152 Minn. 197 | Minn. | 1922
It appears from the record in this .case, and the facts are not in dispute, that on July 20, 1919, M. J. Schwartz was in the employ of the Northern States Power Company, a corporation; each being within and subject to the Workmen’s Compensation Act. On that date while engaged in the line of his employment Schwarz suffered an injury by reason of the negligence of defendant in this action,
The learned trial court was of the opinion and held that the cause of action arose under and by force ¡of our death-by-wrongful-act statute, section 8175, G. S. 1913, and since the action was not commenced within the time there limited the remedy is barred and plaintiff cannot recover. The correctness or incorrectness of that conclusion presents the only question on the appeal. We answer it in harmony with the view taken by the trial court.
The right of action at common law for a personal injury, in the absence of a survival statute, whether the injury result in death or not, is personal and dies with the death of either party, except as provided.by section 8171, G. S. 1913. We have in this state, where the injury results in death, the survival statute relied upon by the trial court, known as our Lord Campbell’s Act, by which an action of the kind is required to be commenced within two years. It is the only enactment having the purpose of continuing such right of action after the death of the injured party, and controls the case at bar, upon the point in issue, the statute of limitations, unless, as contended by counsel for plaintiff, the right is also created and given by the compensation act, with the limit of time for the commence
A careful reading of the pertinent provisions of the compensation act discloses no language indicating a legislative purpose or intent by the third party provisions thereof of creating any new remedy for the death of an employe by the negligent act of a person other than his employer. A remedy for a wrong of that character existed at the time of the passage of the compensation statute, under the death-by-wrongful-act statute, just referred to, and there was no occasion for supplementing or adding thereto by further legislation. The act expressly recognizes the existence of the remedy, and provides that an injured employe or his dependents, where death results from the negligent or wrongful act of a third person, may at his or their option pursue it against the third person or demand compensation from the employer. And it is immaterial so far as concerns an exercise of the option whether the third party be within or without the act; the option may be exercised in either case. These various provisions rounded out and made a consistent whole that feature of the act, but therefrom the conclusion of an intention to grant a new remedy to either the employer or employe cannot well be drawn. The intention to preserve and continue existing remedies is clear. In fact the only new right of action given by the compensation act to anyone is the action by the employe against the employer for an accidental injury, one not previously existing either at common law or by statute. The provisions of the act subrogating the employer to the rights of the employe against third persons negligently or otherwise causing injury to him, create no new right of action in either; such provisions serve only to place the employer who pays the compensation in the first instance in the position of the employe in respect to the remedies held against the third person. The employer thereby acquires such rights and such rights only as were at the time vested in the employe; nothing more, and nothing less.
No authorities have been called to our attention and we have found none passing upon the precise question. The case of Star
Order affirmed.