36 N.W.2d 708 | Minn. | 1949
From the pleadings, it appears that plaintiff has twice previously sought relief for the same injury. First, he sued Freda Swartz and Joseph Swartz, the bar manager, and recovered a verdict against Joseph for $1,000. The trial court directed a verdict for Freda, taking the view that her liability, if any, was under the workmen's compensation act. A motion for new trial was denied, and no appeal was taken. Second, he brought a proceeding against this defendant under the workmen's compensation act. The industrial commission held that plaintiff was an employe of Freda Swartz and that he had suffered an accidental injury which arose out of and in the course of his employment. It made an award to plaintiff against Freda, covering direct medical and hospital expenses; costs of bringing the compensation action; compensation for the period of disability incidental to further surgical and hospital care; and such further surgical and hospital care as he might require. *235
Plaintiff alleged in this action (his third) that Joseph Swartz, husband of Freda, was in the employ of Freda as a general manager in supervision of a tavern licensed to sell liquor and that Joseph, while in an intoxicated condition caused by the illegal dispensing of liquor after hours and while still under the direction of Freda, assaulted plaintiff and injured him severely.
The question presented now for the first time is whether the legislature, in enacting the amendments making the workmen's compensation act compulsory, intended to make its provisions exclusive of the statutory remedy created under the civil damages section of the liquor control act, §
Where an employe has been assaulted by a fellow worker, a foreman, or a third party in the course of his employment, it has been held that the injury is compensable under the workmen's compensation act. In State ex rel. Anseth v. District Court,
Under the workmen's compensation act, as amended by L. 1937, c. 64, the employe's right to elect not to be bound by the act theretofore existing was abolished as to contracts thereafter arising. §
"* * * in the place of any other liability to such employee, his personal representative, surviving spouse, parents, child or children, dependents or next of kin, or any other person entitled to recover damages at common law or otherwise on account of such injury or death, * * *." (Italics supplied.)
In Breimhorst v. Beckman,
"By the weight of authority, it is recognized that compulsory workmen's compensation acts similar to ours do provide a remedy which is an adequate substitute for the common-law or statutory action for damages for injuries sustained by an employe in his employment. Although the plaintiff, by becoming subject to the workmen's compensation act as an employe, has lost a right to sue at law for all damages incurred from injuries resulting from her employer's negligence, she has been fully compensated for this loss by receiving in return a remedy which gives her a certainty of compensatory relief, without the delay of litigation and without regard to any negligence or assumption of risk on her part."
A comparison of the provisions of §
Section
A few Minnesota cases contain dicta that the election to be bound by the workmen's compensation act as it existed prior to the 1937 amendment operated to exclude all other remedies, including statutory *238
ones,7 but only two cases deal8 with the problem of whether compensation is exclusive of a common-law action against the employer for negligence in violating a duty of care imposed by statute. The inference is plain from the cases cited above involving statutory duties that, if the particular injury had been compensable under the compensation act, the sole remedy would have been the award under that act, and no special remedy or action for damages would be available arising out of the breach of the employer's statutory duty. This conclusion is reinforced where, as in the case at bar, both the duty under the liquor control act and the action to enforce it were created by the legislature in the exercise of the police power. The amendments making the workmen's compensation act compulsory and exclusive were also an exercise of that power. See, Breimhorst v. Beckman,
Therefore, where the intent of our legislature has been so clearly expressed that the workmen's compensation act shall provide the exclusive remedy for injuries arising out of the employment relation, we hold that §
The order denying plaintiff's motion for new trial is affirmed.