Gordon v. Burgess Construction Company

425 P.2d 602, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 200
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1967
Docket716
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 425 P.2d 602 (Gordon v. Burgess Construction Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Burgess Construction Company, 425 P.2d 602, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 200 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

Before NESBETT, C. J., RABINO--WITZ, J., and SANDERS, Superior Court-Judge.

NESBETT, Chief Justice.

The question presented is whether the scope of employer coverage originally provided by the Defective Machinery Act has-been retained, separate from and undiminished by the coverage provided by the later enacted Workmen’s Compensation Act, or whether its coverage has been correspondingly reduced by each extension of coverage given to the Compensation Act, during the-fifty years of their coexistence.

In 1913, the Alaska Territorial Legislature enacted the Defective Machinery Act which made any person engaged in manu- *603 factoring, mining, constructing, building, -or other business or occupation carried on by means of machinery or mechanical appliances liable to an employee for all damages resulting from the negligence of any of the employer’s officers, agents, or employees, or by reason of defect or insufficiency “due to the employer’s negligence in the machinery, appliances and works.” 1 The act also provided that the contributory negligence of the employee was no bar to ■recovery where his contributory negligence was slight and the negligence of the employer was gross in comparison, but that the damages awarded should be reduced in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to the employee. 2

This act has not been amended in any ■significant manner during the fifty-three ■years of its existence and is presently codified in the Alaska Statutes as above noted.

In 1915, two years after enactment of the Defective Machinery Act, the Alaska "Territorial Legislature ' enacted Alaska’s first Workmen’s Compensation Act. 3 This .•act covered only employers in the mining industry who employed five or more per.sons and who had not elected to reject the provisions of the act. It also provided that the remedy granted therein was exclusive.

The Workmen’s Compensation Act has been amended approximately twenty-nine times in the fifty years preceding the commencement of this suit. Its coverage of -employers and occupations has been gradually extended. Since its enactment it has always provided that the remedies provided therein were exclusive. Those amendments considered to be most pertinent to the issues of this case are mentioned in the following paragraphs.

SLA 1923, chapter 98 extended the coverage to include all employers of five or more employees in connection with any business, occupation, work, employment or industry except domestic service, agriculture, dairying, or the operation of railroads as common carriers.

SLA 1946, chapter 9 extended the employers included to those employing three or more employees, but retained the group of “excepted” employers mentioned in the 1923 amendment above. This amendment also provided that failure of the employer to secure his liability under the act permitted the injured employee to elect to claim compensation under the act, or to maintain an action for damages. Furthermore, where the employee elected to sue for damages, the employer could not assert the common law defenses of the fellow-servant rule, assumption of risk, or contributory negligence.

SLA 1953, chapter 60 extended coverage to all employers of one or more employees, excepting employers in domestic service, agriculture, dairying, or in the operation of railroads as common carriers.

SLA 1959, chapter 193 repealed the Workmen’s Compensation Act in its en *604 tirety and enacted a new Workmen’s Compensation Act patterned after the Federal Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. The new act excluded from coverage “Part time baby sitters, cleaning persons, harvest help and similar part time or transient help.” 4 These same exclusions are contained in the present act. 5 Also excluded by the present act are executive officers of municipal, charitable, religious, educational, or any other non-profit corporations, who have not been brought within the coverage by the election of their employer corporations and executive officers of private business corporations who have waived coverage under the act. 6

Since its reenactment in 1959 the Workmen’s Compensation Act has provided that the liability of an employer under the act “shall be exclusive and in place of all other liability of such employer.” 7 Previously the act had always provided that the remedy was “in lieu of all rights and remedies as to such injury now existing either at common law or otherwise.”

The complaint filed by appellant alleged that decedent met his death while working with defective machinery provided by his employer, the appellee, whose liability for damages was charged under the Defective Machinery Act. The trial court granted appellee’s motion to quash service of summons and dismiss the complaint on the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction since appellant’s exclusive remedy was under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.

Appellant’s theory on appeal is that the Defective Machinery Act provides a cause of action, where defective machinery has been employed, which is separate and apart from the coverage provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Act and that the employer may not claim the benefit and pro-

Appellee argues that employers covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Act are exempt from any other liability; that the numerous amendments to the act over the years have extended its coverage and correspondingly narrowed that of the Defective Machinery Act, and that the two acts can and should be construed to be harmonious rather than in conflict.

We are of the opinion that appel-lee’s anaylsis of the proper relationship of the two acts is correct. Where a reasonable construction of a statute can be adopted which realizes the legislative intent and avoids conflict or inconsistency with another statute this should be done. 8

When the Defective Machinery Act was enacted its coverage was comprehensive. There was no other similar coverage provided by Alaska law. Upon the enactment of the first Workmen’s Compensation Act two years later, the coverage provided by the Defective Machinery Act was reduced to the extent that it no longer applied to-, employers in the mining industry employing five or more persons who had not rejected the provisions of the act. This reduction in coverage resulted from the particular wording of the compensation act, that the liability provided therein was exclusive and' “in lieu of all rights and remedies as to-such injury now existing either at common law or otherwise.” 9 The Defective Machinery Act’s application to all other classes-of employers was not disturbed.

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Bluebook (online)
425 P.2d 602, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-burgess-construction-company-alaska-1967.