Robert Borger, Sr. v. CSX Transportation Inc. ( 2009 )


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  •                      RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 09a0236p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    ROBERT BORGER, SR.; DERRICK J. ATKINSON, X
    Plaintiffs-Appellants, -
    -
    -
    -
    No. 08-3685
    v.
    ,
    >
    -
    Defendant-Appellee. -
    CSX TRANSPORTATION, INC.,
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 06-00019—Sandra S. Beckwith, District Judge.
    Argued: May 1, 2009
    Decided and Filed: July 8, 2009
    Before: MARTIN, SUHRHEINRICH, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Martin J. Holmes, Jr., SHINDLER, NEFF, HOLMES, SCHLAGETER &
    MOHLER, Toledo, Ohio, for Appellants. Dan Himmelfarb, MAYER BROWN LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: E.J. Leizerman, Michael Jay Leizerman, E.J.
    LEIZERMAN & ASSOCIATES, LLC, Toledo Ohio, for Appellants. Dan Himmelfarb,
    Evan Mark Tager, MAYER BROWN LLP, Washington, D.C., James L. O’Connell, James
    F. Brockman, David E. Williamson, LINDHORST & DREIDAME, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
    Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge. Railworkers Robert Borger and Derrick
    Atkinson sued CSX Transportation under the Federal Employers Liability Act, alleging
    injuries from exposure to hydrochloric acid fumes. For the reasons described below, we
    AFFIRM the district court’s entry of summary judgment in CSX’s favor.
    1
    No. 08-3685         Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                               Page 2
    I.
    On June 21, 2004, Robert Borger, Sr. and Derrick J. Atkinson worked together as
    engineer and conductor on a CSX train heading south from Troy, Ohio to Cincinnati. A
    northbound CSX train from Cincinnati needed to pass on the same track, so Borger stopped
    his train in a siding—a section of track parallel to the main track. As the other train passed,
    Borger remained onboard, while Atkinson stepped off.            Borger says that while the
    northbound train was passing, he smelled an “immediate sharp, strong smell . . . like
    somebody taking a fire extinguisher and blasting it in [his] face.” From where he stood,
    Atkinson also smelled a “very, very strong smell.” Borger’s eyes were irritated and he
    experienced a “strong acidy taste going down [his] throat” as well as headaches and
    coughing. Atkinson experienced similar symptoms; both men received medical treatment.
    Before the northbound train left Cincinnati earlier that evening, a two-man CSX crew
    had conducted a brake inspection which included a visual inspection of the train’s cars. The
    crew reported no leaks or unusual smells. Three crew members aboard the northbound train
    said in affidavits that, before they passed Borger and Atkinson, they were “not aware of any
    odor coming from our train” and “had no knowledge . . . that there was any leak or emission
    or discharge from any of the cars.” One of the crew stated that he had “briefly noticed a
    skunk-like odor . . . which he did not believe came from any of the cars of our train.”
    Another crew member had smelled an “unusual odor, but did not believe that it was coming
    from our train,” and the third crew member “smelled an usual odor, but believed that it had
    come from the Miller Brewery, not our train.”
    After the train passed, Borger reported the odor to a dispatcher and the northbound
    train stopped for the crew to inspect it. The crew did not detect any leaks or unsecured
    valves or hatches, but they did smell a faint odor coming from one of the tank cars that was
    carrying hydrochloric acid. Later that night, the trainmaster inspected the northbound train
    and also did not discover any leaks. And at a later stop in Walbridge, Ohio, yet another CSX
    worker inspected the train and, again, found no leaks.
    Borger and Atkinson filed separate lawsuits against CSX under the Federal
    Employers Liability Act, 
    45 U.S.C. § 51
    , for injuries that allegedly resulted from exposure
    to hydrochloric acid vapors emanating from the northbound train. The district court
    No. 08-3685         Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                                  Page 3
    consolidated their cases and granted CSX’s motion for summary judgment, determining that
    no genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether CSX violated federal safety
    regulations and that the release of hydrochloric acid vapor was not foreseeable and thus was
    not the result of CSX’s negligence. The plaintiffs appeal.
    II.
    This Court reviews de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. Mohnkern
    v. Prof’l Ins. Co., 
    542 F.3d 157
    , 160 (6th Cir. 2008), and makes all reasonable inferences in
    the nonmoving party’s favor. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 587 (1986).
    III.
    The Federal Employers Liability Act provides a federal cause of action against a
    railroad company for employees injured as a result of their employer’s negligence:
    Every common carrier by railroad while engaging in commerce . . . shall be
    liable in damages to any person suffering injury while he is employed by
    such carrier in such commerce . . . for such injury or death resulting in whole
    or in part from the negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employees of
    such carrier . . . .
    
    42 U.S.C. § 51
    . Congress enacted the Act in “response to the special needs of railroad
    workers who are daily exposed to the risks inherent in railroad work and are helpless to
    provide adequately for their own safety.” Aparicio v. Norfolk & W. Ry. Co., 
    84 F.3d 803
    ,
    807 (6th Cir. 1996) (citation omitted), abrogated on other grounds by Reeves v. Sanderson
    Plumbing Prods., Inc., 
    530 U.S. 133
    , 149 (2000). The Act requires a railroad company to
    provide its workers with a “reasonably safe place in which to work and such protection
    [against the hazard causing the injury] as would be expected of a person in the exercise of
    ordinary care under the circumstances.” Aparicio, 
    84 F.3d at 810
     (quoting Urie v.
    Thompson, 
    337 U.S. 163
    , 174 (1949)).
    A plaintiff may demonstrate liability as a matter of law if he proves that a railroad
    company violated a safety statute that establishes an absolute duty on the railroad company.
    See Crane v. Cedar Rapids & Iowa City Ry. Co., 
    395 U.S. 164
    , 166 (1969); Kernan v. Am.
    Dredging Co., 
    355 U.S. 426
    , 443 (1958); Urie, 
    337 U.S. at 163
    . If a plaintiff cannot point
    No. 08-3685         Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                               Page 4
    to a specific safety statute that the railroad violated, he can still prevail by proving the
    “traditional common law elements of negligence: duty, breach, foreseeability, and
    causation.” Adams v. CSX Transp., Inc., 
    899 F.2d 536
    , 539 (6th Cir. 1990).
    A.
    The plaintiffs argue that CSX violated three federal regulations issued under the
    Hazardous Materials Transportation Act, 
    49 U.S.C. § 5101-5128
    : 
    49 C.F.R. §§ 173
    , 173.31,
    and 174.9. We assume, without deciding, that the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act
    is among those safety statutes that establishes an absolute duty under the FELA.
    1) Section 173.31
    First, Borger and Atkinson say that CSX violated 
    49 C.F.R. § 173.31
    :
    d) Examination before shipping.
    (1) No person may offer for transportation a tank car containing a hazardous
    material or a residue of a hazardous material unless that person determines
    that the tank car is in proper condition and safe for transportation.
    (emphasis added). Section 173.31 describes a ten-point inspection process, including for
    example, examination of the “tank shell and heads for abrasion, corrosion, cracks, dents,
    distortion, defects in welds, or any other condition that makes the tank car unsafe for
    transportation.” 
    49 C.F.R. § 173.31
    (d)(1)(i)-(x). But CSX’s failure to perform such an
    inspection does not violate Section 173.31 because the regulation is not directed at carriers,
    like CSX, but at those who “offer for transportation a tank car.” Here, the company that
    offered the car that contained hydrochloric acid to CSX for transportation was Bayer
    Corporation. Thus, under Section 173.31(d), it was Bayer’s duty, not CSX’s, to perform
    these inspections “before shipping” and CSX’s failure to perform them is irrelevant under
    Section 173.31(d)—a regulation that applies to shippers.
    2) Section 174.9
    The plaintiffs also maintain that CSX violated 
    49 C.F.R. § 174.9
    , which addresses
    the inspection duties for carriers:
    No. 08-3685           Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                              Page 5
    At each location where a hazardous material is accepted for transportation
    or placed in a train, the carrier shall inspect each rail car containing the
    hazardous material, at ground level, for required markings, labels, placards,
    securement of closures and leakage. This inspection may be performed in
    conjunction with inspections required under parts 215 and 232 of this title.
    
    49 C.F.R. § 174.9
    . Parts 215 and 232 describe the required pre-departure and brake system
    inspections.
    John Hamm, a CSX car inspector who was on duty the night of the incident, testified
    about the scope of his inspection of the northbound train. The district court concluded that
    it satisfied Section 174.9’s requirements because “in the course of performing the ground
    level Class 1 brake inspection of [the northbound train] before departure[,] [Hamm] also
    looked for signs of leaks on each of the cars and found none.” We agree that this was
    sufficient. Hamm testified in his deposition that he visually observed the valves, ports,
    discharge pipes, hatches, latches, and other equipment on the tank cars in the course of
    completing his brake inspection. He also explained that, had he seen anything out of the
    ordinary, he would have reported it to the lead man and noted it in the Car Inspectors Work
    Report. The Work Report contains no indication that Hamm observed anything out of the
    ordinary.
    The plaintiffs counter that “Hamm did not properly inspect the tank car on the
    northbound train prior to it leaving Cincinnati,” but they do not explain how Hamm’s visual
    inspection fell short of Section 174.9’s requirements. They do not contend that Section
    174.9 requires more than a “ground level” inspection for “required markings, labels,
    placards, securement of closures and leakage,” 
    49 C.F.R. § 174.9
    . These duties are fewer
    and less burdensome than those imposed on shippers, see 
    42 C.F.R. § 173.31
    (d)(1)(i)-(x).
    Although Hamm testified that he was not trained to inspect tank cars, Borger and Atkinson
    offer no evidence that a Section 174.9 visual inspection requires special training, beyond the
    training Hamm completed to become a car inspector. Thus, the district court properly
    concluded that no facts in the record could support an inference that CSX failed to comply
    with Section 174.9.
    3) Section 174.3
    Borger and Atkinson also contend that CSX violated 
    49 C.F.R. § 174.3
    :
    No. 08-3685           Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                                       Page 6
    No person may accept for transportation or transport by rail any shipment of
    hazardous material that is not in conformance with the requirements of this
    subchapter.
    The Department of Transportation has long interpreted this regulation to entitle carriers to
    rely on a shipper’s certification that the material offered is in accordance with the Hazardous
    Material Regulations unless it has “reason to know of discrepancies.” Hazardous Materials,
    1
    
    63 Fed. Reg. 30,411
     (Dep’t of Transp. June 4, 1998) (formal interpretation).                        The
    regulation therefore requires more than evidence that a person was injured by a
    shipment: the carrier must have had a reason to know of a problem. The plaintiffs did
    not, at summary judgment, point to facts supporting a conclusion that CSX violated
    Section 174.3 because it knew of any discrepancies.
    B.
    Finally, Borger and Atkinson contend that even if CSX complied with the
    Hazardous Materials Transportation Act’s requirements, a reasonable fact-finder
    nevertheless could conclude that CSX was negligent. To support this argument, they
    point to CSX’s decision not to investigate the source of an “unusual odor” that some of
    the crew members on the northbound train smelled and the nature of CSX’s pre-
    departure inspection of the northbound train.
    The district court did not decide if CSX’s failure to respond to the “unusual”
    odors detected by crew members aboard the northbound train amounted to negligence
    because the plaintiffs never made that argument. Instead, they focused exclusively on
    the alleged inadequacy and unreasonableness of the pre-departure inspection of the
    northbound train. An argument not raised before the district court is waived on appeal
    to this Court. Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Flowers, 
    513 F.3d 546
    , 552-53 (6th Cir. 2008). But
    even if it had not been waived, the argument is unconvincing because none of the crew
    members who reported smelling an odor believed that the odor came from the train.
    1
    Since the incident, the regulations were amended to allow the carrier to “rely on information
    provided by the offeror,” unless the carrier knows or has reason to know that the information provided by
    the offeror is incorrect. 
    49 C.F.R. § 171.2
    (f).
    No. 08-3685        Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                           Page 7
    CSX’s decision not to investigate the source of those odors does not amount to
    negligence.
    This leaves us with the plaintiffs’ argument that, even if CSX complied with the
    Hazardous Material Transportation Act regulations, its inspection was nonetheless
    unreasonable under the circumstances. Liability under the Federal Employers Liability
    Act may arise “whether the fault is a violation of a statutory duty or the more general
    duty of acting with care.” Kernan, 
    355 U.S. at 438-39
    . The duty is “measured by what
    a reasonably prudent person should or could have reasonably anticipated as occurring
    under like circumstances,” Green v. River Terminal Ry. Co., 
    763 F.2d 805
    , 809 (6th Cir.
    1985), and is breached if the railroad company knows or should have known that the
    “prevalent standards of conduct were inadequate to protect” employees. Van Gorder v.
    Grand Trunk W. R.R., Inc., 
    509 F.3d 265
    , 269-70 (6th Cir. 2007). To survive summary
    judgment, a plaintiff must present “little more than a scintilla” of evidence “given the
    Supreme Court’s view that Congress has favored [the FELA] plaintiffs with a jury
    resolution of all colorable issues.” Aparicio, 
    84 F.3d at
    810 (citing Rogers v. Missouri
    Pac. R.R. Co., 
    352 U.S. 500
     (1957)).
    Borger and Atkinson argue that CSX’s compliance with the safety regulations
    is not necessarily conclusive evidence that it acted in a reasonably prudent manner. In
    support, they rely on Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. United States, 
    13 Cl. Ct. 402
    , 411 (Cl. Ct. 1987). In Southern Pacific (not an FELA case), the court observed that
    “[c]ompliance with regulations intended to prevent the harm at issue may in some
    instances be conclusive evidence of reasonable care, but not where a party has reason
    to suspect the existence of special dangers or hazards.” 
    Id. at 411
     (emphasis added).
    The court in Southern Pacific concluded that the railroad company had notice of facts
    that “suggest[] some failure on the part of shippers to perform their . . . duties.” 
    Id.
    Here, by contrast, Borger and Atkinson did not offer evidence that CSX had notice of
    any special danger or hazard with respect to the northbound train—for example that CSX
    was aware of leaks in general, or that it had special information about the car that
    allegedly leaked hydrochloric acid vapors. Nor did it have any reason to believe that the
    No. 08-3685         Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                             Page 8
    shipper, Bayer Corporation, had not performed its inspection duties. Thus, here, CSX’s
    compliance with the Hazardous Materials Regulations is conclusive evidence that CSX
    exercised due care by conducting a reasonable pre-departure inspection of the
    northbound train.
    Although they deny relying on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur to prove their
    case, the plaintiffs’ claim that CSX violated Section 174.3 is essentially a res ipsa claim.
    It is based on this syllogism: properly prepared cars do not leak when they are being
    transported; something on the northbound CSX train was leaking as it passed them; thus,
    the shipment was “not in conformance” with the requirements of the Hazardous
    Materials Transportation Act.
    This Court has applied res ipsa in FELA cases, see Miller v. Cincinnati, N. O.
    & T. Pac. Ry. Co., 
    317 F.2d 693
     (6th Cir. 1963), but we are not convinced that it applies
    in this case. First, assuming that a leak could be evidence of some person’s negligence,
    it does not follow that it is evidence of CSX’s negligence. That a leak might not
    necessarily result from negligence on the part of the carrier is evident from the structure
    of the Hazardous Materials Act and Regulations. They describe separate inspection
    duties for parties “offering” shipments of hazardous materials (shippers) and for parties
    transporting hazardous materials (carriers).         As we described above, Section
    173.31(d)(i)-(x) imposes inspection duties on “each person offering a tank car for
    transportation,” while Section 174.9 describes how and when “the carrier must inspect
    each rail car.” The plaintiffs’ argument that a leak, no matter when it begins, proves the
    carrier’s negligence ignores the division of regulatory inspection duties. Under the
    plaintiffs’ theory, a carrier is strictly liable regardless of whether it complied with the
    Section 174.9 inspection duties and performed a reasonably prudent pre-departure
    inspection.
    Notably, Borger and Atkinson do not argue that a reasonably prudent pre-
    departure inspection required CSX to go beyond the regulations. Nor do they argue that
    CSX’s pre-departure inspection in this case fell below the railroad industry standard.
    Borger and Atkinson’s expert, Joel Robertson, a “Railway Safety Specialist,” stated that
    No. 08-3685        Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                              Page 9
    CSX “failed to perform an adequate or effective inspection of the tank car each time the
    tank cars were placed in a train, resulting in the acceptance and transporting of a
    defective tank car.” Even if we assume that the odor plaintiffs smelled came from the
    tank car carrying hydrochloric acid where CSX workers later detected an odor, we have
    little information about the odor’s possible causes. No one observed leaks or unsecured
    hatches or latches on the car. As the district court observed:
    The most plausible explanation for the apparent venting of hydrochloric
    acid vapor, advanced by Plaintiffs’ expert, is that [the car] was loaded
    with insufficient outage, or air space between the top level of the liquid
    and the top of the tank, for expansion. The outside temperature and
    hydraulic motion of the train in motion caused the pressure to build
    inside of the tank car to the point that vapor was vented through the
    pressure release valve. Alternatively the pressure relief valve was
    defective to begin with and released vapor into the air at a lower pressure
    than it should have.
    Borger v. CSX Transp., Inc., 
    2008 WL 1886170
    , *2 (S.D. Ohio Apr. 25, 2008).
    Robertson’s report is silent, however, on what type of inspection, in addition to
    the visual inspection required under Section 174.9, would have been “adequate” or
    would have revealed the unknown defect in the car that allegedly leaked hydrochloric
    acid. According to Robertson, the regulations only require the valves on tank cars to be
    inspected every five years, and it is impossible to inspect the valves without removing
    them from the tank car. Hamm, who examined the train before it departed Cincinnati,
    testified that he would have reported any unusual odors, and the absence of any
    indication of an unusual smell on the pre-departure report is evidence that Hamm did not
    smell anything coming from the cars. And the plaintiffs offered no evidence that the
    vapors could not have been released absent a visible leak in the tank of the car. Viewing
    the facts in Borger and Atkinson’s favor, a reasonable fact-finder could not find that
    CSX’s inspection fell below the prevalent standard for railroad companies.
    Accepting the plaintiffs’ argument that an injury was foreseeable in this case
    would require future carriers to anticipate an injury every time a train carries hazardous
    materials—even without notice of a shipment’s deficiency or the presence of an unusual
    odor before a train departs. It would effectively replace the FELA’s negligence standard
    No. 08-3685        Borger, et al. v. CSX Transportation                          Page 10
    with strict liability on all carriers of hazardous materials. Even under the “little more
    than a scintilla” quantum of evidence, no reasonable jury could conclude, based on
    nothing more than a report of an odor detected on the post-incident inspection, that a
    reasonably prudent railroad company could have foreseen that the tank car would leak.
    There is no evidence that the two suspected causes of the alleged leak—insufficient
    outage or a defective pressure relief valve—could have been detected by a visual
    inspection. Nor is there evidence that CSX’s pre-departure visual inspection of the
    northbound train fell below the standard of a reasonably prudent railroad inspection or
    that prescribed by the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act.
    IV.
    We conclude that CSX did not violate the Hazardous Materials Transportation
    Act, and that the evidence is not sufficient for a fact-finder to determine that CSX’s
    negligence caused injuries to Borger or Atkinson. We thus AFFIRM the district court’s
    entry of summary judgment.