DAVIS v. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON.
No. 86
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 18, 1942. Decided December 14, 1942.
317 U.S. 249
Reversed.
Mr. Edward S. Franklin, Assistant Attorney General of the State of Washington, with whom Messrs. Smith Troy, Attorney General, and T. H. Little, Assistant Attorney General, were on the brief, for respondent.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case the Washington Supreme Court held that the State could not, consistently with the Federal Constitution, make an award under its state compensation law to
The petitioner‘s husband, a structural steelworker, was drowned in the Snohomish River while working as an employee of the Manson Construction and Engineering Company, a contributor to the Workmen‘s Comрensation Fund of the State of Washington. Contributions of Washington employers to this Fund are compulsory in certain types of occupations, including the job for which the deceased had been employed.
The Washington statute provides compensation fоr employees and dependents of employees, such as decedent, if its application can be made “within the legislative jurisdiction of the state.” A further statement of coverage
With the manifest desire of removing this uncertainty so that workers whose duties were partly on land and partly on navigable waters might be compensated for injuries, Congress on October 6, 1917, five months after the Jensen decision, passed an Act attempting to give such injured persons “the rights and remedies under the workmen‘s compensation law of any state.” 40 Stat. 395. May 17, 1920, this Court declared the Act unconstitutional. Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Stewart, 253 U.S. 149. June 10, 1922, 42 Stat. 634, Congress made another effort to permit state compensation laws to protect these waterfront employees, but this seсond effort was also held invalid. State of Washington v. W. C. Dawson & Co., 264 U.S. 219. March 4, 1927, came the federal Longshoremen‘s and Harbor Workers’ Act,
Harbor workers and longshoremen employed “in whole or in part upon the navigable waters” are clearly protected by this federаl act; but employees such as decedent here, occupy that shadowy area within which, at some undefined and undefinable point, state laws can validly provide compensation. This Court has been unable to give any guiding, definite rule to determine the extent of state power in advance of litigation, and has held that the margins of state authority must “be determined in view of surrounding circumstances as cases arise.” Baizley Iron Works v. Span, 281 U.S. 222, 230. The determination of particular cases, of which there have beеn a great many, has become extremely difficult. It is fair to say that a number of cases can be cited both in behalf of and in opposition to recovery here.2
We are not asked here to review and reconsider the constitutional implications of the Jensen line of decisions. On the contrary, even the petitioner argues that such action might bring about still worse confusion in an already uncertain field, and points out that state and federal agencies have made real progress toward closing the gap. There is much force in this argument. Since 1917, Congress and the states have sought to restore order out of the confusion which resulted from the Jensen decision. That success has not finally been achieved is illustrated by the present case. The Longshoremen‘s Act, passed with specific reference to the Jensen rule, provided a partial solutiоn. The Washington statute represents a state effort to clarify the situation. Both of these laws show clearly that neither was intended to encroach on the field occupied by the other. But the line separating the scope of the two being undefined and undefinable with exact
There is, in the light of the cases referred to, clearly a twilight zone in which the employees must have their rights determined case by case, and in which particular facts and circumstances are vital elements. That zone includes persons such as the decedent who are, as a matter of actual administration, in fact protected under the state compensation act.
Faced with this factual problem we must give great—indeed, presumptive—weight to the conclusions of the appropriate federal authorities and to the state statutes themselves. Where there has been a hearing by the federal administrative agency entrusted with broad powers of investigation, fact finding, determination, and award, our task proves easy. There, we are aided by the provision of the federal act,
In the instant case, we do not enjoy the benefit of federal administrative findings and must therefore look solely to state sources for guidance. We find here a state statute which purports to cover these persons, and which indeed does cover them if the doubtful and difficult factual questions to which we have referred are decided on the side of the constitutional power of the state. The problem here is comparable to that in another field of constitutional law in which courts are called upon to determine whether particular state acts unduly burden interstate commerce. In making the factual judgment there, we have relied heavily on the presumption of constitutionality in favor of the state statute. South Carolina Highway Dept. v. Barnwell Bros., 303 U. S. 177, 188, 191.5
The benefit of a presumption is also given in cases of conflict of state or state and territorial workmen‘s compensation acts under the Full Faith and Credit clause. There, as here, the issue is a factual one arising from a clash of interest of two jurisdictions. In such a case, involving the question of whether the California or the Alaska Workmen‘s Compensation Act should apply to a
Not only does the state act in the instant case appear to cover this employee, aside from the constitutional consideration, but no conflicting process of administration is apparent. The federal authorities have taken no actiоn under the Longshoremen‘s Act, and it does not appear that the employer has either made the special payments required or controverted payment in the manner prescribed in the Act.
Giving the full weight to the presumption, and resolving all doubts in favor of the Act, we hold that the Constitution is no obstacle to the petitioner‘s recovery. The case is remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring:
Any legislative scheme that compensates workmen or their families for industrial mishaps should be capable of simple and dependable enforcеment. That was the aim of Congress when, with due regard for the diverse conditions in the several States, it afforded to harbor-workers the
Such a desirable end cannot now be achieved merely by judicial repudiation of the Jensen doctrine. Too much has happened in the twenty-five years since that ill-starred decision. Federal and state enactments have so accommodаted themselves to the complexity and confusion introduced by the Jensen rulings that the resources of adjudication can no longer bring relief from the difficulties which the judicial process itself brought into being. Therefore, until Congress sees fit to attempt another comprehensive solution of the problem, this Court can do no more than bring some order out of the remaining judicial chaos as marginal situations come before us. Because it contributes to that end, I join in the Court‘s opinion.
Theoretic illogic is inevitable so long as the employee in a situation like the present is permitted to recover either under the federal act (cf. Parker v. Motor Boat Sales, 314 U.S. 244; Northern Coal Co. v. Strand, 278 U.S. 142; Nogueira v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. Co., 281 U.S. 128; Employers’ Liability Assurance Co. v. Cook, 281 U.S. 233) or under a state statute (cf. Millers’ Underwriters v. Braud, 270 U.S. 59; Alaska Packers Assn. v. Accident Comm‘n, 276 U.S. 467). That is the practical result, whether it be reached by the Court‘s path or that apparently left open under the Chief Justice‘s views. It is scant comfort to an employer that he may find he has committed a misdemeanor in not posting a bond as required by the federal act because he may have been advised, not unnaturally, that under the prior rulings оf this Court the activities of his employees were local in nature and hence he could be sued only under state law.
Any effort to lessen the uncertainties and complexities which have followed in the wake of the Jensen decision and its successors during the past twenty-five years deserves sympathetic consideration. But in the present state of the law, the Court‘s attempt to remove them by construing state workmen‘s compensation acts and the Longshoremen‘s and Harbor Workers’ Act so that thеir coverages overlap, can hardly be deemed to be within judicial competence.
Section 3 of the Longshoremen‘s Act,
The Court‘s opinion in the present case seems to proceed upon the assumption that, if petitioner had filed a claim under the federal act, and the federal commissioner had awarded compensation, we would sustain his ruling, although the Court now holds that the state authorities erroneously concluded they were without constitutional power to make the award. Indeed, after our decision in Parker v. Motor Boat Sales, supra, petitioner‘s right of recovery under the federal act can hardly be doubted: not only could a federal commissioner properly decide
Congress by the enactment of the Longshoremen‘s and Harbor Workers’ Act has left no room for an overlapping dual system of the sort which the Court now espouses by placing its decision on a new doctrine that recovery under either the state or the federal act is to be sustained if the case is thought a close one. Section 5 of the Act,
Congress has directed that if the case is within the federal statute, the employer shall be relieved of all other obligation. But in order to relieve the employee in a doubtful case of the necessity of filing two claims, one under each act, a double burden is imposed on the employer by an inadmissible construction of the federal act. The dual system of presumptions, which are to operate in favor of the employee, but apparently never against him, will serve to sustain an exercise оf either state of federal jurisdiction in every case within the so-called “twilight zone.” But this is accomplished only by depriving employers of the immunity which Congress sought to confer when it set up a system in which federal and state acts are made mutually exclusive.
Although the basic question in these cases is said to be “factual,” the twilight zone doctrine does not reveal how—in view of the great weight which is to be given the federal commissioner‘s finding, as in the Motor Boat case—we can in this case disregard the findings of four state
Notwithstanding the ruling in the Motor Boat case that Congress had adopted the Jensen boundary of federal jurisdiction, there are in the present case special circumstances which take it out of that ruling and leave us free to reconsider Jensen‘s constitutional basis. The exclusive liability section of the federal statute contains a proviso that if the employer fails to give security for payment of compensation, as required, then the employee may elect to claim compensation under the federal statute, “or to maintain an action at law or in admiralty.” The purpose of this proviso seems to be to preserve to the employee all remedies which he might otherwise have had, in the event that the employer does not give the prescribed security. Since this record does not show that the employer complied, petitioner is free to pursue any available remedy which the Constitution permits and which the state may choose to afford.
Only if the Court were to overrule the Jensen case in its constitutional aspects could I join in a reversal of the judgment here. If we are to continue to apply the Jensen
