OPINION
RABINOWITZ, Justice.
In this appeal, we are asked to overrule Gordon v. Burgess Construction Co., 425 P.2d 602 (Alaska 1967).
In the superior court John Haman and his wife brought suit against Allied Concrete and Modern Construction. The Ha-mans sought the recovery of compensatory and punitive damages against Allied Concrete under three separate counts. They alleged that Allied Concrete leased to Modern Construction an automatic concrete mixer which was mounted on a truck. It was further alleged that the drive chain which turned the rotating drum on the mixer broke and struck John Haman in the head resulting in disfigurement and in the loss of his right eye. In the fourth count of their complaint the Hamans asserted a claim for relief against Modern Construction under AS 23.25.010.
In this latter
count it was stated that Modern Construction was, within the purview of AS 23.25.-010, engaged in the construction business which was carried on by means of machinery or mechanical appliances, that John Haman was an employee of Modern Construction at the time he was struck by the defective drive chain, and that Modern Construction was guilty of gross negligence and wanton and willful misconduct.
Allied Concrete in its answer generally denied the Hamans’ allegations and cross-claimed against Modern Construction on the basis of an indemnification clause in the lease under which the concrete mixer was rented to Modern Construction. Modern Construction moved for summary judgment on the grounds that John Haman was in its employ at the time of the accident, that at the time it had appropriate workmen’s compensation insurance coverage, that under
Gordon,
John Haman’s exclusive remedy, at least as to any claim for relief against Modern Construction, was under the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act,
so that Haman could not ground a claim for relief on the provisions of AS 23.25.010. In their opposition, the Hamans urged that this court was incorrect in its decision in
Gordon.
The superior court granted Modern Construction’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed with prejudice Count IV of the complaint.
The Hamans now appeal from the dismissal of their claim for relief against Modern Construction.
In this appeal the Hamans argue that the legislature did not intend that the exclusive remedy provision
of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act should bar a claim for relief under AS 23.25.010.
It is recognized that this same argument was rejected in Gordon v. Burgess Construction Co., 425 P.2d 602 (Alaska 1967).
The arguments presented by the appellant in
Gordon
are nearly identical to those presented by the Hamans regarding the effect of the exclusive remedy provision of the Compensation Act on the coverage of AS 23.25.010-040. In holding that appellant’s action under AS 23.25.010 was properly dismissed because the alleged injury was covered by workmen’s compensation, we stated:
We do not adopt appellant’s argument that the Alaska Legislature, by continuing the Defective Machinery Act [AS 23.25.010-040] in existence after enactment of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, evidenced its intent to exclude defective, dangerous machinery from the coverage of the Compensation Act in order to coerce employers to furnish safe machinery.
A more logical interpretation of the legislative intent, and that subscribed to by most courts, is that the remedies pro
vided by a workmen’s compensation act are intended to be in lieu of all rights and remedies as to a particular injury whether at common law or otherwise. 425 P.2d at 605.
We also noted in
Gordon
that AS 23.25.010 has not been amended significantly since its original enactment in 1913. The Workmen’s Compensation Act, however, has been amended numerous times. Over the years following the enactment of the first compensation act in 1915,
workmen’s compensation coverage has been expanded to include an increasingly wide range of employers. Since the Compensation Act has always included an exclusive remedy provision, as its coverage of employments increased, the coverage of AS 23.25.010-040 necessarily was diminished. Thus we held in
Gordon
that AS 23.25.-010-040 have no application where the employee’s injuries are covered by workmen’s compensation.
We reaffirm
Gordon
and hold that its interpretation of the scope and coverage of AS 23.25.010-040 is correct.
We think this an appropriate occasion to discuss a facet of AS 23.25.010-040 which was not mentioned in
Gordon.
Taken together, these statutes are a form of Employers’ Liability Act. Apparently patterned after the Federal Employers’ Liability Act,
AS 23.25.010 provides that employers engaged in specified occupations are liable.
for all damages which may result 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. (Emphasis supplied.)
This clause describes two distinct causes of injury to the employee which give rise to the employer’s liability under the statute: First, the negligence of the employer in providing defective or insufficient machinery, appliances and works; and second, the negligence of an officer, agent, or employee of the employer whether or not such negligence is -related to defects or in-sufficiencies in the machinery, appliances and works. Thus, it appears that AS 23.25.010 is not, as the Hamans contend, concerned primarily with requiring employers to maintain safe equipment,
but covers a much wider range of causes of industrial injuries.
An examination of the history
and purposes of Employers’ Liability Acts in general reveals that AS 23.25.010-040 were primarily intended to abrogate certain defenses traditionally available to an employer in a common law action brought by his employee for injuries suffered in the course of employment.
In an attempt to relieve employees of the harsher effects of the common law relating to the employment relation, a number of states enacted Employers’ Liability Acts. While the various acts differed as to the types of employment covered and differed in their treatment of contributory negligence and assumption of risk,
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OPINION
RABINOWITZ, Justice.
In this appeal, we are asked to overrule Gordon v. Burgess Construction Co., 425 P.2d 602 (Alaska 1967).
In the superior court John Haman and his wife brought suit against Allied Concrete and Modern Construction. The Ha-mans sought the recovery of compensatory and punitive damages against Allied Concrete under three separate counts. They alleged that Allied Concrete leased to Modern Construction an automatic concrete mixer which was mounted on a truck. It was further alleged that the drive chain which turned the rotating drum on the mixer broke and struck John Haman in the head resulting in disfigurement and in the loss of his right eye. In the fourth count of their complaint the Hamans asserted a claim for relief against Modern Construction under AS 23.25.010.
In this latter
count it was stated that Modern Construction was, within the purview of AS 23.25.-010, engaged in the construction business which was carried on by means of machinery or mechanical appliances, that John Haman was an employee of Modern Construction at the time he was struck by the defective drive chain, and that Modern Construction was guilty of gross negligence and wanton and willful misconduct.
Allied Concrete in its answer generally denied the Hamans’ allegations and cross-claimed against Modern Construction on the basis of an indemnification clause in the lease under which the concrete mixer was rented to Modern Construction. Modern Construction moved for summary judgment on the grounds that John Haman was in its employ at the time of the accident, that at the time it had appropriate workmen’s compensation insurance coverage, that under
Gordon,
John Haman’s exclusive remedy, at least as to any claim for relief against Modern Construction, was under the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act,
so that Haman could not ground a claim for relief on the provisions of AS 23.25.010. In their opposition, the Hamans urged that this court was incorrect in its decision in
Gordon.
The superior court granted Modern Construction’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed with prejudice Count IV of the complaint.
The Hamans now appeal from the dismissal of their claim for relief against Modern Construction.
In this appeal the Hamans argue that the legislature did not intend that the exclusive remedy provision
of the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act should bar a claim for relief under AS 23.25.010.
It is recognized that this same argument was rejected in Gordon v. Burgess Construction Co., 425 P.2d 602 (Alaska 1967).
The arguments presented by the appellant in
Gordon
are nearly identical to those presented by the Hamans regarding the effect of the exclusive remedy provision of the Compensation Act on the coverage of AS 23.25.010-040. In holding that appellant’s action under AS 23.25.010 was properly dismissed because the alleged injury was covered by workmen’s compensation, we stated:
We do not adopt appellant’s argument that the Alaska Legislature, by continuing the Defective Machinery Act [AS 23.25.010-040] in existence after enactment of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, evidenced its intent to exclude defective, dangerous machinery from the coverage of the Compensation Act in order to coerce employers to furnish safe machinery.
A more logical interpretation of the legislative intent, and that subscribed to by most courts, is that the remedies pro
vided by a workmen’s compensation act are intended to be in lieu of all rights and remedies as to a particular injury whether at common law or otherwise. 425 P.2d at 605.
We also noted in
Gordon
that AS 23.25.010 has not been amended significantly since its original enactment in 1913. The Workmen’s Compensation Act, however, has been amended numerous times. Over the years following the enactment of the first compensation act in 1915,
workmen’s compensation coverage has been expanded to include an increasingly wide range of employers. Since the Compensation Act has always included an exclusive remedy provision, as its coverage of employments increased, the coverage of AS 23.25.010-040 necessarily was diminished. Thus we held in
Gordon
that AS 23.25.-010-040 have no application where the employee’s injuries are covered by workmen’s compensation.
We reaffirm
Gordon
and hold that its interpretation of the scope and coverage of AS 23.25.010-040 is correct.
We think this an appropriate occasion to discuss a facet of AS 23.25.010-040 which was not mentioned in
Gordon.
Taken together, these statutes are a form of Employers’ Liability Act. Apparently patterned after the Federal Employers’ Liability Act,
AS 23.25.010 provides that employers engaged in specified occupations are liable.
for all damages which may result 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. (Emphasis supplied.)
This clause describes two distinct causes of injury to the employee which give rise to the employer’s liability under the statute: First, the negligence of the employer in providing defective or insufficient machinery, appliances and works; and second, the negligence of an officer, agent, or employee of the employer whether or not such negligence is -related to defects or in-sufficiencies in the machinery, appliances and works. Thus, it appears that AS 23.25.010 is not, as the Hamans contend, concerned primarily with requiring employers to maintain safe equipment,
but covers a much wider range of causes of industrial injuries.
An examination of the history
and purposes of Employers’ Liability Acts in general reveals that AS 23.25.010-040 were primarily intended to abrogate certain defenses traditionally available to an employer in a common law action brought by his employee for injuries suffered in the course of employment.
In an attempt to relieve employees of the harsher effects of the common law relating to the employment relation, a number of states enacted Employers’ Liability Acts. While the various acts differed as to the types of employment covered and differed in their treatment of contributory negligence and assumption of risk,
they uniformly abrogated the fellow servant doctrine.
These acts, however, did not create a new claim for relief as such for the employee. Even at common law an employee was able to sue his employer for negligence;
it was the employer’s defenses that usually defeated his claim.
Once states having Employers’ Liability Acts enacted comprehensive Workmen’s Compensation Acts, the exclusive remedy provisions of the compensation acts were frequently held to have repealed the earlier liability acts to the extent that the liability acts purported to cover injuries also covered by workmen’s compensation.
Gordon v. Burgess Construction Co.,
supra,
is in line with these cases.
In asking us to re-examine
Gordon,
the Hamans rely on a line of Supreme Court cases which hold that the exclusive remedy provision of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act
does not bar a longshoreman from bringing a direct action against a shipowner for injuries caused by unseaworthiness of the vessel, even where the shipowner is also the longshoreman’s employer. Reed v. Steamship YAKA, 373 U.S. 410, 83 S.Ct. 1349, 10 L.Ed.2d 448 (1963); Jackson v. Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., 386 U.S. 731, 87 S.Ct. 1419, 18 L.Ed.2d 488 (1967). Prior to
Reed
and
Jackson,
the Supreme Court had held that a shipowner’s duty to maintain a seaworthy vessel extended to longshoremen as well as to seamen, and that the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act did not bar a direct suit by the longshoreman against a shipowner based on unseaworthiness of the vessel. Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 328 U.S. 85, 66 S.Ct. 872, 90 L.Ed. 1099 (1946).
In
Reed,
the Supreme Court was faced with a dilemma. It had previously held in
Sieracki
that a shipowner owed an absolute, nondelegable duty to longshoremen to maintain a seaworthy vessel, and that a longshoreman could sue the shipowner directly for a breach of that duty. The Longshoremen’s Compensation Act provided that an employers’ liability under the act was “exclusive and in place of all other liability of such employer ... at law or in admiralty . . .
Yet all longshoremen, whether employed directly by a shipowner or employed by a stevedor-ing company, faced the same hazards caused by an unseaworthy vessel. The Court admitted that on its face Section 905 would seem to bar a suit by a longshoreman against his shipowner-employer for breach of the duty of seaworthiness, yet held that Congress had a contrary intent.
This holding was founded on the Court’s belief that
it would produce a harsh and incongruous result, one out of keeping with the dominant intent of Congress to help longshoremen, to distinguish between liability to longshoremen injured under precisely the same circumstances because some draw their pay directly from a shipowner and others from a stevedoring company doing the ship’s service. 373 U.S. at 415, 83 S.Ct. at 1353, 10 L.Ed.2d at 453.
Further, the Supreme Court reasoned that a shipowner should not be able to avoid its traditional obligation of seaworthiness simply because it was also an employer of longshoremen.
In the present appeal, we are not faced with such a dilemma. All workmen who suffer injuries due to the negligence of their employers in providing unsafe equipment are treated the same under the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act. Further, the exception to the exclusive remedy provision of the Longshoremen’s Compensation Act carved out in
Reed
and
Jackson
involves one limited situation where a stevedoring company is also a shipowner.
Industrial accidents involving the use of machinery or appliances are not unusual. The exception to the Alaska Compensation Act’s exclusive remedy provision urged by the Hamans would seriously undermine, if not engulf, the comprehensiveness of that system of compensation.
We agree with the Hamans that the Workmen’s Compensation Act does not by itself provide an incentive for employers to furnish safe equipment, and that such an incentive would promote desirable social ends. We also realize that the schedule of benefits under the Alaska Workmen’s Com
pensation Act does not always realistically reflect the compensation needs of injured employees or their dependents. Generally these are matters for legislative, not judicial, consideration.
The order of the superior court granting Modern Construction summary judgment is affirmed.
BOOCHEVER, J., not participating.