Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Co. v. Anchors

73 S.E. 551, 10 Ga. App. 322, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1912
Docket3479
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 551 (Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Co. v. Anchors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Co. v. Anchors, 73 S.E. 551, 10 Ga. App. 322, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 489 (Ga. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Powell, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

The sole question involved is whether the act of Congress of April 22, 1908, known as the Federal “employer’s liability act,” applies to this transaction. That statute, by its terms, relates only to liability of carriers by railroad “ while engaged in commerce between any of the several States” to persons “while employed by such carrier in such commerce.” It will be called to mind that the prior act of Congress on the same subject (the act of 1906) was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in Howard v. Illinois Central R. Co., 207 U. S. 463 (52 L. ed. 297), on the ground that it applied to all carriers who were generally engaged in interstate commerce, as to all employees, whether the carrier and the employee were at the time of the injury actually engaged with commerce of that character or not. The present law was enacted with its limitations with the special object in view of cutting out the constitutional objection for which the prior law had been declared invalid. The present law emphasizes three things which must concur before its provisions are applicable: (1) the railroad company in question must engage in interstate commerce; (2) it must at the time of the injury in question be engaging in that character of commerce, as contradistinguished from such purely local matters as it may also engage in; (3) the injured servant must also at the time of receiving his injury be engaging in interstate commerce. That the carrier in this case was generally engaged in interstate commerce is not in question. The remaining questions are whether, at the time the injury complained of was [325]*325received, it was engaging in interstate commerce, and whether the injured employee was engaging in that character of commerce at that time. To narrow the point a little more, the concrete question is whether the work of repairing a defective rail in a track over which a railroad company carries on its transportation, both local and interstate, is of itself an act of engaging in interstate commerce.

It is very difficult to impose the limitations of a definition upon the word “commerce” as used in the Federal constitution. How this_ term, which originally was considered as almost synonymous in .meaning with the word “ trade,” has been enlarged so as to include contracts, transportation, ways, means, and agencies, and even instrumentalities by which commercial intercommunications are carried on, is a matter of legal history. Still, with all of its enlargement of meaning, the word “commerce” has its limitations, and there are some things which, though touching the field of commercial operation, do not enter into it in such a way as to become of themselves a part of the commerce. The insuring of articles intended for interstate transportation is a matter which touches interstate commerce, but is not commerce within the purview of the constitution. Paul v. Virginia, 75 U. S. (8 Wall.) 168 (19 L. ed. 973); Hooper v. California, 155 U. S. 49 (39 L. ed. 297); Nutting v. Moss, 183 U. S. 553 (46 L. ed. 634). To manufacture goods with the intention of devoting them to interstate commerce is not interstate commerce. U. S. v. Knight Co., 156 U. S. 1 (39 L. ed. 325). In the case of Kidd v. Pearson, 128 U. S. 1 (32 L. ed. 346), in which it is held that a State may prohibit the manufacture of intoxicating liquors within its borders, notwithstanding that the manufacturer intends to use the liquors only for exportation beyond the borders of the State, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Lamar, draws the distinction between manufacture and commerce thus: “No distinction is more popular to the common mind, or more clearly expressed in economic and political literature, than that between manufactures and commerce. Manufacture is transformation — the fashioning of raw materials into a change of form for use. The functions of commerce are different. The buying and selling and the transportation incidental thereto constitute commerce; and the regulation of commerce in the constitutional sense embraces the regulation at least of such transportation. The

[326]*326legal definition of the term as given by this court in County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S. 691, 702 [26 L. ed. 238, 241], is as follows: Commerce with foreign Nations and among the States, strictly considered, consists in intercourse and traffic, including in these terms navigation and the transportation and transit of persons and property, as well as the purchase, sale, and exchange of commodities.’ If it be held that the term includes the regulation of all such manufactures as are intended to be the subject of commercial transactions in the future, it is impossible to deny that it would also include all productive industries that contemplate the same thing. The result would be that Congress would be invested, to the exclusion of the States, with the power to regulate, not only manufactures, but also agriculture, horticulture, stock raising, domestic fisheries, mining — in short, every branch of human industry. For is there one of them that does not contemplate, more or less clearly, an interstate or foreign market? Does not the wheat grower of the Northwest, and the cotton planter of the South, plant, cultivate, and harvest his crop with an eye on the prices at Liverpool, New York, and Chicago? The power being vested in Congress and denied to the State, it would follow as an inevitable result that the duty would devolve on Congress to regulate all of these delicate, multiform, and vital interests — interests which in their nature are, and must be, local in all' the details of their successful management.” Again, in Coe v. Errol, 116 U. S. 517 (29 L. ed. 715), the court held that logs cut in the woods and brought to the landing for the purpose of being transported in interstate commerce did not thereby become a subject of interstate commerce.

From these and other cases of the Supreme Court of the United States along the same line, it is clear that a distinction is observed between preparing to engage in interstate commerce and in engaging in interstate commerce. As was pointed out by the United States Supreme Court in Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465, 481 (31 L. ed. 508), “it is to be remembered that railroads'are not natural highways of trade and commerce; they are artificial creations; they are constructed within the territorial limits of the State and by the authority of its laws, and ordinarily bv means of corporations exercising their franchises by limited grants from the State.” And, as the opinion of the court in that case goes on to point out, there are many matters relating to the preparation of a [327]*327railroad company to engage in interstate commerce which are of a purely local nature, and are not of themselves a part of interstate commerce. From the reasoning and from the illustrations given in the case of Howard v. Illinois Central R.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 551, 10 Ga. App. 322, 1912 Ga. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charleston-western-carolina-railway-co-v-anchors-gactapp-1912.