202 F. 1 | 9th Cir. | 1913
(after stating the facts as above). An act of the Legislature of the state of Washington approved March 6, 1905 (Laws 1905, c. 84), as amended by an act passed in 1907 (Laws 1907, c. 205), provides:
“That any person, firm, corporation, or association, operating a factory, mill, or workshop where machinery is used, shall provide and maintain in use * * * reasonable safe-guards for all vats, pans, trimmers, cut-off, gang edger, and other saws, planers, cogs, gearings, belting, shafting, coupling, set screws, live rollers, conveyors, mangles in laundries and machinery of other or similar description, which it is practicable to guard, and which can be effectively guarded with due regard to the ordinary use of such machinery and appliances, and the dangers to employSs therefrom, and with which the employes of any such factory, mill, or workshop are liable to come in contact while in the performance of their duties. ⅜ ⅜ * ”
Section 2 of the act of .1905 provides that:
“Every factory,' mill, or workshop where machinery is used and manual labor exercised by the way of trade for purposes of gain, within an enclosed room * ⅜ * shall be provided in each workroom thereof with good and sufficient ventilation,” etc.
Section 3 of the act of 1905 provides that:
“The openings of all hoistways, hatchways, elevators, and well-holes and stairways in factories, mills, workshops, storehouses, warerooms, or stores, shall be protected where practicable by good and sufficient trapdoors, hatches, fences, gates, or other safeguards,” etc.
Section 5 of the act of 1905, as amended by section 3 of the act of 1907, provides that:
“Any person, firm, corporation, or association carrying on business to wbi cli the provisions o£ this act are applicable, shall have the right to make written request to said Commissioner of Labor to inspect any factory, mill or workshop, and the machinery therein used, and any storehouse, wareroom or store, which said applicant is operating. * * * ”
Section 6 of the act of 1905 provides that the employe of any person, firm, corporation, or association shall notify his employer of any defect or other failure to guard the machinery, appliances, ways, works, and plants with which or in‘and about which he is working, and that the employé may complain to the Commissioner of Labor of any such defects or failure to guard such machinery.
'■Section 7 of the act of 1905, as amended by section 4 of the act of 1907, provides that whenever, upon examination or re-examination of any factory, mill, or workshop, store or building, or the machinery or appliances therein to which the provisions of the act are applicable, the property so examined and .the machinery and appliances therein conform in the judgment of the Commissioner of Labor to the requirements of the act, he shall issue a certificate, etc.; that a copy of the certificate shall be kept posted in a conspicuous place on every floor of all factories, mills, workshops, storehouses, warerooms, or stores to which the provisions of the act are applicable, and that, if the provisions of the act have not been complied with, the Commissioner of Labor shall notify the person operating the mill, factory, or workshop of that fact.
The sole question presented and argued by counsel in this court is whether the plant in question was a “factory, mill, or workshop” within the meaning of the above-mentioned legislation of the state of Washington. The court below held that it was not, for the reason that the plant was not located in a permanent building, and should be likened to a threshing machine, a steam shovel, a wrecking car, and other similar machines and appliances, and to the small concrete and asphalt mixers which are frequently seen in use upon the streets of cities and towns. We are unable to take that view of this plant. That it was built and operated for the purpose of manufacturing out of crude material the finished product with which the defendant company paved streets and roads is not denied. It is true that it was not manufactured in any sort of a house, but we do not understand that a house is an absolutely essential element of either a factory or a mill. It is, of course, readily conceded that a factory usually and perhaps almost invariably embraces one or more buildings, and, where machinery constitutes a part of the factory, such machinery is undoubtedly usually housed; but even at common law the factory is not
In Black’s Law Dictionary the word “factory” is thus defined:
' “In the English law the term includes all buildings or premises wherein, or within the close or curtilage of which, steam, water, or any mechanical power is used to move or.work any machinery employed in preparing, manufacturing, or finishing cotton, wool, hair, silk, hemp, or tow. Later this definition was extended to other manufacturing places.”
The statute of Massachusetts defines factory as “any premises where steam, water, or other mechanical power is used in the aid of any manufacturing process there carried on.” Revised Laws of Massachusetts ' 1902, p. 916, c. 106, § 8.
A similar definition is contained in the statutes of Kansas of 1901 (section 6650), in the Annotated Revised Statutes of Missouri (1906, section 10104), and in the General Statutes of Minnesota of 1894 (section 2264). In 26 Cyc. p. 531, it is said, among other things, that:
“Various establishments have been held to be factories or manufactories under certain statutes, and the statutory meaning is sometimes wider than the common definition.”
See, also, 26 Cyc. p. 530, and numerous cases there cited.
The real question here is, What is the meaning of the words “factory, mill, or workshop,” as used in the above cited statute of the state of Washington? Among the definitions given by Webster of the word “mill” is:
“A common name for various machines which produce a manufactured product, or change the form of raw material by continuous repetition of some action, as a saw mill, a stamp mill, etc.”
The title of the act of the state of Washington of March 6, 1905, as well as many of its provisions, are substantially the same as that of the preceding Factory Act of the state entitled “An act providing for the protection of employes in factories, mills, or workshops where machinery is used” (Laws of Washington 1903, p. 40), concerning which prior act the Supreme Court of the state said, in the case of Ward v. National Lumber & Box Co., 54 Wash. 307, 103 Pac. 2:
“The act further provides for ventilation and sanitary conditions, guarding of trapdoors and hatchways, etc.; so that it will be seen from a reading of the act that the evident intention of the Legislature was to protect operatives in factories in every manner and in every particular in which they could be protected consistent with the reasonable operation of the particular factory which was engaged in business. The appellant invokes the rule of ejusdem generis, and insists that the friction wheel, not being specified in the factory act, and not being of the same kind or genus as any of the machinery specially mentioned, does not fall under the head of machinery of other or similar description, and that, therefore, the assumption of risk attaches in this kind of a case. Considering the whole scope of the factory act and the evident intention of the Legislature, we are unable to reach the conclusion contended for by the appellant. There is no doubt that the general rule is that the general word must take its meaning and be presumed to embrace only things or persons of the kind designated in the specific words; but, as is said in 26 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.) p. 610, the object of the rule in question being not to defeat but to ascertain and effectuate the legislative intent, it will not be applied where the application would be in the face of the evident meaning of the framers of the law. In other words, the maxim*6 has no application where there is no room for construction but only when the meaning is not apparent from the language itself; and it is also said: •Nor does the rule obtain where the specific words signify subjects greatly different from one another, for here the general expression might very consistently add one more variety. In such case, the general term must receive it's natural and wide meaning.’ This is peculiarly the case under our statute, where the specific words signify subjects greatly different from one another, vats, pans, trimmers, cut-off, gang-edger, and other saws, planers, cogs, gearings, belting, shafting, coupling, set screws, live rollers, conveyors, mangles in laundries, etc., all or nearly all being machinery or parts of machinery of different character. We think, in the face of the statute, it would be doing violence to the evident intention of the Legislature to hold that the duty to guard the machinery in question was not imposed upon the millowner; and the testimony is undisputed that this machine could have been guarded without affecting the efficiency of its operation.”
The primary purpose of all such legislation is to promote the public welfare by securing the safety of employes,' and, as said by Mr. Justice Story in United States v. Winn, 3 Sumn. 209, Fed. Cas. No. 16,740, cited with approval by the .Supreme Court in Johnson v. Southern Pacific Co., 196 U. S. 1, 18, 25 Sup. Ct. 158, 162 (49 L. Ed. 363), the proper course in all such cases “is to search out and follow the true intent of the Legislature and to adopt that sense of the words which harmonizes best with the context, and promotes in the fullest manner the apparent policy and objects of the Legislature.”
It is not contended by the plaintiff in error, and it is obviously not true, that the Legislature of the state of Washington by the legislation in question undertook to require the safeguarding of all machinery and like appliances. What it did declare is that every person, firm, corporation, or association operating a factory, mill, or workshop where machinery is used shall, among other things, provide and maintain in use reasonable safeguards for such machinery as that which caused the injury of the plaintiff in error; and we are of the opinion that to say that the plant of the defendant in' error is not embraced by the words “factory” or “mill,” because not permanently located in a building, is an inadmissible limitation of the scope of the terms of the statute in view of its manifest purposes; and we tliink the doctrine of the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case of Johnson v. Southern Pacific Co., supra, confirms this view. We see nothing in conflict with it in the fact that the act of March 6, 1905, as amended by that of 1907, contains many specific provisions applying to factories and mills located in permanent buildings, with many rooms and floors.
It results that the action of the court below in granting the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was erroneous, and must be and hereby is reversed, with costs to the plaintiff in error, leaving the judgment entered upon the verdict in full force.