207 P. 416 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
This is a proceeding in certiorari to review an award of the Industrial Accident Commission in favor of one M. Toutain, a marine machinist who was injured while installing machinery in a vessel that was being constructed by Toutain's employer, the petitioner here. The vessel had never been in commission. It was an incomplete structure at the time of the injuries. It had, however, been launched and had been drawn up beside a dock for completion, where it was afloat and riding the navigable waters of Los Angeles harbor at the time of the accident. Claiming that the commission's award was based upon a maritime tort, petitioner contends that the respective rights and duties of the parties must be determined and controlled by the maritime law, and that, *354 therefore, the application of the California Workmen's Compensation Act would be an unauthorized invasion of the admiralty jurisdiction of the federal courts.
By article III, section 2, of the constitution of the United States the judicial power of the United States extends "to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction." The judicial code of the United States (40 Stats. at Large, 395 [4 Fed. Stats. Ann., p. 838; 5 Fed. Stats. Ann., p. 921; U.S. Comp. Stats., secs. 991, 1233]), by sections 24 and 256, vests exclusive jurisdiction in the federal courts "of all civil cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases the right of a common-law remedy where the common law is competent to give it, and to claimants the rights and remedies under the Workmen's Compensation Law of any state." The concluding part of this saving clause, that which purports to save to claimants the rights and remedies afforded by a state Workmen's Compensation Act, was added to the federal judicial code on October 6, 1917, by an amendment commonly known as the Johnson amendment. In Southern Pac. Co. v. Jensen,
It is earnestly urged by petitioner that the case at bar is within the doctrine of these decisions of the United States supreme court. In each of those cases the injury was received *355
in the course of an employment under a maritime contract or while the injured servant was performing work of an essentially maritime character. In the instant case the injured employee was not engaged in the performance of a maritime contract, nor were his services of a maritime nature. [1] In determining whether a contract be maritime the test is, not locality, as in the case of torts, but the subject matter of the contract — the nature of the work to be done. (Doey v. Clarence P. HowlandCo.,
Notwithstanding Toutain's employment was nonmaritime, petitioner, assuming that the injury was the result of a maritime tort, argues that, because courts of admiralty have jurisdiction of claims for damages growing out of torts committed on navigable waters, it would destroy that uniformity which the federal constitution was designed to accomplish in matters maritime if our state workmen's compensation law were applied to such an injury. We are unable to agree with this contention. In our opinion this case is controlled by the recent decision of the United States supreme court in Grantetc. Ship Co. v. Rhode, supra— a case wherein it was alleged that the employee received his injuries as the result of a maritime tort, it being alleged that he was hurt by reason of his employer's negligence in constructing and maintaining a faulty scaffolding on a vessel afloat on navigable waters. In that case Rhode, as libellant, brought a suit on the admiralty side of the United States States district court to recover damages for injuries sustained by him while at work as a carpenter or joiner on a partially completed vessel lying at a dock in the Willamette River in the state of Oregon. The uncompleted vessel was lying in navigable waters at the time *356 of the injuries. Negligence of the employer in the construction and maintenance of the scaffolding was alleged as ground for the recovery of damages. It was held that, though the general admiralty jurisdiction extends to a proceeding to recover damages resulting from a tort committed on a vessel lying on navigable waters within a state, nevertheless the exclusive features of the Oregon Workmen's Compensation Act are applicable to such a case, and that, therefore, the state statute abrogated the right to recover damages in an admiralty court which otherwise would have existed. In other words, it was held, in effect, that where the work is nonmaritime and is done pursuant to a nonmaritime contract, the rights and liabilities of the parties have no direct relation to navigation, and need not be measured by those rules of the sea the uniform operation of which is essential to any general system of maritime law; and that, therefore, in such cases, and notwithstanding that the work is done on navigable waters, the remedy afforded by a state Workmen's Compensation Act is the exclusive remedy, even though the injury may have been the result of the employer's maritime tort.
Because the Oregon Workmen's Compensation Act [Or. Laws 1913, p. 188] is an elective statute, giving to both employers and workmen the option to accept or reject its provisions, whereas our statute is compulsory, petitioner claims that the principle of the Rhode case is not applicable here. With this contention we find ourselves unable to agree. In the first place, we fail to see any ground for the assumption that the award under review here was based upon a tort, maritime or nonmaritime. Nowhere in the record is there the slightest hint that the injury was the result of any negligence or fault. To entitle Toutain to the compensation provided for by our Workmen's Compensation Act it was not necessary that there should be any wrongful act or omission. That act allows compensation for all injuries arising out of employment irrespective of negligence or fault. The payments provided for by the act are founded simply upon the injury, and are entirely disconnected with any theory of fault on the part of the employer or right on the part of the employee established by law prior to the passage of the act, save in instances of "serious and willful misconduct." The basic principle *357
of the act is that the cost of injuries incidental to modern industry should be treated as a part of the cost of production. That purpose is effected without the creation of a delictual liability. (Doey v. Clarence etc. Co., supra; Berton v. DryDock Co., 219 Fed. 765. See, also, Quong Ham Wah Co. v.Industrial Acc. Com.,
But as we understand the doctrine of the Rhode case, it matters not whether the injury be the result of a tort — a delictual omission or commission — or whether it happened without any fault on the part of the employer. Nor is it a matter of moment that the state Compensation Act be either elective or compulsory. Where, as in the Jensen, Walker, and Stewart cases, the servant is injured while performing work of a maritime nature, or while employed under a maritime contract, the parties must be deemed to have contracted with each other in contemplation of the general system of maritime law and with the knowledge that their respective rights and liabilities would be measured and defined by that law. [3] And since it was the design of the federal constitution to preserve a proper harmony and uniformity in the maritime law, it follows that where work is performed under a maritime contract no state has power to abolish the well-recognized maritime rules concerning the measure of recovery and substitute therefor the indemnity that is afforded by a Workmen's Compensation Act. [4] But where, as in the case before us, the contract of employment is nonmaritime, and the work is not of a maritime character, the workmen's compensation law fastens upon the relation of employer and employee the obligation to compensate for injuries received in the course of employment. (North Alaska Salmon Co.
v. Pillsbury,
The award is affirmed.
Works, J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on June 12, 1922.
All the Justices concurred. *359