On the facts hereinafter stated, the Industrial Board of Indiana, hereby certified for our consideration and determination, the questions of law hereinafter stated.
Statement of facts. John Moody was born on May 1, 1904, and at all times hereinafter stated was over sixteen years of age and under eighteen years of age; on June 3, 1921, said Moody entered the service of a corporation engaged in mining coal in Sullivan county, Indiana; said corporation is hereinafter designated as the operator; at said time and ever since said operator has been engaged in mining coal in Sullivan county, Indiana, and has had employed in its mine more than ten men; said Moody worked for said operator in said mine as a coal miner continuously from June 3, 1921, until
On the other hand, the injured party and the operator contend that the injured party, a boy of sixteen years of age, is a lawful employe within the meaning of §76, cl. b, of the Indiana Workmen’s Compensation Act, Acts- 1919 p. 158; that §22 of the School Attendance' Law of 1921 (Acts 1921 p. 337) expressly provides that no minor under the age of sixteen years shall be employed, permitted or suffered to work in any capacity in or about any mine, and that the evident intent and effect of this section is to authorize the employment of boys more than sixteen years of age in mines when they have complied with the other provisions of the statute, as it is admitted Moody had done; that the declaration in §1 of an act concerning labor (Acts 1911 p. 658, supra) that the business of mining coal is declared a dangerous occupation and industry subject to the provisions of said act, is a declaration merely for the purpose of requiring the examination of coal miners and their certificates of competency and permits for apprentices as therein provided.
The Industrial Board of Indiana submits to this court the following questions of law for determination:
First:—Upon the foregoing facts, was John Moody
Second:—Does the Industrial Board have jurisdiction to hear and determine his claim for compensation?
Said Moody had complied with all laws necessary to his lawful employment and he was lawfully employed, unless precluded from such employment by reason of his age as hereinafter discussed.
It will be observed that each of the specific occupations enumerated above are of a highly dangerous character.
We have here an enumeration of specific occupations each of which is highly dangerous, and a general phrase following including others, and under the rule aforesaid, it must be held to refer to occupations of the same class or character. Section 22 of the same act (Acts 1921 p. 337.) prohibits the employment of any minor under the age of sixteen years in a number of employments there named, each of which is less hazardous in its nature, and included in such less hazardous occupations is that of employment in or about any mine, quarry or excavation. As said §22, swpra, prohibits the employment of persons under sixteen years of age in the less hazardous, though dangerous occupations, including employment in or about any mine, quarry or excavation, the necessary implication is that persons over sixteen years of age may be lawfully employed therein.
It being, then, lawful to employ any person over sixteen years of age in or about any mine under the provisions of §22,. swpra, unless the provision of such §22 as to mines can be differentiated from “other occupations dangerous to life or limb or injurious to health or morals” as found in §23, supra, the two sections are irreconcilable. But it appears that the phrase with refference to employment in or about any mine in §22, supra, names an occupation that is in a different class from the occupations named in §23, supra, and that therefore they.are not irreconcilable.
In State v. Shanks (1912), 178 Ind. 330, 99 N. E. 481, it was held that statutes are to be construed so that full force and effect shall be given to all parts thereof, and this rule must be applied in ascertaining wherein language, which is specific necessarily, comes in conflict with that which is general. The efforts must in the first instant be to harmonize all the provisions of the statute by construing all parts together, and it is only when on such construction the repugnancy of special provisions to the general language is plainly manifest, that the intent of the legislature, as declared in the general enacting parts of the statute, is superseded.