32 N.E.2d 554 | Ohio | 1941
This case presents the following question for determination: Where a resident of Ohio enters into a contract of employment in the state of Michigan with a Michigan corporation, to perform services in interstate commerce only, receives his salary and instructions from his employer in the state of Michigan, and is certified to the Industrial Accident Board of Michigan, and thereafter while in Ohio, is injured *45 in the course of his employment, is such workman entitled to compensation from the State Insurance Fund of Ohio?
As plaintiff's employment was limited to interstate commerce, and as his injury was received in the course of and arose out of such interstate commerce employment, our first inquiry necessarily is (New York Central Rd. Co. v. Winfield,
Neither in the Federal Employers' Liability Act (Title 45, Section 51 et seq., U.S. Code), the Motor Carrier Act of 1935 (Title 49, Section 301 et seq., U.S. Code), nor elsewhere has the Congress as yet acted in respect of this matter.
As was said in the case of Hall v. Industrial Commission,
"The consensus of authority seems to be that a state may provide compensation to one engaged in interstate commerce so long as the Congress of the United States, acting under its constitutional power to regulate commerce among the states, has not pre-empted the field. * * * [Citing cases.]
"It is urged that the collection of premiums is an unwarranted burden on the employer and in effect on interstate commerce, since the right to regulate commerce among the states is reposed in Congress by the federal Constitution. The power of Congress in this respect is complete and plenary and a direct burden cannot be imposed thereon by a state; but it is clear that in case Congress has not acted, state power may beexercised within certain limitations. If the matter is such asto require a general system or uniformity of regulation thepower of Congress is exclusive. In situations which admit of diverse treatment due to peculiar local conditions, the state may act until such time as Congress legislates on the subject." (Italics ours.) *46
The foregoing statement was made made the authority of theMinnesota Rate Cases,
In the ease of Hall v. Industrial Commission, supra, this court held: "Where an employer, engaged in operating a bus line for the carriage of passengers from within to without the state, has his office and principal place of business within this state and enters into a contract of hire therein with an employee, resident hereof, by which the latter engages as porter in interstate commerce on a bus so operated by the employer, and such employee is injured outside the state while thus employed, the fact that the accident occurs in interstate commerce does not of itself deprive the employee of compensation under the workmen's compensation law of this state, Congress not having pre-empted the field by the enactment of legislation relating thereto." See, also,Prendergast v. Industrial Commission,
There is some dispute as to whether the instant contract of hire was made in Ohio or Michigan. We have *47 examined the evidence, and have come to the conclusion that the contract was made in tile state of Michigan. Both courts below came to this same conclusion.
The courts below stressed the following language used in the case of Industrial Commission v. Gardinio,
We are not here dealing with the rights of a workman injured in Ohio while engaged in intrastate employment. In this case, we are dealing with the rights of a workman whose employment was transitory and confined exclusively to interstate commerce. Assume that the plaintiff had been injured in either Michigan or Pennsylvania, into both of which states his work took him. We see at once that where the work to be done is not confined to a single state, but is to be performed in interstate commerce, the lex loci contractus *48 becomes an important consideration in determining whether plaintiff, a resident of Ohio and injured in Ohio, has a right to participate in the State Insurance
Among the courts of other states which have given some weight to the place of the contract, is the Supreme Court of Michigan.
In the case of Leininger v. Jacobs,
As shown by the first and second paragraphs of the syllabus, the supreme Court of Michigan held in that case:
"1. Contract entered into between one who made application for employment to employer at his principal place of business, located in Michigan, and latter telephoned his agent in Ohio to put applicant to work which necessitated employee coming into this state incident to the discharge of his duties and in which he received fatal injuries held, a Michigan contract rather than an Ohio contract, hence employee's dependents are entitled to compensation under the Michigan Workmen's Compensation Act (2 Comp. Laws 1929, Section 8407 et seq.).
"2. Employer who had elected to come under Michigan Workmen's Compensation Act and was under Michigan contract of employment which contemplated discharge of duties in this state is not relieved from liability for fatal injuries to employee received in this state, by reason of fact that employee and his dependents were not domiciled in Michigan (2 Comp. Laws *49
1929, Section 8407 et seq.)." (See also Roberts v. I. X. L.Glass Corp.,
The Court of Appeals in the instant case said: "Every consideration of governmental interest as affecting plaintiff's social, business and political life was in Ohio." We do not think that such considerations are controlling. In support of its statement, the court below cited the case of Alaska PackersAssn. v. Industrial Accident Commission of California,
We agree with the court below that the purpose of the Ohio workmen's compensation law is to protect Ohio workmen, but this does not mean that the purpose of the law is to protect Ohio citizens or residents. Both residence and citizenship are immaterial.
As held in the case of Industrial Commission v. Gardinio,supra, a citizen of Ohio is not protected by the workmen's compensation law when injured while performing work of a purely local character in another state. On the other hand, as held in the case of Ohio v. Chattanooga Boiler Tank Co.,
Until such time as the federal Congress acts and preempts the field, the state of Ohio may require an Ohio employer engaged in operating a trucking line in interstate commerce to protect his employees under the Workmen's Compensation Act of this state. But to require a nonresident employer engaged in interstate commerce whose employees enter this state in the course of their employment in interstate commerce to comply with the Ohio workmen's compensation law would place an undue burden upon interstate commerce.
It may be argued that such burden on interstate commerce might be obviated by the employer paying a premium on the proportion of the workmen's wages measured by the time spent in the several states. While such an arrangement might be reasonable in some cases, it can readily be seen that such procedure would at once become a burden in and of itself in the majority of cases. Before all employer engaged solely in interstate commerce might send a workman into or through Ohio, it would be necessary for the employer to qualify in Ohio and pay a premium, which premium in the great majority of cases would be of a speculative amount. It would be somewhat analogous to securing a visa for foreign travel and paying a premium on a bond to insure that the workman would not become a public charge. It would isolate the states — the avoidance of which and the assurance of free intercourse among the states are the purposes of the commerce clause.
We do not consider a workman employed in interstate commerce only, under a contract made outside the state of Ohio with a nonresident employer, an Ohio workman within the contemplation of the Ohio Work men's Compensation Act.
It is our holding, therefore, that where a person enters *51 into a contract of employment in the state of Michigan with a Michigan employer to perform services in interstate commerce only, receiving his salary and instructions from his employer in the state of Michigan and being certified to the Industrial Accident Board of that state, such person is not entitled to participate in the State Insurance Fund (workmen's compensation fund) of this state on account of an injury received in the state of Ohio, and arising out of such interstate employment.
We believe that the interpretation of the workmen's compensation law contended for by appellee, which in effect would require employers engaged in interstate commerce to comply with the workmen's compensation law of each state through which they operate, would result in an undue burden upon interstate commerce and would therefore be in violation of the commerce clause of the federal Constitution.
Judgment reversed and final judgment for appellant.
WEYGANDT, C.J., WILLIAMS, MATTHIAS, HART, ZIMMERMAN and BETTMAN, JJ., concur. *52