Wasilewski v. Warner Sugar Refining Co.

87 Misc. 156, 149 N.Y.S. 1035
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 Misc. 156 (Wasilewski v. Warner Sugar Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wasilewski v. Warner Sugar Refining Co., 87 Misc. 156, 149 N.Y.S. 1035 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Ransom, J.

The plaintiff’s claim of right to sue in this state under the New Jersey Employers’ Liability Act of 1909 (Laws of 1909, chap. 83, Stat. of N. J.) is based upon an extraordinary conception of law and public policy. The New Jersey act of 1909 regulated common-law defenses of the employer and paralleled many of the provisions of the New York Employers’ Liability Act as set out in section 200 et se%. of the Labor Law (Laws of 1909, chap. 36). On July 4,1911, there went into effect in New Jersey a Workmen’s Compensation Act (Laws of 1911, chap. 95, as amd. by chap. 368, Stat. of N. J.). The 1911 statute estab[158]*158listed a comprehensive system of definite compensation for industrial accidents, without regard to negligence, and provided that it should govern the employer’s liability in all cases where an express written stipulation to the contrary was not entered into, by employer and employee, at the time the contract of hiring was made. After the taking effect of the compensation act, the plaintiff, who lives in New York city, went over to the defendant’s plant at Edgewater, N. J., and there was hired by the defendant. Nothing was done by master or servant to avoid the application of the compensation plan. Concededly, if the plaintiff brought suit in New Jersey for the injuries which-he sustained in the Edgewater plant on August 9, 1912, his recovery would be fixed by the act of 1911. He would have no standing in a New Jersey forum under the act of 1909, because that is looked upon as superseded and repealed by the act of 1911, and the latter is looked on by the New Jersey courts as establishing a constitutional system of compensation unquestionably operative as to the plaintiff’s employment at Edgewater. Sexton v. Newark District Telegraph Co., 84 N. J. L. 85.

The plaintiff, however, does not now wish to accept the payment to which he is entitled under the compensation plan. He is advised that his injuries were due to the employer’s negligence, and he wishes to take • his chances on getting a larger amount through a suit at law. Accordingly he starts suit in the state of his residence, and seeks to maintain an action under the 1909 statute of New Jersey, rather than under the statute which was in force in that state at the time he was hired and at the time he was hurt.

It is familiar law that, in an action in this state for personal injuries sustained by an employee hired and working in another state, the statutes, decisions [159]*159and public policy of the state in which the contract of hiring was made are ordinarily recognized as fixing the plaintiff’s rights and remedies in this forum. Bakewell v. Orford Copper Co., 160 App. Div. 671; Stokes v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 134 id. 363; Dyke v. Erie R. R. Co., 45 N. Y. 113; Voshefskey v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 21 App. Div. 168; 2 Whart. Confl. -Laws (3d ed.), 1103, 1105. If the employee claims in this state a right and remedy under the statute of another state, the decisions of the courts of the latter state, relative to such statute and such right or remedy, are commonly recognized as controlling our administration of any remedy afforded by such statute. Jessup v. Carnegie, 80 N. Y. 541; Zeikus v. Florida East Coast Ry. Co., 153 App. Div. 345. In the Voshefskey ease, supra, where the plaintiff asserted in New York a right of action under the law of Pennsylvania, the decision of the Pennsylvania court that a certain statute of that state would prevent recovery by the plaintiff in Pennsylvania was given enforcement by the courts of New York and held to prevent recovery here.

■ The plaintiff at bar seeks, however, to avoid these salutary rules of comity, by assertion of the principle that New York courts will not recognize or enforce any statute or decision of another state if the same be contrary to the established public policy of this commonwealth. Counsel for the plaintiff ingeniously argues that under the decision in Ives v. South Buffalo R. Co., 201 N. Y. 271, the New Jersey Compensation Act of 1911 must be regarded as repugnant to the fundamental public policy of this state, that accordingly no New York court can recognize the 1911 statute as effectively superseding or repealing the Liability Act of 1909, and that, therefore, the plaintiff may maintain suit in New York under a New Jersey [160]*160statute which the legislative, executive and judicial authorities of that state do not recognize as in force at the time the plaintiff was hired or at the time he was hurt.

I cannot accept the contention of counsel that the Compensation Act of 1911 is repugnant to the public policy of this state. By going to New Jersey to obtain work, the plaintiff submitted himself to the law of the place of contract, and, if New Jersey courts find nothing in the 1911 statute to offend, why should New York courts reject it and remand the parties to protracted litigation under a statute which is out of harmony with the humanitarian spirit of today? In the first place, is any New York court now warranted in holding that a workmen’s compensation statute is contrary to the public policy of this state? By a constitutional amendment adopted in November, 1913, the people of the state declared, by an overwhelming majority, that no conception of public policy should thereafter be held to invalidate any workmen’s compensation act, whether ‘ ‘ compulsory ” or “ elective ’ ’ in form. This state has itself put in force a compensation plan far more sweeping than the optional system embodied in the New Jersey law. It would be a curious turning back of the scroll of events to hold that public policy ” still prevents New York from recognizing New Jersey decisions upholding the constitutionality of a New Jersey statute applicable to a right concededly to be determined on the basis of the New Jersey law. In the second place, with the public policy of New York now so definitely aligned on the side of compensation legislation, it at least seems reasonable to regard the decision in the Ives case as hereafter applicable only to the precise matter before the court in that case, viz., a statute imposing liability on the employer “ without his consent and without his fault.” [161]*161The New Jersey act of 1911 is “ optional ” or “ elective ” in form, and in many American courts the Ives decision has been held to be no precedent for the unconstitutionality of an “ elective ’ ’ system of compensation. Borgnis v. Falk Co., 147 Wis. 327; Opinion of Justices, 209 Mass. 607; Mondou v. New York, New Haven & Hartford R. R. Co., 223 U. S. 1; Cunningham v. Northwestern Improvement Co., 44 Mont. 180; Sexton v. Newark District Telegraph Co., supra; State v. Clausen, 63 Wash. 535; Young v. Duncan, decided by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in June, 1914. I do not believe that the Ives decision would properly be deemed now a holding that the public policy of this state forbids a compensation plan ‘ ‘ optional ’ ’ in the New Jersey sense, i. e., applicable unless the parties exercise their option and express in writing their intention not to be governed thereby.

An adjudication precisely in point is that in Albanese v. Stewart, 78 Misc. Rep.

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87 Misc. 156, 149 N.Y.S. 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wasilewski-v-warner-sugar-refining-co-nynyccityct-1914.