Baughman v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad

259 N.W. 897, 271 Mich. 244, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 803
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1935
DocketDocket No. 54, Calendar No. 38,063.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 897 (Baughman v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baughman v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad, 259 N.W. 897, 271 Mich. 244, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 803 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Btttzel, J.

Plaintiff was awarded compensation at the rate of $14 a week by the department of labor and industry, on review of an award by the deputy commissioner denying compensation. In discussing the case we limit ourselves solely to questions raised by appellant in its denial of liability and in the statement of questions involved in its brief. The principal question is whether plaintiff at the time of his injury was engaged in intrastate commerce and is therefore entitled to recover under the compensation act of this State (2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 8407 et seq.), or whether he was engaged in interstate commerce and is accordingly limited to proceedings under the Federal employers’ liability act (45 USCA, §§ 51-59). Plaintiff was employed by defendant as a switchman. He belonged to a crew of five, which included an engineer and fireman who ran the engine-, and a conductor who gave directions, all engaged in the switching of cars on defendant’s tracks in Lansing, Michigan. At the place where it is alleged the accident occurred, there is a main track and also two side tracks used for the purpose of storing a large number of empty freight cars. Plaintiff’s hours of work were from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. According to his testimony, on September 23, 1926, at 3:45 or 4 p. m., he was disconnecting an empty box car, the only car then attached to the engine on the main track, for the purpose of placing it on the storage tracks, there to remain until needed. He signaled the engineer, and while attempting to get on the engine so as to release the car and shunt it back to the storage tracks, his foot slipped and was caught in the loose gravel alongside the track. In attempting to extricate his foot he twisted and *247 ■wrenched the knee so badly as to put it out of joint. He nevertheless completed the movement of releasing the car, which rolled up onto the storage track, and he then got off the engine and closed and locked the switch. Plaintiff alleges that this was the only car he had anything to do with at the time of the accident; that the storage track at that time was already half full of empty cars awaiting consignment. He continued to work until quitting time, although he had but little to do the balance of the afternoon. He failed to mention the accident to the conductor, or to other members of the crew, but reported it to the yardmaster the following day.

Notwithstanding considerable question as to whether plaintiff actually suffered the injury claimed, there is sufficient testimony, by which we are bound on certiorari, showing that plaintiff did suffer a compensable injury at the time claimed, was confined to his bed for á considerable period, and is totally disabled from resuming his former occupation as switchman.

The important question is whether plaintiff was engaged in interstate commerce at the time of the alleged injury. It is defendant’s contention that the injury occurred during the last operation of the day, in which Northern Pacific car 5006 was being moved from the storage track for the purpose of spotting it at the Reo plant, where it was to be loaded with automobiles consigned to Winnipeg, Manitoba; that the car in question was the last of a string of 18 cars standing on the storage track, which were brought onto the main line, where plaintiff uncoupled the Northern Pacific car 5006; that plaintiff’s injury occurred while he was stepping on the engine in order to uncouple it from the remaining 17 cars, which were to be returned to the storage track; and that after the engine had been uncoupled, *248 the Northern Pacific car was shoved down to the Reo plant, where it was loaded with automobiles and shipped two days later to Winnipeg, Manitoba. If Northern Pacific car 5006 was purposely selected and brought from the storage tracks for the predetermined purpose of taking it to the Reo plant, there to be loaded and sent to Winnipeg, Manitoba, then the moment it left the storage track to begin its scheduled journey to Winnipeg, it began a movement in interstate commerce; and if plaintiff was injured while assisting in this particular movement, his remedy would lie under the Federal employers’ liability act (45 USCA, § 51 et seq.). The movement of the car would be the first step in its transportation to its ultimate destination outside the State. Louisville & Nashville B. Co. v. Parker, 242 U. S. 13 (37 Sup. Ct. 4); Philadelphia & Reading R. Co. v. Hancock, 253 U. S. 284 (40 Sup. Ct. 512); Bogers v. Railway Co., 246 Mich. 399.

On the other hand, if it be true, as claimed by plaintiff, that the injury occurred in an entirely different movement, while he was uncoupling a single empty box car from an engine on the main track, in order to place the car on the storage track, where it was to remain until needed, then plaintiff was not engaged in interstate commerce at the time of his injury, and he would be entitled to recover under the State compensation act.

It therefore becomes necessary to determine in which particular movement plaintiff was engaged at the time of his injury. Although defendant presented a great deal of testimony to the effect that the last operation of the day was the switching out of Northern Pacific car 5006, as described above, and that this car was consigned to Winnipeg, defendant produced no competent evidence to show that plaintiff was engaged in that particular move *249 ment at the time of his injury. The testimony which defendant did offer on this latter question was largely hearsay and incompetent. Bruce Snyder, conductor of the switching crew and in charge of the operation in which defendant claims the alleged accident occurred, stated that the particular movement being made at the time plaintiff claims to have been injured was the switching out of Northern Pacific car 5006, consigned to Winnipeg; that this was the last operation of the day. Snyder admitted, however, that he did not know about plaintiff’s injury until he heard about it the following day, and that his information came from the yardmaster. James Wilson, claim agent of defendant company, was also called, but his testimony was incompetent almost in its entirety. It was based exclusively on an investigation of the accident, made by him some four months after it occurred, the results of which he had incorporated in a written report. This report, introduced in evidence, describes the last operation which took place on the day when plaintiff claims to have been injured, and states that the injury occurred during this movement according to the story alleged to have been related on the following day by plaintiff to the yardmaster, from whom Wilson obtained the information. Wilson could not tell of his own knowledge whether plaintiff’s injury occurred during this last operation of the day, or earlier as plaintiff had testified, but admitted that his information on this particular question was obtained from the yardmaster and the yard foreman. The testimony shows that the yardmaster, William Reed, was in Battle Creek at the time of the hearing, but he was not called as a witness.

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Related

Baughman v. Grand Trunk Western Railroad
268 N.W. 815 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 897, 271 Mich. 244, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baughman-v-grand-trunk-western-railroad-mich-1935.