Erie R. v. Connors

261 F. 303, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1768
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1919
DocketNo. 3245
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 F. 303 (Erie R. v. Connors) 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. v. Connors, 261 F. 303, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1768 (6th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

WARRINGTON, Circuit Judge.

James B. Connors commenced action against the railroad company in the common pleas court of Ma-honing county, Ohio, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained while in the employ of the company and through its negligence. On petition of the company the case was removed to the court below, where the company answered, and upon trial before court and jury a verdict of $22,000- was rendered, and judgment was entered thereon in favor of Connors. The company prosecutes error.

Plaintiff received his injuries in a roundhouse of the company at Cleveland. He is a machinist, and at the time of the injury was in a pit under one of the defendant’s passenger engines, and, pursuant to order of his foreman, engaged in tightening certain “engine truck jaw bolts.” While plaintiff was thus engaged, and standing between a truck axle and the end of an air brake piston, seemingly “turned side[304]*304ways” with reference to the line of the piston, another employe, an. inspector, caused his ‘helper to apply the air through manipulation of a lever in the' cab of the engine, and for the purpose of testing the air brakes. It resulted, according to some of the testimony, that plaintiff was caught between the axle and the end of. the moving piston, at and about the_-small of his back, and severely injured. Although the inspector says he knew plaintiff was about the engine shortly before the accident, yet it is reasonably plain that he had no actual knowledge of plaintiff’s position at the time he directed the air to be applied, indeed, there is testimony to the effect that he did not select a point from which he could have seen the place of the accident; and the testimony is conflicting as to plaintiff’s knowledge that it was then intended to set the air brakes, plaintiff testifying positively that he did not know of any purpose to apply the air, at least until he was caught and injured.

Whether the situation thus in substance described signified negligence, which in view of the pleadings and the law would support the action, depends upon certain statutory conditions which will presently be considered. The applicable features of negligence charged in the petition in substance are: (1) Failure to exercise ordinary care toward ascertaining plaintiff’s position and either directly to apprise him or otherwise to give warning of the intent to set the brakes; and (2) failure to prescribe and enforce rules for the safety of employés working in a position about an engine where the setting of the brake would be likely to injure them. The answer denied these charges generally and averred that whatever injury plaintiff sustained was due solely to his own negligence.

[1] It is not claimed by either side that the federal Employers’ Liability Act (Act April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65 [Comp. St. §§• 8657-8665]) is applicable to the case.. The controversy as to the ap.posite rule of law arises under two statutes of the state of Ohio; one 'is called the Metzger Act and the other tire Norris Act. The Metzger Act, sometimes called locally the “Railroad Employers’ Liability Act,” is comprised-in sections 9015 to 9018 of the Ohio General-Code of 1910 (4 Page & Adams’ Ann; Ed. pp. 460-468).1 The Norris Act is comprised in sections 6242 to 6245 — 1 of the Ohio General Code of 1910 (3 P. & A. Ann. Ed. pp. 382-384).2 In attempting [305]*305to ascertain the legislative intent with respect to these two lines of legislation, it is helpful to consider the common purpose of the original statutes, as just pointed out, to enlarge the rights of employés, and the preservation of this purpose when the statutes were grouped and given ultimate form in the General Code; for the question at last is whether the provisions do not disclose relationship of controlling importance here, in spite of the varying dates of enactment of the prior statutes and their separate grouping later in different chapters of the Code.

Counsel for the company insist that the Metzger Act originated prior to the Norris Act, and is special in the sense that it relates only to railways, while the Norris Act is a general statute, and that the acts are in consequence to be so interpreted as to treat the special statute as an exception to the general statute, relying, for instance, on Gas Co. v. Tiffin, 59 Ohio St. 420, 441, 54 N. E. 77, and Doll v. Bar, 58 Ohio St. 113, 120, 50 N. E. 434. Stated in another way, the insistence is that the Metzger Law is exclusive in operation and affords no relief in a case like the instant one. That law concerns defects in railway rolling stock and tracks, which result in injuries to employes while engaged in operating trains, and also railway liability as respects negligence of fellow servants, assumption of risk, and contributory negligence. A synopsis of the sections comprising the law is set out in the margin.3 If, then, it be recalled that plain[306]*306tiff’s injury was not caused by a defect in rolling stock or track and not received by him while engaged in the operation of a train, it is plain enough — indeed, it is in effect conceded — that he possessed no right to recover at all unless he was within the protection of the Norris Act, and whether he was so protected is a vital question.4

It is to be observed that the portion of' the Metzger Act which is included in section 9016 of the General Code imposes liability for negligence of a railroad company or any of its officers or employés, “in addition to other liability,” thus indicating that it was not the legislative design that this act should be the sole source of a statutory right of recovery, but, on the contrary, that there was other existing statutory provision intended to protect railway employés, as well as employés in other occupations, against negligence of their employers. -Responsive provision in this behalf is to be found, we think, in the Norris Act, which in most comprehensive terms authorizes recovery in actions between employés and employers for personal injuries, “in’ addition to the liability now existing by law.” 5 This becomes plain when some of the terms 6f that act are applied to the facts already stated. Section 6242, as just shown, provides that an employé having control of employés either in the particular department in which an injury occurs or in a separate department, also that an employé whose duty it is to inspect machinery used m the business of the employer or to give warning to or for employés, “shall be held to be tlie superior and not the fellow servant of. such other employés of such employer.” To give this language concrete application, it is perfectly plain that Inspector Collins was the superior of Machinist Connors, the plaintiff; for it distinctly appears [307]*307that Collins was an inspector, and, besides, was in control of the helper to whom he gave the order to set the air brake piston in motion; and this is true whether the department in which the inspector was working be regarded as the department in which plaintiff was working, or as a separate department. It is scarcely necessary to add that the statutory provisions just mentioned are distinguishable from the provision of the Metzger Act respecting superior servants, for the latter provision would seem to be inapplicable by reason of the fact that plaintiff Júmself had a helper (see section 9016).

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Bluebook (online)
261 F. 303, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-r-v-connors-ca6-1919.