91 Kan. 226 | Kan. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this action the servant recovered judgment for injuries caused by the failure of the master to comply with the provisions of the factory act requiring the guarding of dangerous machinery.
The main question raised by the defendant’s appeal is whether the action is barred by the one year’s statute of limitations, which provides that “an action upon
The defendant calls attention to the case of Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604, 109 Pac. 657, where it was held that neither contributory negligence nor assumed risk are defenses available to the master in an action to recover under the statute. Our attention is challenged particularly to certain expressions in the opinion in that case where it was said that the. act is a “police regulation adopted to reform the inhumanity of factory methods”; that the legislature, instead .of attempting to enforce the act by means of a criminal prosecution, saw fit to provide “a civil remedy-in damages,” and that the statute was adopted “as a means of enforcing a positive duty enjoined by law in the interest of public welfare.” Because of these statements in the opinion, and particularly because we there construed the act so as to permit an employee to recover for injuries sustained by a violation of its provisions, even though he himself was negligent, it is contended that the court has committed itself to the proposition that the act is penal in its nature. Counsel strenuously insist that the statements referred to were, made in the opinion in Caspar v. Lewin as grounds for upholding the constitutionality of the act; and it is intimated that, having so ruled in order to save the act from the charge of uncon'stitutionálity, we can not now, “without bending the law to suit the exigencies of each particular case,” do otherwise than declare the act to be penal.
In the briefs it is said:
“Counsel for appellee are asking this court to put itself in the abominable position of saying that this*229 statute is a penalty to save it from unconstitutionality as it did say in Caspar v. Lewin, while at the same time saying in the case at bar that it is not a penalty in order to save this case from the bar of the Statute of Limitations.”
It may be remarked, in passing, that some of the arguments advanced in this case, like the arguments leveled against the power of the state to enact the factory law at all, would have carried far more persuasive force thirty or forty years ago than in this year of Grace; not because there has been any change in the principles of law which control in the construction of statutes, nor because the police power of the state has been enlarged. The state has always possessed the power to enact such a law. (Balch v. Glenn, 85 Kan. 735, 119 Pac. 67.)
The police power inherent in all government was just as broad forty years ago as it is to-day, but laws of this character were absent from the statute books because at that time public sentiment had not crystallized into a demand for their enactment. For instance, it is altogether probable that if congress had attempted forty years ago to enact the stringent provisions of the safety-appliance law’requiring interstate railways to equip their trains with safety devices for the protection of the lives and limbs of their employees, the law would have been declared unconstitutional. Yet only the other day the law was again upheld and at the same time construed as intended by congress to permit an employee who was injured by a failure to comply with its provisions the right to recover damages regardless of the ancient doctrine of “assumed risk,” and notwithstanding his injuries were occasioned by his “contributory negligence.” (St. Louis & Iron Mountain Ry. v. Taylor, 210 U. S. 281, 52 L. Ed. 1061; and, see, Brinkmeier v. Railway Co., 81 Kan. 101. 105 Pac. 221.)
We find no difficulty in determining that the statute is so far remedial in its character, notwithstanding some of its provisions, that the cause of action is not for the recovery of a penalty or forfeiture. And this we shall undertake to demonstrate, confident that it can be accomplished without embarrassment to the court, and, we trust, without bending the law to suit any supposed exigencies of this or any particular case.
It may be conceded that there is a conflict of authority in the various states as to whether such statutes should be regarded as penal, but it is not believed there is any conflict in the decisions of this court. "Actions to recover on statutes which allow double or treble damages, as for cutting or carrying away timber (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 9692), are held to be controlled by the one-year statute. In Sullivan v. Davis, 29 Kan. 28, it was said:
“Where more than actual compensation is asked, it is by virtue of some express statute, and the excess is by such statute given in the way of penalty.” (p. 34.)
Actions brought under the statutes for failure to comply with a proper demand for the release of mortgages are barred by the one-year limitation, because the plaintiff in such a case is permitted to recover the sum of $100 and attorneys’ fees without regard to whether he has been damaged at all. The right to recovery under - such statutes has been held penal and not in any sense compensatory. (Hall v. Hurd, 40 Kan.
This court has uniformly refused to enforce wrongful death statutes of other states providing for a fixed recovery or nothing, regardless of actual damages. (Hamilton v. H. & St. J. Rld. Co., [1888], 39 Kan. 56, 18 Pac. 57; Dale v. Railroad Co., [1897], 57 Kan. 601, 47 Pac. 521; Matheson v. Railroad Co., [1900], 61 Kan. 667, 60 Pac. 747; Rochester v. Express Co., [1912], 87 Kan. 164, 123 Pac. 729.)
In Frame v. Ashley, 59 Kan. 477, 52 Pac. 474, the three-years statute of limitation was held to apply to an action against a bank- officer for receiving deposits in an insolvent bank where the purpose of the action was for recovery of the deposit. The sole question there was whether the action was upon a “liability
“The general rule is that' a statutory obligation to pay damages which the common law does not give is ‘a liability created by statute/ where the damages awarded are limited to compensation — limited to an amount which merely .makes the injured person, whole. The general rule also, is that a statutory obligation to pay an amount beyond compensation, to submit to more than the simple redress of the wrong done, to pay riot merely in respect of the deserts- of the inj ured person but as punishment for the wrong done, is- a penalty. Tested by these.simple rules the case is easy of solution.” (p. 478.)
Referring to the statute giving, a ■ mortgagor the right to recover one hundred dollars for failure to release a satisfied mortgage, the opinion said: ’ ■
“There is no analogy between these statutes and the one under • consideration. The latter gives ■ .compensation — nothing more, and permits nothing less. - The former gives a fixed sum irrespective of the damages actually sustained. Damages from failure to enter satisfaction of á mortgage may be very great. It may be that none whatever occur. Whether great or small, or none at all, the amount recoverable is fixed arbitrarily at one- hundred dollars.” (p. 480.)
The conclusion' reached was' that the statute imposed a liability for compensation-only, that it-was remedial, and therefore not barred by' the one-year statute.
The court quite recently had before it the question whether a Colorado statute was penal - in the international sense, so that it could not be enforced here.(Machinery Co. v. Smith, 87 Kan. 331, 124 Pac. 414.) The statute imposed a liability upon stockholders of a Colorado corporation, and it was sought to-maintain an action in the courts of Kansas, to recover thereon. Notwithstanding the fact-that the Colorado courts had already declared the statute to be- penal in the sense that it was barred by a statute of limitations similar to the one involved in this case, we held that the action
“The statute is beyond doubt penal in a certain sense. And it has often been broadly stated' that a penal statute has no extra-territorial force, and will not be executed by the courts of another state or country. A distinction has been made, however, between statutes which are entirely penal, their sole purpose being to punish a violation of the law for the public benefit, and those which are in part compensatory, the violator being required to make good to an individual a possible loss having some connection with his default. It is universally held that statutes of the former character can be executed only by the sovereignty enacting them. But by the weight of later authority, and as we think by the better 'reason, actions may be maintained anywhere to enforce the liability to an individual, created by statutes of the latter kind. Cases on both sides of the question are collected in 1 Cook on Corporations, 6th ed., § 223, pp. 586-588; and in 3 Clark & Marshall on Private Corporations, § 833.” (p. 332.)
The opinion cites, as the leading case on the subject, Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657, 36 L. Ed. 1123, and quotes from the opinion in that case,, where it was said, referring to statutes which are in part compensatory:
“ ‘As the statute imposes a burdensome liability on the officers for their wrongful act, it may well be considered penal, in the sense that it should be strictly construed. But as it gives a civil remedy, at the private suit of the creditor only, and measured by the amount of his debt, it is as to him clea-rly remedial. To maintain such a suit is not to administer a punishment imposed upon an offender against the state, but simply to enforce a private right secured under its laws to an individual. We can see no just ground, on principle, for holding such a statute to be a penal law, in the sense that it can not be enforced in a foreign state or country.’ (p. 676.)” (p. 334.)
The Durein case was a suit under section 4370 of the General Statutes of 1909 by minor children to recover damages on account of liquor sold to their father. The judgment was reversed upon another point; but in the opinion the court ruled that the action was not one for a forfeiture or penalty, and was therefore not controlled by the one-year statute. Cases from other courts directly in point are: Coy v. Jones, 30 Neb. 798, 47 N. W. 208, 10 L. R. A. 658; State v. A. C. L. R. Co., 56 Fla. 617, 47 South. 980; Woolverton et al. v. Taylor et al., 132 Ill. 197, 23 N. E. 1007, 22 Am. St. 521; Bell v. Farwell, 176 Ill. 489, 52 N. E. 346, 68 Am. St. 194; Gardner v. N. Y. & N. E. R. R. Co., 17 R. I. 790, 24 Atl. 831; Hornor v. Henning et al., 93 U. S. 228, 23 L. Ed., 879; see, also, Sutherland on Stat. Const., § 208, and cases cited.)
In Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604, 109 Pac. 657, the court was not considering the question of limitations, and there was no intention in any of the language there used to declare that a cause of action under the factory act is for the recovery of a penalty or forfeiture. While the public derives a benefit from the enforcement of the law, the immediate purpose of the statute, so far as it allows the injured party to recover,
The verdict of the jury was in favor of the defendant railway company, and against the defendant A. C. Battelle, and he is the only appellant. As against him, the action was brought within less than two years from the time it accrued, excluding the periods during which he was absent from the state.
There remain for consideration some complaints of error in the admission of evidence and in the instructions; and the further contention that on the undisputed evidence a verdict should have been directed for the defendant. We deem it unnecessary to enter into a minute description of the machine at which the plaintiff was injured. It was a new machine of the latest and most modern type of construction, and had only been installed about two weeks. It was known as a “20-12 Boss planer,” the figures indicating that it was designed to plane a timber with the maximum thickness of 20 in. by 12 in. The knives were on “cylinder heads” located inside the external frame work on the bed of the machine, and moved at the rate of 3000 revolutions a minute. The timber was fed into the machine from one end automatically so that a person was in no danger of coming in contact with the knives while feeding the 'machine. Under the cylinder heads there was a spiral trough into which the shavings were thrown by the current of air created by the revolving knives, and the shavings would be discharged at one side of the machine.
The plaintiff was thirty-seven years of age; had worked in different shops, and had been working at this plant about seven months. He was in sole charge of
As before stated, the machine had been installed but a short time, and one of the parts known as the “shavings exhaust” had not been placed upon it at the time the plaintiff was injured, It was placed thereon soon after the accident occurred. The testimony shows that this shavings exhaust consisted of a metal pipe or iron boxing running- up from above the knife heads to a fan and that the exhaust of air carried the shavings away from the top of the upper knife head. Directly over the knife heads there was an iron flange upon which the hood or boxing of the exhaust was intended to rest. The fan and some portions of the material for the construction of the shavings exhaust were in the shop; other parts were missing, and because another planer had broken down the new machine was started in operation without waiting until the material for the exhaust arrived, and had been operated for two weeks without a shavings exhaust. It was shown by plaintiff’s evidence that the hood of the exhaust, if it had been in place, would have set down over the knife heads like a box. “When it -is down it completely covers the knives of the upper head.” The contention is. made that the undisputed evidence shows that it was not practicable to guard the knives against
He also testified that the usual method of removing shavings that have accumulated on the knives is to use the air blast. Witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the effect of having the shavings exhaust in its place was that it served as a guard, or in other words, while it was in place it would be impossible for an accident such as that by which the plaintiff was injured to occur. In addition, there was testimony of the plaintiff tending to show that it was practicable to guard the machinery by other devices; and all of this was a question for the jury, if there had been no testimony at all upon that subject. (Bubb, Adm’x, v. Railway Co., 89 Kan. 303, 131 Pac. 575.) It is wholly unimportant that the main purpose of the shavings exhaust was to carry away shavings from the knife heads. 'The evidence conclusively shows that if it had been in place it would have covered the knives so that this accident could not have occurred.
In Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604, 109 Pac. 657, it was expressly ruled that the burden is upon the defendant under the factory act to prove that it was not practicable to guard the machinery. We are not inclined to reconsider that ruling or to restate the principles upon which the decision rests.
It does not appear that the plaintiff was allowed to state his conclusions respecting either the practicability of guarding the machine or that the hood was installed or intended as a guard. He, as well as the defendant and other witnesses, testified that it served the purposes of a guard when in place. It was not contended at the trial that the sole purpose of its installation was to provide a guard; nor indeed was it necessary to show that such was its purpose. As we have seen, the intention with which it was installed was not controlling, since it conclusively appears that the machine was designed to have such a device and that when installed it served the purpose of a guard. Moreover there was evidence from which the jury could have found that it was practicable to guard the knives by other methods and appliances.
The court properly instructed that the plaintiff could not recover if the jury found from the evidence that it was impracticable to guard the knives so as to prevent the occurrence of the accident. Contributory negligence is not a defense under the factory act (Caspar v. Lewin, 82 Kan. 604, 109 Pac. 657); and it was not error to refuse to submit to the jury the question of whether the plaintiff was. negligent. If the direct cause of the injury was the failure to provide a guard, his negligencé could not have been more than a
We discover no. error in the .record and the judgment will be affirmed. . ....