55 P.2d 762 | Okla. | 1936
On Muy 10, 1933, Alfred Hale was injured while engaged in a hazardous employment on the Fort Sill Military Reservation near Lawton, Okla., in the employ of Jerome A. Utley, who carried workmen's compensation insurance. The State Industrial Commission awarded workmen's compensation to the injured employee, and the employer and insurance carrier have instituted this action to review the award, contending that the Workmen's Compensation Act of Oklahoma is not applicable to, and the Industrial Commission has no jurisdiction over, injuries received in the course of labor performed on the United States Military Reservation at Fort Sill.
The Fort Sill Military Reservation was set aside and designated as such before the state of Oklahoma was created, and the land constituting that reservation was not purchased by the federal government from the state of Oklahoma within the meaning and for the purposes included within article 1, sec. 8, clause 17 of the Constitution of the United States, but was owned by the United States by cession from France many years before Oklahoma became a state.
In 1913 our state Legislature by enactment ceded exclusive jurisdiction to the United States of all territory "now owned by the United States and comprised within the limits of the military reservation of Fort Sill," reserving the right, however, to serve civil or criminal process Within the reservation in suits or prosecutions for or on account of rights acquired, obligations incurred or crimes committed outside of the reservation. This enactment is now section 12253, O. S. 1931. (It is proper at this place, without any assertion as to its significance, to say that the parties stipulated in the instant action that the contract of employment and all incidents in connection therewith were made, performed, and occurred on the reservation.)
In 1915, two years later than the above cession of jurisdiction, our Legislature adopted the Workmen's Compensation Act. In 1928 the federal Congress enacted an act (chap. 15, 45 Stat. at L. 54, USCA Title 16, sec. 457), the pertinent parts of which are as follows:
"In the case of the death of any person by the neglect or wrongful act of another within a national park or other place subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, within the exterior boundaries of any state, such right of action shall exist as though the place were under the jurisdiction of the state; * * * and in any action brought to recover on account of injuries sustained in any such place the rights of the parties shall be governed by the laws of the state within the exterior boundaries of which it may be."
It is obvious from the above history that whatever jurisdiction the state courts or the Legislature had over the Fort Sill. Military Reservation prior to 1913, was by section 12253, supra, in 1913, ceded to the United States exclusively. When the Workmen's Compensation Act was later adopted it could have no application to territory beyond the jurisdiction of its creator, the Legislature.
Did the act of Congress of 1928, copied above, then make the Workmen's Compensation Act applicable within the reservation, and thus vest jurisdiction in the State Industrial Commission to make awards for injuries received therein? This question *256 must be answered by reference to the terms of the congressional act. That act refers only to actions at law for the neglect or wrongful act of another, whereas our Workmen's Compensation Act abolished such actions at law by injured employees against employers, either with or without negligence, except in certain cases not pertinent here, and substituted the rights and procedure now administered by the State Industrial Commission. Such was the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Washington, and the same view was taken on appeal by the Supreme Court of the United States. We shall refer to those decisions further on in this opinion. Since the question before us involves the construction of an act of Congress, we are dealing in part with a federal question, in which case we should, if possible, follow the ruling thereon of the Supreme Court of the United States.
This question was before us in Utley v. Phelan,
"* * * And we conclude that the State Industrial Commission was without jurisdiction or authority to pass upon the claim of the claimant."
The Industrial Insurance Act of the state of Washington was so constructed that the injured employee drew compensation from a state insurance fund created by contribution from employers, while our act is not exactly like that. However, from the viewpoint of the question under consideration, no legal distinction can result because of that difference. In Murray v. Gerrick Co.,
"The state Supreme Court held that the compensation act does not apply to territory beyond the authority of the state Legislature. But it also held that act could not have any force in the Navy Yard, since it was adopted many years after the cession of jurisdiction by the state and consequent acquisition of the tract by the United States. In this the court was clearly right. After the effective date of the state's cession the jurisdiction of the federal government was exclusive (Ft. Leavenworth R. Co. v. Lowe,
For further authority and excellent discussion of this question and its subheads see the following cases: St. L. S. F. Ry. Co. v. Satterfield,
The law announced herein appears to be the only view possible under the facts of the case, especially in a jurisdiction wherein the Workmen's Compensation Act has no extraterritorial effect, such as is the case in Oklahoma. Sheehan Pipe Line Const. Co. v. State Industrial Commission,
OSBORN, V. C. J., and RILEY, BAYLESS, BUSBY, CORN, and GIBSON, JJ., concur.