Colorado v. Johnson Iron Works, Ltd.
Colorado v. Johnson Iron Works, Ltd.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff’s husband was killed by an explosion while he was at work for the defendant company. Plaintiff charges that át was through the negligence of the defendant company, and claims damages under article 2315 of the Civil Code, which provides that—
“Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.”
Defendant excepted, on the ground that plaintiff’s sole remedy was under the Employers’ Liability Act. Act 20, p. 44, of 1914. This exception was sustained, and plaintiff’s suit dismissed, with reserve of right to sue under the said act.
This act provides what shall be the liability of an employer to an employé, his widow, or his children in case of his being injured or killed in the course of his employment; and provides further, in its section 34:
“The rights and remedies herein granted * * * shall be exclusive of all other rights and remedies of such employé, his personal representatives, dependents, relations, or otherwise, on account of such injury.”
Plaintiff contends that this does not have the effect of doing away with the remedy under article 2315, C. C., but that, if it does, said act cannot be understood as applying to the widow of the employé because between her and the employer there was no contractual relation, and therefore she cannot be held to have waived her right to sue under said article of the Code, and that if the said act is applicable to her case, and does supersede said article 2315, it is unconstitutional, because broader in these respects than its title, and is otherwise unconstitutional because it is a special' law, and because it deprives her, without due process of law, of her right to sue under said article of the Code which right is her property.
“An act prescribing the liability of an employer to make compensation for injuries received by an employs in performing services,” etc.
The act does no more in its body than “prescribe the liability of an employer, for injuries received by an employé in performing services” etc.
All the questions raised by plaintiff in this' case in connection with said act have been considered and decided (and let us hope settled) in the following cases: Boyer v. Crescent Box Co., 143 La. 368, 78 South. 596; Whittington v. La. Sawmill Co., 142 La. 322, 76 South. 754; Philps v. Guy Drilling Co., 143 La. 951, 79 South. 549; Veasey v. Peters, 142 La. 1012, 77 South. 948.
“an adequate and equitable relief and an equitable lump sum be adjudicated, according to said acts, adding to it an adequate and equitable sum for sufferings, mental agony, loss of consortium, and pecuniary loss.”
Except as in this prayer, nothing was alleged to be due, or claimed, under said Employers’ Liability Act in the petition; but, on the contrary, said act was repudiated throughout as invalid, and inapplicable to the case. The learned trial judge thought the petition insufficient to justify any judgment under the act.
This ruling was correct. Plaintiff has made no specific demand upon defendant under the act, either in or out of court. Section 18 of the act would seem to contemplate that suit may be brought under the act only after the parties have failed to agree out of court upon the amount of compensation due. At any- rate, the defendánt company is entitled to know what specific amount the plaintiff is claiming before it can be required to answer.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- COLORADO v. JOHNSON IRON WORKS, Limited
- Cited By
- 41 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Master and servant Employers’ Liability Act provides exclusive remedy of servant killed in the course of his employment, and supersedes Civ. Code, art. 2315, giving widow right of action for wrongful death. 2. Statutes The title of the Employers’ Liability Act, “An act prescribing the liability of an employer to make compensation for injuries received by an employé in performing services,” etc., is sufficiently broad to include section 34 thereof, providing that the rights and remedies, given by the act, where a servant is killed or injured, shall be exclusive of all rights and 'remedies of an employé, his personal representatives, dependents, relations, or otherwise. 3. Statutes Employers’ Liability Act is not “special,’*' within the intendment of Const, art. 48, forbidding the enactment of special or local laws. 4. Constitutional law The Employers’ Liability Act does not deprive a widow of property without due process of law, by reason of its depriving her of the right of action she had under Civ. Code, art. 2315, for damages for wrongful death of her husband. 5. Death The right to sue for damages for wrongful death is purely statutory. 6. Constitutional law The regulation of what recourse one person may have against another for personal injury is a matter entirely within legislative discretion. 7. Master and servant The sole effect of failure of a master to post the notice required by Employers’ Liability Act, § 12, is to extend for six months the delay in which notice of the injury must be given to the employer, and does not render such act inapplicable to an injury received by a servant. 8. Constitutional law &wkey;>70(3) — Justness OF STATUTES A LEGISLATIVE QUESTION. With the policy or justice of the Employers’ Liability Act the courts have nothing to do; such matter being' for the Legislature. 9. Master and servant A prayer, in an action by a widow under Civ. Code, art. 2315, to recover damages for the wrongful death of her husband, that, should the court hold that the case is governed by the Employers’ Liability Act, then “an adequate and equitable relief and an equitable lump sum be adjudicated according to the said act, adding to it an adequate and equitable sum for suffering, mental agony, loss of consortium, and pecuniary loss,” was not sufficient to _ justify a judgment under the Employers’ Liability Act. Monroe, C. J., dissenting.