DocketNumber: Appeal, 137
Judges: Keller, Baldrige, Rhodes, Hirt, Reno, James
Filed Date: 4/17/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Argued April 17, 1944. This is a workman's compensation case. On April 23, 1937, Dominick Sabatino Antonio was employed by defendant at its station in Johnstown, Pa. On that day he was fatally injured in the course of his employment. His duties included keeping the station clean, tending the furnace, meeting the trains, loading and receiving mail and baggage, and transporting the mail and baggage from the trains on the upper or train level of the station to the baggage room on the lower level, and from the baggage room to the trains. On the day in question deceased and another employee of defendant, a baggageman, met an interstate passenger train operating from Chicago, Ill., to New York City, and unloaded onto an electric truck some newspapers and one pouch containing mail from points outside the state of Pennsylvania. Deceased proceeded to lower the truck with its cargo on an elevator from the upper to the lower level in order to reach the baggage room where the newspapers and mail were to be delivered to the consignees. Before the elevator reached the lower level, an accident occurred, and deceased suffered injuries which resulted in his death. The baggageman used a stairway to reach the lower level.
A claim petition was filed by the widow of the deceased employee. The referee made an award which was affirmed by the Workmen's Compensation Board. The court of common pleas reversed the board on the ground that deceased at the time of the accident was engaged in interstate transportation. Claimant has appealed.
The sole question involved is whether the deceased *Page 280 at the time of the fatal accident was engaged in interstate transportation or in matters so closely related thereto as to be considered a part thereof.
The facts are undisputed. The character of the employment is to be determined by us as a matter of law. Jordan v. Erie R. Co.,
If deceased was employed in interstate commerce on April 23, 1937, the consequent rights from the accident arose under the Federal Employers' Liability Act, April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65,
The test of whether deceased at the time of his accidental injury was engaged in interstate commerce, within the meaning of the act then in force, naturally must be whether he was engaged in interstate transportation or in work so closely related to such transportation as to be practically a part of it. Chicago North Western Ry. Co. v. Bolle,
In the present case we think the status of deceased with respect to interstate transportation is to be tested *Page 281
by the work that he was actually performing at the time of the accident. Slizik v. Pittsburgh Lake Erie R. Co., supra, p. 289. Some of his duties did not involve interstate transportation. But at the time of the accident he was transporting a pouch of interstate mail unloaded by him from an interstate train to the baggage room in the station where the mail was to be received and taken to the post office at Johnstown. Consequently, at the time of the fatal accident he was engaged in the completion of an interstate movement. It was part of the duties of deceased to participate in the movement of mail from the train to the baggage room. The receipt and transfer of the interstate mail coming in on an interstate train was interstate transportation. The successive movements were parts of one unified service. Mason v. Reading Co.,
Deceased was engaged in the actual unloading of the mail from the train until he had placed it in the baggage room on the lower level of the station. His work in meeting the interstate passenger train, unloading the mail from it, and transporting the mail to the baggage room for ultimate delivery must be viewed as a unit. Such employment is clearly in furtherance of interstate transportation. See Missouri P. Ry. Co. v. Baldwin,
273 S.W. 834, certiorari denied
Judgment is affirmed. *Page 282
New York Central Railroad Company v. Wheeling Can Company ( 1926 )
Mayers v. Union Railroad ( 1917 )
Scarborough v. Pennsylvania Railroad ( 1943 )
Mason v. Reading Company ( 1937 )
Slizik v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad ( 1940 )
Koons v. Philadelphia & Reading Ry. Co. ( 1921 )
Chicago & North Western Railway Co. v. Bolle ( 1931 )
Niblett v. Pennsylvania Railroad ( 1941 )