Plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, a Minnesota corporation, in the capacity of fireman in charge of its heating plant. Both were within and subject to the Workmen’s Compensation Act. Plaintiff was injured while engaged in his employment, by reason of which he was disabled for a brief period from the discharge of his duties, in adjustment of which there was paid to him the sum of $44. There were, as we understand the matter, no compensation proceedings, but that is not of special importance. At the time of the accident, resulting in the disability stated, plaintiff received an additional independent injury, but not amounting to a disability to perform his work, for which the compensation act makes no express or other provision for compensation. The additional injury was to his left pubic nerve, totally destroying the functions thereof, rendering him permanently impotent. Finding no remedy under the compensation act for the particular injury, plaintiff brought this action at law to recover therefor, alleging that it was caused by the negligence of defendant. Defendant interposed in defense, among other things, that the parties were within the compensation act, and that the remedy there provided is exclusive. Plaintiff demurred to that part of the answer and defendant appealed from an order sustaining the same.
The only question presented is whether an employee, within the compensation act, who suffers an injury in the course of his employment which results: (1) In a disability, temporary or permanent, for which compensation may be had under the act; and (2) an associate injury not amounting to a disability, either temporary or otherwise, and for which no compensation is provided, may maintain an action at law for the latter injury on the ground that it was occasioned by the negligence of the employer. We answer the question in the negative.
The question is of first impression in this state, though it has come
In some of the jurisdictions of this country and in England, situations of the kind are expressly covered by statute. Bradbury, Compensation Acts (3d ed.) 874. But not by the statute of this state. The whole scheme of our statute is one of reciprocal concessions by employer and employee, from which benefits and protection fall to each, which, without the law, neither could demand or recover; of benefit to the employee, for he is thereby given protection for injuries impairing his earning capacity, without regard to the culpability of the employer, when, without the statute, he would be remediless. In consideration of this insured compensation and protection by the acceptance of the act, he, by necessary implication, relinquishes his common law remedies, and thus places a limit on his rights to that measured and granted by the compensation act. Section 8204, G. S. 1913. In return for the required payment of compensation for the accidental injury, for which the common law furnishes the employee no relief, the employer is protected from the suit at law for the negligent injury. Thus we have the reciprocal yielding and giving up of rights existing at common law for
That the remedy so given and provided is exclusive of all others seems to -be the prevailing opinion of the courts where the question has received attention. Shannahan v. Monarch Engineering Co.
For the reasons stated the demurrer to the answer should have been overruled, and the order sustaining it is- accordingly reversed.
