Carey v. N.Y.C.R.R. Co.

165 N.E. 805, 250 N.Y. 345, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 888
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 165 N.E. 805 (Carey v. N.Y.C.R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey v. N.Y.C.R.R. Co., 165 N.E. 805, 250 N.Y. 345, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 888 (N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

The action is under the Federal Employers' Liability Act to recover damages for negligence resulting in death.

Carey, an engineer in the service of defendant, was taking a string of coopered cars from the defendant's yard in Buffalo to another yard or junction. The cars were to be sent from the junction to the Buffalo grain elevators, where they were to be held in readiness for expected orders for the movement of grain. In switching the cars at the junction from the main track to a side one, Carey was killed. The question is whether he was engaged, when injured, in interstate commerce.

Buffalo is one of the great grain ports of the world. The grain that comes there through the Great Lakes is transferred into elevators until forwarded beyond. *Page 348 The place in Buffalo where these elevators have been built is known as Burroughs Lot. How long the grain may be left there after it has been lifted from the vessel, the record does not show. Very often, perhaps generally, it is discharged from the elevator at once, to be carried in cars to the seaboard or to intermediate points. We take judicial notice of the fact that this is by no means the invariable practice. There are times when it is kept in storage at the elevators to be reconditioned for the owners or held for higher prices (cf. Shafer v. FarmersGrain Co., 268 U.S. 189, 192). The course of dealing in that regard will be traced at greater length hereafter. As to the place of origin of the grain, much, of course, will depend upon the location of the terminal. So far as the Buffalo elevators are concerned, the evidence is that all the grain there elevated, whether in transit or for storage, is brought from other States or countries. At active seasons, as in the fall movement of the crops, hundreds of cars leave the elevators in a day. In the slack season, as in June when Carey met his death, the cars are comparatively few. Movement begins in every instance at the Pennsylvania yard, which alone among the railroads has tracks contiguous to the terminals. When shipments are to be made to points on other lines, the Pennsylvania agent gives notice to the appropriate line to send the needed cars. Shipment is made at the elevators upon the cars of the line over whose route the grain is to be carried. This line collects the freight, and accounts to the Pennsylvania for the haul within the switching limits.

On June 9, 1927, at 3:45 P.M., the Pennsylvania agent at Burroughs Lot telephoned to the defendant for ten coopered cars. No orders had then been received for the shipment of grain over the defendant's line. The agent, instructed by experience, believed that orders would come in, and wished to have the cars at hand in order to avoid delay. They were surplus equipment in *Page 349 anticipation of approaching needs. Of the ten cars dispatched by the defendant in response to this request, two were disabled when Carey was killed in a collision. The other eight arrived at Burroughs Lot on June 10, and were held awaiting orders. One other car belonging to the defendant was already on the spot. There is no occasion to enumerate the cars of other lines.

We have said that no orders had come in when the ten cars were requested of the defendant in anticipation of approaching needs. Some orders did come in, however, later in the day, one for a shipment from an elevator to Fairton, New Jersey, the other for a shipment to Batavia, New York. Since the cars were not collected till after 8 P.M., the inference is not unreasonable that before they left the yard, the two orders had been received by the agent at Burroughs Lot. The grain billed to Fairton, New Jersey, was placed the same day on the car already at the elevator. The grain destined for Batavia was placed on one of the eight cars arriving on June 10, two cars, it will be recalled, having been disabled on the way. The record does not tell us to whom this grain belonged, or how long it had been in storage before being loaded at the yard. After the shipment to Batavia, there remained seven of the defendant's cars, which moved at later dates. One, loaded on June 11, was billed to the Buffalo Flour Mills, at Buffalo, New York. The other six were loaded with grain belonging to B.F. Schwartz Co., and were billed on June 14, some to New York city, and some to Weehawken, New Jersey. Schwartz Company became the owners of this grain on June 9 while it was in transit on the Lakes, and gave orders for its reshipment on its delivery at the port.

The disposition of the cars has now been traced from the time of their arrival at the Pennsylvania yard. The question is still unanswered whether in their movement to that yard they were in interstate or local commerce. For this there is need that other data be before us. Contracts *Page 350 for the carriage of grain over the waters of the Lakes describe the elevators at Buffalo as the point of destination. The grain is at rest, so far as the form of the documents discloses, when lifted from the vessel. Even so, the form is not conclusive if there has persisted an intention to move the grain forward in a transit substantially continuous, the halt at the elevators being merely "a convenient step in the process of getting it to its final destination" (Binderup v. Pathe Exchange, 263 U.S. 291,309; B. O.S.W.R.R. Co. v. Settle, 260 U.S. 166, 170, 173;Chicago Bd. of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U.S. 1, 33; Flanagan v.Federal Coal Co., 267 U.S. 222; Cott v. Erie R.R. Co.,231 N.Y. 67; cert. denied, 257 U.S. 636). The case for the plaintiff has been argued on the assumption that there is always that intention, or that exceptions are so extraordinary that they may be put aside as unimportant. But the difficulty is that the assumption is unsupported by the record. We are not informed by the evidence what proportion of the grain is received for transfer and what proportion held in storage. The burden is on the plaintiff to bring the case within the statute (Osborne v.Gray, 241 U.S. 16). If we turn, however, from the record and refer to public documents within the orbit of judicial notice, we see that there are other activities, such as reconditioning and storage, which are functions of these terminals, besides the furtherance of transit. Much information is to be gathered from volume III of a report of the Federal Trade Commission on the Grain Trade, and particularly on the subject of Terminal Grain Marketing (Publications U.S. Federal Trade Commission, December 21, 1921).

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Bluebook (online)
165 N.E. 805, 250 N.Y. 345, 1929 N.Y. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-nycrr-co-ny-1929.