A Decade of Litigation Rooted in a Single Brake Test
The February 2010 Incident
Rookaird filed suit in 2014, contending he was punished for conducting an air-brake check on February 23, 2010, before moving a 42-car train to storage. The brake test went forward despite a trainmaster’s uncertainty about whether it was required.
Hours later, the crew had not completed the move. They were instructed to sign out and leave, but Rookaird marked the wrong time on his time sheet, failed to sign it, and reportedly argued with another employee in the lunchroom instead of going home. A BNSF investigation concluded he had been inefficient, dishonest, and noncompliant—grounds the railroad said justified termination.
Verdict Won, Trimmed, Vacated — and Re-Litigated
A federal jury awarded Rookaird $1.6 million in 2016, later reduced. But after cross-appeals, the Ninth Circuit vacated the award in 2018. The court held that the brake test—though not legally required—still fell under FRSA protections, but said Rookaird had not sufficiently proven the test contributed to his firing.
After Rookaird’s death, his estate administrator Paul Parker continued the case. A bench trial in 2022 again favored BNSF, finding the brake test played only a minor role in the termination decision.
The Ninth Circuit panel partially reversed that ruling in August 2024, prompting a rehearing by the full court. The en banc decision in May ultimately sided with BNSF, setting the stage for the estate’s unsuccessful Supreme Court appeal.
