196 N.W. 185 | Mich. | 1923
Lead Opinion
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries received while assisting in the operation of a corn husker belonging to the defendant. Both of the parties are farmers living in the same neighborhood near Freeport in Barry county, Michigan. The plaintiff did not own the farm upon which he was living at the time of the accident, but was engaged in working it on shares. The defendant owned a large farm and frequently exchanged work with the plaintiff and sometimes employed him at regular wages. In the fall of 1920, the defendant was the owner of a corn husker which he used on his own farm and on the farms of neighbors. He employed the plaintiff to go with him from farm to farm and assist in its operation. At the time of the accident the plaintiff was feeding the husker when his right arm became caught in the machinery and was so badly mangled as to require amputation. He claims that his injuries were caused by the negligence of the defendant in not providing him with a safe place in which to work, in failing to instruct him as to the proper operation of the machine, and in neglecting to warn him of the dangers involved. Denying the negligence alleged by the plaintiff, the defendant made his defense on the theory of assumption of risk and contributory negligence. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the defendant.
The only question involved is whether the common-law defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk were available to the defendant. This *666 depends, of course, upon whether the plaintiff at the time of the accident was a farm laborer within the meaning of the workmen's compensation act (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 5424) which provides that the provisions of the act shall not apply to actions for personal injuries by household domestic servants and farm laborers. The circuit judge held the plaintiff was a farm laborer at the time of the accident; that as such he was exempted from the provisions of the compensation law and that, therefore, in his action for personal injuries, the common-law defenses were available to the defendant. The plaintiff says that in so ruling the court was in error.
Was the plaintiff a farm laborer within the meaning of the statute? The power of the legislature to classify employees and to except from the operation of the workmen's compensation act the class designated as farm laborers, is based upon the fact that there is a reasonable and substantial distinction between the conditions under which the farm laborer performs his work and the conditions under which work is performed by those engaged in other employments. In excluding farm laborers from the benefits granted to other classes, it was evidently the theory of the legislature that the work of the farm laborer was not sufficiently hazardous to require the protection of the compensation law. As the danger incident to the operation of machinery used in threshing grain and husking corn is as great as that incident to the use of machinery in a factory or elsewhere, it was probably in the legislative mind that when a farmer was engaged in that business apart from his regular farming perations, he was not engaged in farming and his employees were not farm laborers. In no other way can the exclusion of farm laborers from the benefits of the statute be explained or justified. We think the legislature must have considered a farm *667
laborer as one who is employed to do ordinary farm work, and not one engaged in the special business of going from farm to farm to thresh grain and husk corn with machinery not ordinarily used by farmers. In Shafer v. Parke, Davis Co.,
In support of his contention that the plaintiff was a farm laborer, counsel for the defendant cites and relies on the following cases: Sylcord v. Horn,
The question coming up under a much different state of facts has been before this court in Shafer v. Parke, Davis Co.,
In holding that under the circumstances of this case the plaintiff was not a farm laborer within the meaning of our statute, we do not mean to be understood as saying that he would not have been a farm laborer if he had been employed to assist in the operation of this machine in husking the defendant's corn on his own farm. Nor do we wish it understood that the ruling applies where the machine is owned by farmers on the co-operative plan, that is, where it is owned by a group of farmers for the purpose of husking their own corn. The extent of our holding is that one is not a farm laborer within the meaning of our statute when in the employ of a man who travels about from farm to farm with a corn husking machine, engaged in the commercial business of husking corn for a stated compensation.
For the reasons herein stated the judgment of the circuit court is reversed. The plaintiff will have costs.
FELLOWS, CLARK, BIRD, SHARPE, MOORE, and STEERE, JJ., concurred with McDONALD, J.
Dissenting Opinion
I am in accord with the holdings in the Iowa and Minnesota cases cited by my Brother. The statute exempts from the provisions of the workmen's compensation law household or domestic servants and farm laborers. As said by Mr. Justice Hallam in the Minnesota case:
"Much farm work is done by the use of complicated machinery. There are tractor plows, self-binders and even combination harvester-threshers by means of which harvesting and threshing are done as one operation. *670 These and other operations may be done for others by one who is able to own the more complicated and expensive machinery. But it is all, nevertheless, farm work and the employee who does such work is a 'farm laborer' within the meaning of the compensation act."
I am for affirmance.