LOCOMOTIVE INSPECTION ACT
(EXCERPTS FROM 45 U.S.C.)
(INCLUDING AMENDMENTS OF THE RAIL SAFETY IMPROVEMENT ACT OF 1988)
SECTION 22. INSPECTION OF LOCOMOTIVES AND APPURTENANCES;
DEFINITIONS
That the term "railroad," when used in this Act, shall have
the same meaning as when used in the Federal Railroad Safety Act
of 1970 (45 U.S.C. 431 et seq.).
SECTION 23. USE OF UNSAFE LOCOMOTIVES AND APPURTENANCES
UNLAWFUL; INSPECTION AND TESTS
It shall be unlawful for any railroad to use or permit to be
used on its line any locomotive unless said locomotive, its boiler,
tender, and all parts and appurtenances thereof are in proper
condition and safe to operate in the service to which the same are
put, that the same may be employed in the active service of such
railroad without unnecessary peril to life or limb, and unless said
locomotive, its boiler, tender, and all parts and appurtenances
thereof have been inspected from time to time in accordance with
the provisions of sections 28-30 and 32 of this title and are able
to withstand such test or tests as may be prescribed in the rules
and regulations as hereinafter provided for.
SECTION 28. RULES AND INSTRUCTIONS AS TO INSPECTION
Each railroad subject to this chapter shall file its rules
and instructions for the inspection of locomotive boilers with the
chief inspector within three months after February 17, 1911, and
after hearing and approval by the Interstate Commerce Commission,
such rules and instructions, with such modifications as the
commissioner requires, shall become obligatory upon such railroad:
Provided, however, That if any railroad subject to this chapter
shall fail to file its rules and instructions the director of
locomotive inspection shall prepare rules and instructions not
inconsistent herewith for the inspection of locomotive boilers, to
be observed by such railroad; which rules and instructions, being
approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and a copy thereof
being served upon the president, general manager, or general
superintendent of such railroad, shall be obligatory, and a
violation thereof punished as hereinafter provided: Provided also,
That such railroad may from time to time change the rules and
regulations herein provided for, but such change shall not take
effect and the new rules and regulations be in force until the same
shall have been filed with and approved by the Interstate Commerce
Commission. The director of locomotive inspection shall also make
all needful rules, regulations, and instructions not inconsistent
herewith for the conduct of his office and for the government of
the district inspectors: Provided, however, That all such rules
and instructions shall be approved by the Interstate Commerce
Commission before they take effect.
SECTION 29. DUTIES OF DISTRICT INSPECTORS; INSPECTION AND
REPAIRS BY CARRIERS; NOTICE TO CARRIER OF CONDITION
OF BOILER; APPEAL TO DIRECTOR AND REEXAMINATION;
FURTHER APPEAL TO SECRETARY
It shall be the duty of each inspector to become familiar, so
far as practicable, with the condition of each locomotive boiler
ordinarily housed or repaired in his district, and if any
locomotive is ordinarily housed or repaired in two or more
districts, then the director of locomotive inspection or an
assistant shall make such division between inspectors as will avoid
the necessity for duplication of work. Each inspector shall make
such personal inspection of the locomotive boilers under his care
from time to time as may be necessary to fully carry out the
provisions of sections 22-29 and 31-34 of this title, and as may
be consistent with his other duties, but he shall not be required
to make such inspections at stated times or at regular intervals.
His first duty shall be to see that the railroads make inspections
in accordance with the rules and regulations established or
approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, and that railroads
repair the defects which such inspections disclose before the
boiler or boilers or appurtenances pertaining thereto are again put
in service. Each railroad subject to such sections shall keep on
file the report of each inspection required by such rules and
regulations and the report showing the repair of the defects
disclosed by the inspection. The rules and regulations referred
to in this section shall prescribe the manner in which such reports
shall be kept. Whenever any district inspector shall, in the
performance of his duty, find any locomotive boiler or apparatus
pertaining thereto not conforming to the requirements of the law
or the rules and regulations established and approved as
hereinbefore stated, he shall notify the railroad in writing that
the locomotive is not in serviceable condition, and thereafter such
boiler shall not be used until in serviceable condition: Provided,
however, That a railroad, when notified by an inspector in writing
that a locomotive boiler is not in serviceable condition, because
of defects set out and described in said notice, may within five
days after receiving said notice, appeal to the director of
locomotive inspection by telegraph or by letter to have said boiler
reexamined, and upon receipt of the appeal from the inspector's
decision, the director of locomotive inspection shall assign one
of the assistant directors of locomotive inspection or any district
inspector other than the one from whose decision the appeal is
taken to reexamine and inspect said boiler within fifteen days from
date of notice. If upon such reexamination the boiler is found in
serviceable condition, the director of locomotive inspection shall
immediately notify the railroad in writing, whereupon such boiler
may be put into service without further delay; but if the
reexamination of said boiler sustains the decision of the district
inspector, the director of locomotive inspection shall at once
notify the railroad owning or operating such locomotive that the
appeal from the decision of the inspector is dismissed, and upon
the receipt of such notice the railroad may, within thirty days,
appeal to the Interstate Commerce Commission, and upon such appeal,
and after hearing, said commission shall have the power to revise,
modify, or set aside such action of the director of locomotive
inspection and declare that said locomotive is in serviceable
condition and authorize the same to be operated: Provided further,
That pending either appeal the requirements of the inspector shall
be effective.
SECTION 30. POWERS AND DUTIES OF INSPECTORS, AND PROVISIONS OF
CERTAIN SECTIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL PARTS OF
LOCOMOTIVE AND TENDER; EXAMINATIONS OF INSPECTORS
The director of locomotive inspection and the two assistant
directors of locomotive inspection, together with all the district
inspectors, appointed as hereinbefore provided, shall inspect and
shall have the same powers and duties with respect to all the parts
and appurtenances of the locomotive and tender that they have with
respect to the boiler of a locomotive and the appurtenances
thereof, and the provisions of sections 22-29 and 31-34 of this
title as to the equipment of locomotives shall apply to and include
the entire locomotive and tender and all their parts with the same
force and effect as it applies to locomotive boilers and their
appurtenances. All inspectors and applicants for the position of
inspector shall be examined touching their qualifications and
fitness with respect to the additional duties imposed.
SECTION 31. ANNUAL REPORT OF DIRECTOR
The director of locomotive inspection shall make an annual
report to the Interstate Commerce Commission of the work done
during the year, and shall make such recommendations for the
betterment of the service as he may desire.
SECTION 32. REPORT BY RAILROAD TO DIRECTORS AS TO ACCIDENTS;
PRESERVATION OF DISABLED PARTS; INVESTIGATION AND
REPORT THEREUPON
In the case of accident resulting from failure from any cause
of a locomotive boiler or its appurtenances, resulting in serious
injury or death to one or more persons, a statement forthwith must
be made in writing of the fact of such accident, by the railroad
owning or operating said locomotive, to the director of locomotive
inspection. Whereupon the facts concerning such accident shall be
investigated by the director of locomotive inspection or one of his
assistants, or such inspector as the director of locomotive
inspection may designate for that purpose. And where the
locomotive is disabled to the extent that it cannot be run by its
own steam, the part or parts affected by the said accident shall
be preserved by said railroad intact, so far as possible, without
hindrance or interference to traffic until after said inspection.
The director of inspection or an assistant or the designated
inspector making the investigation shall examine or cause to be
examined thoroughly the boiler or part affected, making full and
detailed report of the cause of the accident to the director of
locomotive inspection.
SECTION 33. REPORT BY SECRETARY OF INVESTIGATIONS
The Interstate Commerce Commission may at any time call upon
the director of locomotive inspection for a report of any accident
embraced in section 32 of this title, and upon the receipt of said
report, if it deems it to the public interest, make reports of such
investigations, stating the cause of accident, together with such
recommendations as it deems proper. Neither said report nor any
report of said investigation nor any part thereof shall be admitted
as evidence or used for any purpose in any suit or action for
damages growing our of any matter mentioned in said report or
investigation.
SECTION 34. PENALTY FOR VIOLATIONS BY CARRIER; DUTY OF UNITED
STATES ATTORNEY TO SUE THEREFOR; DIRECTOR TO GIVE
INFORMATION
Any person (including a railroad and any manager, supervisor,
official, or other employee or agent of a railroad) violating this
Act, or any rule or regulation made under its provisions or any
lawful order of any inspector, shall be liable to a penalty in such
amount, not less than $250 nor more than $10,000 per violation
(with each day of a violation constituting a separate violation),
or where a grossly negligent violation or a pattern of repeated
violations has created an imminent hazard of death or injury to
persons, or has caused death or injury, not to exceed $20,000, as
the Secretary of Transportation deems reasonable, except that a
penalty may be assessed against an individual only for a willful
violation. Such penalty shall be assessed by the Secretary of
Transportation and, where compromise is not reached by the
Secretary under the Federal Claims Collection Act of 1966,
recovered in a suit or suits to be brought by the United States
attorney for the judicial district in which the violation occurred,
in which the individual defendant resides, or in which the
defendant has its principal executive office; and it shall be the
duty of such attorneys, subject to the direction of the Attorney
General, to bring such suits upon duly verified information being
lodged with them, respectively, of such violations having occurred;
and it shall be the duty of the director of locomotive inspection
to give information to the proper United States attorney of all
violations coming to his knowledge. For purposes of this section,
an act by an individual that causes a railroad to be in violation
of any of the provisions of this Act, or any rule or regulation
made under its provisions or any lawful order of any inspector,
shall be deemed a violation, and an individual shall be deemed not
to have committed a willful violation where such individual has
acted pursuant to the direct order of a railroad official or
supervisor under protest communicated to the supervisor. Such
individual shall have the right to document such protest.
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | LOCOMOTIVE INSPECTION ACT |
Author | rbrogan |
Last Modified By | rbrogan |
File Modified | 2005-11-23 |
File Created | 2005-11-23 |