Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/228/559/
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 02:18:47+00:00

Document:
This Court has heretofore sustained the constitutionality of the statute of Indiana of 1893 abolishing as to railroad corporations the defense to actions for personal injuries sustained by employees of negligence of a fellow-servant. Tullis v. Lake Erie Railroad, 175 U. S. 348; Louis. & Nash. R. Co. v. Melton, 218 U. S. 36, 38 [argument of counsel -- omitted].
If a state statute has been construed by the highest state court, it is the duty of this Court to determine its constitutionality under the federal Constitution as so construed.
The Supreme Court of Indiana having held that the statute of 1893 of that state abolishing the fellow servant defense only applied to railroad employees whose occupation exposed them to hazards incident to operation of trains, this Court holds, following its previous decisions, that the statute is not unconstitutional as denying equal protection of the laws.
Quaere whether a state statute applicable to all employees of a railroad company, whether exposed to hazard of operations of trains or not, contravenes the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The court below was justified in holding, on the facts in this case, that a yard foreman was in charge or control of the train on which the employee sustained his injuries.
One who did not in the court below plead or prove the settled judicial construction of a statute of another state cannot claim that full faith and credit was denied to the judicial construction of such statute by the courts of the enacting state.
The putting in evidence of opinions of the highest court of a state construing a statute of that state does not amount to proving a settled construction of that statute.
must have been set up in the court below. It is too late to set it up in the petition for writ of error from this Court.
An unconstitutional statute is not a law, and is as inoperative as though it never had been passed; it can neither confer a right or immunity nor operate to succeed any existing valid law, and so held as to Employers' Liability Act of 1906.
Quaere the extent to which the Employers' Liability Statute superseded state statutes upon the same subject.
The purpose of Congress cannot be indicated by a statute which is unconstitutional.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of the statute of Indiana abolishing as to railroad companies the fellow servant defense, are stated in the opinion.
This is a personal injury case. The plaintiff, Haynes L. Hackett, was a yard switchman in the employ of the railroad company. While engaged in switching cars in the yard of the company at Monon, Indiana, on February 4, 1907, he was injured through the negligence of another servant of the company who was his immediate superior as yard foreman. He brought this action in the Supreme Court of Cook County, Illinois, and recovered a judgment for $30,000, for the loss of both legs. This was affirmed by the Appellate Court of Illinois, which was the highest court of the state to which the case could be carried.
dropped out of the case. The remaining counts were based upon the Indiana Act of March 4, 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 294), and particularly the fourth paragraph thereof. The demurrer to these courts was overruled, and the plea of not guilty was entered, upon which issue was joined.
"every railroad or other corporation, except municipal, operating in this state shall be liable for damages for personal injuries sustained by any employee while in its service, the employee being in the exercise of due care and diligence, in the following cases."
"When such injury was caused by the negligence of any person in the service of such corporation who has charge of any signal, telegraph office, switch yard, shop, roundhouse, locomotive, engine, or train upon a railway."
Shortly stated, the case alleged was that the plaintiff, while assisting in the switching of certain cars from one track to another, was, through the negligence of the yard foreman, then in control and directing the operation, thrown violently and negligently from one of the cars and run over. The plaintiff in error claimed in the state court that the Indiana statute upon which the action was brought was invalid as a denial to railroad companies of the equal protection of the law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. This objection was denied, and the ruling is assigned as error.
The constitutionality of the act has been upheld by this Court in Tullis v. Lake Erie Railroad, 175 U. S. 348, and in L. & N. Railroad v. Melton, 218 U. S. 36.
operation of railway trains with those in other branches of the service not so subjected, and therefore not within the reason for the classification. Upon this assumption, it is claimed that the act is one which cannot be upheld as valid as to one class of employees and invalid as to the other embraced within the single classification, and must therefore be condemned as wholly invalid under the rule applied by this Court in Employers' Liability Cases, 207 U. S. 463. But this argument overlooks the fact that the act in question is an act of state legislation, and that its construction is a matter for the state courts of Indiana. If the Supreme Court of Indiana has construed the act as not extending to any class of railroad employees except those whose occupation connects them in some way with the movement of trains where they are exposed to the hazards incident to the operation and movement of trains and engines, and the act as thus construed and applied is a valid enactment, we must accept that as the proper interpretation of the act. The single duty of this Court would then consist in determining whether the act, as thus construed, violated the equality clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.
"It was held by this Court in Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Montgomery, 152 Ind. 1; Indianapolis Union R. Co. v. Houlihan, 157 Ind. 494; Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v.
Lightheiser, 168 Ind. 438; Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Collins,168 Ind. 467; Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Ross, 169 Ind. 3, that, as applied to railroads, said Employers' Liability Act was not in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States or of any provision of the Constitution of this state. In Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Ross, supra, we said:"
"The validity of this act, so far as it applies to railroads, was upheld in the case of Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Montgomery, supra, and that holding has been twice reaffirmed since this appeal was filed, . . . and the constitutionality of the law must be regarded as settled."
"Following the case of Pittsburgh &c. R. Co. v. Ross, supra, we hold that the constitutionality of said law must be regarded as settled, and it will not be considered in this case."
"Notwithstanding the language of the statute is"
"that every railroad, or other corporation, except municipal, operating in this state, shall be liable for damages for personal injury suffered by any employee while in its service,"
of his duties brings him into a situation where he is, without fault, exposed to the dangers and perils flowing from such operation and movement, and is by reason thereof injured by the negligence of a fellow servant described in the act."
That the act, as thus construed and upheld by the highest court or Indiana, does not contravene the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is settled by the two decisions of this Court cited above. But we do not intimate that the act, if construed as applicable to all employees of a railroad company, would be in contravention of that clause.
The Illinois court held that, upon the facts of this case, the yard foreman through whose negligence the plaintiff Hackett was injured was in charge of a train within the meaning of the act. The train was in the yard. Its movements were under the foreman's control. The act for which the company was held liable under the statute was, said the Illinois court, quoting from Chicago, Indianapolis &c. Ry. v. Williams, 168 Ind. 276, "[a] negligent act occurring at a time when the doer of the act is in charge or control of a train." To hold that the operation in the yard of a company, of a train hauled by an engine, for the purpose of distributing its cars, is not an operation of a train or engine within the meaning of the Indiana act, and that the negligence of employees directing and controlling the movements of the train is not the negligence of one in charge of a train within the fair purpose and meaning of the act, would be to make the act meaningless as to the most dangerous class of work which falls to the lot of railroad employees.
We therefore conclude that the contention that the Illinois court erred, either in holding the act valid under the equal protection clause or in its application of the act to the facts of this case is without merit.
"Our duty, of course, is confined to determining whether error was committed by the court below as to the federal questions involved, and, as it is impossible to predicate error as to matters not pleaded or proved in the court below, which were essential to be pleaded and proved, it follows that the contention concerning the denial of the protection of the full faith and credit clause furnishes no ground for reversal."
We conclude, therefore, that we are not concerned in the interpretation placed upon the Indiana act unless it be that that construction offends against some federal right properly asserted and open to our consideration.
in not holding that the Indiana statute had been superseded by the Federal Employers' Liability Act of June 11, 1906 (34 Stat. 232, c. 3073). It does appear in one or more of the counts of the plaintiff's declaration that the railroad company was engaged in operating a railroad extending into two or more states, and such was the evidence. The first count might be said to declare upon the liability of the company under the Act of 1906. Upon that ground, the case was removed to the circuit court of the United States. But that court remanded it to the state court. Thereupon defendant demurred to the first count, and the demurrer was sustained. No exception was saved, and no error assigned either in the state court or in this. In no other way was any claim set up or asserted under that federal act, nor did the state court make any ruling as to the effect of that act upon the Indiana statute, and the judgment of the Illinois court was rested wholly upon the Indiana statute. Not having been specially set up in the state court and there passed upon, it is obvious that the point has not been saved.
"Concluding, as we do, that the statute, whilst it embraces subjects within the authority of Congress to regulate commerce, also includes subjects not within its constitutional power, and that the two are so interblended in the statute that they are incapable of separation, we are of the opinion that the courts below rightly held the statute to be repugnant to the Constitution, and nonenforceable."
Employers' Liability Cases, 207 U. S. 463, 207 U. S. 504.
That act was therefore as inoperative as if it had never been passed, for an unconstitutional act is not a law, and can neither confer a right or immunity nor operate to supersede any existing valid law. Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U. S. 425, 118 U. S. 442; Ex Parte Siebold, 100 U. S. 371, 100 U. S. 376.
The second Employers' Liability Act, which avoided the faults of the first, was not passed until after the injury complained of. We pass by, as not involved any question as to the extent to which that act operated to supersede the Indiana statute. The situation is not at all like that presented in Northern Pacific Railway v. Washington, 222 U. S. 370. There, a perfectly valid act concerning the hours of service upon railroads engaged in interstate commerce had been passed. The mere postponement of its operation was held not to lessen its effect as a manifestation of the purpose of Congress to regulate a subject which might be the subject of state legislation only when Congress had been silent. The effect of this purpose to take control of the subject was held to supersede an existing state statute dealing with the same matter from the time of the passage of the Act of Congress. No such purpose could be manifested by a void statute, since it was not law for any purpose.

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