Victory Sparkler & Specialty Co. v. Francks

128 A. 635 | Md. | 1925

The appeal is from a judgment of $22,500, recovered against the appellant for the benefit of a young girl, who had contracted phosphorous poisoning while employed in the making of fireworks for the appellant. The company's pleas were to the effect (1) that it was an employer engaged in an extra-hazardous employment within the Maryland Workmen's Compensation Act, and had secured compensation to its employees by insurance in conformity with the act in an authorized assurance carrier; and (2) that the girl was its servant at the time she sustained the injury complained of which arose out of and in the course of this employment; and (3) that the employer had fully complied with all the provisions of the act, and was ready and able to pay her the compensation to which she was entitled thereunder; and (4) that this liability for compensation was exclusive. There was a replication to the pleas containing this defence, that denied that the injuries alleged in the declaration were accidental personal injuries, but asserted that they "were the result of the gradual contraction of a disease known as `phosphorus poisoning,' caused by the inhalation of fumes and gases wrongfully and negligently permitted and allowed by the defendant to be collected in the place in which the said plaintiff worked for said defendant, as alleged in the plaintiff's declaration." The appellant demurred to this replication, which was overruled; and the case went to trial, and, after proof, a verdict was rendered against the appellant and judgment was extended in favor of the appellee. The case is brought up on the demurrer, and the rulings of the lower court on the evidence and prayers are not before us.

The demurrer presented the question involved in the approved manner; and we do not consider that the Act of 1914, chapter 110, has any effect on the right of the appellant to *372 have determined the correctness of the lower court's action on the demurrer. The affirmance or reversal of the judgment is on the question of law raised by the demurrer. Prejudicial error on demurrer depends, as a rule, upon the then state of the pleadings, and not on what occurred later in the course of the trial. After the ruling on the demurrer against the defendant it was necessary, as well as the established practice, to go to trial; to take proof and to have a verdict and judgment; and then the right of a review of the ruling on a demurrer cannot be denied. Emersonian Apartments v. Taylor (1918), 132 Md. 209;Kendrick Roberts v. Warren Bros., 110 Md. 76. The provisions of the Act of 1914, chapter 110, apply to prayers, and require that if a prayer is to present a question of variance between the pleadings and the evidence, it must state specifically the points wherein it is claimed such variance exists. The act furnished no sufficient basis for the appellee's contention that, through the omission from the record of the testimony and of the prayers, and of the exceptions thereon, it does not affirmatively appear that the appellee did not recover the judgment on an entirely different case from that set up in the declaration; or that, if the appellee had so recovered, the appellant had raised the question of variance as pointed out by the Act of 1914, chapter 110. The important function of a demurrer is recognized in the Act of 1914, chapter 109, where it is provided that no question of the sufficiency of the pleadings as stating a cause of action as a defence, which might have been raised by demurrer, shall be raised by prayer or instruction at the trial.

The Court must assume that the trial below proceeded in harmony with the pleadings, and that the proof admitted conformed to them, in the absence of anything in the record to the contrary. Such an assumption is a practical necessity and is founded on an obviously sound principle of procedure. Furthermore, as the decisive question was determined on the pleadings, the incorporation of the proof and the prayers would have made an unjustifiable increase of the cost of the record. *373

The appellant was engaged in an extra-hazardous employment, and was not in default under any of the requirements of the Workmen's Compensation Act; and the girl was in his service when she gradually contracted, through her employer's negligence, phosphorus poisoning in the course of and arising out of her employment. The pleadings raised these two legal questions: Was the employer liable at common law to the servant, if her injury was not compensable under the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act? and, Was not the disease of phosphorus poisoning an injury outside of the purview of the act? The lower court answered both these inquiries in the affirmative, and they are here renewed for a final determination.

1. The Act of 1914, chapter 800, has a preamble reciting that the then subsisting law with respect to injuries sustained by workmen in the course of their employment was inadequate, unsatisfactory, and uneconomic from the standpoint of the best interest of the workmen, the employer and the State, and these introductory recitals were followed by this sequent paragraph:

"Now, therefore, the State of Maryland, exercising herein its police and sovereign power, declares that all phases of extra-hazardous employments be, and they are hereby withdrawn from private controversy, and sure and certain relief for workmen injured in extra-hazardous employments and their families and dependents are hereby provided for, regardless of questions of fault, and to the exclusion of every other remedy, except as provided in this Act."

The quoted paragraph has the solemnity, sanctions and form of a statutory enactment, with the exception of a compliance with the provisions of the Constitution of the State providing that "The style of all laws of this State shall be, Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland." Art. 3, § 29; McPherson v.Leonard, 29 Md. 377, 386-389; Prince George's County v. B. O.R.R. Co., 113 Md. 179, 182, 183; Williams v. Broening,135 Md. 232. While it is not the Court's purpose to hold that this paragraph is a part *374 of the body of the statute, yet the Legislature could not have gone much further in stressing its intention to make the terms of the law exclusive within its indicated scope. Furthermore, this preliminary declaration is, in substance, incorporated in the text of the act. Northern Pac. R.R. Co. v. Meese, 239 U.S. 614. See section 6604-1 of Washington Act, at p. 937 of U.S. Bulletin (1921), Workmen's Compensation Legislation.

In section 14 of the act, it is provided that "every employer subject to the provisions of this act shall pay or provide as required herein compensation according to the schedule of this act for the disability or death of his employee resulting from an accidental personal injury sustained by the employee arising out of and in the course of his employment, without regard to fault as a cause of such injury, except when the injury is occasioned by the wilful intention of the injured employee to bring about the injury or death of himself or of another, or where the injury results from the intoxication of the injured employee while on duty."

In respect to the liability imposed by the provisions last quoted, the same section declares: "The liability prescribed by the last preceding paragraph shall be exclusive, except that if an employer fail to secure the payment of compensation for his injured employees and their dependents as provided in this Act, an injured employee or his legal representative in case death results from the injury, may, at his option, elect to claim compensation under this Act, or to maintain an action in the courts for damages on account of such injury; and in such an action the defendant may not plead as a defense that the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow-servant or that the employee assumed the risk of his employment, or that the injury was due to the contributory negligence of the employee." See sections 57, 59.

And later on, when the act prescribes the compensation for the workman or his family or dependents, section 36 explicitly sets forth: *375

"Each employee (or in case of death his family or dependents) entitled to receive compensation under this article shall receive the same in accordance with the following schedule and except as in this article otherwise provided, such payment shall be in lieu of any and all rights of action whatsoever against any person whatsoever."

The use of the word "payment" for this sentence has no other significance than that it was demanded to make this provision of section 36 consistent with that one of section 14, providing for an election by the employee or his representatives of compensation under the act or of the common law action for damages, without the defence of the negligence of a fellow servant, the employee's assumption of risk, or his contributory negligence, if the employer had failed to secure the payment of the compensation by one of the three methods of insurance prescribed by section 15.

When these various sections are considered together, in connection with the preliminary paragraphs of the act, the meaning is so clear and unmistakable that it would be a denial of the legislative purpose to strike their plain terms from the statute by judicial construction. An exact parallel in facts with this case is not found in the reported decisions of this tribunal, but whenever this Court has spoken on any phase of this subject, it has uniformly said that, aside from the exceptions created by the act itself, the operation of the law is exclusive of all other remedy and liability, with respect to both the employer and employee, engaged in hazardous employments, in regard to all injury arising out of and in the course of the employment. Jirout v. Gebelein, 142 Md. 692, 697-699; Solvucav. Ryan Reilly Co., 131 Md. 265, 269, 129 Md. 235, 238;Hagerstown v. Schreiner, 135 Md. 650, 653, 654; Adleman v.Ocean Accident Guarantee Co., 130 Md. 572, 574; Northern Pac.R.R. Co. v. Meese, 239 U.S. 614, 618; Grant Smith-Porter ShipCo. v. Rohde, 257 U.S. 469, 476, 477; Raymond v. Railway Co.,243 U.S. 43, 45; Peet v. Mills, 76 Wash. 437; Zajachuck v.Willard Storage Battery Co., 106 Ohio St. 538; IndustrialCommission v. Brown, 92 Ohio St. 309. *376

The decisions in B. O.R.R. Co. v. Branson, 128 Md. 678, and in the same case in 131 Md. 686, were both before the passage of the Maryland act, and the reference to the right of the injured party to proceed at common law, if he were not within the scope of the Federal Employer's Liability Act, was made in connection with that act, which had none of the provisions of the present State law on the point now being determined.

The case at bar is not within any of the exceptions specified by the act. The appellant had fulfilled all its obligations under the act, and it was engaged in an extra-hazardous occupation. The girl was its employee, who had sustained an injury arising out of and in the course of this employment and her sole remedy was under the terms of the Workmen's Compensation Law. She accepted this situation as a statutory term of her employment when she became the servant of the appellant.

It has been argued with ability and skill that the Workmen's Compensation Act is restricted in its operation to that distinct and separate class of injuries arising from accidents, and that with respect to all other injuries from any other cause the common law remedies exist in full vigor and efficacy against the employer. This theory of the statute is at once confronted by the salient purpose of the act, to put an end to private controversy and to litigation. It splits apart the field of negligence in hazardous employments, and makes futile the law's pronouncement that it is the exclusive remedy for every phase of extra-hazardous employment, except as by its own terms specified. The contention does not meet the provisions of section 14, which first impose the employers' obligation to pay compensation, and then affirm that this liability of the employer "shall be exclusive," i.e., exclusive of all other liability as an employer, to his employee, save as by the act indicated. In other words, the statute has given to labor what it never had before, and has taken from capital what it had always enjoyed, and has compensated the latter by limiting its liability, while engaged in hazardous employment, and conforming to the act, to the payment *377 of compensation only to those who sustain an injury, arising out of and in the course of their employment, that is compensable under the act.

The statutory definition of injury, which was made compensable without reference to neglect of employer or fault of worker, except when the injury was self-inflicted or the sole result of the intoxication of the employee, and the abolition of the fellow-servant rule, of the defences of contributory negligence and assumption of risk, and the substitution of a regulated and certain compensation for damages, contribute convincingly to the conclusion that the legislative intent was to include within the act not only the newly created class of compensable injuries, but also every injury which could be suffered by any worker in the course and arising out of the employment, for which there was then a subsisting right of action. Baggott Company v. IndustrialCommission, 290 Ill. 530. With this conception of the purpose and effect of the act, the Legislature was consistent in making the prescribed liability of the employer and remedy of the employee exclusive with respect to all injuries sustained in the hazardous employment.

It is true that the question here has never been decided by this Court, yet the former opinions were on cognate matters and the view stated, while not controlling, is at least suggestive; and in accord with the construction now given, which is within the letter and spirit of the enactment. The decisions of other appellate tribunals, which have not reached our conclusion, were controlled by the wording of their own respective statutes, which will be found to be substantially different from the Maryland act either in phrasing, or in additional or in omitted provisions in respect to or affecting the subject under discussion. If the decisions of these courts were adopted, the Maryland act would undergo an amendment by judicial construction through engrafting upon it the effect of the particular provisions of the foreign acts.

The statute becomes its own expositor when the subject of the enactment is known, and the object to be accomplished by it is understood, and the words employed are free from *378 uncertainty and doubt, and express clearly and distinctly the sense of the Legislature. "The language of the statute is its most natural expositor; and when its language is susceptible of a sensible interpretation, it is not to be controlled by any extraneous considerations." Alexander v. Worthington,5 Md. 485; Sutherland on Statutory Construction, sec. 237.

2. Catherine R. Francks was an employee of the appellant, a manufacturer of fire works, and she worked in its "spit devil department" where, some time during the years 1921, 1922, 1923, or parts thereof, "she gradually contracted a disease known as phosphorus poisoning" through the inhalation of dangerous and noxious fumes and gases, wrongfully and negligently permitted and allowed by the appellant to be collected in the place where she worked, without warning or notice to her, and which resulted in long periods of sickness, a serious operation for the removal of parts of her lower jawbones, the extraction of a number of her teeth and painful medical treatment, with inability to work as she did before the contraction of the disease. She entered the employment of the appellant about June 1st, 1921. The pleadings do not disclose when she left, but the suit was brought on December 7th, 1923, and the declaration was filed that day.

The gravamen of the action is negligence, and the appellant is charged in the five counts of the declaration with neglect in failing (a) to provide a safe working place; (b) to supply proper appliances and equipment for the expulsion of the gases from the workroom; (c) to secure competent fellow-servants for the operation of devices for expelling the fumes and preventing their accumulation; (d) to warn and instruct the employee of the danger of the employment and adopt and make known proper regulations for the protection of the worker. The theory on which this suit was brought is that the injury to the girl was not an accidental injury but an occupation disease, and so not within the Workmen's Compensation Act. For the reasons given in this opinion there could be no recovery at common law, as the employer in this instance was exempt from all liability to its employee for any accidental injury except under the act. The remaining *379 inquiry is whether the injury sustained by the employee is within the terms of the act.

An occupation or industry disease is one which arises from causes incident to the profession or labor of the party's occupation or calling. It has its origin in the inherent nature or mode of work of the profession or industry, and it is the usual result or concomitant. If, therefore, a disease is not a customary or natural result of the profession or industry, perse, but is the consequence of some extrinsic condition or independent agency, the disease or injury cannot be imputed to the occupation or industry, and is in no accurate sense an occupation or industry disease. In this case, the occupation of the girl as an employee in a department of a manufactory of fireworks was simply a condition of her injury, whose cause was the definite negligence charged against the employer. The most that is warranted to be inferred from the allegations of fact in the declaration is that the phosphorus poisoning alleged was the gradual result of the negligence of the employer. As this negligence was a breach of duty to her, it was not to be foreseen or expected by the worker as something which would occur in the course of her employment. The fact that she continued at her place of labor, in the doing of her common and regular task, makes it clear that the phosphorous poisoning happened without her design or expectation, and so her injury was accidental.Providence Life Ins. Co. v. Martin, 32 Md. 310, 314, 315;Century Dictionary, Vol. 1, p. 34; Gay v. Hocking Coal Co.,184 Iowa 949; Industrial Com. v. Roth, 98 Ohio St. 34; Dovev. Alpena Hide Leather Co., 198 Mich. 132; Re Maggelet,228 Mass. 57; Hartford Accid. Indem. Co. v. Industrial AccidentCom., 32 Cal. App. 481; Gladfelter v. American Phorphorus Co. (1917), 26 Pa. Dist. R. 1072. It was by chance that employer did not use due care, and by chance that the vapor of phosphorus was where its noxious foreign particles could be inhaled by the girl. It was by chance that the inspired air carried these particles into her system, sickening her, and causing a necrosis of the jaw after fortuitously finding a lesion. The injury thus inflicted upon *380 her body was accidental by every test of the word, and its accidental nature is not lost by calling the consequential results a disease. Nor can the fundamentally accidental nature of the injury be altered by the consideration that the infection was gradual throughout an indefinite period, as this simply implies a slow development of the malady, or that, instead of a single accidental injury, there was a succession or series of accidental injuries culminating in the same consequential results. The introduction of phosphorus into the human body is none the less accidental, if through the medium of a pimple point, an unsound tooth, a scratch or a lesion, or of ingestion or in breathing. Nor is the accidental nature of this introduction lessened by the length of time intervening between the reception of the poisonous substance and the first manifestation of the resultant poisoning, as its progress may be slow, moderate or rapid according to the form it assumes. The infection is the accidental injury, and whatever follows in causal connection are but consequences, which measure the duration and effect of the injury. As suggested by Lord Birkenhead in Innes v. Kynoch (1919), A.C. 765, 770, an ultimate analysis would resolve the facts into (1) the invasion of the bacillus or harmful foreign substance, which may be conceived as a blow or physical assault of far more disastrous consequences than the usual result of larger and more substantial forces; and (2) the infection or contraction of the disease which is the injury, the assault being deemed the accident.

The phosphorus poisoning of the employee as described in the declaration was therefore not a disease incident to the industry, but was an injury in causal connection with her employment, within the meaning of the act defining injury to "mean only accidental injuries, arising out of and in the course of employment, and such disease or infection as may naturally result therefrom." Sec. 63, par. 6.

It would be impossible to reconcile the indifferent use throughout the act of such terms in reference to the same thing as "injury," "accident," "personal injury," "injury by accident," "notice to or knowledge of the occurrence of the *381 injury on the part of the employer"; "such notice may be in writing — and state in ordinary language the time place, nature and cause of the injury" (sec. 38, par. 1) or "such report shall state the (a) time, cause and nature of the accident and injuries, and probable duration of the injuries resulting therefrom; (b) whether the accident arose out of or in the course of the injured person's employment" (sec. 38, par. 2); "between the occurrence of an injury"; and "injury was not occasioned." However, the conflict is immaterial, and may indeed exist, by reason of this statutory definition of what alone is compensable.

It will be observed that the statutory definition of a compensable injury under the Maryland act is not that it is an "accident," or that it is an injury "by accident" but that it must be "accidental injuries." The difference is important, as it marks the divergence between the thing or the event (i.e., accident) and a quality or a condition (i.e., accidental) of that thing or event. As the substantive carries the idea of something happening unexpectedly at a time and place, the term "accident" or "injury by accident" has been consistently construed by the courts to embrace two different notions: the first is that of unexpectedness, and the second, that of an injury sustained on some definite occasion, whose date can be fixed with reasonable certainty. The adjective "accidental" is not a technical term but a common one whose popular usage would not necessarily mean that the words "accidental injuries" indicated the existence of an accident, but rather the idea that the injury was either unintended or unexpected. See 25 HarvardLaw Review, pp. 338, 342. In the term "accidental injuries," the substantive "injuries" expresses the notion of the thing or event, i.e., the wrong or damage done to the person; while "accidental" qualifies and describes the noun by ascribing to "injuries" a quality or condition of happening or coming by chance or without design, taking place unexpectedly or unintentionally.

If this simple distinction between a noun and an adjective be drawn, a host of cases will cease to have any application to the instant inquiry. Counsel have ably argued the case at *382 bar and in their briefs, and we have weighed the many cases cited, but we do not find in those reaching a different conclusion from this opinion a sufficient analogy between their statutes and the Maryland act to make their decisions controlling. The Maryland act is remedial and should receive a liberal construction so as to give to it the most beneficial operation; and when it contains positive direction that it should "be so interpreted and construed as to effectuate its general purpose," the Court must act under the compulsion of this mandate, and not disappoint an explicit provision, plainly expressed, even if it should involve a change in its present administration. In jurisdictions where an "accident" was the test of compensability and disease was excluded, there has been a marked tendency towards a more liberal theory of compensation since the decision in Brinton's Ltd. v. Turvey (1905) A.C. 230. The first step was to recognize that disease may be injury by accident, subject to the proof of some particular event or occurrence happening on a particular date and place as being the accident. The next step was taken when it was held there was no distinction in principle between an accident "which has been proved to have happened at a particular hour on a particular day and an accident in reference to which the particular hour or day cannot be established, but which certainly is proved to have occurred within some narrow limitation of time." Innes (orGrant) v. Kynoch (1919), A.C. 765; Burrell v. Salvage (1911), 90 L.J.K.B. 1540. Whether the injury was the result of one or more accidents would seem in principle to be quite as immaterial as particularity in the time of the occurrence, and the whole question to be one of the sufficiency of evidence to establish the causal connection between an accident or a series of accidents and the injury. A further discussion of the cases would unduly lengthen the opinion, and as the reasons controlling the Court have been set forth it is not necessary.

The phosphorus poisoning of the girl was contracted in the course of and arising out of an hazardous employment, at a particular place and within a known and definite particular *383 period of time, and in causal connection with the negligence of the employer, whose neglect and its effect were not foreseen or anticipated by her. She was accordingly entitled to compensation under the act, as is admitted by the appellant, as well as its willingness to pay her compensation. There is no reason why she should not presently make her application for compensation. Her failure to notify her employer within ten days after the first manifestation of her injury, and to file her application within thirty days after her disability, are infractions of directory provisions of sections 37 and 38 of the act; and the commission may well excuse her in the exercise of its sound discretion. The Court will reverse the judgment, without a new trial, but without prejudice to the girl.

On motion for modification of judgment:

Since the filing of the opinion in this case, the appellee has brought to the attention of the Court, alleging it as a fact, that at the time of her employment by the appellant, Catherine R. Francks was an infant under the age of eighteen years. The record as made up contained no testimony on that point. It is now submitted to us for the first time in a motion for a modification of the judgment of this Court upon the theory that this fact, together with the nature of her employment, withdrew her from the operation of the Workmen's Compensation Act, and that there should be a remand of the case, with leave to amend her declaration so as to avail herself of any other different cause of action which she may have.

The Court expresses no opinion on the soundness of the theory, or of the right of the appellee to recover under any other form of action, but the Court will remand the case as requested so as to afford the appellee the same opportunity of amendment as she would have had if the court below had sustained the demurrer.

Judgment reversed, with costs to the appellant, and caseremanded with leave to the appellee to amend the declaration andhave a new trial thereupon, if it be so elected. *384

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