Rogers v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co.

85 S.W.2d 581, 337 Mo. 140, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 581 (Rogers v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Mobile Ohio Railroad Co., 85 S.W.2d 581, 337 Mo. 140, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 403 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This is an action, under the Federal Employers' Liability Act (U.S.C.A., Title 45, 51-59), for damages for personal injuries. This suit was brought by John F. Rogers, who was run over by appellant's cars, while he was in its employ as a brakeman. Rogers had a verdict for $22,500, and appellant has appealed from the judgment against it entered thereon. John F. Rogers died and, prior to hearing in this court, the cause was revived in the name of his administrator.

[1] The serious question in this case is whether Rogers was, at the time of his injury, engaged in interstate transportation or in work so closely related to such transportation as to be practically a part of it, which is the test of the applicability of the Federal Act. [Chicago N.W. Railroad Co. v. Bolle,284 U.S. 74, 52 Sup. Ct. 59, 76 L.Ed. 173; Chicago E.I. Railroad Co. v. Industrial Comm., 284 U.S. 296, 52 Sup. Ct. 151, 76 L.Ed. 304; New York, N.H. H. Railroad Co. v. Bezue, 284 U.S. 415, 52 Sup. Ct. 205, 76 L.Ed. 370, 77 A.L.R. 1370.] This question is raised by appellant's assignment of error that the court erred in overruling its demurrer to the evidence at the close of the case. The facts in this case from which this question must be determined are undisputed.

Rogers had been employed by appellant as a brakeman on freight trains for twenty-three years, prior to his injury on April 21, 1930. On that day he was head brakeman on freight train No. 31 which left Jackson, Tennessee, for Okolona, Mississippi. In this train were several cars of interstate freight. There were also eight gondola cars which had been loaded with gravel at Johnsonville, Tennessee, delivered to appellant at Jackson, and placed in its train there. These gravel cars were billed to Selmer, Tennessee, but, either because there was not room for them there or because of a request from the consignee, the train crew got orders to set them out at Bethel Springs, Tennessee, a nearby station. The movement of these cars was entirely intrastate as they were at no time to be moved out of the State of Tennessee.

When the train reached Bethel Springs, it had orders to go on the passing track to allow freight train No. 28 to pass it and also to set out these gravel cars, and upon arriving there, the train pulled upon the passing track, which was west of the main line track. West of the passing track was a house track upon which the travel cars were to be left. There was a planing mill with a loading platform in front on the west side of the house track and there was a box car on the house track by this loading platform, having been placed there to be loaded with lumber. The train was headed south so that it was necessary to switch the house track from the south end. There was not enough room on the house track, south of the box car, to leave the gravel cars there, so the first movement was to take out the box car and couple it to the south gravel car. To *Page 144 make this movement Rogers, who as head brakeman was in charge of the switching, went over to the house track and removed the derail south of the box car. He then came back and uncoupled the engine and rode it south, to the house track switch stand. He threw the switch, gave a back-up signal and, when the engineer moved back on the house track, he got on the engine, rode back to the box car and coupled it to the tender. The box car was then pulled out onto the passing track, Rogers again threw the switch, gave the back-up signal, and the engine backed north with the box car to the standing train, where Rogers coupled the box car to the south gravel car. The conductor of the train uncoupled the north gravel car, gave the go-ahead signal which Rogers relayed to the engineer, and the engine moved again south past the switch stand with all nine cars. Rogers threw the switch again for the next movement, which was to back onto the house track until the box car was opposite the loading platform, at the place where it had been, but with the gravel cars north of it. It was then intended to uncouple the engine so that it could go back to the rest of the train and proceed on its interstate journey.

The engine was not to be moved back onto the house track with these cars until Rogers gave a back-up signal. Just after Rogers had lined up the switch, train No. 28 passed on the main line and Rogers says that he waved to the fireman on that train. The engineer and conductor of his own train and appellant's other witnesses said that he gave a back-up signal. Whether he did or not, this was apparently the interpretation placed by the engineer on whatever movement of his hand Rogers did make at that time. Rogers walked north toward the loading platform, which was about 179 feet from the switch stand. He walked with his back to the train, which followed and overtook him, moving upon what the engineer interpreted to be a back-up signal, and he was struck by the corner of the box car near the derail, about 16 feet south of the loading platform.

Rogers' testimony as to what he was doing and intended to do was as follows:

"After I had lined this switch for the house track, I gave no back-up signal. It was my duty to give that back-up signal, and I intended to give that signal when I got myself placed up in this little pathway that led south of the platform. That little pathway was somewhere around 10 feet south of the platform. . . . I started up to the little pathway just south of the platform, figuring on stationing myself there on this pathway to give the signal to back-up, so I could be there to spot this car at the platform where I got it from. It was my duty to give the signal to spot the box car at the platform. That is, I would give the signal to stop, signal the engineer to stop, when the box car got back to the platform *Page 145 where it had formerly been. It was necessary for me to be at the south end of the platform to give the stop signal at the proper time. . . . If I had not been struck, the next moves I would have made, I would have been in this little pathway, then I was figuring on giving my signal to back-up, then the cars would have backed up, then I would have given the stop signal to stop them after the car was spotted. . . . Then I would cut my engine off and go back to my train. I had to line that derail back before I left there. The purpose of lining that derail back was to keep the cars from running out on the main line."

Appellant argues:

"When the train stopped on the passing track at Bethel Springs and the engine was uncoupled from the train to commence the series of switching movements, necessary to set out the intrastate gravel cars on the house track, interstate transportation ceased, and the interstate cars in the train and the interstate freight in those cars remained at rest; and the work of the crew, thereafter in switching the intrastate cars was solely for the purpose and had the sole result of intrastate transportation."

This is too narrow a view of the work Rogers was doing, and fails to take into account the well-settled principles that, while "`the true test (of the applicability of the Federal Act) is the nature of the work being done at the time of the injury' . . . `it is the employment that determines whether or not the injury to the employee is within the purview of the act, and not necessarily the particular act of the employee at the precise time of the injury.' . . .

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 581, 337 Mo. 140, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-mobile-ohio-railroad-co-mo-1935.