Bayon v. Beckley

93 A. 139, 89 Conn. 154
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 93 A. 139 (Bayon v. Beckley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayon v. Beckley, 93 A. 139, 89 Conn. 154 (Colo. 1915).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

This is a proceeding under chapter 138 of the Public Acts of 1913, p. 1735, entitled “An Act *156 concerning Compensation to Workmen injured in the Course of their Employment” (commonly called the Workmen’s Compensation Act), to obtain compensation for personal injuries sustained by the claimant while employed by the respondent. The portions of the Act which bear upon the questions before us are printed in the foot-note. The Superior Court, to which *157 the respondent appealed from an award by the compensation commissioner in favor of the claimant, has reserved for the advice of this court the questions of law arising upon “the facts contained in the ‘Finding and Award’ of the compensation commissioner.” These, so far as material to the case, are as follows: A contract of employment existed between the claimant and respondent on May 2d, 1914. Both parties had accepted Part B of the Act, because neither party had refused to accept it nor had either withdrawn his acceptance. On the 7th of May the claimant was personally injured while shaking a rug in the course of her employment. The injury arose out of her employ *158 ment, and was not caused by the claimant’s wilful and serious misconduct or by her intoxication. The respondent had failed to comply with the provisions of § 30 of Part B. of the Act. He regularly employed less than five persons.

The respondent claims that upon this state of facts he is not liable to compensate the claimant for her injury: (1) because the Act does not affect employers having regularly less than five employees; and (2) because; if such employers are within the provisions of the Act, and the respondent was therefore properly presumed to have accepted Part B because neither he nor the claimant had refused to accept it, he thereby incurred no liability to compensate the claimant for any injury under Part B, for the reason that he failed to comply with the provisions of § 30; and that, if liable to her at all for her injuries, it is only in an action at law. Part B, §42.

These claims present two questions of law for our decision: first, are employers who regularly have less than five employees within the scope of Part B; second, if they are, does a failure to comply with the provisions of § 30 of Part B deprive not only them, but also their employees, of the benefits of its provisions. If either of these claims is correct, the compensation commissioner exceeded his powers in awarding compensation to the claimant, and the award appealed from should be set aside; otherwise the appeal should be dismissed.

Section 1 of Part B provides that “when any persons in the mutual relation of employer and employee shall have accepted part B of this act, the employer shall not be liable to any action for damages on account of personal injury sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of his employment . . .; but the employer shall pay compensation on account of such injury in accordance with the scale hereinafter pro *159 vided.” This language is broad enough to include every employer who has accepted Part B, whether he regularly has five or less than five employees. The same is true of the following language contained in § 2 of Part B: “Every contract of employment not made before the date of this act shall be conclusively presumed to include a mutual agreement between employer and employee to accept part B of this act and be bound thereby”; and again, “every contract of employment made before the date of this act . . . shall be conclusively presumed to include a mutual agreement between employer and employee to accept part B.” By these two provisions^ the employer, whether of less than five or more than five employees, named in any contract existing at the date of the Act or made afterward, is conclusively presumed to have accepted Part B, unless he or the employee has indicated his refusal to accept it. There is thus expressed in Part B a clear intention on the part of the legislature that it shall apply to all employers. There is nowhere in Part B of the Act any language which shows an intention to exclude from the “benefits” of Part B any employer or any employee who shall wish to accept it.

It is claimed in behalf of the respondent that the legislature which enacted the law in fact intended to exclude, from those who may accept' Part B, all employers who regularly employ less than five persons, as shown by remarks made by members during the debates upon the compensation bill and since its passage, and that this intent is expressed by the language of the Act, if parts A and B are read together in view of the history and progress of legislation relating to employers’ liability and workmen’s compensation. We cannot poll the legislature which enacted the Act in question, to determine its-intention, nor regard what individual members thereof are reported to have since said was its intention. *160 We are to ascertain the intention of the legislature from the words which it has used in the Act (State ex rel. Judson v. County Commissioners, 68 Conn. 16, 23, 35 Atl. 801; Lee Bros. Furniture Co. v. Cram, 63 Conn. 433, 437, 438, 28 Atl. 540) reading all its parts together, as the respondent correctly claims, in view of the circumstances surrounding the legislature at the time the statute was passed, and the history and progress of kindred, legislation. New York & N. E. R. Co.’s Appeal from Railroad Commissioners, 62 Conn. 527, 534, 26 Atl. 122; Quinebaug Bank v. Tarbox, 20 Conn. 510, 518.

Part A, subtitled “Employers’ Liability,” relates to actions “to recover damages for personal injury” caused by the negligence and default of the employer “sustained by an employee arising out of and in the course of his employment,” and in § 1 it abolishes the defenses of contributory negligence, negligence of a fellow-servant, and assumption of risk, in all those actions of this character which are within the scope of Part A. Certain actions of this character are not within the scope of Part A, and these are designated in §2.

Part B, subtitled “Workmen’s Compensation,” relates to the compensation of employees by their employers for personal injuries sustained by them in the course of their employment and arising out of it. The injuries for which compensation is here given are not confined to those due to the employer’s wrongful act, as is the case in the actions referred to in Part A, but may arise solely from the employee’s own negligence or fault, from the negligence or fault of a fellow-servant, or of some third party. Prior to the passage of the present Act, employers’ liability laws, in which some or all of the so-called common-law defenses were in whole or in part abolished, and workmen’s compensation Acts *161

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 139, 89 Conn. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayon-v-beckley-conn-1915.