Summary of Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S. Ct. 817, 82 L. Ed. 1188 (1938).
Facts
Tompkins (P) sustained personal
injuries when he was struck by an Erie Railroad Company (D) freight train in
Pennsylvania while walking on a footpath adjacent to the tracks. Tompkins was a
citizen of Pennsylvania and Erie Railroad Company was incorporated in New York.
Tompkins brought this personal
injury lawsuit in diversity in federal district court in New York, asserting
that he was lawfully on the property as a licensee, and that the accident
occurred as a result of Erie Railroad’s negligence in the operation or
maintenance of the train. Erie Railroad Company denied liability and asserted
that the rule that had been established in the courts of Pennsylvania should
apply. Under that rule, persons using pathways adjacent to railways were deemed
trespassers and the railroad would not liable for injuries unless its actions
were wanton or willful.
Tompkins denied that such a rule had
been established by the Pennsylvania courts. He further contended that since no
Pennsylvania statute addressed the issue of liability in such cases, the
railroad’s duty and liability should be determined according to the rule established
in federal court in light of Swift
v. Tyson. Under federal common law Tompkins
would be regarded as a licensee. Railroads owed a duty of ordinary care to
pedestrians and would be liable upon a showing of ordinary negligence.
At trial, the jury returned a
verdict in favor of Tompkins for $30,000. The Circuit Court of Appeals
affirmed, holding that in regards to questions of general law that are not
covered by state statute, federal courts are free to exercise their judgment as
to what the law is. The Circuit Court of Appeals held that railroads owe a duty
of ordinary care to those who use permissive pathways adjacent to railroad
tracks. The defendant appealed and the Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Issue
- In actions in diversity, except in matters governed by the Constitution or acts of Congress, must federal courts apply state common law in addition to statutory law?
Holding
and Rule (Brandeis)
- Yes. In actions in diversity, except in matters governed by the Constitution or acts of Congress, federal courts must apply state common law in addition to statutory law.
In diversity cases, federal courts
must apply state law as declared by the highest state court in addition to
state statutory law. There is no federal general common law. Congress has no
power to declare substantive rules of common law applicable in a State and the
Constitution does not confer such a power upon the federal courts.
In disapproving the doctrine of
Swift v. Tyson, the Court does not hold section 34 of the Federal Judiciary Act
of 1789 unconstitutional. It merely declares that, by applying the doctrine of
that case, rights which are reserved by the Constitution to the several States
have been invaded.
The ruling in Swift v. Tyson is
overruled. It was an unconstitutional assumption of powers by the Courts of the
United States. Federal courts do not have the power to create federal common
law as this gives federal courts powers not granted in the Constitution.
Congress has no power to declare the substantive rules of common law in state
actions.
The Swift decision is flawed because
it promotes forum shopping. Citizens of one state could move to another state
to create diversity and bring suit in federal court to take advantage of a more
favorable choice of law. Such a defect is substantial and provides no benefit.
Disposition
Reversed and remanded.
This case is also cited as Erie
Railroad v. Tompkins and as Erie v. Tompkins. See Byrd v. Blue Ridge Rural Electric Cooperative,
Inc. for a law school civil procedure
case brief in which the Supreme Court held that the Seventh Amendment right to
trial by jury in civil lawsuits supersedes conflicting state law.
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