Petitioner, an independent contractor in the business of
unloading gasoline, was instructed by the consignee to unload a
tank car of gasoline which had been hauled by respondent railroad
and which was located on a siding in its freight yards. While
petitioner was standing on a board attached to the car near the
dome, in order to unload the car by opening a valve inside the
dome, the board broke and petitioner fell, sustaining injuries. The
board, which was defective, was permanently fastened to the car
near the dome, and had been placed there for the purpose for which
petitioner was using it.
Held: the board as a safety appliance within the
meaning of §§ 2 and 3 of the Safety Appliance Act of
1910, and the railroad was absolutely liable for damages resulting
from petitioner's injuries. Pp.
350 U. S.
319-325.
(a) The board here involved came within the meaning of the term
"running boards" as used in § 2 of the Act, which provides
that "all cars requiring . . . secure running boards shall be
equipped with such . . . running boards." P.
350 U. S.
321.
(b) The fact that the Interstate Commerce Commission, in its
1911 regulations under § 3, has not specified uniform
standards for such running boards is not a binding administrative
determination that they are not "running boards" for the purposes
of § 2. Pp.
350 U. S.
321-322.
(c) Failure of the Commission to specify uniform standards for
such running boards under § 3 need not mean that the tank car
was not a car "requiring" such a running board within the meaning
of § 2. Pp.
350 U. S.
322-323.
(d) If such a running board is provided by a railroad or the
makers of the car and used by the railroad as an appliance
necessary for the use of the car, it must be a safe board as
required by § 2. Pp.
350 U. S.
323-324.
(e) Section 2 is not limited to such running boards as are
required only in the movement of the train. Pp.
350 U. S.
324-325.
(f) There is no merit in the railroad's contention that, since
petitioner is not one of its employees, no duty is owed him under
§ 2 of the Act. P.
350 U. S.
325.
220 F.2d 242 reversed.
Page 350 U. S. 319
MR. JUSTICE MINTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, an independent contractor in the business of
unloading gasoline, was instructed by the consignee to unload a
tank car of gasoline which had been hauled by respondent Atlantic
Coast Line and which was located at the time on a siding in
respondent's freight yards. In order to release the gasoline
through a hose attached to the bottom of the car, it was necessary
to go to the dome on top of the car, remove the dome cap, and open
a valve inside the dome. ,While petitioner and his helper were
engaged in opening the valve, the board on which they were standing
broke, and petitioner fell, sustaining injuries. There is no
dispute that the board was defective. It was a wooden board over
seven feet long attached to the side of the tank near the top just
below the dome by means of two triangular steel braces extending
from the side of the tank at either end of the board.
The question presented here is whether this device, which for
convenience we shall call a dome running board, is a safety
appliance within the meaning of §§ 2 and 3 of the Safety
Appliance Act of 1910. Act of April 14, 1910, c. 160, §§
2 and 3, 36 Stat. 298, 45 U.S.C. §§ 11 and 12.
Petitioner brought suit in the District Court, alleging in one
count of his amended complaint absolute liability for a violation
of the Act and in a second count common law negligence. The jury
returned a general verdict in his
Page 350 U. S. 320
favor. The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for a new
trial on the negligence count alone, holding that the trial court
erred in instructing that the dome running board was a safety
appliance. 220 F.2d 242. [
Footnote
1] We granted certiorari because of the importance of the
questions raised as to the proper interpretation of the Safety
Appliance Act. 350 U.S. 819.
Section 2 of the Safety Appliance Act of 1910 provides in
part:
". . . all cars requiring secure ladders and secure running
boards shall be equipped with such ladders and running boards. . .
."
Section 3 provides:
"That, within six months from the passage of this Act, the
Interstate Commerce Commission, after hearing, shall designate the
number, dimensions, location, and manner of application of the
appliances provided for by section two . . . , and thereafter said
number, location, dimensions, and manner of application as
designated by said commission shall remain as the standards of
equipment to be used on all cars subject to the provisions of this
Act, unless changed by an order of said Interstate Commerce
Commission . . . , and failure to comply with any such requirement
of the Interstate Commerce Commission shall be subject to a like
penalty as failure to comply with any requirement of this Act. . .
. [
Footnote 2]"
Under the authority of § 3, the Commission in 1911
promulgated regulations still in force providing in detail for
Page 350 U. S. 321
one running board running around the perimeter, or at least the
full length of the sides, of tank cars. [
Footnote 3] Such a board enables a trainman to walk the
length of a tank car between cars adjoining it on either end. The
regulations make no mention whatever by any name of dome running
boards. Petitioner nevertheless contends that the dome running
board is a required running board affording him protection under
§ 2.
The obvious purpose of a dome running board is to provide a
secure flooring for those who must perform operations in connection
with the tank car dome. Clearly the dome running board has major
importance in loading and unloading operations. But a railroad man
of over twenty-five years' experience testified that it also may be
used to stand on in order to pass hand signals or repair minor
troubles occurring while the train is en route. The dome running
board is an integrated part of the exterior equipment of a tank
car; [
Footnote 4] it functions
as a permanently attached outside "floor" near the dome of the car.
The testimony showed that railroad men, including respondent's
employees, often refer to the dome running board as a running
board. We hold that it comes within the meaning of the term
"running boards" as used in § 2.
The fact that the Commission, in its 1911 regulations under
§ 3, has not specified uniform standards for dome running
boards is not a binding administrative determination that they are
not running boards for the purposes of § 2. The reason for the
omission is apparently the Commission's view that only appliances
affording safety while the train is moving need be standardized.
But
Page 350 U. S. 322
there is no showing that the regulations purport to exhaust by
implication each category of statutory appliances listed in §
2. Omission of dome running boards, of itself, shows no more than
that the Commission has not standardized all possible running
boards within § 2.
Davis v. Manry, 266 U.
S. 401, is consistent with our view. There, the Court
itself interpreted the language in § 2 requiring grab irons
"on their roofs" of "cars having ladders" to apply only to cars
having roofs. It then pointed to the Commission's failure to
standardize a grab iron over a standardized ladder on a tender
without a roof only as a supporting "practical construction" of the
section. Moreover, the Commission in that case, having standardized
the ladder, had no alternative but to interpret the statutory word
"roofs" by either standardizing a grab iron or not standardizing
it. Here, no such practical construction is implied by the failure
to standardize.
Even if the dome running board be properly characterized as a
running board, respondent contends that, since § 2 refers to
"cars requiring . . . secure running boards," the Commission's
failure to standardize dome running boards under § 3
constitutes an administrative determination that they are not
required within the meaning of § 2. The purpose of § 3
was to provide uniformity in the location and characteristics of
those appliances upon which railroad men, working "always, in
haste, and often in darkness and storm," must "instinctively" rely
in the hazards of their employment.
Illinois Central R. Co. v.
Williams, 242 U. S. 462,
242 U. S. 466.
[
Footnote 5] Effectuation of
such a purpose would require standardization of running boards
which extend the length of train cars. But considerations of
administrative expertise relevant to § 3 are not equally
applicable to the effectuation of the purpose of § 2. The
Page 350 U. S. 323
purpose of the latter section was "to convert the general legal
duty of exercising ordinary care to provide" safety appliances on
cars "requiring [them] for their proper use" into a "statutory, an
absolute and imperative duty, of making them
secure.'"
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Williams, supra. The purpose of
§ 3 is to standardize the appliances required by § 2. But
it does not follow that appliances necessary and furnished for the
safe use of the car, although not standardized under § 3, are
not within the sweep of § 2. Clearly, those who work on train
cars may necessarily have to rely on the security of a dome running
board, although the purposes of that appliance may not require any
unhesitating reliance on its uniform characteristics.
In the
Williams case, supra, this Court held that the
Commission's statutory power to postpone the effective date of its
standardization regulations under § 3 did not suspend the
railroad's duty under § 2 to make appliances secure. There was
no question that the appliance in
Williams was required,
but the teaching of the case is that Commission action under §
3 does not exhaust the commands of § 2.
See also Southern
Pac. Co. v. Carson, 169 F.2d 734, holding a railroad liable
under § 2 for defects in an independent wooden club used to
help turn a brake wheel where the wheel itself complied with the
Commission's regulations, which made no mention of the club. We
conclude that failure of the Commission to standardize the dome
running board need not mean that it was not a required running
board under § 2. To hold otherwise would relieve railroads
from the absolute duty under § 2 to make safety appliances
secure whenever new appliances are adopted which have not yet been
standardized by the Commission.
Both the respondent and the manufacturer of the tank car
considered that the dome running board was required for the proper
use of the car. The railroad industry
Page 350 U. S. 324
itself has recognized that tank cars require secure dome running
boards. The Association of American Railroads safety appliance
standards, largely identical to the Interstate Commerce Commission
regulations, contain detailed uniform specifications for dome
running boards, [
Footnote 6]
and compliance with those safety standards is required for
interchange of cars between lines. [
Footnote 7] Petitioner used the dome running board not
simply because it happened to be there, but also because it had to
be there for him to perform his duties safely, and performance of
his duties was essential to the operation of the tank car. At best,
appliances standardized in Commission regulations represent the
minimum of safety equipment, and there is no prohibition of
additional safety appliances. If a dome running board is provided
by the railroad or the makers of the car and used by the railroad
as an appliance necessary for the use of the car, it must be a safe
board as required by § 2.
Cf. Texas & Pacific R. Co.
v. Rigsby, 241 U. S. 33,
241 U. S.
37.
The Commission, in a brief filed here, contends that only
appliances designed to insure safety while the train is in movement
are within § 2, and, therefore, a dome running board cannot be
a statutory running board. No case is cited to support this
construction. Nothing in the language of § 2 itself or in its
legislative history indicates that it should be read so narrowly.
Whether or not an appliance is designed to afford protection while
the train is moving may provide the Commission with an appropriate
guide for deciding which appliances should be standardized under
§ 3. But there is no reason to import such a distinction into
§ 2 in order to deny the
Page 350 U. S. 325
humane benefits of the Act to those who perform dangerous work
on train cars that are not moving. Section 2 is not limited to such
running boards as are required only in the movement of the train.
The dome running board here was required for the use of the car.
Section 2 required it to be safe, although regulations pursuant to
§ 3 had not standardized it.
There is no merit in respondent's contention that, since
petitioner is not one of its employees, no duty is owed him under
§ 2 of the Act. Having been upon the dome running board for
the purpose of unloading the car, he was a member of one class for
whose benefit that device is a safety appliance under the statute.
As to him, the violation of the statute must therefore result in
absolute liability.
Coray v. Southern Pacific Co.,
335 U. S. 520;
Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 303 U. S.
10;
Fairport, P. & E. R. Co. v. Meredith,
292 U. S. 589;
Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Layton, 243 U.
S. 617. The judgment below must be reversed, and the
judgment of the District Court reinstated.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The action against Southern Railway Co., a co-defendant, as
delivering carrier of the car was dismissed.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 3, as it appears in the United States Code, omits,
presumably as executed, the language containing the statutory
command to the Commission to make its original standardization
regulations. 45 U.S.C. § 12.
[
Footnote 3]
49 CFR §§ 131.8(b), 131.9(c), 49 CFR § 131.7
covers "Tank cars with side platforms," and contains no provision
for "running boards." The car in question here does not come within
§ 131.7.
[
Footnote 4]
See Car Builders' Cyclopedia (18th ed. 1949-1951),
249-254, especially the diagrams at 252-253, of a tank car with a
dome running board, there called a "dome platform," similar to the
present car.
[
Footnote 5]
See also H.R.Rep. No. 37, 61st Cong., 2d Sess; S.Rep.
No. 250, 61st Cong., 2d Sess. 3.
[
Footnote 6]
A.A.R. Safety Appliances for Tank Cars Built after May 1, 1917,
Car Builders' Cyclopedia (19th ed. 1953), 938, 939-942.
[
Footnote 7]
A.A.R. Code of Rules for the Interchange of Traffic (1952 ed.),
Rules 3(s)(1), 3(r)(7).
MR. JUSTICE REED, with whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR.
JUSTICE BURTON join, dissenting.
The ultimate question presented by this case is whether the
defective dome platform [
Footnote
2/1] which caused petitioner's injury is a safety appliance
within the meaning of § 2 of the Act of April 14, 1910, c.
160, 36 Stat. 298, 45 U.S.C. § 11. The Court holds that the
dome platform is a
Page 350 U. S. 326
"running board" within the meaning of § 2, and that the
tank car involved here was a car "requiring" the platform.
First, it can hardly be said that the dome platform is a running
board as that term is used in § 2 of the Act. It appears that
every device regulated by the Safety Appliance Act is principally
designed for use by, and for the protection of, trainmen while
railroad cars are in motion. Certainly there is no indication that
this legislation was meant to regulate all devices and appliances
employed on railroad cars; and there is nothing in the legislative
history upon which to base a belief that equipment designed
principally for loading and unloading cars, such as a dome
platform, was to be covered by the statute. Moreover, while a dome
platform might be loosely spoken of as a running board, it does not
appear that it falls within the technical definition of that term
as used in the trade. A running board is a "plane surface, made of
boards or special metal structure, for trainmen to walk or run on."
[
Footnote 2/2] The platform
involved here is used principally to stand on to give convenient
access to the top of the dome.
However, the principal ground upon which I dissent is aside from
the question whether a dome platform is a "running board" under
§ 2. Assuming that it is, it does not follow that the
respondent violated the Act. Pursuant to such an assumption, I will
read § 2 of the statute as though the words "dome platforms"
appear in the place of "running boards." But, even then, not
every
Page 350 U. S. 327
defective dome platform is prohibited by the statute. So far as
pertinent here, § 2 provides that "all cars requiring . . .
secure running boards [
viz., dome platforms] shall be
equipped with such. . . ." The congressional mandate, then, is
merely that railroad carriers shall provide secure dome platforms
on cars "requiring" them. No other dome platforms would be safety
appliances under this Act. Therefore, the inquiry here narrows to
whether this tank car "required" a dome platform.
Section 2 does not itself indicate any means for determining
which cars require running boards (dome platforms), and thus does
not specify which dome platforms, if any, are safety appliances.
[
Footnote 2/3] However, § 3 of
the Act provides that, within six months,
"the Interstate Commerce Commission, after hearing, shall
designate the number, dimensions, location, and manner of
application of the appliances provided for by section two of this
Act . . . , [
Footnote 2/4]"
and that those designations are to remain as railroad equipment
standards unless changed by the Commission. [
Footnote 2/5] It seems inescapable, just as a matter
of
Page 350 U. S. 328
logic, that, since § 3 gave to the Commission the duty to
determine, among other things, how many of the "required" § 2
appliances shall be used and where they shall be placed, the
Commission was thereby meant to determine which are cars
"requiring" running boards (dome platforms), and therefore which
dome platforms, if any, are safety appliances. Moreover, if it be
assumed that the statute is ambiguous on this matter, the other
alternative is to leave to the courts the determination of which
types of cars require dome platforms, or any other § 2
equipment except sill steps and hand-brakes, to be revealed
ad
hoc. The creation of such uncertainties is not to be favored.
But, in view of the existence of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, an administrative expert in the safety requirements of
the railroad industry, coupled with the explicit delegation to the
Commission by § 3 of the authority to designate the number and
location of the appliances required by § 2, it would seem
difficult to conclude anything but that Congress made railroads
responsible as insurers only for such running boards as the
Commission, not the courts, might determine are required. This
purpose of Congress is even more clear from the words of the Act
itself than it is from the Code sections, codified long after the
regulations were issued.
This leads me to examine the regulations promulgated by the
Interstate Commerce Commission pursuant to § 3 of the Act. As
previously noted, that section required the Commission to prescribe
the uniform standards applicable to the safety appliances set forth
in § 2. Nowhere in the regulations (49 CFR § 131.1
et
seq.) does the Commission prescribe dome platform equipment
for tank
Page 350 U. S. 329
cars. [
Footnote 2/6] It follows
that tank cars are not cars "requiring" dome platforms. Therefore,
the absence of such equipment on tank cars, or the presence of such
equipment in a defective condition, should not constitute a
violation of the Act. Of course, this would not mean that railroads
could with impunity employ insecure dome platforms on their tank
cars, or, for that matter, any defective equipment not covered by
the Safety Appliance Act. That Act does not supplant the basic law
of negligence, and this petitioner has preserved his right of
recovery for any negligence.
The fact that the Association of American Railroads prescribes
dome platforms for tank cars in its safety appliance standards
[
Footnote 2/7] does not suggest a
different result. The Association is not entrusted with the
enforcement of this statute or with its reach, and, while it is
commendable that it has adopted standards in this instance which
require equipment beyond that which may be covered by the Safety
Appliance Act, if I am correct as to the duties of the Commission,
the action of the Association cannot supplant the determinations of
the Commission.
This Court has never before held that railroad car equipment not
specifically required by statute or regulation can be treated as
governed by the Safety Appliance Act. That issue has been ruled
upon in accordance with this dissent in
Central Vermont R. Co.
v. Perry, 10 F.2d 132. There, the trial court had instructed
the jury affirmatively on the application of the Safety
Appliance
Page 350 U. S. 330
Act with respect to the absence of a footboard across the rear
of a tender. Without deciding whether the footboard was a running
board within the meaning of § 2 of the 1910 Act, and evidently
upon the assumption that it was, the court said:
"As the Safety Appliance Act and its supplements do not require
a footboard at the rear end of the tender of a shifting engine and
the regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission do not
require one, . . . we are of the opinion that the court erred in
its instruction to the jury."
Id. at 137.
The position herein expressed is not contrary to
Illinois
Central R. Co. v. Williams, 242 U. S. 462.
That case involved a defective handhold at the top of a ladder on a
boxcar. Section 2 of the Act provides for secure ladders on all
cars "requiring" them, and, on "all cars having ladders," it
provides for secure handholds at the top of the ladders. The Court
commented that
"A box car could not properly be used without a secure ladder,
and . . . all cars having ladders must be equipped with secure hand
holds. . . ."
Id., at
242 U. S. 464.
But I do not understand this to have been a holding by the Court
that, apart from any Interstate Commerce Commission determination,
boxcars require secure ladders. At most, the comment was a dictum,
since it was clearly not necessary to decide whether the car
involved required a secure ladder. The car had a ladder, and all
cars "having ladders shall also be equipped with secure hand holds
or grab irons on their roofs. . . ." Moreover, as later appears in
that case, the Commission had previously issued an order
designating the number, dimensions, location, and manner of
application of ladders on boxcars. While that order granted an
extension of time of five years within which to comply with the
standards therein prescribed, it nonetheless constituted a
Commission determination that boxcars
Page 350 U. S. 331
require secure ladders within the meaning of § 2. For
similar reasons,
Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Rigsby,
241 U. S. 33, is
not contrary to this dissent.
See Atchison, T. & S.F. R.
Co. v. Scarlett, 300 U. S. 471.
Finally, continuing to assume that a dome platform is a running
board under § 2, and now upon the further assumption that the
courts were meant to decide which cars require them, a dissent is
still indicated. In these circumstances, consistent with the normal
rule, great respect should be given to the interpretation of an act
by the administrative agency designated to administer it. [
Footnote 2/8] As has been observed, the
regulations of the Interstate Commerce Commission prescribing the
uniform standards applicable to § 2 safety appliances omit to
mention dome platform equipment for tank cars. Thus, the Commission
does not understand dome platforms to be "required" for tank cars
under § 2. If it had so understood, it is reasonable to
believe it would have provided standards for such equipment in its
regulations. Moreover, at the request of the Court, the Commission
advised by brief in this case that the dome platform was not even a
running board, much less a required running board. Following this
Court's ruling in
Davis v. Manry, 266 U.
S. 401, this "construction by the Commission -- the
tribunal to which the application of section 2 was entrusted and
which would be solicitous to enforce it -- " should be followed.
Id., at
266 U. S.
404-405.
For these reasons, the judgment should be affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The device involved in this case is denominated a dome platform
in the Car Builders' Cyclopedia (18th ed. 1949-1951) 253.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Car Builders' Cyclopedia (19th ed. 1953) 51. Substantially the
same definition of the term appears in each of the other eighteen
editions of this volume, the first of which was published in 1879
as "The Car-Builders' Dictionary." That edition was published so as
to alleviate the "inconvenience, confusion, and delay . . . caused
. . . by want of common names for the different parts of (railroad)
cars." Preface, The Car-Builder's Dictionary (1879).
See
also 350
U.S. 318fn2/1|>note 1,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Section 2 does, however, specify which cars require sill steps
and handbrakes. "
All cars must be equipped with secure
sill steps and efficient hand brakes. . . ." (Italics supplied.)
Assuming that "sill steps" and "hand brakes" include all devices
falling within those terms when used generically, it would seem
that all such devices are safety appliances, and and must meet the
statutory standard of "secure" or "efficient."
Cf. Southern
Pac. Co. v. Carson, 169 F.2d 734.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The quoted phrase does not appear in 45 U.S.C. § 12, the
Code section corresponding to § 3 of the Act. The phrase
evidently was omitted from the Code as being fully executed at the
time the Code was compiled.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Act became law on April 14, 1910. Thus, the Commission had
until October 13, 1910, within which to adopt its standardizing
regulations. Such regulations were adopted on October 13, 1910, by
Commission order. Subsequently, on March 13, 1911, the Commission
adopted another order superseding the order of October 13, 1910. 49
CFR § 131.1
et seq. However, the effective date of
the mandate of § 2 was, by its terms, not until July 1, 1911,
over three months after the final promulgation of the Commission
regulations. There was thus no time lag, either actual or
contemplated, between the effective date of § 2 and the ICC
determinations.
[
Footnote 2/6]
49 CFR §§ 131.8(b) and 131.9(c) are the only
regulations relating to running boards on tank cars, and it is
clear, as well as conceded, that those subsections do not require a
running board of any sort at or near the dome of these cars.
[
Footnote 2/7]
A.A.R. Safety Appliances for Tank Cars Built after May 1, 1917,
Car Builders' Cyclopedia (19th ed. 1953) 939-942; A.A.R. Code of
Rules for the Interchange of Traffic (1952 ed.), Rules 3(s)(1),
3(r)(7).
[
Footnote 2/8]
United States v. American Trucking Assns., 310 U.
S. 534,
310 U. S.
549.