Saylor v. Enterprise Electric Co.

212 P. 477, 106 Or. 421, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 23
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 212 P. 477 (Saylor v. Enterprise Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saylor v. Enterprise Electric Co., 212 P. 477, 106 Or. 421, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 23 (Or. 1923).

Opinion

HARRIS, J.

The question for discussion is whether the facts bring the instant case within the embrace of the Employers’ Liability Act. We are not inquiring whether the defendant was or was not guilty of culpable negligence according to the standards fixed by the rules of common law. If it be assumed for the purposes of discussion that the defendant is chargeable with culpable negligence within the rules of the common law, the plaintiff must nevertheless fail in this action, unless the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act apply to the facts disclosed by the record, because she is suing in her individual capacity. If the Employers’ Liability Act applies to the facts, the plaintiff is the person entitled to sue. If the statute does not apply and if the defendant is liable in damages for common law negligence, the representative of the estate of the decedent must sue. If the Employers’ Liability Act does not embrace a fact situation like the instant case, the demurrer was properly sustained even though it is assumed that the defendant was guilty of negligence according to common-law standards.

The decedent was not an employee of any employer at the time of his death. He was on a mission of his [425]*425own. He was not working for any other person. He was entering upon the county road, a public place, a place where he and the public had a right to be, a place where it was to be expected that the public would be. It is contended that he was engaged in work and that therefore he was a workingman and as such belonged to the class for whose protection the statute was passed. Although it is conceded that he was not working on the wire, it is insisted that he was engaged in work about the wire. The plaintiff does not claim that the act was intended to protect every member of the public, but she does insist “that it was intended to protect any member of the public who might be working ‘or engaged in any work,’ upon or about electric wires carrying a high and dangerous voltage.” The defendant argues that the statute was designed to cover none but employees.

It will facilitate the discussion if we again relate the history of the Employers’ Liability Act and once more copy the statute in full. The act was adopted by the people in the exercise of the power of the initiative. The petition was circulated under the direction of the Oregon State Federation of Labor and was filed with the Secretary of State by J. F. Cassidy, Secretary of the Oregon State' Federation of Labor. Upon the authority of Section 5, Chapter 226, Laws of 1907, the Secretary of State transmitted a copy of the measure to the Attorney General with a request that the latter prepare a ballot title, and accordingly the Attorney General did prepare a ballot title. J. F. Cassidy was notified of the form prepared by the Attorney General, and it was apparently satisfactory, for it was printed upon the ballots submitted to the electorate. Through its secretary, J. F. Cassidy, the Oregon State Federation of [426]*426Labor filed with the Secretary of State an argument in support of the measure. The ballot title prepared by the Attorney General, the argument submitted by the Oregon State Federation of Labor, and the proposed act were printed in the Voters’ Pamphlet as required by law and a copy of that pamphlet was sent to every registered voter in the state. The following is a copy of the ballot title and argument in favor of the measure as they were printed in the Voters’ Pamphlet.

“Argument.
“ (Affirmative.)
“Submitted by
“Oregon State Federation oe Labor in favor of the measure designated on the official ballot as follows:
“Proposed by Initiative Petition.
“A bill for a law requiring protection for persons engaged in hazardous employments, defining and extending the liability of employers, and providing that contributory negligence shall not be a defense. Vote Yes or No.
“330. Yes.
“331. No.
“Argument in Favor oe the Above Measure.
“A Bill for the Protection of Laborers in Hazardous Employments.
“This is the call of the plain people to the plain people for relief. Oregon is making a name for itself as the best home for the immigrant because of its political reforms and the powers which the people have taken into their own hands, and yet Oregon stands backward and almost alone in her failure to recognize that the injury or death of a workman is as much a part of the conduct of the business as the bursting of a boiler or breakage of the machinery and to prevent the death or injury of the workman should be as much a part of the cost of the business [427]*427as the protection of machinery or replacing old with new. The iron machinery is insured and guarded from injury in every way, but the human machinery is, in fact, too cheap to be worth protecting. Every form of capital receives the aid of special privilege laws; land held in vacancy, money authorized to be issued by certain institutions only; and manufacturers are protected by tariff laws. The only factor in the production of social wealth which is not protected in any sense whatever is labor. Babies are born without limit and must live, and there are always_plenty waiting to take the dead man’s shoes. This bill does not ask so arbitrary and artificial a thing as that the laborers’ wages be protected and guaranteed by law, but it does ask that the employer be compelled to use diligence in protecting the laborer as to his life and limb, while earning wages; that a safe place in which to work be provided and that ropes, chains, beams, machinery, etc., be properly tested before the workman is asked to risk his life with them. Surely this is a reasonable request. Ten per cent of electrical workers are killed. It is a more hazardous employment than war. The same may be said of workers on bridges and high steel frame structures.
"Senator Elihu Boot, in his speech before the National Civic Federation, said: ‘It seems to me that our present system of dealing with those injuries that come to our employees in our great industrial life is foolish, wasteful, ineffective and barbarous * * . The cost of support which is made necessary by the injuries suffered in a business is just as much a part of the cost of the business as the tools that are worn out and the material that is consumed.’
"The commission appointed to report to the legislature of New York on the question of employers’ liability says, at page 11: ‘At common law in England and the United States the legal relations of employer and employed before 1837 did not differ in any way from the legal relation of strangers and there were no special rules as to employers’ liability. * * Up to [428]*4281837 that single principle seems to have been the whole law on the subject. But from that time, both in England and America, there has developed gradually a large body of special law on employers’ liability. This is judge-made law * * The important point to be noted is the fact that this body of special laws exists for no very clearly defined reasons of justice or social policy; that it is purely “judge-made” and not over seventy years old.’

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Bluebook (online)
212 P. 477, 106 Or. 421, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saylor-v-enterprise-electric-co-or-1923.