Adams v. Iten Biscuit Co.

1917 OK 47, 162 P. 938, 63 Okla. 52, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 9, 1917
Docket7984
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 1917 OK 47 (Adams v. Iten Biscuit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Iten Biscuit Co., 1917 OK 47, 162 P. 938, 63 Okla. 52, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 483 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

Plaintiff in error as plaintiff below commenced this action against the defendant in error, defendant below, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have *54 been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant while in its employment as a baker. On January 22, 1916, an amended petition was filed, to which demurrer was sustained upon the ground that the injuries complained of were covered by the Workmen’s 'Compensation Law, passed at the 1915 session of the Legislature, being chapter 246, p. 574, Sess. Laws 1915. From the judgment sustaining demurrer to his amended petition, plaintiff brings the case here, and urges that the Workmen’s Compensation Law is unconstitutional because in conflict with various provisions of the state and federal Constitutions, and that even though valid and constitutional, the act does not cover the .injuries alleged in plaintiff’s petition to have been received by him. The act is too long to set out in detail, but provides a system of compulsory compensation to injured employes in hazardous industries, and places the administration of the act under a commission therein created, and designated the “State Industrial Commission,” and also fixes a schedule of awards and provides penalties for the violation of the act. It requires all employers who are engaged in certain hazardous occupations therein enumerated and defined to secure compensation to their employes for all accidental injuries arising out of or in the course of employment, and such diseases or infections as may naturally and unavoidably result therefrom, by one of three methods, prescribed in the act as follows: (a) By insurance with some stock corporation or mutual association or by exchanging contracts of indemnity or interinsuranee under the reasonable regulation of the Industrial Commission providing for and securing the payment of the compensation provided by the act. (b) The employer may, with the approval of the commission, enter into or continue an agreement with his employes to promote a scheme for compensation in lieu of the insurance above mentioned, such compensation to be no less than that prescribed by the act, and not to be variant therefrom as to terms of payment, and provided that where such scheme requires contributions from the employes, the benefits shall be consistent therewith. (c) If the employer shall furnish satisfactory proof of his ability to pay compensation. the commission may, in its discretion, require the deposit with the commission as security an indemnity bond in an amount and kind to be determined by the commission to secure the payment of the compensation provided bjr the act. The right of action to recover damages for personal injuries not resulting in death arising and occurring in hazardous employments as defined in the act, except a right of action reserved to the State Industrial Commission for the benefit of an injured employe, is abrogated, and jurisdiction of the courts of the state over such causes, except as to the cause reserved to the State Industrial Commission for the benefit of injured employes, is abolished.

The validity of this legislation is challenged by plaintiff upon the ground that it' is not a valid exercise of the legislative power, and that it was beyond the jurisdiction or authority of the Legislature as defined by section 1, art. 5, Const., which de-cíales that the legislative authority of the state shall be vested in the Legislature, consisting of a Senate and House of Representatives, but reserving to the people themselves the powers of the initiative and referendum, and by article 5, sec. 36, declaring that the authority of the Legislature shall extend to all rightful subjects of legislation, and violates article 24, secs. 1, 2, regulating the procedure for amending the Constitution. That the act was not an amendment to the Constitution, and that it did not submit an amendment to the people for adoption, seems too plain for argument. That the changes made are important and far-reaching cannot be questioned, and while they may appear to be revolutionary, yet such legislation has been enacted in Great Britain and various British colonies and in some of the principal countries of Continental Europe, and at the time this case was submitted had been adopted in 31 states of the Union and in the territories of Alaska and Hawaii. The statutes in the different states vary somewhat from those in Europe and in England, and are different from each other in certain particulars, but all of them are based upon the underlying principle that the proper regulation of such hazardous occupations and the payment of just compensation for injuries received therein is a matter of public concern. Many of the laws are optional, while those in New York, Washington, Montana, California, and this state are compulsory. Numerous decisions in states where the statutes are elective have been rendered which are valuable as giving the history and reasons for such legislation and as illustrating the administration of such laws, but as' the objections urged to the act now under consideration are of a similar character to those urged against other compulsory acts, decisions from the states where compulsory legislation has been enacted will be more valuable in determining the questions now presented. Prior to the passage of this act, the remedy afforded was based upon the relation of employer and employe and had for its purpose the redress of private wrongs, and the measure of damages recoverable was intended to be commensurate with the injury suffered. In our modern industrial life, accidents to workmen engaged in various industrial pursuits were all but inevitable, *55 and their frequent occurrence could not be prevented by legislation, However wisely framed or rigidly enforced, and a remedy was afforded only in cases wHere fault existed upon the part of or could be imputed to the employer; and where no such fault existed, the loss was borne by the injured employe or by those dependent upon him or by the state at large. The action of the employe was always subject to the defenses of contributory negligence or of assumption of risk, and frequently a recovery was only had after vexatious and costly litigation, involving large economic waste in the expenditure by litigants of large sums of money for counsel fees and other costs incident thereto, with the added burden of taxation necessary to maintain the courts. Often unjust verdicts were rendered, causing much complaint that the practical operation of the law did not obtain the result which it was intended to accomplish. In harmony with the prevailing views on this subject, the Legislature enacted this law, which effects a substantial change in the relations of master and servant to each other and to the public, not based upon the theory of compensation for private wrongs, but in accordance with an enlightened modern public opinion, which demands as simple justice that an employe engaged in one of the enumerated occupations, who has been injured, or in case of death his dependents, shall receive such compensation as will prevent him or them from becoming public charges and enable the minor children of such employe to receive an education and training that will make them self-supporting. By section 7, art. 23, Const., the Legislature is restrained from abrogating tlie cause of action for injuries resulting in death. Instead of the losses being borne as heretofore, in a great majority of cases, by the injured employe or his dependent ones, it was the belief that such losses should be borne by the industries causing them, or. more accurately speaking, by tlie consumers of the products of such industries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 47, 162 P. 938, 63 Okla. 52, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-iten-biscuit-co-okla-1917.