Alabama Great Southern R. Co. v. Bonner
Alabama Great Southern R. Co. v. Bonner
Opinion of the Court
The action is to recover damages for wrongful death. Two counts seek recovery under the state statute, and one under the federal Employers’ Liability Act. The counts claiming under the state law were eliminated by the trial court. The trial was had under the count based on the federal statute, and resulted in verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. From this judgment defendant appeals, and here assigns several rulings as error. The assignment chiefly relied upon and argued is that as to the count on which the trial was had the defendant .was entitled to peremptory instructions.
The facts as to which there is no dispute are briefly as follows:
The defendant is a common carrier engaged in inter and intra state commerce. Shortly before the deceased met his death one of the defendant’s trains engaged in interstate commerce was held up and robbed. The defendant’s agents, as soon as possible, notified the *229 sheriffs and police officers in several counties near the scene of the robbery, and these officers, in turn, notified others, and posses were thus organized to pursue and apprehend the bandits. The defendant through its agents and agencies, assisted the officers of the law in the endeavor to apprehend and arrest the robbers. It aided in organizing or facilitating the posses, in that it notified the officers and requested the search, and furnished transportation and conveyances to members of the posses from their homes to the scene of the robbery and to points in the vicinity where it was thought probable that the robbers might be apprehended.
Deceased was not an officer, but, at the request of defendant’s agents, went with a posse to conduct and control some dogs,' bloodhounds, belonging to a friend, this friend consenting to the use of his dogs on the condition that deceased should go with them. A posse, composed of a number of deputy sheriffs from Jefferson county, some from Montgomery county, and possibly some from other counties, including deceased, was carried by the defendant in one of its cabooses from Birmingham, Bessemer, and other points to the scene of the robbery and to other points on its line near there, for the purpose of hunting the robbers, who were supposed to be in the .woods or hiding in other places. The train, having reached a point on'defendant’s line in Tuscaloosa county known as Box Springs, about 50 miles from Birmingham, was stopped to allow the party, or a part thereof, to alight and search that vicinity. While they were thus alighting from the caboose, a gun in the hands of a deputy sheriff named Cope was by him accidentally or negligently discharged, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate.
There is a dispute or contention as to whether this posse was in the charge or under the control of-one Ball, a special agent of the defendant, or was under the orders of one of the officers of the law, a sheriff or deputy sheriff. As we view the ease, this question is wholly immaterial. So far as a proper decision' is concerned, it is unnecessary to decide whether or not there was evidence to support the finding that the relation of master and servant, or that of employer and employs, existed between the defendant and the deceased, or between the defendant and the alleged negligent deputy, Cope.
We deem it unnecessary to cite or review any authorities on the subject, as we find none like tbe case in hand. Every case, of course, must depend upon its own particular and peculiar facts, whether it is within or without the statute in question, and we feel sure that the case in hand is not within the protection or scope of the statute.
Many of the decisions of the state and federal courts have been very recently cited and reviewed upon the question: What is necessary to bring a case within the purview or scope of the statute in question? And we have examined many others, and none of the reported cases so cited and reviewed or examined, support the holding of the trial court in submitting this case to the jury as to the count based on the federal Employers’ Liability Act; but we are of the opinion that they all tend to show that a case like the one in hand is not within the statute. See the cases of Southern Railway Co. v. Peters, 194 Ala. 94, 69 South. 611, and L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Blankenship, 199 Ala. 521, 74 South. 960, and cases there cited.
In a very recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, not yet officially reported, it was held that by the very terms of the statute the true test is the nature of the work being done at the time of the injury or death, and that the mere fact that the parties expected in the future to engage in interstate commerce, or (we may add) had in the past engaged in such work, is not sufficient to bring the case yyitkin the statute; that to come within the statute the act or work being performed by the injured servant must be an act or work of interstate commerce, or must be so directly and immediately connected with interstate commerce as to be a part of it or of other acts thereof, or a necessary incident thereto. See Erie Railroad Co. v. Welsh, 242 U. S. 303, 37 Sup. Ct. 116, which follows Behren’s Case, 233 U. S. 473, 34 Sup. Ct. 646, 58 L. Ed. 1051, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 163; Carr’s Case, 238 U. S. 260, 35 Sup. Ct. 780, 59 L. Ed. 1298; Shanks’ Case, 239 U. S. 556, 36 Sup. Ct. 188, 60 L. Ed. 436, L. R. A. 1916C, 797.
Here the evidence utterly fails to show that deceased, if conceded to have been employed by the defendant, was ever employed to engage in commerce of any kind or description, or that he ever did in fact so engage; and there is no evidence that such work was ever contemplated to be performed in the future by the deceased. The only fact which at all lends color to this, as a case under the act in question, is that the train of the defendant which was robbed was engaged in interstate commerce when robbed, and that deceased attempted to apprehend the robbers. He was not on the train when it was robbed, and there is no pretense that he was then in the employ of the defendant for any purpose, or that he was ever in its employment except to search for and apprehend the robbers. This, we hold, is not -sufficient.
It is unnecessary to pass upon any of the other questions assigned as errors or argued; either they are not involved in the question' decided, or they will probably not arise on another trial.
We do not mean to intimate that there was or was not any evidence to support a verdict for the plaintiff under other counts of the complaint, as that question is not before us; but we are of the opinion that it is certain there was none to support a verdict under the only count submitted to the jury.
What we have said as to the relations existing between defendant and the deceased and the alleged negligent person was merely conceding, without deciding, the proof on these questions to be as alleged, for the purpose of showing that in such case there could be no recovery under the count declaring on. the federal Employers’ Liability Act.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.