156 Wis. 580 | Wis. | 1914
It is conceded, as the fact is, that, in case of an employee, in the course of bis employment, being injured by tbe actionable negligence of a third person,, a statutory remedy accrues to him for compensation, against bis employer and a common-law remedy against sucb third person, though be cannot have but one satisfaction. If be elects to pursue tbe latter remedy be waives tbe statutory right, and if be elects to pursue tbe former, tbe employer by succession,- — • ipso fado et eo instanii, — becomes tbe owner of tbe right against tbe wrongdoer and “may enforce tbe same in bis own name.” Tbe statute, sec. 2394 — 25, Stats. 1913, thus provides :
“1. Tbe making of a lawful claim against an employer for compensation under sections 2394 — 3 to 2394 — 31, inclusive [the Workmen’s Compensation Law], for tbe injury or death of bis employee shall operate as an assignment of any cause of action in tort which tbe employee or bis personal representative may have against any other party for sucb injury or death; and sucb employer may enforce in bis own name tbe liability of sucb other party.”
*582 “2. The making of a claim by an employee against a third party for damages by reason of an accident covered by sections 2394 — 3 to 2394 — 31, inclusive, shall operate as a waiver of any claim for compensation against the employer.”
In case of the employer becoming, in the manner indicated, the owner of a claim for injury to his employee, is such right a mere personal possession of a remedy for protection against loss growing out of the statutory liability, or is it a property right which the employer may deal with the same as an ordinary thing in action, — personally, judicially enforce it or assign it, affording the assignee, as the real party in interest, the right to proceed as legal owner ?
In a broad sense, such a claim as the one we are dealing with is a mere chose in action. Bennett v. Bennett, 116 N. Y. 584, 23 N. E. 17. It is an incorporeal thing, resting in action, — remediable by an ordinary judicial remedy, as distinguished from a thing in possession. It is' assignable and survivable. Lehmann v. Farwell, 95 Wis. 185, 70 N. W. 170; Nemecek v. Filer & S. Co. 126 Wis. 71, 105 N. W. 225; Brown v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 102 Wis. 137, 77 N. W. 748, 78 N. W. 771.
Thus it will be seen that an ordinary claim for damages for a tortious injury to the person, notwithstanding it was otherwise at common law, is a property right which may pass by assignment or operation of law, with the incidental right to a judicial remedy, by and in the name of, the real party in interest, to enforce it. That is the thing which, under sec. 2394 — 25, Stats., in the circumstances there mentioned, is waived or becomes possessed by the employer, according to the facts.
In providing that the right of the employee shall move from him and vest in his employer by the former making a lawful claim against the latter under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, did the legislature intend that, in the transit, it should lose the element of assignability? It is suggested-that such is the case because of the language “and such em
The statute makers seem to have contemplated that, equitably, a wrongdoer, in the circumstances under discussion, is the one primarily liable; that the statutory right of the injured man should not work for the protection of the tortfeasor; but if insisted upon, the other right shall pass to the employer as an equivalent. The idea was not that the employer should become possessed of the common-law right for mere purposes of indemnity. That seems plain, because of the transition not waiting upon actual payment of the statutory claim, or the enforcement of such common-law claim being limited to the measure of the employer’s payment to discharge the statutory liability. In the circumstances mentioned in the statute, the rights of all persons become fixed upon the event of the employee, by action in legal form, making a choice between the two ways open to him. That against the employer being chosen; that against the wrongdoer immediately passes, by operation of law, to such employer. The status then is, according to the letter of the statute, this: The sole source of compensation for the employee is the employer; but, without prejudice to the liability of the wrongdoer, he remaining answerable just the same, but to the then real party in interest, the employer. No different conclusion is contended for by counsel for appellant, except by construction of the statute.
Ambiguity in a statute is a condition of judicial construction. When uncertainty of meaning, with reasonable clearness, begins the duty of judicial construction arises; but so long as there is no need for construction, to attempt it is to pass the line between the judicial and the legislative function. So if the legislative intent in the statute in question be not pretty clearly involved in obscurity, it must be presumed
There does not seem to be any obscurity in the statute when viewed in the literal sense. Is there any when we apply it to the situation with which the legislature dealt? None is perceived. To give the employee, at his option, a source of indemnity for his loss without benefiting the wrongdoer or necessarily impoverishing the employer, is reasonable and quite the natural thing. It was very easy to have changed the character of the common-law claim against the wrongdoer from an assignable to an unassignable claim, or have limited it to a mere instrumentality for indemnity. Neither was done. There is nothing unreasonable or absurd in the statute from any viewpoint that we have been able to measure it. Ref ore, its enactment the employer could purchase an employee’s claim for damages against one who had wrongfully injured him in his person or his property, and enforce it in his own' name. In such a case the amount paid for the claim would not militate, necessarily, against its enforceability, or the measure of the recovery, or in any way affect the claim as to assignability. The letter of the statute, as well as its purpose, seems to be that, in case of a compulsory purchase of such a claim the nature of it shall not at all be changed. The use of the word “may” instead of the word “shall” or some other word indicating that the claim in passing by the statutory assignment loses its assignability, pretty clearly shows a purpose to provide for the creation of a status of sole ownership as distinguished from one in trust for the employee.
By the Oourt. — The order is affirmed.