Reinke v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.

145 F. 988, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana
DecidedApril 28, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 145 F. 988 (Reinke v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reinke v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 145 F. 988, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815 (circtdmt 1906).

Opinion

HUNT, District Judge.

The plaintiff instituted this action to recover $5,000 damages for an injury to his thumb. He alleges that he was a laborer, hired by the Northern Pacific Railway Company; that on August 30, 1904, one McCarthy was an employe of the defendant, employed as an engineer operating a certain Ledgewood engine used by the defendant in unloading dirt and gravel from its gravel cars upon and along its tracks; that on August 30, 1904, plaintiff, as a laborer, was performing his duties, assisting in the managing and manipulating of a certain cable or wire rope, which was attached to a certain drum, which was revolved by the machinery of the said Ledgewood engine; that the gravel cars were being unloaded by drawing a plow or float over and along the floor of the cars, which plow or float was moved by the cable being attached to and passing from the plow over and along the intervening cars, and to the drum, aforesaid; that the drum was placed upon the car or truck upon which the Ledge-wood engine was placed and being operated, at which point the cable passed upon and over a spindle or roller, and then was fastened to the said drum, where the cable was coiled around the drum; that, in the unloading of the gravel and dirt from the gravel cars upon and along the tracks, the cable became slackened, and doubled back upon itself; that, in the discharge of his ordinary duties as a laborer, which duties had been assigned to plaintiff by one Davis, an emplové and agent of defendant, and conductor of the gravel train, plaintiff climbed the car or truck, upon which the Ledgewood engine was placed, and took hold of the cable, as it was his duty to do, and held it taut, while the said McCarthy, performing his duty, operated the engine, which caused the drum to revolve; that, as plaintiff was holding the cable taut, he was standing about six feet from the roller, and facing the Ledgewood engine; that McCarthy, acting as employé and agent of the defendant, in a negligent and careless manner [989]*989started the Ledgewood engine at a high and unusual rate of speed, unknown to plaintiff, and contrary to the usual speed used in operating the said engine and drum, which sudden and violent and careless starting up of the engine caused the drum to revolve so rapidly that plaintiff was jerked from off his feet, and was violently pulled forward by the cable, which coiled so rapidly around the drum that the thumb on liis left hand «as drawn under and between the cable and the roller, thereby wounding the thumb in such a manner that it was necessary to amputate the same. The defendant has demurred to the complaint on the ground that the facts stated do not constitute a cause of action.

Plaintiff must recover, if recovery can he had at all, under the statute of Montana enacted March 5, '1903 (Paws .1903, p. 150, c. 83), which reads as follows:

"Every railway, corporation, including electric railway corporal ions, doing business in this state shall he liable for all damages sustained by an employ?: thereof, within this state, without contributing negligence on his parr, when such damage is caused by the negligence of any train dispatcher, telegraph operator, superintendent, master mechanic, yardmaster, conductor, engineer, mot orinan, or of any other employe who has superintendence of any stationary or hand signal.”

A later fellow-servant statute, passed in 1905, pertaining to the liability of railroad corporations for damages to employes, is only useful to be consulted as aiding the court in reaching a correct construction of the act of 1903, which is admitted to be controlling in the ease. Examination of the various fellow-servant statutes of the states shows that section 1 of the 1903 fellow-servant law of Montana was taken substantially from the statute of Wisconsin approved April Hi, 1889. and in force in that state until 1893. The Wisconsin statute reads as follows:

“Every railroad corporation doing business in this state shall be liable for damages sustained by any employe thereof within this state, without contributory negligence on his part, when such damage is caused by the negligence of any train dispatcher, telegraph operator, superintendent, yardmaster. conductor, or engineer, or of any other employe, who has charge or control of any stationary signal, target point, block or switch.”

The Legislature of Montana having obtained the statute from another state, the courts will, under well-known rules, have very great regard for, if, indeed, they will not be guided by, the construction put upon the law by the .highest courts of the state whence the law was taken.

There could he no recovery by this plaintiff under the common law. That is conceded. So the case must rest upon the true construction of the statute which has changed the rule of the common law. 1 do not mean to narrow in any way the doctrine that the responsibility of a railroad company to its employés may be a matter of general law, but simply to recognize that, where there is an express statutory regulation changing the common law, the federal courts will adhere to the decisions of the courts of the state upon the subject. We will therefore be aided by the decision of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin [990]*990in Hartford v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company, 91 Wis. 374, 64 N. W. 1033. Liability was there sought to be fixed for the act of a foreman of repair shops, who,, it was claimed, was a superintendent within the meaning of the statute quoted. The court thus reasoned:

“The question here presented is not what definition the railroad company-now gives to the word ‘superintendent,’ or how Webster defines it; but in what sense did the Legislature use the word in the act in question? To properly determine such question, resort must be had to the established rules for the judicial construction of statutes. It is said that: ‘The true rule is to look at the whole and every part of the statute, and the apparent intent derived from the whole of the subject-matter, to the effect and consequences, to the reason and spirit of the law, and thus to ascertain the true meaning of the Legislature, though the meaning so ascertained conflict with the literal sense of the words; the sole object being to discover and give effect to the intention of its framers.’ Ogden v. Glidden, 9 Wis. 46; Harrington v. Smith, 28 Wis. 43; Ryegate v. Wardsboro, 30 Vt. 746. Applying this test to the act in question, it clearly appears that the legislative intent was to provide a remedy for the negligence of officers and employes that have to do with the operating department of the road, the movement of trains and cars. Each of those specifically named fits persons that, 'as a matter of common knowledge, are responsible for the proper movement of trains and cars, ‘train dispatcher, telegraph operator, superintendent, yardmaster, conductor or engineer.’ And following these designations there is the general clause covering various other persons engaged in the same line of work, but who are not so well and commonly known by any specific name applied to their positions, ‘or of any other employe, who has charge or control of any stationary signal, target point, block or switch.’ Now, if such was the intent of the framers of the law, and we think it was, then the word ‘superintendent’ cannot be made to apply to a foreman of the repair shop.
“Again, it is laid down as an elementary principle in the construction of statutes that the common usage of words at the time of the enactment is a true criterion by which to determine their meaning. Smith, Stat. & Const. Law, i 482.

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Bluebook (online)
145 F. 988, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reinke-v-northern-pac-ry-co-circtdmt-1906.