Erie R. Co. v. Kane

118 F. 223, 14 Ohio F. Dec. 193, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4515
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1902
DocketNo. 944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 118 F. 223 (Erie R. Co. v. Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erie R. Co. v. Kane, 118 F. 223, 14 Ohio F. Dec. 193, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4515 (6th Cir. 1902).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

i. The plaintiff in error requested the lower court to give to the jury two instructions, in these words:

“No. 1. The court says to you, as a matter of law, that, upon the evidence introduced upon this trial, the plaintiff’s decedent, Thomas Kane, a fireman upon one engine and with one train crew, was, at the time of the accident complained of in this case, a fellow servant with Bowker, the engineer of another engine, with another train crew, whose negligence, it is claimed in this case, was the proximate cause of the accident resulting in Kane’s death, and that therefore the plaintiff cannot recover in this case, and you should return a verdict in favor of the defendant railroad company.”
“No. 10. The court instructs you that the plaintiff cannot be entitled to recover in this case unless you shall find from the evidence introduced in this trial that the engineer, Bowker, had charge or control of other employés of the company; and, if you conclude that the plaintiff has failed to show that fact by a preponderance of the evidence, she cannot recover in this case, and you should return a verdict in favor of the defendant railroad.”

It refused to give either one of these instructions, and, on the contrary, instructed the jury that Bowker was not the. fellow servant of the decedent. The refusal to give these instructions was duly excepted to, and has been assigned as error. The lower court so acted because it was of the opinion that the second clause of the third section of an act of the legislature of Ohio passed April 2, 1890 (87 Ohio Laws, p. 150), as construed by the supreme court of Ohio in the case of Railroad Co. v. Margrat, 51 Ohio St. 130, 37 N. E. 11, applied to this case. That section is in these words:

“That in all actions against tbe railroad company for personal injury to or death resulting from personal injury of any person, while in the employ of such company, arising from the negligence of such company or any of its officers or employés, it shall be held, in addition to the liability now existing by law, that every person in the employ of such company, actually having power or authority to direct or control any other employé of such company, is. not the fellow-servant, but superior of such other employé; also, that every person in the employ of such company having charge or control of employés in any separate branch or department shall be held to be the superior and not fellow-servant of employés in any other branch or department who have no power to direct or control in the branch or department in which they are employed.”

[226]*226The syllabus of the Margrat Case, which was prepared by the court, and expresses the law thereof, is in these words:

“(1) An engineer in charge of a locomotive on one train of cars of a railroad company is in a branch or department of its service separate from that of a brakeman on another train of the same company, within the meaning of the terms ‘separate branch or department,’ as those terms are employed in section 8 of the act of April 2, 1890 (87 Ohio Laws, p. 150).
“(2) An engineer in charge of a locomotive, who has authority to direct or control a fireman serving on the same locomotive, is a superior within the meaning of the above-named section.
“(3) Whether an engineer or other employs of a railroad company has authority to direct or control other employés of the same company is a question of fact to be determined in each case. This may be done, however, either by proof of express authority, or by showing the exercise of such authority to be customary, or according to the usual course of conducting the business of the particular company interested, or of railroads generally.”

In the opinion, Judge Bradbury presents the reasoning upon which these conclusions were founded, in these words:

“The relation of superior and subordinate, however, did not actually exist between Margrat and the engineer by whose negligence he was injured; for, as we have seen, the latter had no authority to command or direct the former in discharging his duties. But the statute, we think, declares that relation to exist, as matter of law, for the purpose of charging the company, if the engineer was the superior of—that is, was authorized to command or direct—any co-employé whatever, and Margrat was without such authority. They must have been in ‘separate’ branches or departments of the company’s service, for the section so declares. The section, however, makes no attempt to define the terms ‘departments’ and ‘branches,’ but these terms should not be limited so as to embrace merely those large divisions created for convenience in administering the affairs of the company. On the contrary, it is more reasonable to suppose that they relate to those minute ones which concern the daily duties of the employés. Those terms are general and comprehensive, but, as the legislature discloses no purpose, in this connection, to regulate the internal affairs of a railway company, it should not be presumed to refer to divisions of its business made for its own ends; and, if not to such divisions, what divisions could it mean, but those which divide up the employés while in actual service? The section expressly declares a purpose to enlarge the remedy of the employés for accidents occurring in the course of their employment. This declaration emphasizes the presumption that the terms under consideration should be construed as referring to conditions affecting them, rather than to those which are established by the company for its own purposes. Without pursuing the matter further, we hold that, under the section of the statute under consideration, an engineer on one train is in a separate branch of the company’s service from that of a brakeman of another train belonging to the same company.”

The facts of the case were these: The train to which the plaintiff brakeman belonged was being coupled to two cars in the yard of the railroad company at Deshler, Ohio. Whilst he was proceeding along a parallel track to reach the place of coupling," he was negligently run into by a locomotive manned by an engineer and fireman. Whether the plaintiff’s train had come in off the road, and it was the intention for it, after the coupling was made, to proceed on its j'ourney, or it was a train in charge of a switching crew, and being switched in the yard, does not clearly appear. It is stated, however, that it was part of plaintiff’s duties to help switch cars in defendant’s yard at Deshler. Nor does it clearly appear that the locomotive which [227]*227ran plaintiff down belonged to the yard, or had connection with any other cars.

Counsel for plaintiff in error contend that the second clause of said statutory provision does not apply to this case, for two reasons: One is that the employé who is thereby made the constructive superior, and hence not fellow servant, of certain other employés, is one who is the actual superior of more than a single employé, 'and in this case Bowker was the actual superior of but a single employé, to wit, his fireman. The ground upon which they base this construction of the clause is in the use therein of the plural word “employés.” And it was in view thereof that instruction No. io was asked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 F. 223, 14 Ohio F. Dec. 193, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-r-co-v-kane-ca6-1902.