United States v. Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co.

242 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 944
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1916
DocketNo. 2980
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 242 F. 161 (United States v. Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co., 242 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 944 (E.D. Ky. 1916).

Opinion

COCHRAN, 'District Judge.

This cause is before me on plaintiff's demurrer to defendant’s answer to the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth paragraphs of the petition. It is a prosecution under the Safety Appliance Act. The violation charged in each of these paragraphs is the hauling from Cov-ington, Ky., toward Silver Grove, Ky., about 10 miles away, of an interstate car with, a defective coupling apparatus. The answer presents the same defense to each of these paragraphs. That defense is that each of the cars was received from a connecting railway at Cincinnati, Ohio, just north of Covington, to be hauled to Silver Grove, a terminal on defendant’s road and where it maintained its yard; that it was in a safe and proper condition when it left Cincinnati; that defendant had no inspectors or repairmen and made no inspections or repairs at Covington; that it had inspectors, repairmen, and all the facilities for making repairs at Silver Grove; that the defect complained of was discovered and repaired at that point; and that Silver Grove was the first point at which such repairs could have been made after the defect occurred and the discovery thereof. It is not alleged that [162]*162the defect was discovered at Covington and the car hauled to Silver Grove to be repaired. Indeed, the implication, if not admission, is that it was not discovered until the car reached Silver Grove. The case presented by the answer, therefore, is this: The defect arose between Cincinnati and Covington, after defendant began to haul the car; it hauled the car in its defective condition from Covington to Silver Grove; it did not discover the defect until the car reached Silver Grove; and no provision had been made by it at Covington, or, for that matter, at any point between Covington and Silver Grove, for discovering the defect.

Beyond question, under the Safety Appliance Act as it stood before the amendment of April 14, 1910, the haulings of these cars were violations thereof. According to the construction placed on .the act by the Supreme Court, though a defect arose from no fault of the railroad company, and though it was ignorant thereof and in no fault in not discovering it, if the railroad company hauled it any distance for any purpose, it violated the act. The amendment was enacted to relieve the statute of, at least, some of its absoluteness. The question is: To what extent it did so. It provides that, in case the coupling apparatus becomes defective whilst the car is being used, it “may be hauled from the place where such equipment was first discovered to be defective or insecure to the nearest available point where such car can be repaired.” It will be noted that the only hauling of a defectively equipped car which the amendment permits is from the place where the defective condition was first discovered to the nearest repair point, and, as it has been construed, then only for the purpose of repair. It says nothing about hauling such car before such discovery. Possibly there is room to say that it did not occur to the amendment, if we may personify it, that there would be any violation of the act if it was hauled before discovery, at least if there was no fault on the part of the railroad company in not discovering it sooner, and, even more than this, to wit, that it is the presupposition of the amendment that there would be no violation in such a case. It would seem to be just as .harsh to punish a railroad company for hauling a defective car, when it was not at fault in discovering its condition, as for hauling it after discovery to a repair point for repairs, when it could not be repaired at the place of discovery. If the permission of the amendment is limited to the latter hauling, what we have then is this: If a car becomes defective out on the road at a point where it cannot be repaired, and1 it is at once discovered, there is no violation of the act in hauling the car to the nearest point for repairs; but if it is not discovered there is a violation in hauling the car from that point thereto, though there may be no fault in not discovering it before reaching such point, and it is discovered and repaired thereat.

The decisions of the federal courts which have had to deal with this question, however, go far toward holding, if they have not actually held, that the amendment goes no further. The reasoning upon which this position is based is that, as under the original act, any hauling of a defectively equipped car was a violation thereof, and the amendment only permits hauling of such a car after the discovery to the nearest repair point for repairs, any other hauling and hence a hauling before [163]*163discovery, though without fault, in not discovering, is a violation thereof. In the case of C., B. & Q. R. R. v. United States, 211 Fed. 12, 127 C. C. A. 438, a decision of the appellate court of the Eighth circuit, a car was received by the defendant from the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Co., at Kansas City, Mo. The defendant has a yard therein known as the “Twelfth Street yard.” Whether the car was received, at this point does not clearly appear. But before it received the car it was inspected and found to be in proper condition, and it was hauled by defendant from that yard across the Missouri river, over its bridge and main line, 1» its Murray Street yard. When it reached there the defendant for the first time discovered that the coupling appliance was out of repair. It was held that, if the car was in a defective condition in the Twelfth Street yard, there was a violation of the act, notwithstanding it was not discovered until it reached the Murray Street yard. The decision was based on two reasons — ■ that the defect was of such a character that it could have been repaired at the Twelfth Street yard, and the car was not hauled to the Murray Street yard for repairs. Possibly, if the car was defective whilst in the Twelfth Street yard, defendant was not without fault in not discovering it there; and it is to be noted that the lower court instructed the jury that, if the defect arose whilst the car was in transit between the two yards, there was no violation of the act.

In the case of United States v. Trinity & B. V. R. Co., 211 Fed. 448, 128 C. C. A. 120, a decision of the appellate court of the Fifth circuit, a car was hauled from Tom Ball, through Houston, to Galveston. It was hauled from Houston in a defective condition. It was inspected at Tom Ball and found to be in good condition. Defendant had no inspectors or repair shops at Houston, but did have them at Galveston. It did not discover the defective car until it reached Galveston. Houston was a few hours’ run from Tom Ball and Galveston a few hours’ run from Houston. It was held that the defendant was liable. It was stressed, however, that it was not shown that the hauling to Galveston was necessary to repair the defect, and it could not have been repaired, except there. Judge Call said:

“Bear in mind that under the Safety Appliance Act of 1893 (Act March 2, 1893, c. 196, 27 Stat. 531 [Comp. St. 19.16, §§ 8605-SGÍ2J), and the amendments, ignorance of defects does not excuse. The duty to have and maintain in good order the safety appliances required is a positivo duty imposed on the carrier, * * * and that the defendant in the instant case seeks to avoid responsibility for the violation of this duty by pleading the proviso of the act of J910. By all the canons of construction, it must clearly bring itself within the terms of the proviso before it can demand immunity.”

The case of United States v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., 213 Fed. 748, 130 C. C. A.

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Related

Southern Pac. Co. v. United States
23 F.2d 61 (Eighth Circuit, 1927)
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242 F. 420 (Sixth Circuit, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
242 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-chesapeake-o-ry-co-kyed-1916.