Killes v. Great Northern Railway Co.

161 P. 69, 93 Wash. 416, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1218
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1916
DocketNo. 13481
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 P. 69 (Killes v. Great Northern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Killes v. Great Northern Railway Co., 161 P. 69, 93 Wash. 416, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1218 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Morris, C. J.

Appeal from a judgment in favor of respondent upon verdict in his favor. The action was brought under the Federal employers’ liability act, and the first question to be determined is whether or not respondent was, at the time of his injury, engaged in interstate commerce and, therefore, within the act. If he was not so engaged, then this action must fail.

Respondent was employed by appellant as a laborer. On the day in question, he was directed to go down to appellant’s [417]*417freight shed, in which interstate commerce was handled, and paint or whitewash the ceiling of the shed. For this purpose a scaffold was to be erected upon which respondent and those engaged with him were to stand while applying the paint. Arriving at the shed, respondent and two others, Wood and Casey, were directed by McGinity, the foreman in charge, to build the scaffold out of four-by-fours laid across the main rafters of the shed about thirteen feet above the floor. Upon these four-by-fours, two-by-ten planks were to be laid, but not nailed, as it would be necessary to move the planks as the work progressed. After directing them how to build the scaffold, McGinity showed them a pile of lumber out in the yard from which the necessary timber for the scaffold was to be procured. Wood, Casey and respondent thereupon proceeded to build the scaffold.

At the time of the accident, respondent was up on the scaffold putting the planks in place, and Wood and Casey were below passing them up. Wood noticed that one of the four-by-fours already in place was showing signs of breaking, and he and Casey went out to the pile of lumber and obtained another timber to place under the defective four-by-four as a brace. This was done, and while the brace was being held in place by the men below, Wood directed respondent to nail its upper end to the four-by-four. Respondent proceeded to do so, kneeling upon a plank, when the four-by-four broke and he fell to the floor. These facts will be sufficient to determine the question suggested.

Respondent, having resisted a removal of his case to the Federal courts upon his right to sue in the state court under the Federal statute, elected as between a right of action at common law and one under the Federal act and must abide by his election as fixing the law of the case. Baird v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 78 Wash. 67, 138 Pac.. 325.

The freight shed itself, as a storehouse and place for the handling of interstate commerce, is conceded by appellant to [418]*418be an instrumentality made use of in interstate commerce, but it does not follow that the building of a scaffold to be used in the painting of an interstate commerce freight shed bears such a relation to the movement of interstate freight, or is such an integral or necessary part thereof, as to make such work fall within any definition or test of interstate commerce that has up to this time been announced. In Horton v. Oregon-Washington R. & Nav. Co., 72 Wash. 503, 130 Pac. 897, 47 L. It. A. (N. S.) 8, we reviewed the cases then reported to determine a practical test to apply to cases that would fall within the act, and reached the conclusion that the employment of the injured servant must be in connection with some instrumentality used in interstate commerce, and that the relation of the employment to interstate commerce must be such that an injury to the servant tended to hinder or delay the movement of trains engaged in such commerce. We sustained the action as within the act in that case upon the theory that an employee whose duty it was to attend a pumping plant furnishing necessary water to interstate trains was employed in furthering the movement of interstate traffic as much as the fireman who stoked the engine, the switchman moving oil for us,e in an interstate engine, or the servant who repaired the engine or cars; and that in going to his employment by the means supplied by the master, he was under the protection of the act to the same extent as the fireman passing from one phase of his employment to another, in each of which cases the action has been sustained. Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Maerkl, 198 Fed. 1; Lamphere v. Oregon R. & Nav. Co., 196 Fed. 336; Montgomery v. Southern Pac. R. Co., 64 Ore. 597, 131 Pac. 507, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 13.

We again passed upon the character of employment necessary to bring the servant under the Federal act in Bolch v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R. Co., 90 Wash. 47, 155 Pac. 422, where a switchman was injured while engaged in the removal of cars from one repair track to another, and sustained the action because of testimony that one of the cars being [419]*419moved was loaded with lumber destined for transportation to the state of South Dakota. We there reasoned that the interstate transportation to which this car was thén devoted was not ended merely because the car had become temporarily disabled and had been placed upon the repair track awaiting repairs. No case, either state or Federal, has gone farther in sustaining liability under the Federal act than either the-Horton or the Bolch cases, but in each of those cases the work in which the servant was engaged at the time of his injuries was within the test announced in the Horton case, or, as said in New York Cent. & H. R. Co. v. Carr, 238 U. S. 260, at the time of the injury the employee was engaged in an act which was so directly and immediately connected with interstate-commerce as substantially to form a part or a necessary incident thereto.

Adopting this liberal rule of interpretation, the facts here presented do not come within it. The building of a scaffold' in a freight shed upon which a workman is to stand while painting the roof has no direct or immediate connection with interstate commerce, nor is it a necessary incident in furthering the movement of interstate freight. It may be admitted-that the freight shed is an instrumentality made use of in interstate commerce, but the respondent was not at work upon the freight shed. His act was at least one step removed from any connection with interstate commerce or any of its instrumentalities, either directly or indirectly.

This view is in harmony with that expressed in Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Rogers, 221 Fed. 52, where it was held that a-workman engaged in cleaning stencils used in the manufacture and repair of interstate cars was not' entitled to the protection of the Federal act. It is likewise sustained by Shanks v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 239 U. S. 556, L. R. A. 1916C 797. There a workman employed in the railway machine, shops where repairs were made to engines operated in interstate commerce was injured while moving a heavy shop fixture used in repair work. It was held that the connection between. [420]*420the fixture and interstate transportation was too remote, the only function of the fixture being to communicate power to machinery used in repairing engines, some of which were used in such transportation. So here, the only function in building this scaffold was to assist in painting a freight shed which stored interstate commerce.

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Bluebook (online)
161 P. 69, 93 Wash. 416, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killes-v-great-northern-railway-co-wash-1916.