MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER is of the opinion that the writ of
certiorari should not be granted. Since the writ has been granted,
he would dismiss it as improvidently granted for the reasons set
forth in his opinion in
Rogers v. Missouri Pacific R. Co.,
352 U. S. 500,
352 U. S.
524.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, dissenting.
As MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS said in
Wilkerson v. McCarthy,
336 U. S. 53,
336 U. S. 68
(1949), "[t]he liability which [the FELA] imposed was the liability
for negligence." Believing that the Congress was looking to the
courts to
Page 354 U. S. 902
see that the railroads were held to strict accountability under
the Federal Employers' Liability Act [
Footnote 1] for any negligence whatever resulting in
injury to an employee, the Court has taken cases that, in ordinary
course, it would have denied as involving only particular facts,
rather than questions "of importance to the public,"
Layne
& Bowler Corp. v. Western Well Works, Inc., 261 U.
S. 387,
261 U. S. 393
(1923). As in the seamen's Jones Act [
Footnote 2] cases, the Court feels a duty under this
Federal Act to examine each case to make certain that its mandate
is honored. [
Footnote 3] There
has been no breach in this policy since its establishment soon
after the amendment of the Act in 1936. In my opinion, however, the
judgment today goes beyond the most generous interpretation that
may be given to the Act. The petitioner suffered the grevious
injury which resulted in the loss of a leg while using, as a
toilet, one of the railroad's cars standing on a switch track.
While petitioner was "answering his call of nature" in the car, it
moved slightly from a contact with two other cars that were being
switched. This contact caused some steel plates in the car to
shift, crushing petitioner's right leg.
The Court does not find a failure on the part of the railroad to
provide a safe place for the petitioner to work insofar as toilet
facilities are concerned. The railroad thus is not found negligent
in this respect. But the Court seizes upon a statement in the trial
judge's memorandum that
"There is evidence that employees sometimes used gondola cars in
lieu of toilets. The Court must assume
Page 354 U. S. 903
that this was known to the defendant."
The trial judge found, however, that the railroad could not
anticipate that this particular gondola car would be used for that
purpose because it was loaded with freight -- steel plates -- and
was standing on a track that was being used for normal switching
operations. The judge points out that petitioner himself thought
that the car was empty when he climbed into it. If the car had not
been loaded, the petitioner would not have suffered the injury
which resulted. For these reasons, the trial judge found that the
railroad could not anticipate that its employee would so use a
loaded car or that the resultant injury would occur. In addition,
the petitioner had admitted that he
"certainly [did] not feel that the yard crew was careless in any
manner. . . . This was a very easy impact, and the two standing
cars did not move over a foot, at the most."
In the light of such a record, it appears to me that negligence
could not be imputed to the railroad. Of course, if the majority is
saying that the railroad must inspect every loaded car awaiting
switching, lest an employee be using it as a toilet, then I could
easily understand the action here. But this it does not say, for it
would be not only an unrealistic, but an untenable, burden to place
on the railroad. The court cites two cases, neither of which
appears to me to be apposite. In
Rogers v. Missouri Pacific R.
Co., 352 U. S. 500,
352 U. S. 502
(1957),
"petitioner was supplied with a crude hand torch and was
instructed to burn off the weeds and vegetation along [the
railroad's track]."
The mishap occurred while he was performing these services.
There was a "likelihood that petitioner . . . would suffer just
such an injury as he did."
Id. at
352 U. S. 504.
In
Wilkerson v. McCarthy, supra, the railroad had
constructed a pit in its yards for the repair of car wheels. It was
40 feet long, 11 feet deep, and over 4 feet wide, and was under a
series of 3 or more railroad tracks. A permanent board about 22
inches wide was constructed
Page 354 U. S. 904
across the pit, and was used by the employees of the railroad to
walk across it. While there was a chain placed around a portion of
the pit, it was not sufficient to stop employees from using the
board for crossing purposes. An employee slipped on the board,
which was greasy and oily, and was injured by a fall to the bottom
of the pit. There was thus a very hazardous practice which, a jury
might find, the railroad took inadequate precautions to prohibit.
The railroad was held responsible. The practice here may be
unsanitary, but it is not foreseeably hazardous. This accident
resulted from a combination of freak circumstances, rather than
from actionable negligence.
While I was not on the Court when
Wilkerson was
decided, I fully agree with its holding, and likewise adhere to my
joining the Court in the
Rogers case. The factual
situations in those cases are far removed from the facts here. In
my opinion, the decision today extends the doctrine of these cases
far beyond any theory of liability for negligence that the Congress
intended under the Federal Employers' Liability Act.
[
Footnote 1]
35 Stat. 65, as amended, 45 U.S.C. § 51
et
seq.
[
Footnote 2]
41 Stat. 1007, 46 U.S.C. § 688.
[
Footnote 3]
Since the October Term 1949, there have been some 17 cases,
including 8 this Term, involving the sufficiency of the evidence
under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. In 15 of these cases,
we of the majority, recognizing the responsibility that the
Congress has placed on us to enforce the purpose of the Act,
entered judgment for the injured employee.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER joins,
dissenting.
The facts of this case, as summarized by District Judge Cecil,
are these:
"On October 7, 1950, Boyd R. Ringhiser, the plaintiff herein,
arose in the afternoon, made preparation to report for duty at 4:45
p.m., had a bowel movement, made a mental calculation, and thereby
set in motion a chain of events which created a result both unusual
and tragic."
"The sequence of these events is as follows: the plaintiff's
bowel movement was unsatisfactory; 'This won't do,' said he to
himself (statement made by plaintiff at trial, but ordered
stricken); he took a
Page 354 U. S. 905
dose of salts and washed it down with sweet cider; he got in his
car and drove to Parson's Yard, the switching yard of the
defendant, and had a bowel movement at the roundhouse. He then got
on his engine and maneuvered it to track twelve, where it was
coupled on to a train scheduled for Walbridge Yard at Toledo. While
sitting in his engine waiting for his air brake test, he had an
urgent call of nature and 'had to go quick.' He dismounted from his
locomotive cab to go to a toilet a short distance west. A long
train of empties passed between him and the object of his immediate
attention. He could not wait for this train to pass and went to No.
8 switch track and climbed into a low-sided gondola car to answer
his call of nature. While thus engaged, a yard crew switched two
cars into No. 8 switch track. These cars came in contact with the
car ahead of plaintiff's car and it likewise came in contact with
plaintiff's car. The gondola car in which plaintiff had taken his
position was loaded with steel plates and when the cars made
contact, the plates shifted, caught plaintiff's right leg and
crushed it so that, a few days later, it had to be amputated."
On these facts I do not think the accident was a reasonably
foreseeable consequence of any act or omission of the railroad. I
therefore dissent.