The Arizona Employers' Liability Law (Rev.Stats., 1913, pars.
3154, 3156, 3158, 3160), in respect of certain specified
employments reasonably designated as inherently hazardous and
dangerous to workmen, imposes upon the employer, without regard to
his fault or that of any person for whose conduct he is
responsible, liability in compensatory (not speculative or
punitive) damages for the accidental personal injury or death of
any employee arising out of and in the course of the employment and
due to a condition or conditions of the occupation, but not caused
by the employee's own negligence.
Held that it does not
infringe the rights of employers under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pp.
250 U. S. 419
et seq. New York Central R. Co. v. White,
243 U. S. 188.
The states are left a wide field of discretion to change their
laws, and their legislation is not subject to constitutional
objection upon the ground that it is novel and unwise. Pp.
250 U. S.
419-421.
The court has repeatedly adjudged that the rules governing the
liability of employers for death or injury of employees in the
course of the employment are subject, as rules of future conduct,
to alteration by the states, and that, excluding unreasonable or
arbitrary changes, the employer may be made liable without fault,
and the common law defenses be abolished. P.
250 U. S.
419.
In this instance, the effect of the statute is to require the
employer, instead of the employee, to assume a pecuniary risk
inherent in the
Page 250 U. S. 401
employment and due to its conditions, and not to the negligence
of the employee killed or injured, leaving the employer, as the
common law in theory left the employee, to take such risk into
consideration in fixing wages, with the opportunity, besides, to
charge the loss as a part of the cost of the product of the
industry. P.
250 U. S.
420.
The statute limits recovery strictly to compensatory damages --
excluding punitive damages, which it may be conceded would be
contrary to natural justice -- and makes only such discrimination
between employer and employee as necessarily arises from their
different relations to the common undertaking. There is no denial
of the equal protection of the laws. P.
250 U. S.
422.
The statute adds no new burden to the cost of industry, but
merely recognizes and in part transfers to the employer an existing
and inevitable burden due to the hazardous nature of the industry.
P.
250 U. S.
424.
The statute may be regarded as a police regulation, designed to
prevent the injured employees and their dependents from becoming a
burden upon the public, and, so regarded, it cannot be said to be
so clearly unreasonable and arbitrary that this Court should
declare it violative of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
It amounts to a contradiction of terms to say that, in leaving
the issues of fact and the compensatory damages to be determined by
juries according to the established procedure of the courts, the
statute violates due process of law. P.
250 U. S.
426.
If a state establishes a right of action for compensation to
injured workmen upon grounds not arbitrary or fundamentally unjust,
the question whether the award shall be measured as compensatory
damages are measured at common law or according to some prescribed
scale reasonably adapted to produce a fair result is for the state
to determine. P.
250 U. S.
428.
Whether such compensation should be paid in a single sum or
distributed during the period of disability or need is likewise for
the state to determine. P.
250 U. S. 429.
The objection that the Arizona act may be extended by
construction to nonhazardous industries cannot be raised by parties
whose industries were indisputably hazardous.
Id.
The objection that the benefits of the act may be extended, in
the case of a death claim, to those not nearly related to or
dependent upon the workman, or may even go by escheat to the state,
held not presented, the Arizona court having construed the
act as confining recovery to compensatory damages. P.
250 U. S.
430.
Page 250 U. S. 402
The Arizona system allows the injured employee an election of
remedies, permitting restricted recovery under a "compensation law
" although he has been guilty of contributory negligence, and full
compensatory damages under the Employers' Liability Act if he has
not.
Held not inconsistent with the due process or equal
protection clauses, as respects employers. P.
250 U. S.
430.
CONCURRING OPINION OF HOLMES, J.
That certain voluntary conduct may constitutionally be put at
the peril of those pursuing it finds illustrations in the criminal
law and in the extent to which a master may be held for acts of a
servant. P.
250 U. S.
432.
The criterion of fault itself involves applying the external
standard of prudence and the decision of a jury.
Id.
Holding the employer liable for accidents tends directly to
secure attention to the safety of the men, an unquestionably
constitutional object of legislation.
Id.
In allowing damages for pain and mutilation, the Arizona law
constitutionally may have been based on the view that, if a
business is unsuccessful ,it means that the public does not care
enough for it to make it pay, and, if it is successful, the public
pays the expenses, and something more, and should pay, as part of
the cost of producing what it wants, the cost of pain and
mutilation incident to the production, and that, by throwing that
loss upon the employer in the first instance, it is thrown in the
long run, justly, upon the public. P.
250 U. S.
433.
The liability under this law is limited to a conscientious
valuation of the loss, and it is to be presumed that juries and
courts will confine it accordingly.
Id.
It is not urged in this case that the provision for 12 percent
interest from the date of suit, in case of an unsuccessful appeal,
is void. P.
250 U. S.
434.
19 Ariz. 151,
id. 182, affirmed.
The cases are stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 417
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
In each of these cases, a workman in a hazardous industry in the
State of Arizona, having received in the course of his employment a
personal injury through an accident due to a condition or
conditions of the occupation not caused by his own negligence or,
so far as appears, by that of his employer or others, brought
action under the Employers' Liability Law of Arizona and recovered
compensatory damages against the employer ascertained upon a
consideration of the nature, extent, and disabling effects of the
injury in each particular case. And the question is raised whether
the statute referred to, as applied to the facts of these cases, is
repugnant to that provision of the Fourteenth Amendment which
declares that no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty,
or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
Article XVIII of the Constitution of the State of Arizona is
entitled "Labor," and contains, among others, the following
sections:
"SECTION 4. The common law doctrine of fellow servant, so far as
it affects the liability of a master for injuries to his servant
resulting from the acts or omissions of any other servant or
servants of the common master, is forever abrogated."
"SECTION 5. The defense of contributory negligence or of
assumption of risk shall, in all cases whatsoever, be a question of
fact, and shall at all times, be left to the jury."
"SECTION 6. The right of action to recover damages for injuries
shall never be abrogated, and the amount recovered shall not be
subject to any statutory limitation."
"SECTION 7. To protect the safety of employees in all hazardous
occupations, in mining, smelting, manufacturing, railroad or street
railway transportation, or any other industry, the legislature
shall enact an employers' liability
Page 250 U. S. 418
law, by the terms of which any employer, whether individual,
association, or corporation, shall be liable for the death or
injury, caused by any accident due to a condition or conditions of
such occupation, of any employee in the service of such employer in
such hazardous occupation, in all cases in which such death or
injury of such employee shall not have been caused by the
negligence of the employee killed or injured."
"SECTION 8. The legislature shall enact a workmen's compulsory
compensation law applicable to workmen engaged in manual or
mechanical labor in such employments as the legislature may
determine to be especially dangerous, by which compulsory
compensation shall be required to be paid to any such workman by
his employer if, in the course of such employment, personal injury
to any such workmen from any accident arising out of, and in the
course of, such employment is caused in whole or in part or is
contributed to by a necessary risk or danger of such employment or
a necessary risk or danger inherent in the nature thereof, or by
failure of such employer or any of his or its officers, agents, or
employee, or employees to exercise due care or to comply with any
[law?] affecting such employment: Provided, that it shall be
optional with said employee to settle for such compensation or
retain the right to sue said employer as provided by this
Constitution."
Pursuant to § 7, the Employers' Liability Law was enacted
(c. 89, Laws 1912, Reg.Sess.; Arizona Rev.Stats. 1913, pars.
3153-3162); pursuant to § 8 a Workmen's Compulsory
Compensation Law was enacted (c. 14, Laws 1912, 1st Spec.Sess.;
Arizona Rev.Stats. 1913, pars. 3163
et seq.).
In two of the present cases, the former law was sustained by the
Supreme Court of Arizona against attacks based upon the Fourteenth
Amendment.
Inspiration Consol. Copper Co. v. Mendez, 19
Ariz. 151;
Superior &
Page 250 U. S. 419
Pittsburg Copper Co. v. Tomich, 19 Ariz. 182. In the
other three cases, it was sustained by the United States district
court for that district. And the resulting judgments in favor of
the injured workmen are brought under our review by writs of
error.
Some of the arguments submitted to us assail the wisdom and
policy of the act because of its novelty, because of its one-sided
effect in depriving the employer of defenses while giving him (as
is said) nothing in return, leaving the damages unlimited, and
giving to the employee the option of several remedies, as tending
not to obviate but to promote litigation, and as pregnant with
danger to the industries of the state. With such considerations
this Court cannot concern itself. Novelty is not a constitutional
objection, since under constitutional forms of government each
state may have a legislative body endowed with authority to change
the law. In what respects it shall be changed, and to what extent,
is in the main confided to the several states, and it is to be
presumed that their legislatures, being chosen by the people,
understand and correctly appreciate their needs. The states are
left with a wide range of legislative discretion, notwithstanding
the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment, and their conclusions
respecting the wisdom of their legislative acts are not reviewable
by the courts.
We have been called upon recently to deal with various forms of
workmen's compensation and employers' liability statutes.
Second Employers' Liability Cases, 223 U. S.
1,
223 U. S. 47-53;
New York Central R. Co. v. White, 243 U.
S. 188,
243 U. S. 196
et seq.; Hawkins v. Bleakly, 243 U.
S. 210;
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
243 U. S. 219;
Middleton v. Texas Power & Light Co., 249 U.
S. 152. These decisions have established the
propositions that the rules of law concerning the employer's
responsibility for personal injury or death of an employee arising
in the course of the employment are not beyond alteration by
legislation in
Page 250 U. S. 420
the public interest; that no person has a vested right entitling
him to have these any more than other rules of law remain unchanged
for his benefit, and that, if we exclude arbitrary and unreasonable
changes, liability may be imposed upon the employer without fault,
and the rules respecting his responsibility to one employee for the
negligence of another and respecting contributory negligence and
assumption of risk are subject to legislative change.
The principal contention is that the Arizona Employers'
Liability Law deprives the employer of property without due process
of law, and denies to him the equal protection of the laws, because
it imposes a liability without fault, and, as is said, without
equivalent protection. The statute, in respect of certain specified
employments designated as inherently hazardous and dangerous to
workmen -- and reasonably so described -- imposes upon the
employer, without regard to the question of his fault or that of
any person for whose conduct he is responsible, a liability in
compensatory damages, excluding all such as are speculative or
punitive (
Arizona Copper Co. v. Burciaga, 177 P. 29), for
accidental personal injury or death of an employee arising out of
and in the course of the employment and due to a condition or
conditions of the occupation, in cases where such injury or death
of the employee shall not have been caused by his own negligence.
This is the substance of pars. 3154 and 3158, and they are to be
read in connection with par. 3156, which declares what occupations
are hazardous within the meaning of the law. By par. 3160,
contracts and regulations exempting the employer from liability are
declared to be void.
In effect, the statute requires the employer, instead of the
employee, to assume the pecuniary risk of injury or death of the
employee attributable to hazards inherent in the employment and due
to its conditions and not to the negligence of the employee killed
or injured. In determining
Page 250 U. S. 421
whether this departure from the previous rule is so arbitrary or
inconsistent with the fundamental rights of the employer as to
render the law repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment, it is to be
borne in mind that the matter of the assumption of the risks of
employment and the consequences to flow therefrom has been
regulated time out of mind by the common law, with occasional
statutory modifications. The rule existing in the absence of
statute, as usually enunciated, is that all consequences of risks
inherent in the occupation and normally incident to it are assumed
by the employee, and afford no ground of action by him or those
claiming under him in the absence of negligence by the employer,
and even risks arising from or increased by the failure of the
employer to take the care that he ought to take for the employee's
safety are assumed by the latter if he is aware of them or if they
are so obvious that any ordinarily prudent person under the
circumstances could not fail to observe and appreciate them; but if
the employee, having become aware of a risk arising out of a defect
attributable to the employer's negligence, makes complaint or
objection and obtains a promise or reparation, the common law
brings into play a new set of regulations requiring the employer to
assume the risk under certain circumstances, the employee under
others.
Seaboard Air Line v. Horton, 233 U.
S. 492,
233 U. S.
504-505; s.c.,
239 U. S. 239 U.S.
595,
239 U. S.
598-599, and cases cited.
But these are no more than rules of law, deduced by the courts
as reasonable and just, under the conditions of our civilization,
in view of the relations existing between employer and employee in
the absence of legislation. They are not placed by the Fourteenth
Amendment beyond the reach of the state's power to alter them, as
rules of future conduct and tests of responsibility, through
legislation designed to promote the general welfare, so long as it
does not interfere arbitrarily and unreasonably, and in
Page 250 U. S. 422
defiance of natural justice, with the right of employers and
employees to agree between themselves respecting the terms and
conditions of employment.
We are unable to say that the Employers' Liability Law of
Arizona, in requiring the employer in hazardous industries to
assume, so far as pecuniary consequences go, the entire risk of
injury to the employee attributable to accidents arising in the
course of the employment and due to its inherent conditions,
exceeds the bounds of permissible legislation or interferes with
the constitutional rights of the employer. The answer that the
common law makes to the hardship of requiring the employee to
assume all consequences, both personal and pecuniary, of injuries
arising out of the ordinary dangers of the occupation is that the
parties enter into the contract of employment with these risks in
view, and that the consequences ought to be, and presumably are,
taken into consideration in fixing the rate of wages.
Chicago,
Milwaukee R. Co. v. Ross, 112 U. S. 377,
112 U. S. 383;
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Herbert, 116 U.
S. 642,
116 U. S. 647;
New York Central R. Co. v. White, 243 U.
S. 188,
243 U. S. 199;
Farwell v. Boston & Worcester R. Co. Corp., 4 Metc.
49, 57. In like manner, the employer, if required -- as he is by
this statute in some occupations -- to assume the pecuniary loss
arising from such injury to the employee, may take this into
consideration in fixing the rate of wages, besides which he has an
opportunity, which the employee has not, to charge the loss as a
part of the cost of the product of the industry.
There is no question here of punishing one who is without fault.
That, we may concede, would be contrary to natural justice. But, as
we have seen, the statute limits the recovery strictly to
compensatory damages. And there is no discrimination between
employer and employee except such as necessarily arises from their
different relation to the common undertaking. Both are
essential
Page 250 U. S. 423
to it, the one to furnish capital, organization, and guidance,
the other to perform the manual work; both foresee that the
occupation is of such a nature, and its conditions such, that
sooner or later some of the workmen will be physically injured or
maimed, occasionally one killed, without particular fault on
anybody's part.
See 243 U.S.
243 U. S. 203.
The statute requires that compensation shall be paid to the injured
workman or his dependents because it is upon them that the first
brunt of the loss falls, and that it shall be paid by the employer
because he takes the gross receipts of the common enterprise, and,
by reason of his position of control, can make such adjustments as
ought to be and practically can be made in the way of reducing
wages and increasing the selling price of the product in order to
allow for the statutory liability. There could be no more rational
basis for a discrimination, and it is clear that in this there is
no denial of the "equal protection of the laws."
Under the "due process" clause, the ultimate contention is that
men have an indefeasible right to employ their fellow men to work
under conditions where, as all parties know, from time to time some
of the workmen inevitably will be killed or injured, but where
nobody knows or can know in advance which particular men or how
many will be the victims, or how serious will be the injuries, and
hence no adequate compensation can be included in the wages, and to
employ them thus with the legitimate object of making a profit
above their wages if all goes well, but with immunity from
particular loss if things go badly with the workmen through no
fault of their own, and they suffer physical injury or death in the
course of their employment. In view of the subject matter and of
the public interest involved, we cannot assent to the proposition
that the rights of life, liberty, and property guaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment prevent the states from modifying that rule of
the common law
Page 250 U. S. 424
which requires or permits the workingman to take the chances in
such a lottery.
The act -- assuming, as we must, that it be justly administered
-- adds no new burden of cost to industry, although it does bring
to light a burden that previously existed, but perhaps was
unrecognized, by requiring that its cost be taken into the
reckoning. The burden is due to the hazardous nature of the
industry, and is inevitable if the work of the world is to go
forward. What the act does is merely to require that it shall be
assumed, to the extent of a pecuniary equivalent of the actual and
proximate damage sustained by the workman or those near to him, by
the employer -- by him who organizes the enterprise, hires the
workmen, fixes the wages, sets a price upon the product, pays the
costs, and takes for his reward the net profits, if any.
The interest of the state is obvious. We declared in the
White case, (243 U.S.
243 U. S.
207):
"It cannot be doubted that the state may prohibit and punish
self-maiming and attempts at suicide; it may prohibit a man from
bartering away his life or his personal security; indeed, the right
to these is often declared, in bills of rights, to be 'natural and
inalienable,' and the authority to prohibit contracts made in
derogation of a lawfully established policy of the state respecting
compensation for accidental death of disabling personal injury is
equally clear. . . . This statute does not concern itself with
measures of prevention, which presumably are embraced in other
laws. But the interest of the public is not confined to these. One
of the grounds of its concern with the continued life and earning
power of the individual is its interest in the prevention of
pauperism, with its concomitants of vice and crime. And, in our
opinion, laws regulating the responsibility of employers for the
injury or death of employees arising out of the employment bear so
close a relation to the protection of the lives and safety of
those
Page 250 U. S. 425
concerned that they properly may be regarded as coming within
the category of police regulations."
(Citing cases.)
And in
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 U.
S. 219,
243 U. S. 239,
it was said:
"Certainly the operation of industrial establishments that in
the ordinary course of things frequently and inevitably produce
disabling or mortal injuries to the human beings employed is not a
matter of wholly private concern."
Having this interest, the State of Arizona reasonably might
say:
"The rule of the common law requiring the employee to assume all
consequences of personal injuries arising out of the ordinary
dangers and normal conditions of a hazardous occupation, and to
secure his indemnity in advance in the form of increased wages, is
incompatible with the public interest because, assuming that
workmen are on an equality with employers in a negotiation about
the rate of wages, the probability of injury's occurring to a
particular employee, and the nature and extent of such injury, are
so contingent and speculative that it is impracticable for either
employer or employee approximately to estimate in advance how much
allowance should be made for them in the wages, and even were a
proper allowance made, experience demonstrates that, under our
conditions of life, it is not to be expected that the average
workingman will set aside out of his wages a proper insurance
against the time when he may be injured or killed. Hence,
recognizing that injuries to workmen constitute a part of the
unavoidable cost of hazardous industries, we will require that it
be assumed by the one in control of the industry as employer, just
as he pays other items of cost, so that he shall not take a profit
from the labor of his employees while leaving the injured ones and
the dependents of those whose lives are lost through accidents due
to the conditions of the occupation to be a burden upon the
public."
Whether this or similar reasoning was employed we
Page 250 U. S. 426
have no means of knowing; whether, if employed, it ought to have
been accepted as convincing is not for us to decide. It being
incumbent upon the opponents of the law to demonstrate that it is
clearly unreasonable and arbitrary, it is sufficient for us to
declare, as we do, that such reasoning would be pertinent to the
subject, and not so unfounded or irrational as to permit us to say
that the state, if it accepted it as a basis for changing the law
in a matter so closely related to the public welfare, exceeded the
restrictions placed upon its action by the Fourteenth
Amendment.
It is objected that the responsibility of the employer under
this statute is unlimited; but this is not true except as it is
true of every action for compensatory damages where the amount
awarded varies in accordance with the nature and extent of the
damages for which compensation is made. It is said that, in actions
by employees against employers, juries are prone to render
extravagant verdicts. The same thing has been said, and with equal
reason, concerning actions brought by individuals against railroad
companies, traction companies, and other corporations. In this as
in other cases, there is a corrective in the authority of the court
to set aside an exorbitant verdict. And it amounts to a
contradiction of terms to say that, in submitting a controversy
between litigants to the established courts, there to be tried
according to long established modes and with a constitutional jury
to determine the issues of fact and assess compensatory damages,
there is a denial of "due process of law."
Much stress is laid upon that part of our opinion in the
White case, where, after citing numerous previous
decisions upholding the authority of the states to establish by
legislation departures from the fellow servant rule and other
common law rules affecting the employer's liability for personal
injuries to the employee, we said (243 U.S.
243 U. S.
201):
"It is true that, in the case of the statutes thus
Page 250 U. S. 427
sustained, there were reasons rendering the particular
departures appropriate. Nor is it necessary, for the purposes of
the present case, to say that a state might, without violence to
the constitutional guaranty of 'due process of law,' suddenly set
aside all common law rules respecting liability as between employer
and employee without providing a reasonably just substitute. . . .
No such question is here presented, and we intimate no opinion upon
it. The statute under consideration sets aside one body of rules
only to establish another system in its place,"
etc.
In spite of our declaration that no opinion was intimated, this
is treated as an intimation that a statute such as the one now
under consideration, creating a new and additional right of action
and allowing no defense (if the conditions of liability be shown)
unless the accident was caused by the negligence of the injured
employee, would be regarded as in conflict with the due process
clause. We cannot, however regard this statute as anything else
than a substitute for the law as it previously stood; whether it be
a proper substitute was for the people of the State of Arizona to
determine; but we find no ground for declaring that they have acted
so arbitrarily, unreasonably, and unjustly as to render their
action void. They have resolved that the consequences of a personal
injury to an employee attributable to the inherent dangers of the
occupation shall be assumed not wholly by the particular employee
upon whom the personal injury happens to fall, but, to the extent
of a compensation in money awarded in a judicial tribunal according
to the ordinary processes of law, shall be assumed by the employer,
leaving the latter to charge it up, so far as he can, as a part of
the cost of his product, just as he would charge a loss by fire, by
theft, by bad debts, or any other usual loss of the business, and
to make allowance for it, so far as he can, in a reduced scale of
wages. And they have come to this resolution, we repeat, not in a
matter of indifference
Page 250 U. S. 428
or upon a question of mere economics, but in the course of
regulating the conduct of those hazardous industries in which human
beings -- their own people -- in the pursuit of a livelihood must
expose themselves to death or to physical injuries more or less
disabling, with consequent impoverishment, partial or total, of the
workman or those dependent upon him. The statute says to the
employer, in effect:
"You shall not employ your fellow men in a hazardous occupation
for gain, you being in a position to reap a reward in money through
selling the product of their toil, unless you come under an
obligation to make appropriate compensation in money in case of
their death or injury due to the conditions of the occupation."
The rule being based upon reasonable grounds affecting the
public interest, being established in advance and applicable to all
alike under similar circumstances, there is, in our opinion, no
infringement of the fundamental rights protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment.
Some expressions contained in our opinion in the
White
case (
243 U. S. 243
U.S. 203,
243 U. S.
204-205) are treated in argument as if they were
equivalent to saying that, if a state, in making a legislative
adjustment of employers' liability, departs from the common law
system of basing responsibility upon fault, it must confine itself
to a limited compensation, measured and ascertained according to
the methods adopted in the compensation acts of the present day. Of
course, nothing of the kind was intended. In a previous part of the
opinion (pp.
243 U. S.
196-200), it had been shown that the employer had no
constitutional right to continued immunity from liability in the
absence of negligence, nor to have the fellow servant rule and the
rules respecting contributory negligence and assumption of risk
remain unchanged. The statutory plan of compensation for injured
workmen and the dependents of those fatally injured -- an
additional feature at variance with the common law -- was then
upheld, but, of course, without
Page 250 U. S. 429
saying that no other would be constitutional. For if, as we held
in that case, the novel statutory scheme of awarding compensation
according to a prearranged scale is sustainable, it follows,
perhaps
a fortiori, that the Arizona method of
ascertaining the compensation according to the facts of each
particular case -- substantially the common law method -- is free
from objection on constitutional grounds. Indeed, if a state
recognizes or establishes a right of action for compensation to
injured workmen upon grounds not arbitrary or fundamentally unjust,
the question whether the award shall be measured as compensatory
damages are measured at common law, or according to some prescribed
scale reasonably adapted to produce a fair result, is for the state
itself to determine. Whether the compensation should be paid in a
single sum after judgment recovered, as is required by the Arizona
Employers' Liability Law, just as under the common law system in
the case of a judgment based upon negligence, or whether it would
be more prudent to distribute the award by installment payments
covering the period of disability or of need, likewise is for the
state to determine, and upon this the plaintiffs in error can raise
no constitutional question.
To the suggestion that the act now or hereafter may be extended
by construction to nonhazardous occupations, it may be replied
first that the occupations in which these actions arose were
indisputably hazardous, hence plaintiffs in error have no standing
to raise the question (
Plymouth Coal Co. v. Pennsylvania,
232 U. S. 531,
232 U. S. 544;
Jeffrey Mfg. Co. v. Blagg, 235 U.
S. 571,
235 U. S. 576;
Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U. S. 610,
235 U. S. 621;
Middleton v. Texas Power & Light Co., 249 U.
S. 152,
249 U. S.
157), and secondly, it hardly is necessary to add that
employers in nonhazardous industries are in little danger from the
act, since it imposes liability only for accidental injuries
attributable to the inherent dangers of the occupation.
Page 250 U. S. 430
To the objection that the benefits of the act may be extended,
in the case of death claims, to those not nearly related to or
dependent upon the workman, or even may go by escheat to the state,
it is sufficient to say that no such question is involved in these
records; in
Arizona Copper Co. v. Burciaga, 177 P. 29, a
case of personal injuries not fatal, the Supreme Court of Arizona
interpreted the act as limiting the recovery to compensatory
damages; it reasonably may be so construed in its application to
death claims, and it would be improper for this Court to assume in
advance that the state court will place such a construction upon
the statute as to render it obnoxious to the federal Constitution.
Plymouth Coal Co. v. Pennsylvania, 232 U.
S. 531,
232 U. S. 546;
St. Louis Southwester. Ry. v. Arkansas, 235 U.
S. 350,
235 U. S.
369.
It is insisted that the Arizona system deprives employers of
property without due process of law and denies them equal
protection because it confers upon the employee a free choice among
several remedies. In
Consolidated Arizona Smelting Co. v.
Ujack, 15 Ariz. 382, 384, the supreme court of the state
said:
"Under the laws of Arizona, an employee who is injured in the
course of his employment has open to him three avenues of redress,
any one of which he may pursue according to the facts of his case.
They are: (1) The common law liability relieved of the fellow
servant defense and in which the defenses of contributory
negligence and assumption of risk are questions to be left to the
jury. Const. secs. 4, 5, art. 18. (2) Employers' liability law,
which applies to hazardous occupations where the injury or death is
not caused by his own negligence. Const. sec. 7, art. 18. (3) The
compulsory compensation law, applicable to especially dangerous
occupations, by which he may recover compensation without fault
upon the part of the employer. Const., sec. 8, art. 18."
It is said by counsel that the compensation act, because it
limits the recovery,
Page 250 U. S. 431
never is resorted to in practice unless the employee has been
negligent, and hence is debarred of a remedy under the liability
act. But it is thoroughly settled by our previous decisions that a
state may abolish contributory negligence as a defense, and
election of remedies is an option very frequently given by the law
to a person entitled to an action; an option normally exercised to
his own advantage, as a matter of course.
Other points are suggested, but none requiring particular
discussion.
Judgments affirmed.
* The docket titles of these cases are:
Arizona Copper
Company, Limited v. Hammer, No. 20,
Arizona Copper
Company, Limited v. Bray, No. 21,
Ray Consolidated Copper
Co. v. Veazey, No. 232, in error to the District Court of the
United States for the District of Arizona;
Inspiration
Consolidated Copper Co. v. Mendez, No. 332,
Superior
Pittsburg Copper Co. v. Tomich, sometimes known as Thomas, No.
334, in error to the Supreme Court of the State of Arizona.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES concurring.*
The plaintiff (the defendant in error) was employed in the
defendant's mine, was hurt in the eye in consequence of opening a
compressed air valve, and brought the present suit. The injury was
found to have been due to risks inherent to the business, and so
was within the Employers' Liability Law of Arizona, Rev.Stats.1913,
Title 14, c. 6. By that law as construed, the employer is liable to
damages for injuries due to such risks in specified hazardous
employments when guilty of no negligence. Par. 3158. There was a
verdict for the plaintiff, judgment was affirmed by the supreme
court of the state, 19 Ariz. 151, and the case comes here on the
single question whether, consistently with the Fourteenth
Amendment, such liability can be imposed. It is taken to exclude
"speculative, exemplary and punitive damages," but to include all
loss to the employee caused by the accident, not merely in the way
of earning capacity, but of disfigurement and bodily or mental
pain.
See Arizona Copper Co. v. Burciaga, 177 P. 29,
33.
There is some argument made for the general proposition
Page 250 U. S. 432
that immunity from liability when not in fault is a right
inherent in free government and the
obiter dicta of Mr.
Justice Miller in [
Citizen's Savings &\] Loan
Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655, are referred
to. But if it is thought to be public policy to put certain
voluntary conduct at the peril of those pursuing it, whether in the
interest of safety or upon economic or other grounds, I know of
nothing to hinder. A man employs a servant at the peril of what
that servant may do in the course of his employment, and there is
nothing in the Constitution to limit the principle to that
instance.
St. Louis & San Francisco Ry. Co. v.
Mathews, 165 U. S. 1,
165 U. S. 22;
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Zernecke,
183 U. S. 582,
183 U. S. 586;
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Taylor,
210 U. S. 281,
210 U. S. 295.
See Guy v. Donald, 203 U. S. 399,
203 U. S. 406.
There are cases in which even the criminal law requires a man to
know facts at his peril. Indeed, the criterion which is thought to
be free from constitutional objection, the criterion of fault, is
the application of an external standard, the conduct of a prudent
man in the known circumstances -- that is, in doubtful cases, the
opinion of the jury -- which the defendant has to satisfy at his
peril, and which he may miss after giving the matter his best
thought.
The Germanic, 196 U. S. 589,
196 U. S. 596;
Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373,
229 U. S. 377;
Eastern states Retail Lumber Dealers' Association v.
McBride, 234 U. S. 600,
234 U. S. 610;
Miller v. Strahl, 239 U. S. 426,
239 U. S. 434.
Without further amplification, so much may be taken to be
established by the decisions.
New York Central R. Co. v.
White, 243 U. S. 188,
243 U. S. 198,
243 U. S. 204;
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington, 243 U.
S. 219,
243 U. S.
236.
I do not perceive how the validity of the law is affected by the
fact that the employee is a party to the venture. There is no more
certain way of securing attention to the safety of the men, an
unquestionably constitutional object of legislation, than by
holding the employer liable
Page 250 U. S. 433
for accidents. Like the crimes to which I have referred, they
probably will happen a good deal less often when the employer knows
that he must answer for them if they do. I pass, therefore, to the
other objection urged and most strongly pressed. It is that the
damages are governed by the rules governing in action of tort --
that is, as we have said, that they may include disfigurement and
bodily or mental pain. Natural observations are made on the
tendency of juries when such elements are allowed. But if it is
proper to allow them, of course, no objection can be founded on the
supposed foibles of the tribunal that the Constitution of the
United States and the states have established. Why, then, is it not
proper to allow them? It is said that the pain cannot be shifted to
another. Neither can the loss of a leg. But one can be paid for as
well as the other. It is said that these elements do not constitute
an economic loss, in the sense of diminished power to produce. They
may.
Ball v. William Hunt & Sons, Ld., [1912] A.C.
496. But whether they do or not they are as much part of the
workman's loss as the loss of a limb. The legislature may have
reasoned thus. If a business is unsuccessful, it means that the
public does not care enough for it to make it pay. If it is
successful the public pays its expenses and something more. It is
reasonable that the public should pay the whole cost of producing
what it wants, and a part of that cost is the pain and mutilation
incident to production. By throwing that loss upon the employer in
the first instance, we throw it upon the public in the long run,
and that is just. If a legislature should reason in this way and
act accordingly, it seems to me that it is within Constitutional
bounds.
Matter of Erickson v. Preuss, 223 N.Y. 365. It is
said that the liability is unlimited, but this is not true. It is
limited to a conscientious valuation of the loss suffered. Apart
from the control exercised by the judge, it is to be hoped that
juries would realize that unreasonable verdicts would tend to
Page 250 U. S. 434
make the business impossible, and thus to injure those whom they
might wish to help. But, whatever they may do, we must accept the
tribunal, as I have said, and are bound to assume that they will
act rightly and confine themselves to the proper scope of the
law.
It is not urged that the provision allowing twelve percent
interest on the amount of the judgment from the date of filing the
suit, in case of an unsuccessful appeal, is void.
Fidelity
Mutual Life Association v. Mettler, 185 U.
S. 308,
185 U. S.
325-327;
Consaul v. Cummings, 222 U.
S. 262,
222 U. S.
272.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE CLARKE concur in this
statement of additional reasons that lead me to agree with the
opinion just delivered by my Brother PITNEY.
* This concurrence is in case No. 332,
Inspiration Consol.
Copper Co. v. Mendez.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissenting.
I find myself unable to concur, yet reluctant to dissent. The
case is of the kind that, once pronounced, will be a rule in like
or cognate cases forever -- indeed, may even be extended. It is
said to rest on the cases sustaining the workmen's compensation law
of New York,
243 U. S. 203,
and its associated cases in the same volume upholding like laws of
other states. The present case certainly comes after those cases
and has that symptom of being their sequence. They cannot be said
to have been easy of judgment against the contentions and
conservatism which opposed them, and there was, at least to me, no
prophecy of their extent, and therefore to me the present case is a
step beyond them. I hope it is something more than timidity, dread
of the new, that makes me fear that it is a step from the deck to
the sea -- the metaphor suggests a peril in the consequences.
But let me in a more concrete way make application of this
comment. I may assume that the purpose and principle and general
extent of workmen's compensation laws
Page 250 U. S. 435
are known. I must rest on that assumption, for even an epitome
of them or the reasons for them would unduly extend this dissent.
The Arizona law has no resemblance to them. It is a direct charge
of liability upon the employer for death or injury incurred in his
employment, he being without fault. Its remedies are the ordinary
legal remedies; its measure of relief, however, has in it something
more than the ordinary measures of relief, certainly not those of
the compensation laws, nor is it as considerate and guarded as
they. If its validity therefore can be deduced from the cases
explanatory of those laws, it can only be done by bringing its
instances and theirs under the same generalization -- that is, that
it is competent for government to charge liability and exempt from
responsibility according as one is employer or employee, there
being no other circumstance than that relation. Of this there can
be no disguise. It may be confused by argument and attempt at
historical analogies and deductions, but to that comprehensive
principle the case must come at last. All else is adventitious, and
puts out of view the relation of the factors of production. It puts
out of view that employers are as necessary to production as
employees, and subjects to peril the voluntary conduct of the
former and leaves out of account as an element the voluntary
conduct of the latter. In other words, there is a clear
discrimination, a class distinction, with its legal circumstances,
and, I may say, invidious circumstances, in view of some of the
reasons adduced in its justification. And these effects cannot be
concealed under any camouflage, nor given the plausible and
attractive gloss of public policy, justified by the different
conditions of employer and employee. Unquestionably there is a
difference -- it constitutes the life of the relation. But the
question is: who shall compensate the injury that may result from
the relation, voluntarily assumed by both, urged by their
respective interests and a calculation of advantage?
Page 250 U. S. 436
But I pass this discrimination and return to the law as a
violation of the employer's rights, considered absolutely and
abstractly. It seems to me to be of the very foundation of right --
of the essence of liberty as it is of morals -- to be free from
liability if one is free from fault. It has heretofore been the
sense of the law and the sense of the world, pervading the
regulations of both, that there can be no punishment where there is
no blame, and yet the court now, by its decision, erects the denial
of these postulates of conduct into a principle of law and
governmental policy. In other words, it is said to be a benefit to
government to put the exact discharge of duty under the menace of
penalty and invert the conceptions of mankind of the relation of
right and wrong action. If the legislation does not punish without
fault, what does it do? The question is pertinent. Consider what
the employer does: he invests his money in productive enterprise
mining, smelting, manufacturing, railroading -- he engaged
employees at their request and pays them the wages they demand; he
takes all of the risks of the adventure. Now there is put upon him
an immeasurable element that may make disaster inevitable. I find
it difficult to answer the argument advanced to support or palliate
this effect, or, independently of it, to justify the interference
with rights. It is a certain impeachment of some rights to assume
that they need justification, and a betrayal of them to make them a
matter of controversy. There are precepts of constitutional law, as
there are precepts of moral law, that reach the conviction of
aphorisms and are immediately accepted by all who understand them,
and comment is considered as confusing as unnecessary. I say this
not in dogmatism, but in expression of my vision of things, and I
say it with deference to the contrary judgment of my Brethren of
the majority.
Of course, reasons may to found for the violation of rights,
advantage to somebody or something in that violation.
Page 250 U. S. 437
Tyranny even may find pretexts, and seldom boldly bids its will
avouch its acts, and certainly there can be no accusation of
barefaced power in the Arizona law. Its motives and purposes are
worthy, and it requires some resolution of duty to resist them. It
must be seen, and is seen, however, that the difference between the
position of employer and employee, simply considering the latter as
economically weaker, is not a justification for the violation of
the rights of the former, and that individual rights cannot be made
to yield to philanthropy, and therefore the welfare of the
government is brought forward and displayed. The law saves the
government, is the comment, from the burden of paupers, its
administration and peace from the disturbance of criminals. The
answer, I think, is immediate. Government, certainly constitutional
government, cannot afford to infringe -- indeed, betrays its
purpose if it infringes -- a right of anybody upon money
considerations or for ease in the exercise of its faculties.
But, granting there is something in the argument, what shall be
the limits of its application? Will it extend the principle of the
present case to nonhazardous employments? If not, why not? The
Arizona law stops with certain occupations which it calls
"hazardous," but it includes in the description "manufacturing,"
without qualifying words. In the New York compensation law passed
on in
New York Central Railroad v. White, 243
U. S. 203, there were forty-two groups of hazardous
occupations. In
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
243 U. S. 219, the
Court had quite a struggle with the provisions of the Washington
compensation law, which was so far different from those of the
other cases as to incur the dissent of members of the Court. It is
now, I think, of pertinent inquiry whether the quality of being
hazardous is an inherent and necessary element of legality or a
matter of legislative definition and policy. Besides, if there can
be
Page 250 U. S. 438
liability without fault in one occupation, and that can be a
principle of legislation, why not in any other? Who is to determine
the application, court or legislature? If the latter, a court may
not even express apprehension of its exercise, and yet it cannot
put out of view the drift of events and, in blind fatalism, await
their incidence when called upon to consider the legality of such
exercise. We know things are in change -- have changed -- and a
mark of it is that the drift of public opinion, and of legislation
following opinion, is to alter the relation between employer and
employee, and to give to the latter a particular distinction,
relieve him from a responsibility which would seem to be, and which
until lately it has been, the sense of the world to be, as much
upon him as upon his employer, not in dependence, not as a mark of
subservience, but as an obligation of his freedom, and therefore,
as a consequence, that, where he has liberty of action, he has
responsibility for action. In a word, the drift of opinion and
legislation now is to set labor apart and to withdraw it from its
conditions, and from the action of economic forces and their
consequences give it immunity from the pitilessness of life. And
there are appealing considerations for this drift of opinion, and
inevitable sympathy with it, as with many other conditions, but
which the law cannot relieve by a sacrifice of constitutional
rights. In what legislation the drift (it is persuasion in some)
may culminate cannot now be predicted, but it is very certain that,
whatever it be, the judgment now delivered will be cited to justify
it. Will it not be said that, if one right of an employer can be
made to give way, why not another? -- made a condition "upon
economic or other grounds" of his enterprise. Indeed, may not the
question be made more general, and if in supposed benefit to a
particular class, and through benefit to them to the public, there
may be constraint upon or the imposition of burden upon one right
of a citizen, why not upon another? There is therefore, I
Page 250 U. S. 439
think, menace in the present judgment to all rights, subjecting
them unreservedly to conceptions of public policy. If, however,
this general apprehension be not justified, there is threat enough
in the judgment of the court to the interest of employers generally
as a result of the difference in conditions.
A rather curious argument is used to support the Arizona law. It
is said, in justification of its discrimination between employer
and employee, that the employer may, in relief from it and rescue
from its burdens, pass them to the consumers of his products, as he
does or may do in the case of other expenses of his venture, and in
the long run their incidence is, as it is said it should be, on the
public, and that the legislature, in so considering, was reasoning
within constitutional bounds. There is attractive speciousness in
the argument. The individual employer seems to be devested of
grievance, and the problem the law presents to be one of economics
and governmental policy is a kind of taxation, an expense of
government, the burden of which is properly laid upon the public,
and over which a court can have but limited power.
If it is intended by the argument to express no more than a
tendency, while it has no relevancy, I think, upon the validity of
the law, there may be no danger in it. If it is intended to be
erected into a principle, there is danger in it. It is certainly
facile and comprehensive. What burden can be put upon industry or
the activities of men that may not be justified by it?
Of course, there will be no production unless all of its costs
be reimbursed by the price of the articles produced. And by costs,
I mean as well the burdens of government as profit to the employer
-- his inducement to enterprise, and the wages of employees --
their inducement to labor. Without such reimbursement, there will
be no production, and cannot be beyond a certain extent and for a
certain time, and there is no way to effect it but through the
consuming
Page 250 U. S. 440
public. But recourse to such consumption as a rescue from the
law is not a justification for the law, and it is very doubtful if
it had any conscious influence in the enactment of the law.
Indeed, in the present case, what could have been its influence,
and to what extent can it have an ameliorating effect? An employer
in the indicated industries can have no relief except in the home
market. If his products (where there are products) go beyond -- go
to other states -- they will meet the competition of unburdened
products. But this is obvious, and needs no comment.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER and MR. JUSTICE
McREYNOLDS concur in this dissent.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissenting.
While I earnestly join in the dissent written by MR. JUSTICE
McKENNA, it seems not inappropriate to state my own views somewhat
more fully. The important and underlying question is common to the
five cases. No. 232 is typical, and to detail certain facts and
circumstances disclosed by the record therein may aid the
discussion.
Basing his claim upon the Arizona Employers' Liability Law, Dan
Veazey sued plaintiff in error in the United States district court
to recover damages for personal injuries received by him February
10, 1916, while engaged as millwright and carpenter in constructing
a "flotation system" at the company's mill or reduction works in
Gila County, Arizona, "wherein steam, electricity, or other
mechanical power was then and there used to operate machinery." He
alleged that, while exercising due care, he
"suffered severe personal and bodily injuries by an accident
arising out of and in course of such labor, service, and
employment, and due to a condition or conditions of such occupation
or employment,"
which injuries were
Page 250 U. S. 441
not caused by his negligence, but were sustained in the manner
following:
"Plaintiff, in the due course of his said labor, service, and
employment was standing upon a certain timber or joist incorporated
in said 'flotation system,' engaged in bolting and fastening
together the timbers thereof. That the said timber or joist upon
which plaintiff was then and there standing was then and there
elevated above the ground or floor of said mill or reduction works
a distance of approximately ten feet. That, while so engaged as
aforesaid, plaintiff slipped from said timber or joist and fell to
the ground . . . with great force and violence, . . ."
was permanently injured, and will forever remain sick, sore,
lame, and crippled.
No charge of negligence or failure to perform any duty was made
against the company. It unsuccessfully set up and relied upon
invalidity of the Employers' Liability Law because in conflict with
the Fourteenth Amendment; judgment went against it, and the cause
is here by writ of error to the trial court. Judicial Code (Act
March 3, 1911, c. 231) § 237, 36 Stat. 1156.
Article XVIII of the Arizona Constitution provides:
"Section 4. The common law doctrine of fellow servant, so far as
it affects the liability of a master for injuries to his servant
resulting from the acts or omissions of any other servant or
servants of the common master, is forever abrogated."
"Section 5. The defense of contributory negligence or of
assumption of risk shall, in all cases whatsoever, be a question of
fact and shall at all times, be left to the jury."
"Section 6. The right of action to recover damages for injuries
shall never be abrogated, and the amount recovered shall not be
subject to any statutory limitation."
"Section 7. To protect the safety of employees in all hazardous
occupations, in mining, smelting, manufacturing, railroad or street
railway transportation, or any other industry the legislature shall
enact an Employers' Liability Law, by the terms of which any
employer,
Page 250 U. S. 442
whether individual, association, or corporation, shall be liable
for the death or injury, caused by any accident due to a condition
or conditions of such occupation, of any employee in the service of
such employer in such hazardous occupation in all cases in which
such death or injury of such employee shall not have been caused by
the negligence of the employee killed or injured."
"Section 8. The legislature shall enact a Workmen's Compulsory
Compensation Law applicable to workmen engaged in manual or
mechanical labor in such employments as the legislature may
determine to be especially dangerous, by which compulsory
compensation shall be required to be paid to any such workman by
his employer if, in the course of such employment, personal injury
to any such workman from any accident arising out of and in the
course of such employment is caused in whole or in part or is
contributed to by a necessary risk or danger of such employment or
a necessary risk or danger inherent in the nature thereof, or by
failure of such employer or any of his or its officers, agents, or
employee, or employees to exercise due care or to comply with any
law affecting such employment: Provided, that it shall be optional
with said employee to settle for such compensation or retain the
right to sue said employer as provided by this Constitution."
Obeying the constitutional mandate, the legislature enacted the
"Employers' Liability Law," approved May 24, 1912 (c. 89, Laws of
Ariz. 1912, p. 491; Rev.Stats. Ariz.1913, pars. 3153-3162), which
provides:
That to protect the safety of workmen at manual or mechanical
labor in many occupations declared hazardous and enumerated in
§ 4 -- among them all work in or about mines and in mills,
shops, plants and factories where steam or electricity is used to
operate machinery -- every employer, whether individual,
association, or corporation,
"shall be liable for the death or injury, caused by any
Page 250 U. S. 443
accident due to a condition or conditions of such occupation, of
any employee in the service of such employer in such hazardous
occupation, in all cases in which such death or injury of such
employee shall not have been caused by the negligence of the
employee killed or injured."
"Sec. 6. When, in the course of work in any of the employments
or occupations enumerated in Sec. 4 of this act, personal injury or
death by any accident arising out of and in the course of such
labor, service, and employment and due to a condition or conditions
of such occupation or employment is caused to or suffered by any
workman engaged therein, in all cases in which such injury or death
of such employee shall not have been caused by the negligence of
the employee killed or injured, then the employer of such employee
shall be liable in damages to the employee injured, or, in case
death ensues, to the personal representative of the deceased for
the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and children of such
employee, and, if none, then to such employe's parents, and, if
none, then to the next of kin dependent upon such employee, and if
none, then to his personal representative for the benefit of the
estate of the deceased."
Section 7 requires that questions of contributory negligence and
assumption of risk shall be left to the jury. The full text of the
act is in the margin. [
Footnote
1]
Page 250 U. S. 444
Likewise, the legislature enacted a Compulsory Compensation Law,
approved June 8, 1912, applicable to workmen
Page 250 U. S. 445
in the same occupations as those declared hazardous by the
Employers' Liability Law (c, 14, Laws of Ariz.Spec.Sess.1912, p.
23).
Page 250 U. S. 446
Material portions of it are in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 250 U. S. 447
In
Consolidated Arizona Smelting Co. v. Ujack, (1914)
15 Ariz. 382, 384, the supreme court declared:
"Under the laws of Arizona, an employee who is injured in the
course of his employment has open to him three avenues of redress,
any one of which he may pursue according to the facts of his case.
They are: (1) the common law liability relieved of the fellow
servant defense and in which the defenses of contributory
negligence and assumption of risk are questions to be left to the
jury. Const. secs. 4, 5, art. 18; (2) employers' liability law,
which applies to hazardous occupations where the injury or death is
not caused by his own negligence. Const. sec. 7, art. 18; (3) the
compulsory compensation law, applicable to especially dangerous
occupations, by which he may recover compensation without fault
upon the part of the employer. Const. sec 8, art. 18."
In
Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co. v. Mendez, (July
2, 1917) 19 Ariz. 151, 157, the supreme court specifically held
that the Employers' Liability Law does not conflict with the
Fourteenth Amendment, and, among other things, said:
"That the liability statute must
Page 250 U. S. 448
be construed as one creating a liability for accidents resulting
in injuries to the workmen engaged in hazardous occupations due to
the risks and hazards inherent in such occupations, without regard
to the negligence of the employer, as such negligence is understood
in the common law of liability; in other words, such statute
creates a liability for accident arising from the risks and hazards
inherent in the occupation without regard to the negligence or
fault of the employer. . . . In other words, this statute creates a
liability of the master to damages suffered from any accident
befalling his servant while engaged in the performance of duties in
dangerous occupations without requiring the negligence of the
master to be shown as an element of the right to recover, and it
likewise takes away from the master his common law right of defense
of assumption of ordinary risk by the servant, and leaves to the
master the right to defend upon the grounds that the servant
assumed the ordinary risks, other than risks inherent in the
occupation."
This opinion was reaffirmed in
Superior & Pittsburg
Copper Co. v. Tomich, (July 2, 1917) 19 Ariz. 182.
In
Arizona Copper Co. v. Burciaga, (1918) 177 P. 29,
31, 32, 33, the supreme court said:
"As clearly intimated by this Court in
Inspiration
Consolidated Copper Co. v. Mendez, 19 Ariz. 151, 166 P. 278,
1183, the Employers' Liability Law is designed to give a right of
action to the employee injured by accident occurring from risks and
hazards inherent in the occupation and without regard to the
negligence on the part of the employer. Such is the clear import of
the said Employers' Liability Law. . . ."
"The liability incurred by the employer from a personal injury
sustained by his employee from an accident arising out of and in
the course of labor, service, and employment in hazardous
occupations specified in the statute, and due to a condition or
conditions of such occupation
Page 250 U. S. 449
or employment, if such shall not have been caused from the
negligence of such employee, is such an amount as will compensate
such employee for the injuries sustained by him directly
attributable to such accident. . . . 'Liable in damages,' as used
in paragraph 3158, c. 6, of title 14, Employers' Liability Law,
Rev.Stats. of Ariz.1913, has reference to and means that the
employer becomes obligated to pay to the employee injured in an
accident while engaged in an occupation declared hazardous,
occurring without fault of the employer, all loss to the employee
which is actually caused by the accident and the amount of which is
susceptible of ascertainment. . . . Of course, mental and physical
suffering experienced by the employee injured, proximately
resulting from the accident, the reasonable value of working time
lost by the employee, necessary expenditures for the treatment of
injuries, and compensation for the employee's diminished earning
power directly resulting from the injury, and perhaps other results
causing direct loss, are matters of actual loss, and as such
recoverable."
From the foregoing, it appears that we have for consideration a
statute which undertakes, in the absence of fault, to impose upon
all employers (individual and corporate) engaged in enterprises
essential to the public welfare, not subject to prohibition by the
state, and often not attended by any extraordinary hazard, an
unlimited liability to employees for damages resulting from
accidental injuries -- including physical and mental pain -- which
may be recovered by the injured party or his administrator for
benefit of widow, children, parents, next of dependent kin, or the
estate. The individual who hires only one man and works by his side
is put on the same footing as a corporation which employs
thousands; no attention is given to probable ability to pay the
award; length of service is unimportant -- a minute seems enough;
wages contracted for bear no necessary relationship to what may be
recovered;
Page 250 U. S. 450
and a single accident which he was powerless to prevent or
provide against may pauperize the employer. And, by reason of
existing constitutional and statutory provisions, an injured
workman may claim under this act or under the Compensation Law or
according to the common law materially modified in his favor by
exclusion of the fellow-servant rule and otherwise. On the other
hand, while the employer is declared subject to new, uncertain, and
greatly enlarged liability notwithstanding the utmost care, nothing
has been granted him in return.
In such circumstances, would enforcement of the challenged
statute deprive employers of rights protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment? Plainly, I think, nothing short of an affirmative answer
is compatible with well defined constitutional guaranties.
Of course, the Fourteenth Amendment was never intended to render
immutable any particular rule of law, nor did it by fixation
immortalize prevailing doctrines concerning legal rights and
liabilities. Orderly and rational progress was not forestalled.
Holden v. Hardy, 169 U. S. 366,
169 U. S. 387.
But it did strip the states of all power to deprive any person of
life, liberty or property by arbitrary or oppressive action -- such
action is never due process of law.
In the last analysis, it is for us to determine what is
arbitrary or oppressive upon consideration of the natural and
inherent principles of practical justice which lie at the base of
our traditional jurisprudence and inspirit our Constitution. A
legislative declaration of reasonableness is not conclusive; no
more so is popular approval -- otherwise, constitutional
inhibitions would be futile. And plainly, I think, the individual's
fundamental rights are not proper subjects for experimentation;
they ought not to be sacrificed to questionable theorization.
Until now, I had supposed that a man's liberty and property --
with their essential incidents -- were under the
Page 250 U. S. 451
protection of our charter, and not subordinate to whims or
caprices or fanciful ideas of those who happen for the day to
constitute the legislative majority. The contrary doctrine is
revolutionary, and leads straight towards destruction of our well
tried and successful system of government. Perhaps another system
may be better -- I do not happen to think so -- but it is the duty
of the courts to uphold the old one unless and until superseded
through orderly methods.
After great consideration, in
Adair v. United States,
208 U. S. 161, and
Coppage v. Kansas, 236 U. S. 1, this
Court declared that the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees to both
employer and employee the liberty of entering into contracts for
service subject only to reasonable restrictions. "The principle is
fundamental and vital."
In the first case, an act of Congress prohibiting interstate
carriers from requiring one seeking employment, as a condition of
such employment, to enter into an agreement not to become or remain
a member of a labor organization was declared in conflict with the
Fifth Amendment. In
Coppage v. Kansas, a state statute
which declared it unlawful to require one to agree not to be a
member of a labor association as a condition of securing employment
was held invalid under the Fourteenth Amendment, and we said:
"An interference with this liberty so serious as that now under
consideration, and so disturbing of equality of right, must be
deemed to be arbitrary unless it be supportable as a reasonable
exercise of the police power of the state."
In
Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S. 33,
239 U. S. 41, an
Arizona statute prohibiting employment of aliens except under
certain conditions was struck down. We there said:
"It requires no argument to show that the right to work for a
living in the common occupations of the community is of the very
essence of the personal freedom and opportunity that it was the
purpose of the [Fourteenth] Amendment to secure."
The right to employ and the right to labor are correlative
--
Page 250 U. S. 452
neither can be destroyed nor unduly hindered without impairing
the other. The restrictions imposed by the act of Congress struck
down in the
Adair case, by the Kansas statute declared
invalid in the
Coppage case, and by the Arizona statute
held inoperative in the
Truax case, viewed as practical
matters, seem rather trivial in comparison with the burden laid on
employers by the statute before us. And the grounds suggested to
support it really amount in substance to asserting that the
legislature has power to protect society against the consequences
of accidental injuries, and therefore it may impose the loss
resulting therefrom upon those wholly without fault who have
afforded others welcomed opportunities to earn an honest living
under unobjectionable conditions. As a measure to stifle
enterprise, produce discontent, strife, idleness, and pauperism,
the outlook for the enactment seems much too good.
In
New York Central R. Co. v. White, 243 U.
S. 188, and
Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
243 U. S. 219, as
I had supposed for reasons definitely pointed out, we held the
challenged statutes not in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment
although they imposed liability without fault and introduced a plan
for compensating workmen unknown to the common law. The elements of
those statutes regarded as adequate to save their validity we
specified; if such characteristics had not been found, the result
necessarily would have been otherwise, unless we were merely
indulging in harmful chatter.
Here, without fault, the statute in question imposes liability
in some aspects more onerous than either the New York or Washington
law prescribed, and the grounds upon which we sustained those
statutes are wholly lacking. The employer is not exempted from any
liability formerly imposed; he is given no
quid pro quo
for his new burdens; the common law rules have been set aside
without a reasonably just substitute; the employee is relieved
from
Page 250 U. S. 453
consequences of ordinary risks of the occupation, and these are
imposed upon the employer without defined limit to possible
recovery which may ultimately go to nondependents, distant
relatives, or, by escheat, to the state; "the act bears no fair
indication of a just settlement of a difficult problem affecting
one of the most important of social relations" -- on the contrary,
it will probably intensify the difficulties.
The liability is not restricted to the pecuniary loss of a
disabled employee or those entitled to look to him for support, but
includes compensation for physical and mental pain and suffering; a
recovery resulting in bankruptcy to an employer may benefit only a
distant relative, financially independent; the prescribed
responsibility is not
"to contribute reasonable amounts according to a reasonable and
definite scale by way of compensation for the loss of earning power
arising from accidental injuries,"
but is unlimited, unavoidable by any care, incapable of fairly
definite estimation in advance, and enforceable by litigation
probably acrimonious, long drawn out, and expensive. While the
statute is inattentive to the employee's fault, it permits recovery
in excess of the employee's pecuniary misfortune, and provides for
compensation not general, but sporadic, uncertain, conjectural,
delayed, indefinite as to amount, and not distributed over such
long period as to afford actual protection against loss or lessened
earning capacity with insurance to society against pauperism,
etc.
I am unable to see any rational basis for saying that the act is
a proper exercise of the state's police power. It is unreasonable
and oppressive upon both employer and employee; to permit its
enforcement will impair fundamental rights solemnly guaranteed by
our Constitution, and heretofore, as I think, respected and
enforced.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE VAN
DEVANTER concur in this opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
Laws of Arizona 1912, c. 89, p. 491; Rev.Stats. Ariz. Civil Code
1913, pars. 3153-3162, p. 1051.
"Section 1. That this act is and shall be declared to be an
Employers' Liability Law as prescribed in § 7 of article XVIII
of the state constitution."
"Sec. 2. That to protect the safety of employees in all
hazardous occupations in mining, smelting, manufacturing, railroad,
or street railway, transportation or any other industry, as
provided in said Sec. 7 of Article XVIII of the state constitution,
any employer, whether individual, association, or corporation,
shall be liable for the death or injury, caused by any accident due
to a condition or conditions of such occupation, of any employee in
the service of such employer in such hazardous occupation, in all
cases in which such death or injury of such employee shall not have
been caused by the negligence of the employee killed or
injured."
"Sec. 3. The labor and services of workmen at manual and
mechanical labor, in the employment of any person, firm,
association, company, or corporation, in the occupations enumerated
in Sec. 4 of this Act are hereby declared and determined to be
service in a hazardous occupation within the meaning of the terms
of Sec. 2 of this Act."
"By reason of the nature and conditions of, and the means used
and provided for doing the work in, said occupations, such service
is especially dangerous and hazardous to the workmen therein
because of risks and hazards which are inherent in such occupations
and which are unavoidable by the workmen therein."
"Sec. 4. The occupations hereby declared and determined to be
hazardous within the meaning of this act are as follows:"
"1. The operation of steam railroads, electrical railroads,
street railroads, by locomotives, engines trains, motors, or cars
of any kind propelled by steam, electricity, cable or other
mechanical power, including the construction, use, or repair of
machinery, plant, tracks, switches, bridges, roadbeds upon, over,
and by which such railway business is operated."
"2. All work when making, using, or necessitating dangerous
proximity to gunpowder, blasting powder, dynamite, compressed air,
or any other explosive."
"3. The erection or demolition of any bridge, building, or
structure in which there is, or in which the plans and
specifications require, iron or steel frame work."
"4. The operation of all elevators, elevating machines or
derricks or hoisting apparatus used within or on the outside of any
bridge, building, or other structure for conveying materials in
connection with the erection or demolition of such bridge, building
or structure."
"5. All work on ladders or scaffolds of any kind elevated
twenty(20) feet or more above the ground or floor beneath in the
erection, construction, repair, painting, or alteration of any
building, bridge, structure, or other work in which the same are
used."
"6. All work of construction, operation, alteration, or repair
where wires, cables, switchboards, or other apparatus or machinery
are in use charged with electrical current."
"7. All work in the construction, alteration, or repair of pole
lines for telegraph, telephone or other purposes."
"8. All work in or about quarries, open pits, open cuts, mines,
ore reduction works and smelters."
"9. All work in the construction and repair of tunnels, subways
and viaducts."
"10. All work in mills, shops, works, yards, plants and
factories where steam, electricity, or any other mechanical power
is used to operate machinery and appliances in and about such
premises."
"Sec. 5. Every employer, whether individual, firm, association,
company or corporation employing workmen in such occupation, of
itself or through an agent, shall by rules, regulations, or
instructions inform all employees in such occupations as to the
duties and restrictions of their employment to the end of
protecting the safety of employees in such employment."
"Sec. 6. When, in the course of work in any of the employments
or occupations enumerated in Sec. 4 of this act, personal injury or
death by any accident arising out of and in the course of such
labor, service, and employment, and due to a condition or
conditions of such occupation or employment, is caused to or
suffered by any workman engaged therein, in all cases in which such
injury or death of such employee shall not have been caused by the
negligence of the employee killed or injured, then the employer of
such employee shall be liable in damages to employee injured, or,
in case death ensues, to the personal representative of the
deceased for the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and
children of such employee, and, if none, then to such employee's
parents, and, if none, then to the next of kin dependent upon such
employee, and if none, then to his personal representative for the
benefit of the estate of the deceased."
"Sec. 7. In all actions hereafter brought against any such
employer under or by virtue of any of the provisions of this act to
recover damages for personal injuries to any employee, or where
such injuries have resulted in his death, the question whether the
employee may have been guilty of contributory negligence or has
assumed the risk shall be a question of fact and shall at all times
be left to the jury, as provided in Sec. 5 of Article XVIII of the
state constitution."
"Sec. 8. That any contract, rule, regulation, or device
whatsoever the purpose or intent of which shall be to enable any
employer to exempt himself or itself from any liability created by
this act shall to that extent be void: Provided that, in any action
brought against any such employer under or by virtue of any of the
provisions of this Act, such employer may set off therein any sum
it has contributed or paid to any insurance, relief benefit, or
indemnity or that it may have paid to the injured employee or his
personal representative on account of the injury or death for which
said action was brought."
"Sec. 9. In all actions for damages brought under the provisions
of this Act, if the plaintiff be successful in obtaining judgment,
and if the defendant appeals to a higher court, and if the
plaintiff in the lower court be again successful, and the judgment
of the lower court is sustained by the higher court or courts, then
and in that event the plaintiff shall have added to the amount of
such judgment by such higher court or courts, interest at the rate
of 12 percent per annum on the amount of such judgment from the
date of the filing of the suit in the first instance until he full
amount of such judgment is paid."
"Sec. 10. No action shall be maintained under this act unless
commenced within two years from the day the cause of action
accrued."
"Sec. 11. All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are
hereby repealed."
"WHEREAS the state constitution commands the enactment of an
Employers' Liability law by the legislature at its first session;
and"
"WHEREAS this act being said Employers' Liability law is
immediately necessary for the preservation of the public peace,
health and safety, an emergency is hereby declared to exist, and
this act shall be in full force and effect from and after its
passage and its approval by the Governor, and is hereby exempt from
the operation of the referendum provision of the state
constitution."
[
Footnote 2]
Workmen's Compulsory Compensation Law.
Sec. 2. That compensation graduated according to average
earnings and limited to $4,000
"shall be paid by his employer to any workman engaged in any
employment declared and determined . . . to be especially
dangerous, whether said employer be a person, firm, association,
company, or corporation, if in the course of the employment of said
employee personal injury thereto from any accident arising out of
and in the course of such employment is caused in whole or in part.
or is contributed to by a necessary risk or danger of such
employment or a necessary risk or danger inherent in the nature
thereof, or by failure of such employer, or any of his or its
officers, agents, or employee or employees, to exercise due care or
to comply with any law affecting such employment."
"Sec. 4. In case such employee or his personal representative
shall refuse to settle for such compensation (as provided in Sec. 8
of Article XVIII of the state constitution) and chooses to retain
the right to sue said employer (as provided in any law provided for
in Sec. 7, Article XVIII of the state constitution), he may so
refuse to settle, and may retain said right."
"Sec. 6. The common law doctrine of no liability without fault
is hereby declared and determined to be abrogated in Arizona as far
as it shall be sought to be applied to the accidents hereinbefore
mentioned."
"Sec. 14. . . . Provided, if, after the accident, either the
employer or the workman shall refuse to make or accept compensation
under this act or to proceed under or rely upon the provisions
hereof for relief, then the other may pursue his remedy or make his
defense under other existing statutes, the state constitution, or
the common law, except as herein provided, as his rights may at the
time exist. Any suit brought by the workman for a recovery shall be
held as an election to pursue such remedy exclusively."