صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

CAL

THE LAW

OF

COMPENSATION AND INSURANCE

FOR

INJURIES TO WORKMEN

CHAPTER I.

DISTINCTIONS BETWEEN THE COMMON LAW, EMPLOYER'S LIABILITY LAWS, WORKMEN'S INDUSTRIAL INSURANCE LAWS, AND WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION LAWS AS REMEDIES FOR COMPENSATING WORKMEN INJURED IN THE DUE COURSE OF THEIR EMPLOYMENT.

Sec.

1. The common law system of employer's liability prior to the employer's liability and workmen's compensation and insurance laws.

2. The system of employer's liability prior to the workmen's insurance and compensation acts.

Sec.

3. The distinguishing characteristics of employer's liability laws.

4. The modern conception of the employer's liability.

5. The distinguishing characteristics of workmen's compensation acts.

6. The distinguishing characteristics of workmen's industrial insurance laws.

§ 1. The common law system of employer's liability, prior to the liability, and compensation and insurance laws. Today, at common law, the employer's duty to his employé is to use ordinary and reasonable care for the safety of his employé while he is performing his work. That duty includes:

(a) The duty to provide a reasonably safe place to work.

[ocr errors]

(b) The duty to provide reasonably safe tools and appliances.

(c) The duty of being reasonably careful in hiring agents and servants fit for work they are to do. (d) The duty of providing suitable and reasonable rules for carrying on the work.

(e) The duty to warn and instruct youthful and inexperienced servants as to the dangers of the em

ployment.

If a workman be injured by reason of the failure of these duties he may recover from his employer full compensation for his injuries, the amount of damages to be determined by a jury in the usual legal proceedings. Such a right of action is based upon the negligence or fault of the employer. This is the fundamental principle of the present common-law system brought down from the common law of England and which no statute of States or the Federal Government had changed up to the time of the enactment of compensation acts.

The employer has, however, certain defenses to any action brought at common law, as it now exists, by an employé who has been injured in the due course of his employment, and which constitute a special body of socalled judge made law.

(1) THE DEFENSE OF CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE.

Contributory negligence is the negligence of a servant which is a contributing and proximate cause of his injury, and the burden is generally upon the employé in any action for compensation for injuries received to prove not only the negligence of the employer, but that he himself was exercising ordinary care and was free from negligence, directly contributing to the injury.1

1 The reasons for this rule are thus stated by Judge Thompson: "The rule that contributory negligence bars a recovery is said to be founded on (1) the mutuality of the wrong; (2) the impolicy

« السابقةمتابعة »