R.R. Trainmen v. Term. R.R. Ass'n

41 N.E.2d 481, 379 Ill. 403
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1942
DocketNo. 26261. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 N.E.2d 481 (R.R. Trainmen v. Term. R.R. Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.R. Trainmen v. Term. R.R. Ass'n, 41 N.E.2d 481, 379 Ill. 403 (Ill. 1942).

Opinion

Appellants seek reversal of a judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair county setting aside an order of the Illinois Commerce Commission requiring appellee to furnish, throughout the year, and maintain, caboose cars or shelter cars to be attached to cuts of freight cars transported to and from its yards in Illinois. The cause arises by petition of appellant Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, an organization representing trainmen and switchmen employed by appellee, filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission requesting that an order be entered requiring appellee to furnish caboose or shelter cars for its switchmen while in the performance of their duties in the territory in and around East St. Louis, Illinois. The petition alleged that appellee has failed to provide such cars for switchmen in the above-mentioned territory, and as a result thereof switchmen, in the performance of their duties on transfer trains are necessarily *Page 405 required either to ride on the draw-bar, in between freight cars, or on the top, or on the side of freight cars where numerous reduced vertical and horizontal clearances prevail, thus endangering the life, health and safety of such switchmen and of other employees, and of the public within the State of Illinois. Appellee's answer denied the power, right or jurisdiction of the Illinois Commerce Commission to enter any order in regard to the subject matter of the complaint so far as any movements in interstate commerce are concerned, and alleged that it now provides all the facilities reasonably necessary for the health, safety and lives of said employees.

Appellee is a railroad corporation which performs terminal services in the railroad switching district of East St. Louis, Illinois, and St. Louis, Missouri. Switchmen in its employ are assigned to particular switching crews. These crews make and break up trains in the yards, make deliveries from connecting roads to appellee; make transfer runs from the various yards of appellee to and from industries; make up trains and couple cars together, see that the air-brakes are coupled and in order on the train, and when the train leaves the yard for a destination the switchmen take their proper positions on the train, the rear man taking his position on the rear car of the train, where he is required to ride. His duties are to line all switches back into proper position after their use by the train, and in case of a reverse movement, to watch street and highway crossings to protect the public. On some of the transfer runs, side or overhead clearance is insufficient to permit riding on the side or top of the rear car, in which case the rear switchman is required to ride the rear coupler of the car. The length of the trains handled by a crew on a trip varies from one to a hundred cars. A caboose is a railroad car furnished for the housing of train crews and equipped for their safety; provides a place for the crew to carry necessary flagging equipment, raincoats, extra or excess clothing, necessary first-aid equipment and lunches; also to do *Page 406 any necessary clerical work. During the winter months, the handholds, draw-bars and sill steps of cars are often covered with ice, making it difficult for switchmen to get to the top of a car or to prevent being jerked or jarred off. No caboose or shelter cars are furnished to crews working out of certain of the involved yards, though they are furnished from October to May each year on other runs by appellee, and on still other runs are furnished the year round. Various of the runs are entirely within the confines of the State of Illinois, others originate in Illinois and terminate in the yards of appellee in Missouri by crossing the Eads or Merchant's bridge, or originate in Missouri and after passing over one of those bridges terminate in one of the yards of appellee in Illinois. Ninety-eight per cent of the merchandise transferred in the runs between appellee's yards is being transported in interstate commerce. About sixty-eight passenger trains cross the Eads bridge each day. During the early part of each week about the same number of freight trains cross the bridge and later in the week the freight trains exceed the passenger trains in number. Approximately the same number of trains cross the Merchant's bridge each day.

The Eads and Merchant's bridges span the Mississippi river between East St. Louis in Illinois and St. Louis in Missouri. Each bridge has thereon double-track railroads connecting with appellee's yards. The Commerce Commission found that the boundary line between the State of Illinois and the State of Missouri intersects the Eads bridge at a point about 1000 feet west of the west curb of Front street in the city of East St. Louis, and the Merchant's bridge at a point about 775 feet west of the Illinois shore line when the river is at a stage of 2.4 feet.

The commission's order, so far as the principal questions here are concerned, consisted of two items or findings and orders. By finding No. 34 it found that it is reasonable to require appellee to furnish, maintain and operate caboose *Page 407 cars throughout the year on its various transfer, delivery and industrial runs in and out of its three yards: (1) Central District Yard, (2) Madison Yard, and (3) Wiggins No. 2 Yard, the order specifying the particular runs among those yards or to line roads, all of which are within Illinois; and its finding No. 35 was the same as finding No. 34 as to reasonableness of the requirement, and ordered that in so far as operated within the State of Illinois: (1) in all runs into or out of C.D. Yard via Eads bridge, (2) runs via Merchant's Bridge moving in or out of (a) Madison Yard, and (b) Wiggins No. 2 Yard, appellee furnish, maintain and operate caboose cars on its transfer, delivery and industrial runs.

On appeal the circuit court found that the portion of the order of the commission requiring cabooses to be attached to runs moving between appellee's yards in Illinois and over the Eads and the Merchant's bridges, is an interference with interstate commerce and beyond the power of the Illinois Commerce Commission. The court therefore set aside and reversed the order of the commission. It did not consider the validity of finding No. 34 and that part of the order since its power of review was merely to confirm or set aside the order as a whole. This was the correct procedure. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Elgin,Joliet and Eastern Railway Co. 374 Ill. 60.

The principal question in the case concerns the validity of the order of the commission requiring cabooses for these runs over the bridge. Though the commission's order applies only to cuts of cars moving within the State, it is argued by appellee, and not disputed, that the only practical way in which the order can be carried out on runs across the river is to carry these cabooses across the bridge into appellee's yard on the opposite side of the river.

Appellants argue that notwithstanding the trains involved in order 35 are moving in interstate commerce, the attaching of cabooses thereto is not a direct burden on interstate *Page 408 commerce but affects it but indirectly or incidentally, and that the order lies within the inherent power of the State to enact reasonable regulations for the protection of the health, lives and safety of persons within its confines. It is urged that only when Congress has acted is the power of the States impaired, and then only to the extent that their regulations shall not be such as to be in conflict with or repugnant to the action so taken by Congress. Appellee insists that the order based upon finding No.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E.2d 481, 379 Ill. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rr-trainmen-v-term-rr-assn-ill-1942.