Appellant while she was an employee of a tenant of respondents sued the latter for injuries received while using the rest room of the landlords. The answer in- *399 eluded a special plea that for $1,000 paid to the plaintiff she had compromised her claim and executed a full release of ■ the defendants from all liability. Such plea having .been established to the satisfaction of the trial court (Code .Civ. Proc., § 597),- judgment was entered against appellant, denying recovery.
On this appeal it is contended that by virtue of section 3859 * of the Labor Code such release is void by reason of the fact that it was executed without the written consent of appellant’s employer; that solely by virtue of the subrogation provisions of the Labor Code an employee is limited to one recovery and the employer may recover his damages where the employee was injured by the negligence of the third party. After she had settled her claim against respondents, appellant filed against her employer before the Industrial Accident Commission and an award was made against him and his insurance carrier. The employer received credit for the $1,000 paid by respondents.
May plaintiff now sue respondents on the identical claim for which.they paid her $1,000 and took her total release? She cannot do so for two good reasons, namely, (1) she did not rescind her contract of release and (2) the statute which she asserts to be determinative of the nullity of the release is violative of constitutional provisions if- interpreted as urged by appellant.
It is a familiar principle of adjective law that in the absence of the rescission of .a contract of settlement of a claim for personal injuries accomplished according to law, and of a restoration of the consideration paid for the release of the claim the release of the tort feasor is a valid contract and prevents recovery on the disputed claim.
(Garcia
v.
California Truck Co.
The law favors settlement of legal controversies.
(Armstrong
v.
Sacramento Valley R. Co.,
The Section Is Void as Construed by Appellant
The statutes relating to workmen’s compensation derive their validity from section 21, article XX of the Constitution. That section directs the Legislature to enact legislation which would create the employer’s liability to make “adequate provisions for the comfort, health and safety and general welfare of any and all workmen and those dependent upon them for support to the extent of relieving from the
*401
consequences of any injury or death incurred or sustained by workmen in the course of their employment,” etc., regardless of the cause of the death or injury. Nothing in section 21 or in the act adopted pursuant thereto was intended to place restrictions upon an employed workman’s enforcement of his claims against another who is not his employer. Section 21 was essential to the validity of the .contemplated act. Without that section the Employer’s Liability Act would have been invalidated by the doctrine of freedom of contract which is ingrained in all organic laws. Such act was adopted as the expression of this state’s policy for preserving the manpower of the toiling masses and to minimize the losses resulting to them in industry. Insofar as any section of the Labor Code attempts to coerce an industrial employee or his dependent to desist from making contracts with others who are not his employers, it transcends the authority conferred by section 21 and is therefore void. By no rational interpretation can it he said that the liability of
one who is not the employer
to an employee of another is governed by the statutes enacted pursuant to section 21.
(Commercial Casualty Ins. Co.
v.
Industrial Accident Com.,
Merely because the
laissez faire
policies prevailing in the industrial world prior to the twentieth century were eliminated by the cited constitutional provision and the statutes, it must be borne in mind that claims of a workman against those who are not his employers are protected by the same constitutional guaranties that have always given security to the contracts of other classes of citizens. (Federal Const., 14th Amendment; Cal. Const., art. I, §§ 1 and 13;
In re Smith,
In
Johnson
v.
Goodyear Mining Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Me Comb, J., and Wilson, J., concurred.
Notes
Section 3859, Labor Code'; No release or settlement of any claim under this chapter is valid without the written consent of both employer and employee. The consent of both the employer and employee filed in court in writing together with the approval of the court, is sufficient in any action or proceeding where such approval is required by law.”
