1. In an action in a state court under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act, the question of the validity of a release granted to
the carrier by the injured employee is a federal question, and is
to be determined by federal, rather than state, law. Pp.
342 U. S.
361-362.
2. A release of rights under the Federal Employers' Liability
Act is void when the employee is induced to sign it by deliberately
false and material statements of the carrier's authorized
representatives, made to deceive the employee as to the contents of
the release. P.
342 U. S.
362.
3. In an action brought under the Federal Employers' Liability
Act in an Ohio state court, which provides jury trials for cases
arising under the Act, it was error for the judge to take from the
jury the determination of the factual questions as to whether a
release had been fraudulently obtained. Pp.
342 U. S.
362-364.
155 Ohio St. 185,
98 N.E.2d
301, reversed.
In a state court action under the Federal Employers' Liability
Act, the State Supreme Court sustained a judgment for the defendant
notwithstanding a verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff.
155 Ohio St. 185,
98 N.E.2d
301. This Court granted certiorari. 342 U.S. 811.
Reversed
and remanded, p.
342 U. S.
364.
Page 342 U. S. 360
Opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE BLACK, announced by MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS.
Petitioner, a railroad fireman, was seriously injured when an
engine in which he was riding jumped the track. Alleging that his
injuries were due to respondent's negligence, he brought this
action for damages under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, 35
Stat. 65, 45 U.S.C. § 51
et seq., in an Ohio court of
common pleas. Respondent's defenses were (1) a denial of negligence
and (2) a written document signed by petitioner purporting to
release respondent in full for $924.63. Petitioner admitted that he
had signed several receipts for payments made him in connection
with his injuries, but denied that he had made a full and complete
settlement of all his claims. He alleged that the purported release
was void because he had signed it relying on respondent's
deliberately false statement that the document was nothing more
than a mere receipt for back wages.
After both parties had introduced considerable evidence, the
jury found in favor of petitioner and awarded him a $25,000
verdict. The trial judge later entered judgment notwithstanding the
verdict. In doing so, he reappraised the evidence as to fraud,
found that petitioner had been "guilty of supine negligence" in
failing to read the release, and accordingly held that the facts
did not "sustain either in law or equity the allegations of fraud
by clear, unequivocal and convincing evidence."
* This judgment
notwithstanding the verdict was reversed by the Court of Appeals of
Summit County, Ohio, on the ground that, under federal law, which
controlled, the jury's verdict must stand because there was ample
evidence
Page 342 U. S. 361
to support its finding of fraud. The Ohio Supreme Court, one
judge dissenting, reversed the Court of Appeals' judgment and
sustained the trial court's action, holding that: (1) Ohio, not
federal, law governed; (2) under that law, petitioner, a man of
ordinary intelligence who could read, was bound by the release even
though he had been induced to sign it by the deliberately false
statement that it was only a receipt for back wages, and (3) under
controlling Ohio law, factual issues as to fraud in the execution
of this release were properly decided by the judge, rather than by
the jury. 155 Ohio St. 185,
98 N.E.2d
301. We granted certiorari because the decision of the Supreme
Court of Ohio appeared to deviate from previous decisions of this
Court that federal law governs cases arising under the Federal
Employers' Liability Act. 342 U.S. 811.
First. We agree with the Court of Appeals of Summit
County, Ohio, and the dissenting judge in the Ohio Supreme Court,
and hold that validity of releases under the Federal Employers'
Liability Act raises a federal question to be determined by
federal, rather than state, law. Congress, in § 1 of the Act,
granted petitioner a right to recover against his employer for
damages negligently inflicted. State laws are not controlling in
determining what the incidents of this federal right shall be.
Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co. v. Kuhn, 284 U. S.
44;
Ricketts v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 153 F.2d
757, 759. Manifestly the federal rights affording relief to injured
railroad employees under a federally declared standard could be
defeated if states were permitted to have the final say as to what
defenses could and could not be properly interposed to suits under
the Act. Moreover, only if federal law controls can the federal Act
be given that uniform application throughout the country essential
to effectuate its purposes.
See Garrett v. Moore-McCormack
Co., 317 U. S. 239,
317 U. S. 244,
and cases there cited. Releases and other
Page 342 U. S. 362
devices designed to liquidate or defeat injured employees'
claims play an important part in the federal Act's administration.
Compare Duncan v. Thompson, 315 U. S.
1. Their validity is but one of the many interrelated
questions that must constantly be determined in these cases
according to a uniform federal law.
Second. In effect, the Supreme Court of Ohio held that
an employee trusts his employer at his peril, and that the
negligence of an innocent worker is sufficient to enable his
employer to benefit by its deliberate fraud. Application of so
harsh a rule to defeat a railroad employee's claim is wholly
incongruous with the general policy of the Act to give railroad
employees a right to recover just compensation for injuries
negligently inflicted by their employers. And this Ohio rule is out
of harmony with modern judicial and legislative practice to relieve
injured persons from the effect of releases fraudulently obtained.
See cases collected in note, 164 A.L.R. 402-415.
See
also Union Pacific R. Co. v. Harris, 158 U.
S. 326;
Callen v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
332 U. S. 625;
Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Howard, 14 App.D.C. 262,
aff'd, 178 U. S. 178 U.S.
153;
Graham v. Atchison, T. & S.F. R. Co., 176 F.2d
819. We hold that the correct federal rule is that announced by the
Court of Appeals of Summit County, Ohio, and the dissenting judge
in the Ohio Supreme Court -- a release of rights under the Act is
void when the employee is induced to sign it by the deliberately
false and material statements of the railroad's authorized
representatives made to deceive the employee as to the contents of
the release. The trial court's charge to the jury correctly stated
this rule of law.
Third. Ohio provides, and has here accorded, petitioner
the usual jury trial of factual issues relating to negligence. But
Ohio treats factual questions of fraudulent releases differently.
It permits the judge trying a negligence case to resolve all
factual questions of fraud "other than fraud
Page 342 U. S. 363
in the
factum." The factual issue of fraud is thus
split into fragments, some to be determined by the judge, others by
the jury.
It is contended that, since a state may consistently with the
Federal Constitutional provide for trial of cases under the Act by
a non-unanimous verdict,
Minneapolis & St. Louis R. Co. v.
Bombolis, 241 U. S. 211,
Ohio may lawfully eliminate trial by jury as to one phase of fraud
while allowing jury trial as to all other issues raised. The
Bombolis case might be more in point had Ohio abolished
trial by jury in all negligence cases, including those arising
under the federal Act. But Ohio has not done this. It has provided
jury trials for cases arising under the federal Act, but seeks to
single out one phase of the question of fraudulent releases for
determination by a judge, rather than by a jury.
Compare Testa
v. Katt, 330 U. S. 386.
We have previously held that
"The right to trial by jury is 'a basic and fundamental feature
of our system of federal jurisprudence,' and that it is 'part and
parcel of the remedy afforded railroad workers under the Employers'
Liability Act.'"
Bailey v. Central Vermont R. Co., 319 U.
S. 350,
319 U. S. 354.
We also recognized in that case that to deprive railroad workers of
the benefit of a jury trial where there is evidence to support
negligence "is to take away a goodly portion of the relief which
Congress has afforded them." It follows that the right to trial by
jury is too substantial a part of the rights accorded by the Act to
permit it to be classified as a mere "local rule of procedure" for
denial in the manner that Ohio has here used.
Brown v. Western
R. Co., 338 U. S. 294.
The trial judge and the Ohio Supreme Court erred in holding that
petitioner's rights were to be determined by Ohio law, and in
taking away petitioner's verdict when the issues of fraud had been
submitted to the jury on conflicting evidence and determined in
petitioner's favor.
Page 342 U. S. 364
The judgment of the Court of Appeals of Summit County, Ohio, was
correct, and should not have been reversed by the Supreme Court of
Ohio. The cause is reversed and remanded to the Supreme Court of
Ohio for further action not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
* The trial judge had charged the jury that petitioner's claim
of fraud must be sustained "by clear and convincing evidence," but,
since the verdict was for petitioner, he does not here challenge
this charge as imposing too heavy a burden under controlling
federal law.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE REED, MR. JUSTICE
JACKSON and MR. JUSTICE BURTON join, concurring for reversal but
dissenting from the Court's opinion.
Ohio, as do many other States, [
Footnote 1] maintains the old division between law and
equity as to the mode of trying issues, even though the same judge
administers both. The Ohio Supreme Court has told us what, on one
issue, is the division of functions in all negligence actions
brought in the Ohio courts:
"Where it is claimed that a release was induced by fraud (other
than fraud in the
factum) or by mistake, it is . . .
necessary, before seeking to enforce a cause of action which such
release purports to bar, that equitable relief from the release be
secured."
155 Ohio St. 185, 186,
98 N.E.2d
301, 304. Thus, in all cases in Ohio, the judge is the trier of
fact on this issue of fraud, rather than the jury. It is contended
that the Federal Employers' Liability Act requires that Ohio courts
send the fraud issue to a jury in the cases founded on that Act. To
require Ohio to try a particular issue before a different
factfinder in negligence actions brought under the Employers'
Liability Act from the factfinder on the identical issue in every
other negligence case disregards the settled distribution of
judicial power between Federal and State courts where Congress
authorizes concurrent enforcement of federally created rights.
It has been settled ever since the
Second Employers'
Liability Cases, 223 U. S. 1, that no
State which gives its
Page 342 U. S. 365
courts jurisdiction over common law actions for negligence may
deny access to its courts for a negligence action founded on the
Federal Employers' Liability Act. Nor may a State discriminate
disadvantageously against actions for negligence under the Federal
Act as compared with local causes of action in negligence.
McKnett v. St. Louis & S.F. R. Co., 292 U.
S. 230,
292 U. S. 234;
Missouri ex rel. Southern R. Co. v. Mayfield, 340 U. S.
1,
340 U. S. 4.
Conversely, however, simply because there is concurrent
jurisdiction in Federal and State courts over actions under the
Employers' Liability Act, a State is under no duty to treat actions
arising under that Act differently from the way it adjudicates
local actions for negligence, so far as the mechanics of
litigation, the forms in which law is administered, are concerned.
This surely covers the distribution of functions as between judge
and jury in the determination of the issues in a negligence
case.
In 1916, the Court decided without dissent that States, in
entertaining actions under the Federal Employers' Liability Act,
need not provide a jury system other than that established for
local negligence actions. States are not compelled to provide the
jury required of Federal courts by the Seventh Amendment.
Minneapolis & St.L.R. Co. v. Bombolis, 241 U.
S. 211. In the thirty-six years since this early
decision after the enactment of the Federal Employers' Liability
Act, 35 Stat. 65 (1908), the
Bombolis case has often been
cited by this Court, but never questioned. Until today, its
significance has been to leave to States the choice of the
fact-finding tribunal in all negligence actions, including those
arising under the Federal Act. Mr. Chief Justice White's opinion
cannot bear any other meaning:
"Two propositions as to the operation and effect of the 7th
Amendment are as conclusively determined as is that concerning the
nature and character
Page 342 U. S. 366
of the jury required by that Amendment where applicable. (a)
That the first ten Amendments, including, of course, the 7th, are
not concerned with state action, and deal only with Federal action.
We select from a multitude of cases those which we deem to be
leading:
Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet.
243;
Fox
v. Ohio, 5 How. 410,
46 U. S.
434;
Twitchell v. Commonwealth, 7
Wall. 321;
Brown v. New Jersey, 175 U. S.
172,
175 U. S. 174;
Twining
v. New Jersey, 211 U. S. 78,
211 U. S.
93. And, as a necessary corollary, (b) that the 7th
Amendment applies only to proceedings in courts of the United
States, and does not in any manner whatever govern or regulate
trials by jury in state courts, or the standards which must be
applied concerning the same.
Livingston v. Moore, 7 Pet.
469,
32 U. S. 552;
The
Justices v. Murray, 9 Wall. 274;
Edwards v.
Elliott, 21 Wall. 532;
Walker v. Sauvinet,
92 U. S.
90;
Pearson v. Yewdall, 95 U. S.
294."
241 U.S. at
241 U. S.
217.
"And it was, of course, presumably an appreciation of the
principles so thoroughly settled which caused Congress, in the
enactment of the employers' liability act, to clearly contemplate
the existence of a concurrent power and duty of both Federal and
state courts to administer the rights conferred by the statute in
accordance with the modes of procedure prevailing in such
courts."
241 U.S. at
241 U. S.
218.
"The proposition that, as the 7th Amendment is controlling upon
Congress, its provisions must therefore be applicable to every
right of a Federal character created by Congress, and regulate the
enforcement of such right but in substance creates a confusion by
which the true significance of the Amendment is obscured. That is,
it shuts out of view the fact that the limitations of the Amendment
are applicable only to the mode in which power or jurisdiction
shall be exercised in tribunals of the
Page 342 U. S. 367
United States, and therefore that its terms have no relation
whatever to the enforcement of rights in other forums merely
because the right enforced is one conferred by the law of the
United States."
241 U.S. at
241 U. S.
219-220.
Although a State must entertain negligence suits brought under
the Federal Employers' Liability Act if it entertains ordinary
actions for negligence, it need conduct them only in the way in
which it conducts the run of negligence litigation. The
Bombolis case directly establishes that the Employers'
Liability Act does not impose the jury requirements of the Seventh
Amendment on the States
pro tanto for Employers' Liability
litigation. If its reasoning means anything, the
Bombolis
decision means that, if a State chooses not to have a jury at all,
but to leave questions of fact in all negligence actions to a
court, certainly the Employers' Liability Act does not require a
State to have juries for negligence actions brought under the
Federal Act in its courts. Or, if a State chooses to retain the old
double system of courts, common law and equity -- as did a good
many States until the other day, and as four States still do
[
Footnote 2] -- surely there is
nothing in the Employers' Liability Act that requires traditional
distribution of authority for disposing of legal issues as between
common law and chancery courts to go by the board. And, if States
are free to make a distribution of functions between equity and
common law courts, it surely makes no rational difference whether a
State chooses to provide that the same judge preside on both the
common law and the chancery sides in a single litigation, instead
of in separate rooms in the same building. So long as all
negligence suits in a State are treated in the same way, by the
same mode of disposing equitable, nonjury, and common law, jury
issues, the State does
Page 342 U. S. 368
not discriminate against Employers' Liability suits, nor does it
make any inroad upon substance.
Ohio and her sister States with a similar division of functions
between law and equity are not trying to evade their duty under the
Federal Employers' Liability Act, nor are they trying to make it
more difficult for railroad workers to recover than for those suing
under local law. The States merely exercise a preference in
adhering to historic ways of dealing with a claim of fraud; they
prefer the traditional way of making unavailable through equity an
otherwise valid defense. The State judges and local lawyers who
must administer the Federal Employers' Liability Act in State
courts are trained in the ways of local practice; it multiplies the
difficulties and confuses the administration of justice to require,
on purely theoretical grounds, a hybrid of State and Federal
practice in the State courts as to a single class of cases. Nothing
in the Employers' Liability Act or in the judicial enforcement of
the Act for over forty years forces such judicial hybridization
upon the States. The fact that Congress authorized actions under
the Federal Employers' Liability Act to be brought in State, as
well as in Federal, courts seems a strange basis for the inference
that Congress overrode State procedural arrangements controlling
all other negligence suits in a State by imposing upon State courts
to which plaintiffs choose to go the rules prevailing in the
Federal courts regarding juries. Such an inference is admissible,
so it seems to me, only on the theory that Congress included as
part of the right created by the Employers' Liability Act an
assumed likelihood that trying all issues to juries is more
favorable to plaintiffs. At least if a plaintiff's right to have
all issues decided by a jury, rather than the court, is "part and
parcel of the remedy afforded railroad workers under the Employers
Liability Act," the
Bombolis case should be overruled
explicitly, instead of left as a derelict bound to occasion
Page 342 U. S. 369
collisions on the waters of the law. We have put the questions
squarely because they seem to be precisely what will be roused in
the minds of lawyers properly pressing their clients' interests and
in the minds of trial and appellate judges called upon to apply
this Court's opinion. It is one thing not to borrow trouble from
the morrow. It is another thing to create trouble for the
morrow.
Even though the method of trying the equitable issue of fraud
which the State applies in all other negligence cases governs
Employers' Liability cases, two questions remain for decision:
should the validity of the release be tested by a Federal, or a
State, standard? And, if by a Federal one, did the Ohio courts in
the present case correctly administer the standard? If the States
afford courts for enforcing the Federal Act, they must enforce the
substance of the right given by Congress. They cannot depreciate
the legislative currency issued by Congress -- either expressly or
by local methods of enforcement that accomplish the same result.
Davis v. Wechsler, 263 U. S. 22,
263 U. S. 24. In
order to prevent diminution of railroad workers' nationally uniform
right to recover, the standard for the validity of a release of
contested liability must be Federal. We have recently said:
"One who attacks a settlement must bear the burden of showing
that the contract he has made is tainted with invalidity, either by
fraud practiced upon him or by a mutual mistake under with both
parties acted."
Callen v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 332 U.
S. 625,
332 U. S. 630.
Such proof of fraud need be only by a preponderance of relevant
evidence.
See Union Pacific R. Co. v. Harris, 158 U.
S. 326. The admitted fact that the injured worker signed
the release is material in tending to show the release to be valid,
but presumptions must not be drawn from that fact so as to hobble
the plaintiff's showing that it would be unjust to allow a formally
good defense to prevail.
See § 5, Federal
Page 342 U. S. 370
Employers' Liability Act, 35 Stat. 65, 66, 45 U.S.C. §
55.
The judgment of the Ohio Supreme Court must be reversed, for it
applied the State rule as to validity of releases, 155 Ohio St.
185,
98 N.E.2d
301, and it is not for us to interpret Ohio decisions in order
to be assured that, on a matter of substance, the State and Federal
criteria coincide. Moreover, we cannot say with confidence that the
Ohio trial judge applied the Federal standard correctly. He duly
recognized that
"the Federal law controls as to the validity of a release
pleaded and proved in bar of the action, and the burden of showing
that the alleged fraud vitiates the contract or compromise or
release rests upon the party attacking the release."
And he made an extended analysis of the relevant circumstances
of the release, concluding, however, that there was no "clear,
unequivocal and convincing evidence" of fraud. Since these elusive
words fail to assure us that the trial judge followed the Federal
test, and did not require some larger quantum of proof, we would
return the case for further proceedings on the sole question of
fraud in the release.
[
Footnote 1]
Chafee, Simpson, and Maloney, Cases on Equity (1951 ed.) 12.
[
Footnote 2]
Ibid.