Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Co. v. Industrial Commission

141 N.W. 1119, 153 Wis. 552, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 202
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 1119 (Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Co. v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Railway Co. v. Industrial Commission, 141 N.W. 1119, 153 Wis. 552, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 202 (Wis. 1913).

Opinions

MARSHALL, J.

Tbe only question of any moment presented for decision is, whether it is competent for a railroad company to accept tbe provisions of tbe statute aforesaid, except as to its employees “working in shops or offices.” It is appreciated that, at tbe time appellant filed its election, it was commonly thought that such competence did not exist. Though appellant’s election was general in terms with special reference to employees working in shops or offices, doubtless, as its counsel frankly confesses was tbe fact, it intended to accept tbe Compensation Act to tbe fullest extent of its competency. Tbe form used was furnished by tbe Industrial Commission. It used words of election, in general, to come under tbe act, as tbe law provides, followed by specifications as to tbe number of its employees, tbe kind of service, and where tbe labor was being performed. Tbe additional features were mere matters of administration. They were not intended by tbe Commission nor by appellant to limit tbe words of acceptance. Moreover, tbe law makes no provision for any such limitation. Therefore, we have no hesitancy in affirming tbe decision of tbe circuit court, that all of appellant’s employees were included in tbe election if tbe law authorized it. There is, really, no contest on tbis point; but, [555]*555if it were otherwise, there would hardly be room for reasonable doubt, that the Commission and the circuit court reached the correct conclusion. The question seems to be raised now merely for the purpose of having this court formally pass thereon.

.Whether the Compensation Act extends to all railway employees, is of very great interest, because of the large number of persons affected, the hazardous nature of the employment, the manifest public policy to make such provisions for repairing the injuries to all employees so far as practicable, the evident justice of it, not as matter of charity but as matter of humanity and right both to the living and the dead, and as matter of wise public economy as well, to the end that the maimed in service and the surviving widows and orphans and other dependents of those whose service results in fatal injuries should have their losses reasonably dealt with as matter of general concern. No movement in any age has made more for the elimination of waste and the economical application of personal injury cost of production and distribution of those things which are necessary for or administer to legitimate human desires, where it belongs, and to where it must inevitably go as a final resting place, than laws of which the one in question is a distinguished type, — a crystallization, as has been said before, into legal obligation of moral duty and economic truth. The conception and appreciation thereof is such among the nations of the world that the countries which have no such system are exceptional, and consciousness of the justice and necessity therefor is confessed, in general, by all mankind where the dignity of labor has its merited, significance.

In view of what has been said, that the greatest of our industries — the one for which such a law as the one in question is manifestly most needed, and it would seem most desired, by employer, employees, and the public — should be left out of the scope of its beneficent provisions, would challenge attention [556]*556as strange, “passing strange.” In the circumstances we face, the inclination, if not the duty, would be to include the industry rather than to exclude it by construction, if the meaning of the law must be read out of obscurity. It would seem almost unbelievable that the legislature, in providing a system to lay tiie burdens of personal injury losses where they will be as soon as practicable absorbed into the products of industry, left out the most significant class, by far, of the objects of solicitude.

We must confess the idea has been prevalent that the Compensation Act was not intended to apply to railway employees, in general. That has come about, doubtless, from a sentiment which grew up while the act was under consideration in the legislature, based, largely, on a lay understanding of the classification of railway employees into those engaged in shops or offices and all others found in the first part of the act, and the indifference of, or opposition from, some of the employees as well as employers, before the special committee which prepared the bill and before other legislative committees. Somehow, but just how, no one seems to comprehend, the air, so to speak, became, during the progress of the act through the legislature, charged with the idea that there was some specialization as to railway employees and, that, supplemented with the fact of railway employers having kept aloof from the matter until appellant chose to raise the question, seems to have caused more or less of a conviction that the general class of railway employees were not within the benefits of the law.

Notwithstanding that, upon the first occasion of the question being presented to the Commission for decision over a year after the enactment took effect, a decision seems to have been readily reached that the law, as regards its compensation 'features, in letter and spirit, includes, and was intended to include, all railway employees, and the learned circuit court reached the same conclusion. It does not seem that either the Commission or the trial court considered that it was re[557]*557quired to solve any ambiguity in reaching that conclusion. If that be right, it is not the first time a wrong idea, produced by the atmosphere characterizing an enactment, and the harmony therewith for a long period of time, have taken hold of the public mind so as to produce quite a settled conclusion as to legislative intent, and the creation of a condition, which, after careful search when such was required, was not found, in fact, to be either in the letter or spirit or intent of the enactment; a siguificant instance being the conception of the primary election law, that it rendered unlawful the holding of a political party delegate convention as a step in placing a choice of candidates on the primary ballot.

We have been constrained to remark as above, to show that we have not been unmindful of the general idea which has prevailed as to the scope of the Compensation Act. It is proper, in fact it seems a duty, to take notice of that, so far as we might otherwise be led to a too hasty conclusion as to the meaning of the law, looking only at its seemingly plain words in the light of the hope which was vitalized in its enactment and which grows with experience. The sentiments characterizing a law might have some influence to create obscurity, where otherwise it would not exist, but if after all, we find, as the circuit judge and the Commission did, the words of the act plain and the legislative purpose manifest, a contrary conception of it, however produced, cannot legitimately be permitted to create an obscurity to be cleared up by construction, influenced by the history of the legislative labors which constructed the law. A law, plain in its letter, may be obscure when applied to the subject with which it deals. The result may be absurd, or so harsh or unreason.able, as to produce conviction that the literal meaning is not the real purpose. But plain legislative language cannot well be rendered ambiguous by applying to it the mere direction given to public thought by events characterizing the enactment.

[558]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Lamping
153 N.W.2d 23 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1967)
Connor Lumber & Land Co. v. Industrial Commission
12 N.W.2d 67 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1943)
Christ v. Chicago & North Western Railway Co.
224 N.W. 247 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
State ex rel. Marshall v. Roesch
216 P. 749 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1923)
State ex rel. Winston-Dear Co. v. District Court of St. Louis County
176 N.W. 749 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)
Waldum v. Lake Superior Terminal & Transfer Railway Co.
170 N.W. 729 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1919)
Pellett v. Industrial Commission
156 N.W. 956 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1916)
Zavitovsky v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
154 N.W. 974 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1915)
Hoenig v. Industrial Commission
150 N.W. 996 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1915)
Salus v. Great Northern Railway Co.
147 N.W. 1070 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 1119, 153 Wis. 552, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minneapolis-st-paul-sault-ste-marie-railway-co-v-industrial-wis-1913.