What are the facts?
Nuttall was employed as a brakeman by the Reading Company, a common carrier by railroad engaged in interstate commerce. While performing his regular switching and coupling duties in a yard where cars were being assembled and moved in interstate traffic, Nuttall was injured during an attempted coupling maneuver. The cars were equipped with so-called automatic couplers mandated by the Safety Appliance Act, intended to couple by impact without the need for a brakeman to go between cars. According to Nuttall's evidence, the couplers failed to function properly and did not couple on impact, compelling him to place himself in a hazardous position between the cars, where he was crushed and seriously injured. Nuttall sued under FELA, alleging that his injuries were caused, at least in part, by the railroad's violation of the Safety Appliance Act—specifically, the failure of the automatic couplers to perform as intended. The railroad defended by denying any statutory violation and argued that Nuttall had assumed the risks inherent in his duties and was contributorily negligent. At trial, the court permitted the jury to consider assumption of risk as a complete defense. Nuttall sought review, challenging the propriety of those instructions in light of the interplay between FELA and the SAA.
What is the legal issue?
In a FELA action by a railroad employee injured while engaged in interstate commerce, may the railroad assert assumption of risk as a defense where there is evidence that the injury resulted in whole or in part from a violation of the Safety Appliance Act?
What rule applies?
Under FELA, an employee engaged in interstate commerce may recover for injuries resulting "in whole or in part" from the railroad's negligence. A violation of the Safety Appliance Act constitutes negligence per se. Section 4 of FELA bars the defense of assumption of risk where the employee's injury is attributable, in whole or in part, to a violation by the railroad of any statute enacted for the safety of employees, including the Safety Appliance Act. Contributory negligence does not bar recovery under FELA but may proportionally diminish damages (Section 3).
What did the court hold?
No. When an employee's injury results in whole or in part from a Safety Appliance Act violation, the railroad cannot rely on assumption of risk as a defense in a FELA action. It is error to submit assumption of risk to the jury under those circumstances; the appropriate inquiry is negligence per se (based on the statutory violation) and comparative fault as to damages.
What is the reasoning?
The Court emphasized the distinct legislative purposes of FELA and the Safety Appliance Act and how they operate together. The SAA imposes an absolute, non-delegable duty on railroads to equip and maintain certain safety appliances that must function as required; the failure of such a device to operate as intended is itself a statutory violation, and therefore negligence per se. FELA provides a federal cause of action to employees of interstate carriers and modifies traditional common-law defenses by abolishing assumption of risk in cases where a statutory safety violation contributes to the injury. This design ensures that the burden of insufficient safety measures rests with the carrier, not the worker. Here, Nuttall introduced evidence that the automatic couplers failed to couple on impact, compelling his exposure to a known hazard. Under the SAA, that failure is evidence of a statutory breach and supplies the negligence predicate under FELA. By allowing the jury to consider assumption of risk as a complete bar, the trial court undermined the protective purpose of both statutes and misapplied FELA's explicit limitation on that defense in the face of statutory violations. The Court reiterated that while an employee's contributory negligence may reduce damages, it does not bar recovery. Because the statutory framework makes the railroad's duty absolute and removes assumption of risk when such a duty is breached, the case had to be retried under correct instructions that focused on whether a violation occurred and, if so, on apportioning fault solely through comparative negligence rather than assumption of risk.
Why is this case significant?
Nuttall v. Reading Co. is a foundational case in FELA jurisprudence demonstrating how federal safety statutes reshape common-law principles. It teaches that statutory safety mandates create negligence per se and that FELA eliminates assumption of risk where such statutes are violated. For law students, Nuttall provides a template for analyzing the interaction between federal regulatory duties and tort defenses: identify the applicable safety statute, determine whether its violation contributed to the injury, and then apply FELA's comparative negligence scheme while excluding assumption of risk. The case also underscores that in early FELA litigation, proper jury instructions are critical to preserving the statutory balance Congress intended between railroad accountability and the allocation of fault.
How does the Safety Appliance Act affect a FELA claim?
The Safety Appliance Act imposes absolute duties on railroads to equip and maintain specified safety devices (e.g., automatic couplers). A violation constitutes negligence per se. In a FELA suit, if the SAA violation contributed to the injury, the railroad cannot rely on assumption of risk and is liable subject to FELA's comparative negligence rules.
Is assumption of risk ever available as a defense under FELA?
Under the original FELA regime, assumption of risk could be asserted in some circumstances, but not when an injury resulted, in whole or in part, from the violation of a federal safety statute such as the SAA. Nuttall reinforces this limitation. (Note: Congress largely abolished assumption of risk in FELA cases with the 1939 amendment, and the Supreme Court later confirmed that in Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.)
What is the difference between assumption of risk and contributory negligence under FELA?
Assumption of risk traditionally barred recovery if an employee knowingly encountered a job hazard. Under FELA, when a statutory safety violation contributes to the injury, that defense is unavailable. Contributory negligence, by contrast, does not bar recovery under FELA; it reduces damages proportionally based on the employee's share of fault.
Must the employee prove negligence beyond the statutory violation?
No. An SAA violation is negligence per se; proof that the mandated appliance failed to function as required (e.g., couplers failed to couple on impact) suffices to establish the railroad's breach. The plaintiff still must show causation—that the violation contributed to the injury—but need not prove additional negligence elements.
Does FELA apply if the employee was not engaged in interstate commerce?
FELA applies only when the railroad is a common carrier engaged in interstate commerce and the employee's work at the time bore a direct relation to interstate transportation. In Nuttall, the switching and coupling of cars in a yard servicing interstate movements satisfied that requirement.
What remedial effect did Nuttall have on jury instructions?
Nuttall makes clear that when there is evidence of an SAA violation contributing to the injury, a trial court should not instruct the jury on assumption of risk as a potential bar. Instead, the jury should consider whether a statutory violation occurred, whether it contributed to the injury, and, if so, apportion any comparative negligence solely for purposes of reducing damages.