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]
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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]*558Tbe bill, as it was reported to tbe legislature by its special committee after nearly two years of investigation and study, aided by all tbe legal assistance in framing it wbicb it desired to employ, contained an exception of considerable significance in tbe third section as will be hereafter seen. That furnished all tbe basis for tbe idea that tbe law was not intended to include railway employees, generally, wbicb can be found therein. Tbe committee divided tbe proposed legislation into subjects by appropriate beadnotes. Tbe report was adopted by tbe legislature, after long consideration in both bouses 'and by committees, without any change as regards tbe matter under consideration.
Since tbe bill was so considered and passed in tbe light of tbe committee’s division into subjects and, further, by an exposition of its provisions both by tbe committee and tbe eminent counsel who assisted, tbe explanatory part by tbe committee is, to all intents and purposes, incorporated into tbe enactment, or at least may be kept in view in determining whether there is any obscurity therein, rendering judicial construction necessary, or even permissible, and tbe accompanying notes by counsel may also properly be considered.
Save tbe exception referred to, wbicb we will incorporate in place for tbe better understanding of tbe law, tbe following is a copy of tbe bill as passed and now found in tbe statutes, including tbe designated subjects as made by the committee and preserved in tbe statutes.
Abrogation of defenses.
“Section 2394 — 1. In any action to recover damages for a personal injury sustained within this state by an employee while engaged in tbe line of bis duty as such, or for death re suiting from personal injury so sustained, in wbicb recovery is sought upon tbe ground of want of ordinary care of tbe employer, or of any officer, agent, or servant of the employer, it shall not be a defense:
“(1) That tbe employee either expressly or impliedly assumed tbe risk of tbe hazard complained of.
[559]*559“(2) When sucb employer bas at tbe time of tbe accident in a common employment four or more employees, that tbe injury or death was caused in whole or in part by tbe want of ordinary care of a fellow-servant.
“Any employer wbo bas elected to pay compensation as hereinafter provided shall not be subject to tbe provisions of this section 2394 — 1.”
Application to railroads.
“Section 2394 — 3. Except as regards employees working in shops or offices of a railroad company, wbo are within tbe provisions of subsection 9 of section 1816 of tbe statutes, tbe term ‘employer’ as used in sections 2394 — 1 and 2394 — 2, shall not include any railroad company as defined in subsection 1 of said section 1816, said section 1816 being continued in force unaffected, except as aforesaid, by sections 2394 — 1 and 2394 — 2.”
{Excepted and continued sections.)
“Section 1816. Every railroad company shall be liable for damages for all injuries whether resulting in death or not, sustained by any of its employees, subject to tbe provisions hereinafter contained, regarding contributory negligence on tbe part of tbe injured employee:
“(1) When sucb injury is caused by a defect in any locomotive, engine, car, rail, track, roadbed, machinery or appliance used by its employees in and about tbe business of their employment.
“(2) "When sucb injury shall have been sustained by any officer, agent, servant or employee of sucb company, while engaged in tbe line of bis duty as sucb and which sucb injury shall have been caused in whole or in greater part by tbe negligence of any other officer, agent, servant or employee of such company, in the discharge of, or by reason of failure to discharge his duty as such.”
[Subdivisions 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 deal with matters of practice, administration, construction, and conflict of laws.]
“(9) The provisions of this section shall not apply to employees working in shops or offices.”
Liability for compensation.
“Section 2394 — 4. Liability for the compensation hereafter provided for, in lieu of any other liability whatsoever, [560]*560shall exist against an employer for any personal injury accidentally sustained by his employee, and for his death, if the injury shall proximately cause death, in those cases where the following conditions of compensation concur:
“(1) Where, at the time of the accident, both the employer ■and employee are subject to the provisions of sections '2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive, according to the succeeding sections hereof.
“(2) Where, at the time of the accident, the employee is performing service growing out of and incidental to his employment.
“(3) Where the injury is proximately caused by accident, and is not so caused by wilful misconduct.
“And where such conditions of compensation exist for any personal injury or death, the right to the recovery of such compensation pursuant to the provisions of sections 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive, shall be the exclusive remedy against the employer for such injury or death; in all other cases the liability of the employer shall be the same as if this and the succeeding sections of sections 2394 — -1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive, had not been passed, but shall be subject to the provisions of sections 2394 — 1 to 2394-^ — 31, inclusive.”
To the last section the committee appended, among other things, the following: “This section defines the two classes of employees to which sections 2394 — 4 and the subsequent sections apply.”
Employer defined.
Section 2394 — 5. This section is in general terms and includes employers without exception, subject, however, to acceptance of the provisions of sections 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive.
Election by employer.
Section 2394 — 6. This is in general terms prescribing the manner of acceptance by employers of the provisions of sections 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive.
Election by employee.
Section 2394 — 8. This is in general terms in harmony with the. preceding section prescribing the manner of employ[561]*561ees being bound by tbe provisions of sections 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive.
Tbe section preceding tbe foregoing defines employees in general terms, dividing them into two classes: 1st. Those working for public corporations; and 2d. Every person in tbe service of another under any contract of hire, express or implied, oral or written, . . . but not including any person whose employment is but casual or is not in tbe usual course of tbe trade, business, profession, or occupation of bis employer.
To sec. 2394 — 7 and sec. 2394 — 8, covering tbe subject of employees and tbe manner of their becoming subject to tbe provisions of secs. 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 31, inclusive, tbe committee subjoined this explanation:
“These two sections define tbe two classes of employees to whom section 2394 — 4 and tbe subsequent sections apply. . . . All employees are within tbe provisions of section 2394 — 4 and subsequent sections of this act, unless at tbe (time) of entering into suqb employment tbe employee gives tbe employer written notice that be elects not to be subject to tbe provisions of tbe act.”
Tbe committee further adopted this explanation by counsel:
“Tbe proposed bill may be generally divided into two parts:
“Part 1. Embraces tbe first three sections and relates to tbe so-called fellow-servant and assumption-of-risk defenses.
“Part 2. Comprises tbe remaining sections of tbe act and embraces what may be called its compensation provisions.
“Part 1 . . . operates to take away tbe fellow-servant and assumption-of-risk defenses as to all employers except only those who are included within tbe provisions of chapter 254, Laws of 1907 (sec. 1816, Stats.), being tbe railroad fellow-servant and contributory negligence law. Shop and office employees are included within provisions of tbe proposed act because tbe railroad act exempts them from tbe operation of that act. . . . Tbe present act thus accepts tbe classification made by tbe railroad act and includes within it tbe entire class not subject to tbe railroad act. Tbe classification made by tbe railroad act having been sustained by tbe supreme [562]*562court, it would, appear to follow that the class not embraced within that act may properly be the subject of the proposed act. . . . The proposed act leaves the defense of contributory negligence intact, except as to those who elect to come within the compensation provisions. As to employers and employees who elect to come within the compensation provisions of the act, the provisions of Part 1 become immaterial, the compensation provided for being payable irrespective of negligence.
“Part 2. . . . Section 2394 — 4 may well be designated as the hey stone of Part 2 or the compensation pfo visions of the act.”
The subsequent sections of the act contain substantially only administrative features.
The foregoing picture seems to tell its own plain story, leaving no additional explanation necessary to show the legislative intent. The legislation was constructed, as the committee declared, through its counsel, in two parts, one dealing with common-law defenses and the other with the subject of compensation under a new system. The two parts are as separate as if they were embodied in separate enactments. Probably if such had been the case there would not have been a suspicion that what is designated as Part 2, headed by the words “Liability for Compensation,” and introduced by see. 2394 — 4 “as the keystone of it,” was limited in any way by anything contained in secs. 2394 — 1, 2394 — 2, and 2394 — 3.
The subject treated by the latter is entirely concluded thereby and the subsequent section as a keystone introduces an independent subject. The last section of Part 1 closed with the words “said section 1816” as now existing “being continued in force unaffected, except as aforesaid, by the preceding sections of this act.” That is plain. We propose to leave sec. 1816, modifying the common-law defenses as to the particular situations mentioned in that section as to railway employees other than those “working in shops or offices,” [563]*563without change, but to abolish specified of such defenses entirely as to the class there excepted, so that, in case of a railway company not accepting the “provisions of this act ” it may enjoy the benefit of the common-law defenses in negligence actions as modified in sec. 1816 in the particular situations and as to the general class of employees there dealt with; but shall not have the benefit of specified of such defenses at all as to employees “working in shops or offices.” The section closing Part 1 dealt with “the preceding sections of this act,” while the following “keystone” section of the next subject dealt with “the succeeding sections of this act,” leaving all included within the “keystone” section who shall not accept the compensation scheme “subject to the preceding sections of this act.”
Thus Part 1 (secs. 2394 — 1 to 2394 — 3) dealt with the common-law defenses of “assumption of the risk and want of ordinary care of a fellow-servant” and as regards railroad employees continued the classification in sec. 1816, preserving to those engaged in the more hazardous feature of such industry some protection against the former common-law defenses and placing the railroad employees not favored at all by the existing statute with the general mass of employees to whom were secured entire immunity from two of such defenses.
The upshot of the situation is this: Under sec. 1816, railway employees in the nonhazardous field of railroad work, were treated as not entitled to any special legislative protection, whereas, under the new scheme embodied in Part 1 of the Compensation Act, they were made the most favored class.
We see method in that when we turn to Part 2 of the act because of its having been left optional with railway corporations, as with all other private employers, whether to come in under it or stay out. To come in might be attended with some pecuniary loss as to its employees in the specially haz[564]*564ardous features of tbe industry, witb compensating advantages as regards its employees “working in shops or offices.” Without tbe latter there was less inducement to encounter the peril of tbe former.
Manifestly tbe legislature would not have created a system which would, necessarily, have left irretrievably, tbe railway-employees which were specially favored by sec. 1816 in a worse position than those not favored there at all. The lawmaking body in dealing with the next subject created competency of the employer to retrieve the less favored of their-employees in Part 1 from their position by coming in under Part 2 and thus removed all distinctions not only between their employers hut between them and employees in general.
What has been said seems very plain. Not only does the “keystone” section deal with the subject of compensation of injuries to the employee from an original standpoint, but does so in general terms in literal sense applying to all employees, pointing forward for all details and -administrative features-to the “succeeding sections of this act.”
None of such succeeding sections contain in literal sense or inferential suggestion any exception. The term “employee” in sec. 2394 — 5 was defined in the broadest terms.. There is no room to read into it any exception as to class. The provisions for accepting the act in sec. 2394 — 6, the definition of “employer” in sec. 2394 — 7, and all other facts-referable back to the “keystone” section, are in harmony therewith. The note of the committee under sec. 2394 — 8 is to-the effect that it and the preceding sections include all employees, subject to the election feature, to whom sec. 2394 — 4 (the keystone section) and the subsequent sections apply;, and that all employees are within the provisions of sec. 2394 — 4. The committee in that followed the exposition of' the bill by its legal adviser, -and as the fact stands out quite plainly we think, that as to employees who come under the-[565]*565act, regardless of the nature of the employment, “the provisions of Part 1 of the act become immaterial,” — there is as to them, no classification respecting the defenses mentioned in sec. 1816 or in sec. 2394 — 1, “the compensation provided being payable irrespective of negligence on the part of either employer or employee.”
An event occurred during the closing scenes of considering the proposed Compensation Act by the legislature, to which our attention was called by counsel for respondents and has been investigated, which seems to declare plainer, even than could be done by words, if that were possible, that the purpose of Part 2 of the Compensation Act was not intended to leave any class of railroad employees out of its beneficent provisions.
After the bill as first offered had been perfected in the senate by the adoption of numerous amendments not affecting the question under discussion, it was passed by that body and sent to the assembly, where it was received April 6, 1911, it having been pending some four months upon the report of the joint committee which, with the aid of counsel, had spent the long period before mentioned in its preparation. April 12th after the bill was received as aforesaid it was referred with several assembly amendments to the committee on workmen’s compensation. If the subject of whether railway employees, in general, should have the benefit of the new system then came up, there is no record, but if there had been any thought in the legislative mind to except any portion of them and that the bill at the then stage was obscure in respect thereto, now was the time to clear up the uncertainty. If there were any sentiment in favor of excepting railway employees, or any class of them, from the benefits of the new system, now was the time to challenge the judgment of the legislature upon it, because the final preparation was now being made to place the bill upon final passage. If the matter was ever men[566]*566tioned in committee, no amendment was offered there or proposed by tbe committee.
Upon tbe bill coming up in tbe assembly on tbe report of tbe committee for tbe third reading tbe following amendment was offered:
“Amend by inserting after line 4, section 2394 — 32, a new section to read: Section 2394 — 33. Tbe provisions of this act shall not be interpreted, or construed, so as to extend to or include under tbe provisions of this act, tbe following classes of railroad men, to wit: engineers, firemen, conductors, brakemen, section men and line men.”
It was rejected and so emphatically that no record of tbe vote, in detail, was preserved. Thus it seems tbe legislature deliberately, in effect, affirmatively declared that there should be no specialization as to railway employees under tbe compensation part of the new system.
From tbe foregoing it is considered that tbe Industrial Commission and tbe circuit court were right in bolding that tbe O’ompensation Act, without any sufficient degree of uncertainty about it to warrant any search for solution by rules for j'udicial construction, affords railway companies competency to come under it, placing all their employees on the same favored plane as other employees in industrial pursuits.
By the Court. — The j’udgment is affirmed.