105 Kan. 608 | Kan. | 1919
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On November 8, 1917, Charles Fuller, twenty years of age, an employee of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company, received an injury arising out of and in the course of his employment. In February, 1918, the company filed in the district court an application for the appointment
The applicants invoke the statutory direction that—
“The provisions of any statute, so far as they are the same as those of any prior statute, shall be construed as a continuation of such provisions, and not as a new enactment.” (Gen. State. 1915, § 10973, subdiv. 1.) •
The rule of construction referred to, as it is recognized'in the absence of legislation, or as it is formulated in the statute, is not meant to interfere with the enforcement of what to the court appears to be the real intention of the lawmaking body, as derived from a consideration of the acts involved, and the circumstances under which they were adopted. In seeking for the real intention of the present, law, we are constrained to the belief that the legislative purpose was that all employers within the general scope of the compensation act should be held to come within its provisions, except such as subsequent to the 1917 enactment should file with the secretary of state notice of an election to the contrary. While the act of 1917 left untouched some seventeen of the sections of the law as it had stood since 1913, the changes made in the other sections were radical and far-reaching. Important alterations were made re
The reenactment of the section of the act of 1913 creating a presumption that an employer was within the compensation law unless he indicated to the contrary, may be assumed to have had some effect — to have created a different condition of the law from what would have-existed if all reference to it had been omitted from the act of 1917. Its reenactment appears to have been for the very purpose of. requiring those employers who were not content to abide by the new system to give public expression of their unwillingness to be bound by it, or by their silence to submit themselves to it. The inclusion in the new act of the section in question either had that effect, or it had none whatever. The changes made in its language created no difference in its operation. The relation of the amended section to the original can- be seen by the following reprint, in which words included in' the original act and omitted in the
“[All employers as defined by and] Every employer entitled to come within the provisions of this aet, as defined and provided by this act, shall be presumed to have done so, except such employer privileged to elect to come within the provisions of this act, as provided in section 1 hereof and section 5902 of the General Statutes of 1915, unless such employer shall file with the secretary of state at Topeka, Kansas, a written statement that he elects not to accept thereunder, and thereafter any such employer desiring to change his election shall only do so by filing a written declaration thereof with the secretary of state. Notice of such election shall be forthwith posted by such employer in conspicuous places in and about his place of business.” .
Manifestly there is no substantial difference between the clauses “All employers as defined by and entitled to come within the provisions of this act” and “Every employer entitled to come within the provisions of this act, as defined and provided by this act.” The only other change consists in the addition of the words “except such employer privileged to elect to come within the provisions of this act, as provided in section 1 hereof and section 5902 of the General Statutes of 1915.” The references are to a provision in section 1 of the new act that employers whose work, trade or business is not included within the employments enumerated and characterized as “especially dangerous” (to which alone the compensation. statute is by its terms made applicable) may nevertheless elect to come within its provisions by filing a statement to that effect; and to a similar provision in section 5902 of the General Statutes of 1915 with regard to employers who are likewise not within the general scope of the statute because employing less than five workmen. The statute does in fact apply, to a certain extent, regardless of their wishes, , to all employers of five or more workmen in the lines characterized by it as especially dangerous. If they do not accept its compensation feature, their rights in damage suits on account of personal injuries are restricted by it. It does not apply at all to other employers unless they so elect. As a convenient form of expression, it is said not to apply to those who elect not to come within it, the meaning being that such persons are not subject to the compensation system, as distinguished from that of the common law, in relation to the remedy of workmen
In the brief of the plaintiff in Wegele v. Milling Co., post, p. 615, which was argued and submitted with the present case, because involving the same question, the plaintiff’s contention there being that of the appellants here, it is suggested that the effect of the added clause under consideration is to prevent employers whose business is not classed as especially dangerous, or who employ less than five workmen, from withdrawing from the operation of the compensation act after having elected to come under it. This is an interpretation to which we think the language of the statute would not in any event be open; but it plainly is untenable, because, although in the case of employers of less than five workmen the right to a change of election is given only by implication and in the earlier act (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 5902), in the case of employers whose business is. not classed as especially dangerous it is given expressly, in the very act the effect of which is under consideration. (Laws 1917, ch. 226, § 1.)
The exception regarding employers who were wholly unaffected by the law unless they voluntarily chose to take advantage of it, which was inserted in the reenacted section, was in our judgment purely declaratory, and did not in the least change its effect. If to accomplish some other purpose the section was to be reenacted, it might have been thought worth while to repeat there what had already been, explicitly stated
After the adoption of the amendment of 1913, and after the railway company had given notice of its election not to come within its provisions, the road was placed in the hands of a receiver, who also gave notice of a similar election, an action necessary on his part to avoid being subject to the statute. (Unrine v. Railroad Co., 104 Kan. 236, 178 Pac. 614.) The receiver operated the road for something over two years, and it was restored to the company on June 24,1917. The suggestion is made that in this situation a new notice would have been necessary to take the company out of the statute even if, except for the receivership, the rule would have been different. This, however, need not be determined.
The judgment is affirmed.