162 P. 93 | Cal. | 1916
Certiorari to review an award of the Industrial Accident Commission.
The petitioner, North Alaska Salmon Company, is a corporation engaged in the business of packing and selling salmon. Its packing operations are conducted in the territory of Alaska. Its office and principal place of business are in the city and county of San Francisco. Oscar Anderson was employed by the petitioner, under a contract made in San Francisco, for the season of 1914. He was injured while working in Alaska. The commission awarded him compensation. The only point made by the petitioner is that, at the time of Anderson's injury, the commission had no jurisdiction to allow compensation for injuries received beyond the limits of this state.
The case is before us on rehearing. Our former decision, upholding the jurisdiction of the commission, was based on the theory that the workmen's compensation law entered into and became a part of the contract of employment, and that where such contract was made in this state, the statute fixed the rights of the parties with respect to any injury arising out of the employment, wherever such injury might occur. Upon further study, we are satisfied that this view is not tenable. The liability of the employer to pay compensation arises from the law itself, rather than from any agreement of the parties. The law operates upon a status, i. e., that of employer and employee, and affixes certain rights and obligations to that status. True, the relation of employer and employee has its inception in a contract, but once the relation is created, its incidents depend not upon the agreement of the parties, but upon the provisions of the law. Our decisions upholding the validity of this legislation have emphasized, and found support in, the proposition that the statute is one regulating the rights and obligations attaching to the status of employer and employee. (Western Indemnity Co. v. Pillsbury,
The principle here involved was carefully considered and well stated by the supreme court of Alabama in Alabama G. S. R. Co.
v. Carroll,
"The duties and liabilities incident to the relation between the plaintiff and the defendant which are involved in this case, are not imposed by and do not rest in or spring from the contract between the parties. The only office of the contract . . . is the establishment of a relation between them, that of master and servant; and it is upon that relation, that incident or consequence of the contract, and not upon the rights of the parties under the contract, that our statute operates. The law is not concerned with the contractual stipulations, except in so far as to determine from them that the relation upon which it is to operate exists. Finding this relation the statute imposes certain duties and liabilities on the parties *4 to it wholly regardless of the stipulations of the, contract as to the rights of the parties under it, and, it may be, in the teeth of such stipulations." (See, also, Dormidy v. SharonBoiler Works, 127 Fed. 485.)
The question resolves itself, then, into one of the correct interpretation of our statute. We may assume, without undertaking to decide the point, that the legislature has power to enact a statute, providing that employers shall be liable to pay compensation to injured employees whose employment was created by this state, regardless of the place where the injury may have been sustained. So assuming, however, we are called upon to determine whether the Workmen's Compensation, Insurance and Safety Act was designed to cover any injuries other than those occurring within the boundaries of California. Ordinarily, the statutes of a state have no force beyond its boundaries. (Sutherland on Statutory Construction, 2d ed., sec. 13; Story on Conflict of Laws, 8th ed., secs. 7, 22.) Except within the domain committed to the control of the federal government, the states of the Union are "severally sovereign, independent and foreign to each other in regard to their internal and domestic affairs." (Stevens v. Brown, 20. W. Va. 450, 459.) Although a state may have the power to legislate concerning the rights and obligations of its citizens with regard to transactions occurring beyond its boundaries, the presumption is that it did not intend to give its statutes any extraterritorial effect. The intention to make the act operative, with respect to occurrences outside the state, will not be declared to exist unless such intention is clearly expressed or reasonably to be inferred "from the language of the act or from its purpose, subject matter or history." (Kennerson v. Thames Towboat Co.,
The question under discussion has been considered in other jurisdictions, but the authorities are not entirely in harmony. The supreme court of Connecticut has held that the statute of that state gave a right to compensation, even though the injuries had been sustained beyond the boundaries of the state. (Kennerson v. Thames Towboat Co.,
On the other hand, there is strong authority in support of the proposition that workmen's compensation statutes, in the absence of express declaration that they shall operate extraterritorially, are not to be given such effect. This has been the uniform course of ruling under the English statute (Hicks v. Maxton, 1 B. W. C. C. 150; Tomalin v. S. Pearson Son, Ltd. [1909], 2 K. B. Div. 61; Schwartz v. Indiana Rubberetc. Co. [1912], 2 K. B. Div. 299), and the holding has been the same in Massachusetts under the act of that state. (Gould'sCase,
For these reasons, we conclude that, under the statute as it read at the time of Anderson's injury the commission had no jurisdiction to award compensation.
The award is annulled.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred. *8