Martin v. Central Railroad Co. of N.J.

183 A. 214, 116 N.J.L. 162, 1936 N.J. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 183 A. 214 (Martin v. Central Railroad Co. of N.J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Central Railroad Co. of N.J., 183 A. 214, 116 N.J.L. 162, 1936 N.J. LEXIS 214 (N.J. 1936).

Opinions

This appeal seeks a review of a judgment of the Supreme Court which reversed a judgment of the Hudson County Court of Common Pleas affirming a determination of the workmen's compensation bureau, which had awarded compensation to appellant as a dependent under the Compensation act. Pamph. L. 1911, ch. 95.

The facts were stipulated. Appellant is the widow and sole dependent of Joseph Y. Martin, who was in the employ of respondent as a painter. On November 2d 1932, it is conceded, the decedent met with an accident, arising out of and in the course of his employment, in the following manner:

"While repairing the skylight on the roof of the terminal train shed of the respondent, at Jersey City, he sustained a fall through the skylight on to the tracks, which fall caused his death."

The train shed was used by both interstate and intrastate trains, it being stipulated as follows:

"Some of these passenger trains come from out of the state, like Scranton or Easton, Pennsylvania, and some of them come from within the state, such as our seashore trains, carrying passengers in both classes of commerce."

The sole question involved is whether decedent was engaged in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Employers' Liability act of congress when he met his death. The material part of that act declares that a common carrier by railroad, while engaging in commerce between any of the several states, shall be liable in damages to any person, or his dependents, suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce, if the injury be due to the negligence of the carrier,c. And it has been held that when the injury or death occurs when both employer and employe are engaged in interstate commerce, the act of congress is paramount to, and exclusive *Page 164 of, state regulation, whether there be causal negligence for which the carrier is responsible or not. New York CentralRailroad Co. v. Winfield, 244 U.S. 147; Erie Railroad Co. v. Winfield, 244 Id. 170.

It becomes important, therefore, to consider the decisions of the federal court of last resort in determining the decisive question in this case.

The Supreme Court determined that "the service at which the deceased was engaged when the accident befell him falls into the category of interstate commerce," citing Pedersen v. Delaware,Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co. (1913), 229 U.S. 146;57 L.Ed. 1125. In that case it was said: "The true test always is: Is the work in question a part of the interstate commerce in which the carrier is engaged?" The workman there, with another employe, on the afternoon of his injury, acting under the direction of their foreman, was carrying from a tool car to a bridge some bolts or rivets which were to be used by them that night or very early the next morning in repairing that bridge, the repair to consist of taking out an existing girder and inserting a new one. It was necessary to pass over an intervening temporary bridge. The bridges were being regularly used in both interstate and intrastate commerce. While carrying a sack of bolts on his way to the bridge to be repaired, he was run down by an intrastate train on the intervening bridge. The court, speaking through Mr. Justice Van Devanter, held that the employe was engaged in interstate commerce.

In later cases, the same court has refused to extend the holding of that case to other situations, and would appear, to some extent, to have limited it. In Shanks v. Delaware,Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co. (1915), 239 U.S. 556, where the employe was engaged solely in taking down and putting into a new location in the railroad's machine shop an overhead countershaft — a heavy shop fixture — through which power was communicated to some of the machinery used in repairing parts of locomotives used in interstate and intrastate transportation, the same justice who spoke for a majority of the court in the Pederson case, said: *Page 165

"Having in mind the nature and usual course of the business to which the act relates and the evident purpose of congress in adopting the act, we think it speaks of interstate commerce, not in a technical legal sense, but in a practical one better suited to the occasion (see Swift Co. v. United States,196 U.S. 375, 398; 49 L.Ed. 518, 525; 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 276), and that the true test of employment in such commerce is, was the employe, at the time of the injury, engaged in interstate transportation, or in work so closely related to it as to be practically a part of it?"

The opinion then cites cases where the court held that the employe was engaged in interstate commerce and others where it held that the employe was not so engaged. The court concludes:

"Coming to apply the test to the case in hand it is plain that Shanks was not employed in interstate transportation, or in repairing or keeping in usable condition a roadbed, bridge, engine, car, or other instrument then in use in such transportation. What he was doing was altering the location of a fixture in a machine shop. The connection between the fixture and interstate transportation was remote at best, for the only function of the fixture was to communicate power to machinery used in repairing parts of engines some of which were used in such transportation. This, we think, demonstrates that the work in which Shanks was engaged, like that of the coal miner in the Yurkonis case, was too remote from interstate transportation to be practically a part of it, and therefore that he was not employed in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Employers' Liability act.

In Raymond v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Co. (1917), 243 U.S. 43, where a workman was injured while working as a laborer in a tunnel designed to effect a shortening of the line of an interstate railroad carrier, Mr. Chief Justice White said:

"Considering the suit as based upon the Federal Employers' Liability act, it is certain under recent decisions of this court, whatever doubt may have existed in the minds of some at the time the judgment below was rendered, that, under the facts as alleged, Raymond and the railway company were not *Page 166 engaged in interstate commerce at the time the injuries were suffered, and consequently no cause of action was alleged under the act."

In Chicago and Northwestern Railroad Co. v. Bolle (1931),284 U.S. 74

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Painter v. B. O. R. R. Co.
13 A.2d 396 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 A. 214, 116 N.J.L. 162, 1936 N.J. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-central-railroad-co-of-nj-nj-1936.