This summary was computer-generated without any editorial revision. It is not official, has not been checked for accuracy, and is NOT citable.
Facts
- A locomotive engineer employed by BNSF Railway Company (BNSF) died after falling from a train that was accelerating but still within the speed limits prescribed by the Federal Railroad Safety Act (FRSA). The train, operated by the engineer and a conductor, was speeding up as per the engineer's instructions when the engineer exited the locomotive and later was found deceased beside the tracks. The engineer's representative sued BNSF for negligence under the Federal Employers Liability Act (FELA), among other claims (paras 2-3).
Procedural History
- District Court of Santa Fe County: Granted summary judgment to BNSF, concluding that the FELA negligence claim, based solely on allegations of excessive speed, was precluded by FRSA (para 4).
Parties' Submissions
- Plaintiff-Appellant: Argued that the decedent's death was due to negligence on part of BNSF, specifically citing excessive speed, lack of a safety briefing, and defective equipment as contributing factors. Contended that FRSA does not preclude a FELA claim based on allegations of unsafe speed (paras 3, 8, 20-23).
- Defendant-Appellee (BNSF): Argued that the plaintiff failed to prove a breach of duty or causation for the decedent's injuries and claimed that the decedent was negligent. Asserted that a FELA claim based on the speed of the train is precluded by FRSA (para 3).
Legal Issues
- Whether FRSA precludes a FELA negligence claim based solely on allegations of excessive speed when the train was within the speed regulations prescribed under FRSA (paras 1, 8).
- Whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment to BNSF by determining that the FELA claim was precluded by FRSA (para 4).
Disposition
- The Court of Appeals of New Mexico reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to BNSF, holding that FRSA does not preclude a FELA negligence claim based on allegations of excessive speed (para 24).
Reasons
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RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge (MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge, J. MILES HANISEE, Judge concurring):The court concluded that FRSA speed regulations do not preclude a speed-based negligence claim under FELA, aligning with other jurisdictions that have considered the issue. It emphasized that FELA and FRSA serve complementary purposes, with FELA focusing on employee safety and FRSA on national uniformity in railroad safety regulations. The court found no clear and unambiguous congressional intent for FRSA to eliminate remedies under FELA. It distinguished between preemption and preclusion, citing the Supreme Court's decision in POM Wonderful LLC v. Coca-Cola Co. as instructive for interpreting the interplay between two federal statutes addressing the same subject in different ways. The court rejected the district court's analysis that looked at each basis for negligence individually rather than holistically but reversed the summary judgment based on the survival of the claim related to the train's speed (paras 5-24).
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