going to adjust. Some time later, decedent's mangled body was
found lying across one rail of the track on which the cars he had
intended to prepare for coupling had stood. That he had gone
between them to adjust the couplers is suggested by the fact that
they coupled upon impact with the colliding cars, though they
previously had failed so to do. Petitioner's contention, from all
the circumstances proved, is that O'Donnell's death was proximately
caused by the breaking of the coupler, which permitted the two cars
to run free, strike the standing cars, and cause unexpected
movement of the cars between which O'Donnell was engaged.
Respondent contends that they indicate, instead, that death
resulted from a later and independent movement on the track when
the runaway cars were hauled out -- an event which took place
before discovery of decedent's body but after the collision of the
two sets of cars. We need not resolve the conflict between these
competing theories of causation, for that decision was for the
jury.
Ellis v. Union Pacific R. Co., 329 U.
S. 649,
329 U. S.
653.
Our concern is with the effect accorded by the trial court's
instructions to the breaking of the coupler. The issue was defined
by the Court of Appeals:
"The record is devoid of any request by plaintiff that the jury
be instructed that they might infer negligence from the breaking of
the coupler, but, in the District Court, plaintiff contended for
and tendered instructions upon the theory that a breaking of the
coupler in and of itself was negligence
per se. The court
refused to so instruct."
171 F.2d at 976. The Court of Appeals, with one dissent,
sustained this refusal so to charge, saying,
"We do not believe the Act required defendant to furnish
couplers that would not break. We think the true rule is that,
where a coupler
Page 338 U. S. 387
does break, the jury may, if they think it reasonable under all
the circumstances, infer that the coupler was defective and was
furnished and used in violation of the Act. The cases go no further
than to hold that from the breaking of a coupler the jury may infer
negligence."
As this view of the Safety Appliance Act appears to conflict
with the rule laid down in other jurisdictions, [
Footnote 1] we granted certiorari. 337 U.S.
929.
A close and literal reading of the Safety Appliance Act, 45
U.S.C. § 2, [
Footnote 2]
suggests that two functions only are required of couplers: that
they couple automatically by impact and that they uncouple without
requiring men to go between the ends of the cars. This construction
finds some support in the decisions.
See, e.g., St. Louis &
San Francisco R. Co. v. Conarty, 238 U.
S. 243,
238 U. S. 250;
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. United States, 220 U.
S. 559,
220 U. S. 571;
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Layton, 243 U.
S. 617;
Johnson v. Southern Pacific Co.,
196 U. S. 1,
196 U. S. 18.
See also United States v. Southern R. Co., 135 F. 122, 127
(1905);
Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co. v. Charlton, 247 F.
34, 40 (1917);
Chicago, M.,
Page 338 U. S. 388
St. P. & P. R. Co. v. Linehan, 66 F.2d 373, 377
(1933);
Penn v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co., 163 F.2d 995,
997 (1947).
Courts at other times have held, however, that failure of
couplers to remain coupled until released constitutes or evidences
a violation of the Act, just as does their failure to couple upon
impact or uncouple from the sides of cars. As stated by the Court
of Appeals, Second Circuit, the Act "is also aimed at insuring
couplers that will hold together."
Keenan v. Director General
of Railroads, 285 F. 286, 290 (1922);
Philadelphia &
R. R. Co. v. Eisenhart, 280 F. 271 (1922);
Erie R. Co. v.
Caldwell, 264 F. 947 (1920);
Southern Pacific Co. v.
Thomas, 21 Ariz. 355, 188 P. 268;
Kowalski v. Chicago,
N.W. R. Co., 159 Minn. 388, 199 N.W. 178;
McAllister v.
St. Louis Merchants' Bridge Terminal R. Co., 324 Mo. 1005, 25
S.W.2d 791;
Saxton v. Delaware & Hudson Co., 256 N.Y.
363, 176 N.E. 425;
Stewart v. Wabash R. Co., 105 Neb. 812, 182
N.W. 496. And see Reetz v. Chicago & E. R. Co., 46 F.2d 50
(1931). This appears also to have been the view of this Court in
the only case of this nature ever before it.
Minneapolis &
St. Louis R. Co. v. Gotschall, 244 U. S.
66.
See also Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste.
Marie R. Co. v. Goneau, 269 U. S. 406.
It is hard to think of a coupler defect in which greater danger
inheres to workmen, travelers, and all to whom the railroad owes a
duty than one which sets cars running uncontrolled upon its tracks.
We find it difficult to read the Safety Appliance Act to require
that cars be equipped with appliances which couple automatically by
impact and which may be released without going between the ends of
cars, but which need not remain coupled in the meantime. The Act,
so construed, would guard against dangers incident to effecting an
engagement or
Page 338 U. S. 389
disengagement while ignoring the even greater hazards which can
result from the failure of a coupling to perform its main function,
which is to stay coupled until released.
We hold that the Safety Appliance Act requires couplers which,
after a secure coupling is effected, will remain coupled until set
free by some purposeful act of control.
What, then, should a jury be instructed is the consequence of a
failure to provide couplers that so perform? Should the jury be
instructed that it must find liability, or merely that it may find
liability for injuries proximately resulting from the failure?
The arguments and instructions in this case, as well as others,
and the language of many opinions and texts, reflect widespread
confusion as to the effect to be accorded a violation of the
federal safety appliance statute. [
Footnote 3] Part of this confusion is traceable to the
diversity of judicial opinion concerning the consequences
attributed in negligence actions to the violation of a statute.
[
Footnote 4]
Page 338 U. S. 390
Breach of certain statutes in various jurisdictions will be
regarded as some evidence of negligence, to be weighed by the jury
along with the facts.
Hayes v. Michigan Central R. Co.,
111 U. S. 228,
111 U. S. 240;
Union Pacific R. Co. v. McDonald, 152 U.
S. 262,
152 U. S. 283.
At other times or places, or under other statutes, a violation may
be "
prima facie" or "presumptive" evidence of negligence
which defendant must meet or overcome.
E.g., Voiles v.
Hunt, 213 Iowa 1234, 240 N.W. 703. Courts sometimes talk of it
in terms of
res ipsa loquitur, cf. Minneapolis & St. Louis
R. Co. v. Gotschall, supra, or treat violations as negligence
per se. E.g., San Antonio & A.R. R. Co. v.
Wagner, 241 U. S. 476,
241 U. S. 484;
Watts v. Montgomery Traction Co., 175 Ala. 102, 57 So.
471;
Evans v. Klusmeyer, 301 Mo. 352, 359, 256 S.W. 1036,
1037-1038. It is not uncommon that, within the same jurisdiction,
the rule is different as to different statutes.
See Martin v.
Herzog, 228 N.Y. 164, 168, 126 N.E. 814, 815. But usually,
unless the statute sets up a special cause of action for its
breach, a violation becomes an ingredient, of greater or lesser
weight, in determining the ultimate question of negligence.
But this Court early swept all issues of negligence out of cases
under the Safety Appliance Act. For reasons set forth at length in
our books, the Court held that a failure of equipment to perform as
required by the Safety Appliance Act is, in itself, an actionable
wrong, in no way dependent upon negligence and for the proximate
results of which there is liability -- a liability that cannot be
escaped by proof of care or diligence.
St. Louis, Iron Mountain
& Southern R. Co. v. Taylor, 210 U.
S. 281,
210 U. S. 294;
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. United States, supra,
220 U. S.
575-577;
Delk v. St. Louis & San Francisco R.
Co., 220 U. S. 580.
These rigorous holdings were more recently epitomized by Chief
Justice Hughes, speaking for the Court:
"The statutory liability is not based upon the carrier's
negligence. The duty imposed is an absolute one, and the carrier is
not
Page 338 U. S. 391
excused by any showing of care, however assiduous."
Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 303 U. S.
10,
303 U. S.
15.
Notwithstanding this Court's efforts to distinguish the safety
appliance violation case from the common law negligence case,
confusion of the two persists -- in part, at least, due to the
anomalous procedure by which such claims are litigated. This
non-negligence claim, based on a statutory violation, is pursued by
action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, basically a form
of action predicated only upon negligence. [
Footnote 5] The appliance cause often is joined with
one for negligence, and even sometimes, as here, mingled in a
single mongrel cause of action. In addition, at trial, certain
issues such as causation and extent of injury, for example, are
common to both causes of action. All of this has resulted in much
borrowing of the language of negligence law to deal with Safety
Appliance Act cases. And so, in an early case in which this Court
held, "[i]f this act is violated, the question of negligence in the
general sense of want of care is immaterial," we find that it went
on nevertheless to say that the violation is treated "as
negligence' -- what is sometimes called negligence per
se." San Antonio & A.P. R. Co. v. Wagner,
supra.
In a later case, the contention in this Court involved the rule
of
res ipsa loquitur, a maxim of the law of evidence
applicable in some negligence cases. The trial court had charged
that, from the breaking of the coupler, the jury might infer
negligence, which was the instruction which had been requested by
the plaintiff. The railroad opposed this instruction. This Court,
in an opinion anticipatory
Page 338 U. S. 392
of this one, upheld the charge against the objection. Since the
plaintiff had recovered a verdict, this Court, in affirming, found
no occasion to consider whether the plaintiff would have been
entitled to a more favorable charge. But the opinion negativing the
railroad's objection as inconsistent with the absolute liability
imposed by the Act appears in the headnote as a holding "that, in
view of the Safety Appliance Act, negligence might be inferred from
the mere opening of the couplers."
Minneapolis & St. Louis
R. Co. v. Gotschall, supra. Thus, the vocabulary of
negligence, appropriated to non-negligence uses, comes to dominate
the thought.
We no longer insist upon technical rules of pleading, but it
will ever be difficult in a jury trial to segregate issues which
counsel do not separate in their pleading, preparation or thinking.
We think the unfortunately prolonged course of this litigation is
in no small part due to the failure to heed the admonition well
stated by the Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit in a similar
case:
"Of course it is not proper to plead different theories in the
same paragraph, but it is not necessarily fatal, especially when
the adversary makes no objection."
Vigor v. Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co., 101 F.2d 865,
869 (1939). Pleadings will serve the purpose of sharpening and
limiting the issues only if claims based on negligence are set
forth separately from those based on violation of the appliance
acts. [
Footnote 6]
Page 338 U. S. 393
But, no matter how the pleadings are allowed to stand, we think
it is almost indispensable to an intelligible charge to the jury
that a clear separation of the two kinds of actions be observed and
impressed. The trial court in this case submitted the whole
indiscriminately as a negligence case. This is hardly to be
regarded as reversible error, for both counsel pleaded and tried
the case as such, and their requests were stated entirely in terms
of the law of negligence. But the scrambling of the claims in this
case illustrates how much evidence may be admitted, submitted, and
considered on negligence issues that, under our repeated holdings,
would be immaterial in case of violation of the Safety Appliance
Acts.
The plaintiff, for example, can add nothing to the liability
incurred from a violation of the Act by producing evidence of
negligence. Here there was affirmative and, so far as we can find,
uncontradicted testimony that there was "a partial fracture on the
inside of the coupler" indicating that the coupler was weakened by
an old defect. However important this evidence might have been in
determining common law negligence, it added nothing to the direct
case under the Safety Appliance Act made by showing the breaking of
the coupler.
The defendant stressed evidence that, in the switching
operation, the coupler broke concurrently with an emergency stop.
Such evidence might be material on the question of negligence. But
the Act certainly requires equipment that will withstand the stress
and strain of all ordinary operation, grades, loadings, stops, and
starts, including emergency stops. A defendant cannot escape
liability for a coupler's inadequacy by showing that too much was
demanded of it, nor by showing that, while the coupler broke, it
had been properly manufactured, diligently inspected, and showed no
visible defects. These circumstances do go to the question of
negligence; but, even if a railroad should explain away its
negligence, that
Page 338 U. S. 394
is not enough to explain away its liability if it has violated
the Act. [
Footnote 7]
Criticism is made that petitioner's requests to charge were not
sufficiently specific. That they were somewhat general in statement
and were cast in terms of a negligence case is true. But the Court
of Appeals found these requests sufficiently specific and pertinent
to the issues to present the question which it decided. And, in
deciding this question the way it did, we believe it has fallen
into error. We make no examination of the charge insofar as it
related to the issue of general negligence. As to the claim based
on the Safety Appliance Act, we hold that the plaintiff was
entitled to a peremptory instruction that to equip a car with a
coupler which broke in the switching operation was a violation of
the Act which rendered defendant liable for injuries proximately
resulting therefrom, and that neither evidence of negligence nor of
diligence and care was to be considered on the question of this
liability.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, and MR. JUSTICE
MINTON took no part in the consideration or decision of this
case.
[
Footnote 1]
Philadelphia & R. Co. v. Eisenhart, 280 F. 271
(1922);
Keenan v. Director General of Railroads, 285 F.
286 (1922);
McAllister v. St. Louis Merchants Bridge Terminal
R. Co., 324 Mo. 1005, 1014, 25 S.W.2d 791, 796 (1930);
Southern Pacific Co. v. Thomas, 21 Ariz. 355, 360-361, 188
P. 268, 270 (1920);
Kowalski v. Chicago & N.W. R. Co.,
159 Minn. 388, 392-393, 199 N.W. 178, 180 (1924);
Saxton v.
Delaware & Hudson Co., 256 N.Y. 363, 176 N.E. 425 (1931).
Cf. Vigor v. Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co., 101 F.2d 865,
868 (1939);
Western & Atlantic R. v. Gentle, 58 Ga.
App. 282, 295, 198 S.E. 257, 265 (1938).
[
Footnote 2]
"It shall be unlawful for any common carrier engaged in
interstate commerce by railroad to haul or permit to be hauled or
used on its line any car used in moving interstate traffic not
equipped with couplers coupling automatically by impact, and which
can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going between the
ends of the cars."
[
Footnote 3]
E.g., San Antonio & A.P. R. Co. v. Wagner,
241 U. S. 476;
Minneapolis & St. Louis R. Co. v. Gotschall,
244 U. S. 66;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Thomas, 21 Ariz. 355, 361, 188 P.
268, 270;
Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Gentle, 58
Ga.App. 282, 198 S.E. 257;
Vigor v. Chesapeake & Ohio R.
Co., 101 F.2d 865, 869.
See also 2 Roberts, Federal
Liabilities of Carriers, §§ 620, 655
et seq.,
789, 790 (2d ed.1929); 2 Shearman & Redfield on Negligence,
§ 183 (rev. ed.1941); Thornton, Federal Employers' Liability
and Safety Appliance Acts, §§ 289, 302, 311 (3d ed.1916);
Richey's Federal Employers' Liability, Safety Appliance, and Hours
of Service Acts, §§ 56 217, 252 (2d ed.1916).
[
Footnote 4]
For discussions of the general problem and illustrative cases,
see Prosser on Torts, § 39; Harper, Law of Torts,
§ 78; Bohlen, Cases on Torts, pp. 187-204 (3d ed.1930); 1
Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, §§ 11, 12 (rev.
ed.1941); 2 Restatement of the Law of Torts, §§ 286-288;
Thayer, Public Wrong and Private Action, 27 Harv.L.Rev. 317;
Lowndes, Civil Liability Created by Criminal Legislation, 16
Minn.L.Rev. 361.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 1 of the Federal Employers' Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.
§ 51, provides
"That every common carrier by railroad . . . shall be liable in
damages . . . for such injury or death resulting in whole or in
part . . . by reason of any defect or insufficiency, due to its
negligence. . . ."
And see Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Horton, 233 U.
S. 492,
233 U. S.
501-502.
[
Footnote 6]
This, after all, is the command of Rule 10(b), Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, which provides:
"All averments of claim or defense shall be made in numbered
paragraphs, the contents of each of which shall be limited as far
as practicable to a statement of a single set of circumstances. . .
."
Professor Moore, in discussing this Rule with reference to
claims based upon both common law and statutory grounds,
states:
"Separate statement by way of counts is not required; separate
paragraphing in setting out the grounds in the above actions is
desirable and required."
2 Moore's Federal Practise, 2006-2007 (2d ed.1948).
[
Footnote 7]
We do not say that a railroad may never effectively defend under
the Act by showing that an adequate coupler failed to hold because
it was broken or released through intervening and independent
causes other than its inadequacy or defectiveness such, for
example, as the work of a saboteur. And we do not find it necessary
to consider a situation where an adequate coupler failed to hold
because it was improperly set, since such facts are not before
us.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED concurs,
dissenting.
We do not agree that the Safety Appliance Acts contain a
mandatory requirement that cars used in moving
Page 338 U. S. 395
interstate traffic must be equipped with couplers that "will
remain coupled until set free by some purposeful act of control."
[
Footnote 2/1] Congress might have
so legislated, as it did in the section which required cars to be
equipped with "efficient hand brakes. . . ." [
Footnote 2/2]
See Myers v. Reading Co.,
331 U. S. 477.
However, it did not do so. Accordingly, the trial judge, on this
phase of this case, was justified in omitting any instruction to
the jury that, if the railroad used a car equipped with a coupler
that broke in the switching operation, it thereby violated the
Safety Appliance Acts.
In our view, the separating of the cars at the broken coupler
was properly treated as material evidence from which the jury could
infer that the railroad had violated the prohibition of the Acts
against using cars
"not equipped with couplers coupling automatically by impact,
and which can be uncoupled without the necessity of men going
between the ends of the cars. [
Footnote
2/3]"
Vigor v. Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co., 101 F.2d 865.
Cf. Johnson v. Southern Pacific Co., 196 U. S.
1. The jury was adequately instructed to that
effect.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Supra, p.
338 U. S.
389.
[
Footnote 2/2]
36 Stat. 298, 45 U.S.C. § 11.
[
Footnote 2/3]
27 Stat. 531, 45 U.S.C. § 2.