Aрpellant complains that the commission’s “findings of fact” do not comply with the requirements of sec. 102.18 (1),'Stats., which direct:
“After final hearing the commission shall make and file its findings upon all the facts involved in the controversy, - • • ”
He submits that specific findings shоuld have been made relating to exits, the procedure of blowing the pits, and other matters with respect to which he claimed the defendant had violated either safety orders or statute. He contends that the findings, as set forth abovе, are merely conclusions of law.
In
Tesch v. Industrial Comm.
(1930),
“We do not say that formal findings such as should be filed by a circuit judge in cases tried by the court are required. There should be at least an informal recital of the facts which the commission finds to be established. For some years a document designated a memorandum accompanied the so-called findings of fact. That answered the requirements very well in most cases.”
There is such a memorandum in the present case. It states the faсts of the accident; it deals with the specific orders *231 which the appellant deemed applicable аnd states why they are not. We consider that the memorandum and findings filed by the commission are an adequate compliance with sec. 102.18, Stats.
Recovery is permitted by the provisions of sec. 102.57, Stats., only in such cases as involve a failure of the employer to comply with a statute or lawful order of the commission.
Cream City F. Co. v. Industrial Comm.
(1926),
We have held that in the trial of a civil action for recovery on account of violation of the safe-place statute the question whether there has been a violation is for the jury.
Heiden v. Milwaukee
(1937),
It was the claimant’s burden to establish that the statutes or orders, or one of them, were violated.
Skelly v. Industrial Comm.
(1949),
In a number of cases this court, in dealing with similar situations, has given consideration to inspections аnd recommendations made by representatives of the commission.
Milwaukee Corrugating Co. v. Industrial Comm.
(1928),
We are unable to say that there is no credible evidence to support the commission’s finding that there was no viola *233 tiоn of the orders or the statutes. The claimant has called attention to nothing in the record which would permit us, as a mаtter of law, to determine that the passageway occupied by him was inadequate; that the stairways provided for his exit, one of them only a few feet from the place at which he was injured, were not located so as to аfford him the best possible egress; that exits were not so distributed so as to afford the best possible egress, or that the plаce was not as free from danger as its nature would reasonably permit.
The claimant suggests a number of additions and сhanges which might have been made in the premises to render them more safe. The argument that that fact indicates that the employer violated the safe-place statute might be made in any case. We are unable to cоnceive any structure, safe as it might be considered to be, which could not be made more safe. To hold that the possibility that a safe structure or instrument might be made more safe requires the conclusion that there has been a violation would be to make the owner or employer an insurer. Certainly in the application of a penal statutе such as we have here to deal with, we may not go that far. As said by the learned trial judge, “the law of Wisconsin does not guarantee sаfety. All that is demanded is adherence to the ‘rule of reason.’ ”
After the accident the employer installed an irоn stairway at each end of the corridor and claimant contends that because the new installations would reduсe if not obviate the danger, it follows that his injuries were sustained by reason of the violation of the safe-place statute. Evidence of alterations made after the accident may be considered by the trier, but it is no more than evidence to be considered with other facts,
Heiden v. Milwaukee
(1937),
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
