|
Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
NASHVILLE, C. & ST. L. RY. CO. v. STATE OF ALABAMA, 128 U.S. 96
(1888)
128 U.S. 96
NASHVILLE, C. & ST. L. RY. CO.
v.
STATE OF ALABAMA.
1
October 22, 1888
Oscar R. Handley, for plaintiff in error.
[128 U.S. 96, 97]
T. N. McClelland, Atty. Gen., for defendant in error.
FIELD, J.
A statute of Alabama which took effect on the 1st of June, 1887,
'for the protection of the traveling public against accidents caused
by color- blindness and defective vision,' declares that all persons
afflicted with color-blindness and loss of visual power, to the extent
therein defined, are 'disqualified from serving on railroad lines
within the state in the capacity of locomotive engineer, fireman,
train conductor, brakeman, station agent, switchman, flag-man,
gate-tender, or signal-man, or in any other position which requires
the use or discrimination of form or color signals;' and makes it a
misdemeanor, punishable by fine of not less than ten nor more than
fifty dollars for each offense, for a person to serve in any of the
capacities mentioned without having obtained a certificate of fitness
for his position in accordance with the provisions of the act. It
provides for the appointment by the governor of a suitable number of
qualified medical men throughout the state to carry the law into
effect, and for the examination by them of persons to be employed in
any of the capacities mentioned; prescribes rules to govern the action
of the examiners; and allows them a fee of three dollars for the
examination of each person. It declares that re-examinations shall be
made once in every five years, and whenever sickness, or fever, or
accidents calculated to affect the visual organs have occurred to the
parties, or a majority of the board may direct; that the examinations
and re-examinations shall be made at the expense of the railroad
companies; and that it shall be a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of
not less than fifty nor more than five hundred dollars for each
offense, for any such company to employ a person, in any of the
capacities mentioned, who does not possess a certificate of fitness
therefor from the examiners in so far as color- blindness and the
visual organs are concerned. The defendant, the Nashville, Chattanooga
& St. Louis Railway Company, is a corporation created under the laws
of [128 U.S. 96, 98]
Tennessee, and runs its trains from Nashville, in that state,
to various points in other states; 24 miles of its line being in
Alabama, 2 miles in Georgia, 7 in Kentucky, and 464 in Tennessee. On
the 2d of August, 1887, one James Moore, was employed by the company
as a train conductor on it road, and acted in that capacity, in the
county of Jackson, in Alabama, without having obtained a certificate
of his fitness so far as color- blindness and visual powers were
concerned, in accordance with the law of that state. For this
employment the company was indicted in the circuit court of the state
for Jackson county, under the statute mentioned, and on its plea of
not guilty was convicted, and fined $50. On appeal to the supreme
court of the state the judgment was affirmed, and to review it the
case is brought in error to this court.
It was contended in the court below, among other things, that the
statute of Alabama was repugnant to the power vested in congress to
regulate commercce among the states, and that it violated the clause
of the fifth amendment which declares that no person shall be deprived
of his property without due process of law. The same positions are
urged in this court, with the further position that the statute is in
conflict with the clause in the third article of the constitution
which provides that the trials of all crimes shall be held in the
state where they were committed. The first question thus presented is
covered by the decision of this court rendered at the last term in
Smith v. Alabama,
124 U.S. 465 , 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 564. In that case the law adjudged
to be valid required, as a condition for a person to act as an
engineer of a railroad train in that state, that he should be examined
as to his qualifications by a board appointed for that purpose, and
licensed if satisfied as to his qualifications, and made it a
misdemeanor for any one to act as engineer who violated its
provisions. The act now under consideration only requires an
examination and license of parties, to be employed on railroads in
certain specific capacities, with reference to one particular
qualification, that relating to his visual organs;
[128 U.S. 96, 99]
but this limitation does not affect the application of the
decision. If the state could lawfully require an examination as to the
general fitness of a person to be employed on a railway, it could of
course lawfully require an examination as to his fitness in some one
particular. Color- blindness is a defect of a vital character in
railway employes in the various capacities mentioned. Ready and
accurate perception by them of colors, and discrimination between
them, are essential to safety of the trains, and of course of the
passengers and property they carry. It is generally by signals of
different colors, to each of which a separate and distinct meaning is
attached, that the movement of trains is directed. Their starting,
their stopping, their speed, the condition of switches, the approach
of other trains, and the tracks in such case which each should take,
are governed by them. Defects of vision in such cases on the part of
any one employed may lead to fatal results. Color-blindness, by which
is meant either an imperfect perception of colors, or an inability to
recognize them at all, or to distinguish between colors, or between
some of them, is a defect much more common than is generally supposed.
Medical treatises of recognized merit on the subject represent, as the
result of extended examinations, that a fraction over 4 per cent. of
males are colorblind. With some the defect is congenital, with others
brought on by occupations in which they have been engaged, or by
vicious habits in the use of liquors or food in which they have
indulged. It presents itself in a great variety of forms, from an
imperfect perception of colors to absolute inability to recognize them
at all. Such being the proportion of males thus affected, it is a
matter of the greatest importance to safe railroad transportation of
persons and property that strict examination be made as to the
existence of this defect in persons seeking employment on railroads in
any of the capacities mentioned. It is conceded that the power of
congress to regulate interstate commerce is plenary; that, as incident
to it, congress may legislate as to the qualifications, duties, and
liabilities of employes and others on railway trains engaged in that
commerce; and that such legislation will supersede any state
[128 U.S. 96, 100]
action on the subject. But, until such legislation is had, it
is clearly within the competency of the states to provide against
accidents on trains while within their limits. Indeed, it is a
principle fully recognized by decisions of state and federal courts
that, wherever there is any business in which, either from the
products created or the instrumentalities used, there is danger to
life or property, it is not only within the power of the states, but
it is among their plain duties, to make provision against accidents
likely to follow in such business, so that the dangers attending it
may be guarded against so far as is practicable.
In Smith v. Alabama this court, recognizing previous decisions
where it had been held that it was competent for the state to provide
redress for wrongs done and injuries committed on its citizens by
parties engaged in the business of interstate commerce,
notwithstanding the power of congress over those subjects, very
pertinently inquired: 'What is there to forbid the state, in the
further exercise of the same jurisdiction, to prescribe the
precautions and safeguards foreseen to be necessary and proper to
prevent by anticipation those wrongs and injuries which, after they
have been inflicted, it is admitted the state has power to redress and
punish? If the state has power to secure to passengers conveyed by
common carriers in their vehicles of transportation a right of action
for the recovery of damages occasioned by the negligence of the
carrier in not providing safe and suitable vehicles, or employes of
sufficient skill and knowledge, or in not properly conducting and
managing the act of transportation, why may not the state also impose,
on behalf of the public, as additional means of prevention, penalties
for the nonobservance of these precautions? Why may it not define and
declare what particular things shall be done and observed by such a
carrier in order to insure the safety of the persons and things he
carries, or of the persons and property of others liable to be
affected by them?' Of course, but one answer can be made to these
inquiries; for clearly what the state may punish or afford redress
for, when done, it may seek by proper precautions in advance to
prevent. And the court in that case
[128 U.S. 96, 101] held that the provisions
in the statute of Alabama were not strictly regulations of interstate
commerce, but parts of that body of the local law which governs the
relation between carriers of passengers and merchandise and the public
who employ them, which are not displaced until they come in conflict
with an express enactment of congress in the exercise of its power
over commerce; and that, until so displaced, they remain as the law
governing carriers in the discharge of their obligations, whether
engaged in purely internal commerce of the state, or in commerce among
the states. The same observations may be made with respect to the
provisions of the state law for the examination of parties to be
employed on railways with respect to their powers of vision. Such
legislation is not directed against commerce, and only affects it
incidentally, and therefore cannot be called, within the meaning of
the constitution, a regulation of commerce. As said in Sherlock v.
Alling,
93 U.S. 99 , 104, legislation by a state of that character,
'relating to the rights, duties, and liabilities of citizens, and only
indirectly and remotely affecting the operations of commerce, is of
obligatory force upon citizens within its territorial jurisdiction,
whether on land or water, or engaged in commerce, foreign or
interstate, or in any other pursuit.' In our judgment the statute of
Alabama under consideration falls within this class.
The second position of the plaintiff in error, that the state
statute is repugnant to the provision of article 3 of the constitution
which declares that the trial of all crimes shall be held in the state
where they have been committed, is readily disposed of. The provision
has reference only to trials in the federal courts; it has no
application to trials in the state courts.
As to the third position of the plaintiff in error, assuming that
counsel intended to rely upon the fourteenth instead of the fifth
amendment, (as the latter only applies a limit to federal authority,
not restricting the powers of the state,) we do not think it tenable.
Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243; Livingston v. Moore, Id. 469.
Requiring railroad companies to pay the fees allowed for the
examination of parties who
[128 U.S. 96, 102] are to serve on their
railroads in one of the capacities mentioned, is not depriving them of
property without due process of law. It is merely imposing upon them
the expenses necessary to ascertain whether their employes possess the
physical qualifications required by law. Judgment affirmed.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] Affirming 3 South. Rep. 702.
|