Zachary v. North Carolina Railroad

156 N.C. 496
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 9, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 N.C. 496 (Zachary v. North Carolina Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zachary v. North Carolina Railroad, 156 N.C. 496 (N.C. 1911).

Opinion

Brown, J.

There are twenty-three assignments of error in tbe record, none of them relating to tbe reception or rejection of evidence. These assignments present for consideration tbe three principal contentions of tbe defendant:

1. That tbe act of Congress of 22 April, 1908, known as tbe Federal Employees’ Liability Act, applies, and that tbe cause should have been determined under tbe provisions of that act.

2. That there is no sufficient evidence of negligence.

3. That in any view of tbe evidence, tbe intestate was guilty of such, contributory negligence as under the law of this State bars recovery.

Does tbe Federal act apply?

[499]*499Plaintiff’s intestate was fireman of engine 862, which was standing at the time of the occurrence on the cinder track at Selma, N. 0. He had been oiling his engine and preparing it to take a train from Selma to Greensboro, which was made up at Selma. He started across the tracks to go to his boarding-house before leaving, and was stricken and killed by a local switch engine, which at the time was backing down the main line for the purpose of cutting out two cars, which had come in from Pinners Point, Ya., on train 72 for transportation to Greensboro, N. 0. Train 72 is known as Pinners Point train via Selma to Goldsboro, N. G.

Engine 862 was not attached to any cars at the time, but was being prepared to haul a train from Selma to Greensboro composed of miscellaneous cars. All ears brought in from Pinners Point, Ya., by train 72 for points west of Selma are included in this train.

We are of opinion that the Federal act does not apply, and that the case was properly tried under the State law.

The act applies only to a carrier by railroad while engaging-in interstate commerce, and only to an employee “suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce.”

The point was not discussed on the argument or in the briefs, but it occurs to us that the. North Carolina Eailroad is not an interstate railroad, nor is that corporation itself engaged in interstate commerce. Its tracks and property lie wholly within the State of North Carolina, extending from Goldsboro to Charlotte. It is true, the tracks and property are leased to the Southern Eailway Company, a corporation of another State, that is engaged in both inter- and intrastate commerce; but that does not necessarily make the North Carolina Eailroad Company an interstate carrier within the meaning of the act of Congress, any more than A would be made a wholesale grocery merchant because he had leased his warehouse to B, who conducted such business in it, and had assumed responsibility for B’s debts.

The corporation known as the North Carolina Eailroad Company is in existence, has its officers and directors, receives its annual rents from its lessee, the Southern Eailway Com[500]*500pany, and distributes them among its stockholders; but it is not an interstate carrier within the meaning of the Federal act.

It is also true that this Court has held in Logan v. R. R., 116 N. C., 941, that this lessor is responsible for all acts of negligence of its lessee occurring i-n the conduct of business on the lessor’s road, it matters not what kind of commerce the lessee is engaged in at the time. But that is because a railroad corporation cannot escape its responsibility by leasing its road. It is still liable for its lessee’s acts of commission and omission, whether they occur in interstate or intrastate commerce, although the lessor is not actually engaged in either.

We do not think the Federal act applies, for the reason that the deceased at the time when killed was not employed by the Southern Railway, the lessee, in interstate commerce. At the time he was killed the deceased was not engaged in an act of any kind of commerce. He was on the way to his hoarding-house for a purpose entirely personal to himself and not on the carrier’s business. The deceased had oiled and prepared his engine to make the run from Selma to Greensboro, points within this State. The engine was stationary and had not been attached to any cars. The deceased was on his way to his boarding-house, and was killed by a local switch engine which was then unattached to any cars, but going for two cars from Pinners Point, Ya., for the purpose of attaching them to the train that engine 862 was expected to pull. So far as the evidence shows, the deceased nor his engine had ever been engaged in any other work except this local run from Selma to Greensboro.

If the contention of the defendant can be maintained, then it follows that all employees of railways that do an interstate business are necessarily employed in interstate commerce. The ticket seller who sells a ticket to a traveler going beyond the State, the ear cleaner who cleans the ear he is to travel in, the man who loads the engine tender with coal which is to pull him, and the gatekeeper who examines his ticket and passes him on to his car, are all employed in interstate commerce.

The Employees’ Liability Act of 1906 was declared repugnant to the Constitution because by its terms it embraced all [501]*501employees of a railroad, interstate and intrastate, and that the two were so interblended in the statute that they were incapable of separation. Employees’ Liability cases, 207 U. S., 463. If the contention of the learned counsel fox defendant be well founded, then the subsequent act of 1908 would apply to all employees of a railway engaged in both kinds of commerce, however remotely they are connected with it. This would accomplish the very end which it would seem could not be accomplished by the Federal Congress under the first act. This contention would extend the power of Congress to almost every conceivable subject of railway transportation, however inherently local, and would destroy the authority of the States over matters which from the beginning have been under their control.

Was the evidence of negligence sufficient to justify the court in submitting the matter to the jury? We think so. The evidence offered by plaintiff tends to prove that the deceased was compelled to cross the several tracks of the railroad to go from his engine to his residence; that it was customary for all employees to pass to and fro over these tracks; that it was dark at the time and the switching engine was running backwards, tender foremost, from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. Two witnesses testify that there was no light whatever on the end of the tender that was moving forward, nor any flagman there. This is ample evidence of negligence to go to the jury. Ray v. R. R., 141 N. C., 84; Smith v. R. R., 132 N. C., 819; Purnell v. R. R., 122 N. C., 832.

Was the plaintiff’s intestate, in any view of the evidence, guilty of such contributory negligence as bars recovery? We think not, and that his Honor properly submitted that matter to the consideration of the jury. Had it appeared from the evidence offered by plaintiff that his intestate was guilty of contributory negligence, it is settled by precedents that the court may sustain the motion to nonsuit or direct a verdict upon that issue. Baker v. R. R., 150 N. C., 562; Strickland v. R. R., 150 N. C., 4.

Hndei the conditions surrounding the intestate we cannot say, as matter of law, that in any view of the evidence he was [502]*502guilty of contributory negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.C. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zachary-v-north-carolina-railroad-nc-1911.