
    The American Woodenware Manufacturing Company v. Schorling.
    
      Construction of amendments to constitution or statutes—Workmen’s Compensation and Industrial Commission Acts — Health and safety of employes — Purpose and intent of Sections 15 and 16 of act—•Meaning of "lawful requirement in Section 35, Article II, Constitution, 1912 — And Section 29, Workmen’s Compensation Act — Liability of employer within provisions of Section 25, Industrial Commission Act — Right of employe to maintain action.
    
    1. In the construction of amendments to the constitution or to statutes, the body enacting the amendment will be presumed to have had in mind existing constitutional or statutory provisions and their judicial construction touching the subject dealt with.
    2. The Industrial Commission Act (103.0. L., 95) provides for the creation of an administrative board with power to supervise all places of employment, to 1 prescribe general rules and requirements concerning all employments and places of employment and particular orders and requirements for particular employers and places of employment, to secure the lives, health, safety and welfare of every employe in such employments, and every frequenter of such places of employment. The purpose and intent of Sections 15 and 16 of the act was to bring all employers within the scope of the jurisdiction and authority of the commission and to impose on them the obligation to comply with the orders and requirements of the commission when duly made. The provisions of Sections 15 and 16 are not the lawful requirements referred to by, and within the meaning of, Section 35, Article II of the Constitution.
    3. The term “lawful requirement,” as used in Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, and Section 29 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (103 O. L., 84), does not include a general course of conduct, or those general duties and obligations of care and caution which rest upon employers and employes, and all other members of the community, for the protection of life, health and safety.
    4. By the provisions of Section 25 of the Industrial Commission Act an order made by the industrial commission to employers generally or to a particular employer, with reference to safe employment or place of employment, is a lawful requirement (until altered in the manner provided for in the act), for failure to comply with which, or with any statute or municipal ordinance prescribing means or methods required to be used to protect the lives, .health, safety and welfare of employes, the employer under the proviso contained in Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, and Section 29 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, is liable to an employe injured by reason of such failure.
    (No. 15134
    Decided May 22, 1917.)
    Error to the Court of Appeals of Lucas county.
    Fred W. Schorling was an employe of The American Woodenware Manufacturing Company, and on January 7, 1914, sustained an injury in the course of his employment. It is shown by the pleadings that the company, prior to that date, as an employer of more than five men, had paid the premium to the state insurance fund provided for by the Workmen’s Compensation Act.
    Schorling began an action against the company in the court of common pleas of Lucas county to recover for the damages sustained. In his petition the plaintiff alleges that he was employed by the defendant a short time prior to the 7th day of January, 1914, as an operator on a ripsaw in one of the rooms of its factory; that on said 7th day of January, 1914, he was ordered by the foreman of the defendant, who had authority over him, and whose name is to plaintiff unknown, to leave his place of employment at the ripsaw and go to another part of said factory and assist other employes in pushing a load of lumber which was upon a small car operated upon tracks in said factory; that plaintiff endeavored to obey said order and did go to the place where said loaded car of lumber was, and as plaintiff arrived at said place, and was about to take the position directed by said foreman for him to take, said car of lumber was thrown or fell over 'upon plaintiff, burying plaintiff beneath said lumber; and that plaintiff was beneath said lumber for about one-half hour before he could be extricated therefrom.
    Plaintiff says that defendant negligently and carelessly required, and permitted, and ordered, and suffered said plaintiff to go into the place of employment above mentioned, and that said place of employment, as defendant well knew, was not safe; that defendant negligently and carelessly failed to furnish, provide and use safety devices and safeguards for the purpose of preventing said lumber falling; and negligently and carelessly failed and neglected to use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render said employment, and the place of employment above mentioned, safe; and negligently and carelessly failed to do other things reasonably necessary to protect the safety and welfare of plaintiff; and carelessly and negligently maintained said place of employment in a condition that was not safe; and carelessly and negligently furnished employment to plaintiff and required plaintiff to enter upon work which was not safe for plaintiff; and carelessly and negligently furnished said place of employment, and said place of employment was not safe for the plaintiff; and carelessly and negligently failed to adopt and use methods of transporting said lumber and handling said lumber which were reasonably adequate to render said employment of plaintiff and said place of employment safe, and failed and neglected to do other things reasonably necessary’ to protect the safety and welfare of plaintiff; and carelessly and negligently failed to comply with the lawful requirements for the protection of the lives and safety of employes, and especially of plaintiff, as set forth in Sections 15 and 16 of an act creating the Industrial Commission of Ohio, found in 103 Ohio Laws, page 95.
    And plaintiff avers that the defendant carelessly and negligently piled lumber to the amount of about 3,000 feet upon a small, narrow car operated upon aforementioned track, and that said lumber was so piled that it overhung said car and said track on both sides such a great distance that slight force would and did cause said pile of lumber to be overbalanced; and carelessly and negligently caused said lumber to be piled on said car to the height of 10 or 12 feet, so that the center of gravity of said car could not be maintained; and negligently and carelessly so constructed said load upon said car that the center of gravity could not be maintained when said car was being moved; and that defendant was further careless and negligent and violated said laws of Ohio above mentioned in that the track upon which said car was run was defective and uneven and the joints thereof had been allowed to get out of repair. Plaintiff further says that all the acts of negligence above mentioned were caused by the failure of the defendant to comply with the lawful requirements of the state of Ohio for the lives and safety of employes and especially of plaintiff.
    A demurrer to the petition was overruled. The answer contained a general denial, and in a second defense defendant set forth its compliance with the requirements of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, the payment into the state insurance fund of the amount of premium required by the state liability board of awards, and the posting in conspicuous places in and about said factory of printed notices to its employes to that effect.
    Plaintiff in his reply ádmitted the allegations concerning the payment of the premiums as alleged and the posting of notices.
    On the trial a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was rendered by the jury. A motion by the defendant was made for a judgment on the pleadings notwithstanding the verdict, which was overruled and judgment entered for the plaintiff.
    The court of appeals affirmed the judgment, and these proceedings are brought to reverse the judgments of the courts below.
    
      Mr. S. S. Burtsfield and Messrs. Taber & Daniells, for plaintiff in error.
    
      Mr. Joseph McGhee, attorney general; Mr. Frank Davis, Jr., and Mr. Wm. J. Ford, for the Industrial Commission of Ohio.
    
      Mr. W. H. McLellan, Jr.; Mr. A. F. Hanson and Mr. Edmond H. Moore, for defendant in error.
   Johnson, J.

The question presented is, Was the plaintiff entitled to maintain his action for negligence against the defendant, on the grounds set forth in the petition, notwithstanding the fact that the defendant had complied with the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, as an employer of five or more men regularly in its business, and had paid the required premiums into the state insurance fund?

The act was compulsory on employers, and was passed pursuant to the grant of power contained in Section 35 of Article II of the Constitution adopted in September, 1912, the pertinent portion of which is as follows: “For the purpose of providing compensation to workmen and their dependents, for death, injuries or occupational disease, occasioned in the course of such workmen’s employment, laws may be passéd establishing a state fund to be created by compulsory contribution thereto by employers, and administered by the state determining the terms and conditions upon which payment shall be made therefrom, and taking away any or all rights of action or defenses from employes and employers; but no right of action shall be taken away from any employe when the injury, disease or death arises from failure of the employer to comply with any lawful requirement for the protection of the lives, health and safety of employes.”

It is evident that the paramount purpose of this constitutional amendment was to give authority to the legislature to pass a compulsory act for the establishment of a state insurance fund to be administered by the state, to which employers should be compelled to contribute; and also to take away any or all rights of action or defenses from- employes or employers, with the exception that “no right of action shall be taken away from any employe when the injury, disease or death arises from failure of the employer to comply with any lawful requirement for the protection of the lives, health and safety of employes.” Defendant in error contends that the cause of action set out in his petition is preserved to him by the exception stated, and cannot be taken away.

What is the meaning of the term “lawful requirement” as used in the amendment? Does it comprehend every duty which an employer is under to protect the lives, health and safety of his employes, whether the duty arose because of common-law principles or because of a requirement imposed by some legal authority? What was the meaning which the constitutional convention intended should be given to this term “lawful requirement?”

One of the well-settled rules to be followed in the interpretation of an amendment such as here involved is that the body adopting the amendment will be presumed to have had in mind existing statutes, and their judicial construction, touching the subjects dealt with; and courts will view and interpret the words used as they were used and interpreted in the situation existing at the time of the amendment. At the time this amendment was adopted by the convention in May, 1912, the act of May 31, 1911 (which was the original Workmen’s Compensation Law), was in force. Its validity had been upheld by this court in February, 1912, in the case of The State, ex rel. Yaple, v. Creamer, Treas., 85 Ohio St., 349.

It yras provided by Section 21-2 of that act that where a personal injury was suffered by an employe, or when death resulted to an employe from personal injuries while in the employ of an employer in the course of employment, and such employer had paid into the state insurance fund the premium provided in the act, and in case such injury had arisen from the wilful act of such employer or any of the employer’s officers or agents or from the failure of such employer or his agents to comply with any municipal ordinance or lawful order of any duly authorized officer, or any statute for the protection of the life or safety of employes, then in such event nothing in the act contained should affect the civil liability of such employer. It will be observed that in the original act the elements which should constitute lawful requirements for the protection of the life or safety of employes were specifically enumerated.

In reference to the provision just referred to, it is said in The State, ex rel. Yaple, v. Creamer, Treas., supra, at page 393: “Under Section 21-2 if the parties are operating under the act and the employe is injured or killed, and the injury arose from the wilful act of his employer, his officer or agent, or from failure of the employer or agent to comply with legal requirements, as to safety of employes, then the injured employe or his legal representative has his option to claim under the act or sue in court for damages.”

In view of this condition and history it would seem to be clear that when the constitutional convention-had Section 35, Article II, under consideration, which should confer power on the legislature to take away any or all rights of action or defenses from employes or employers, it was following the legislative policy of the state as theretofore declared and as at that time being enforced, and that it intended to include in such provision the exception that no right of action should be taken away from an employe when the injury arose from the wilful acts of his employer, or from his failure to comply with lawful requirements for the protection of employes, as defined by the compensation law then in force; and, further, that the convention adopted a phrase which should comprehend the enumerated elements of lawful requirements found in that law, the phrase being substantially the one used by the court.

Let us view Section 35 from another angle. It is elementary that, if possible, in construing such an instrument as here being examined, effect should be given to every part and every word, and that in the absence of a clear reason to the contrary no part of a provision should be treated as superfluous. The court will avoid any construction which renders a provision meaningless or inoperative. Not only this, but in construing a particular phrase reference should be had to other provisions in the same section in order to ascertain the intention of the enacting body. If the failure to comply “with a lawful requirement” includes an act which was actionable negligence simply because of the rules of common law, then the portion of the section which authorizes the taking away of any or all rights of action or defenses of employes and employers would be practically meaningless and inoperative. We should be holding that embodied in the same section was power to take away all rights of actions or defenses of employes and employers, and also a practical denial of power to take away any right of action.

As already stated, the legislature, pursuant to Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, passed a compulsory act, 103 Ohio Laws, 72. In this act the legislature took away the right of action -of the employe where the employer had paid the premium into the state insurance fund. By Section 23 of the act it is provided that employers who comply shall not be liable to respond in damages at common .law, or by statute, save as hereinafter provided, etc., and by Section 29 it is provided that when an employe of an employer who has paid into the state insurance fund the premium provided for in the act is injured in the course of his employment, and such injury has arisen from the wilful act of such employer, or from his failure to comply with anv lawful requirement for the protection of the lives and safety of employes, then in such event nothing in the act contained shall affect the civil liability of such employer. Section 29 is a substantial reenactment of Section 21-2 of the original law (102 O. L., 524), except that it adopts the phrase used by the constitutional convention in Section 35, Article II, which condensed and comprehended the elements of lawful requirements which were enumerated in the original act. Section 29 was amended in 104 Ohio Laws, 193, so as to provide that the term “wilful act” shall be construed to mean an “act done knowingly and purposely with the direct object of injuring another.”

Here again we meet a distinct conflict between different provisions in the same section, if the construction above referred to be correct. We have a provision preserving to the employe the right to sue his employer for an injury which has arisen from the wilful act of the employer, provided the wilful act was “done knowingly and purposely with the direct object of injuring him,” while in the same sentence we have a provision that the employe may sue his employer for simple negligence in failing to provide for his safety, as such negligence might be ascertained and fixed by the rules of the common law, and without reference to whether it was wilful or unintentional — such as the falling of the lumber alleged to be negligently piled in this case.

We think it clear that no such result was intended in the adoption of the amendment to the constitution referred to.

But it is vigorously insisted by counsel for defendant in error that even if the view of the intent and meaning of Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, and of the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, which we have indicated, is correct, still the provisions of Sections 15 and 16 of the Industrial Commission Act, passed March 12, 1913 (103 O. L., 95), raise a different rule of liability between the employer and employe than that provided for by the compensation act, and constitute “lawful requirements,” for the violation of any of which the employe is entitled to maintain his action. Of course if there is in those sections, or in any legislative act, a lawful requirement within the meaning of Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, the employe’s right of action for its violation is preserved by that provision.

The Industrial Commission Act was passed at the same session of the legislature at which the Workmen’s Compensation Act was passed, and less than a month later, March 12, 1913, 103 O. L., 95.

In obedience to constitutional requirement its subject is clearly expressed in its title, viz.: “An act creating the industrial commission of Ohio, superseding the state liability board of awards, abolishing the departments of commissioner of labor statistics, chief inspector of mines, chief inspector of workshops and factories, chief examiner of steam engineers, board of boilers rules and state board of arbitration and conciliation, merging certain powers and duties of said departments in and transferring certain powers and duties of said departments to said industrial commission of Ohio, and granting such commission certain other powers,” etc.

It is clear that the purpose of this enactment was to create one single administrative board, which should perform the duties of the different officers and boards referred to. By Section 12 of the act it is provided that all of the duties of the state liability board of awards shall be performed by the industrial commission. Like provisions are contained in the act with reference to all of the other boards and officers named.

There is nothing in the Industrial Commission Act which indicates an intention of the legislature to enlarge or diminish the rights of employes and employers under the compensation act, which had then recently been passed. The Industrial Commission Act provided for an administrative agency with power to supervise all places of employment, to prescribe general rules concerning all employments, and particular directions and orders to particular employers and places of employment, in order that watch might be constantly kept of developing and changing conditions dictated by invention and progress in the industries of the state, and in order to secure the largest practicable degree of safety for employes and the public. Having passed out of the simple conditions of earlier times, government has been forced to meet the difficulties of new situations by the delegation of powers to agencies created by and controlled by the state.

Section 13 of the Industrial Commission Act defines the terms which are used in other sections and provisions of the act, and in paragraph 11 it is provided that “The terms 'safe,’ and 'safety,’ as applied to any employment or a place of employment shall mean such freedom from, danger to the life, health, safety or welfare of employes or frequenters as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit, including requirements as to the hours of labor with relation to the health and welfare of employes.” (The italics in this and following paragraphs are ours.)

Sections 15 and 16 are as follows:

“Section 15. Every employer shall furnish employment which shall be safe for the employes therein, and shall furnish a place of employment which shall be safe for the employes therein, and for frequenters thereof, and shall furnish and use safety devices and safeguards, and shall adopt and use methods and processes, follow and obey orders and prescribe hours of labor reasonably adequate to render such employment and places of employment safe, and shall do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety and welfare of such employes and frequenters.

“Section 16. No employer shall require, permit or suffer any employe to go or be in any employment or place of employment which is not safe, and no such employer shall fail to furnish, provide and use safety devices and safeguards, or fail to obey and follow orders or to adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render such employment and place of employment safe, and no employer shall fail or neglect to do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety and welfare of such employes or frequenters; and no such employer or other person shall hereafter construct or occupy or maintain any place of employment that is not safe.”

Then by Section 21 the commission is vested with the power and jurisdiction to have such supervision of every employment and place of employment and of every other building and establishment in this state as may be necessary adequately to enforce and administer all laws and all lawful orders requiring such employment and place of employment or building or establishment, to be safe, and requiring the protection of the life, health, safety and welfare of every employe in such employment or place of employment, and every frequenter of such place of employment, including the power to regulate the hours of labor of employes in such employments and places of employment, with regard to the health and welfare of such employes. By Section 22 it is given full power to investigate every employment and place of employment and make and enforce every reasonable, general and special order necessary to bring about and maintain safety in accordance with the manner provided in the act.

These provisions were necessary to meet the new and ever-varying industrial conditions above pointed out. They are thus enabled to bring about a reduction of the number of accidents and preserve the safety of employes. If results in a particular instance require, the commission can increase the premiums to be paid by the employer,, and can prescribe means and methods of increased safety and caution, for the violation of which the employer is liable to an injured employe. Section 25 provides that all orders of the commission in conformity with law shall be in force and shall be prima facie reasonable and lawful until set aside in an action brought for that purpose under Section 41 of the act, or until altered by the commission. Section 18 requires every employer to furnish the commission with full information and answers to all questions submitted by the commission touching matters connected with the provisions of the act. Paragraph 7 of Section 13 provides that the term “order” shall mean and include any decision, rule, regulation, direction, “requirement,” or standard of the commission, or any other determination arrived at or decision made by such commission.

When the provisions of Sections 13, 15, 16, 18, 21, 22 and 25 are considered together in the light of the declared purpose of the enactment creating the industrial commission, we think it clear that the purpose and the effect of Sections 15 and 16 was to bring all employers within the scope of the jurisdiction and authority of the commission, and to impose upon them the obligation to comply with the orders and requirements of the commission when duly made. Section 15 contains the express provision that “Every employer shall * * * follow and obey orders,” etc., and Section 16 provides that “No employer shall * * * fail to obey and follow orders.”

An employer might well have claimed that without the provisions of Sections 15 and 16 there was no affirmative obligation resting on him to comply with any other order of the commission than one which should require him to conform to the proyisions of statutes or ordinances which specifically define things and duties to be performed.

Having by the cognate sections of the statute conferred upon the commission the power to make the inquiries, investigations and orders referred to with reference to safe exployment, Sections 15 and 16 impose the liability on employers to observe such orders. Such an order, by the provisions of Section 25, becomes a lawful requirement, for the violation of which the employer, under the proviso contained in Section 29 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and under Section 35 of Article II of the Constitution, would be liable to the employe if injured by reason of such violation.

The very fact that the legislature provided by Section 25 that an ordér (which by paragraph 7 means requirement) of the commission shall be lawful is sufficient of itself to show the legislative intent. The expression in Section 25, of this definite means of declaring a lawful requirement, excludes the view that the general, provisions in question were to be so construed. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. Otherwise how vain, misleading and hurtful the explicit and careful provisions of Section 25 and Sections 21 and 22 would be!

The commission might through its authorized officials visit an industrial plant and after thorough inspection and investigation make an order requiring certain specific precautions to be taken and safeguards to be provided, all of which it is expressly empowered and directed to do by the terms of the act here involved, yet if an injury was sustained by an employe, after the employer had fully complied with the order, and had incurred expenses, arranged his plant and conducted his business with reference thereto, the injured employe could assert in an action against him that the precaution ordered by the commission was not reasonable and safe and did not meet the requirements of Sections 15 and 16; that in fact his action had no relation to any order of the commission because his right of action rested upon the general terms of those sections to be determined as at common law. The employer would, in such case, be put upon his defense exactly as if the old common-law rule and the antiquated and unsatisfactory methods of dealing with accidents in industrial pursuits still prevailed, and as if no law had been passed and no effort made by the state to respond to the sentiment of the people, created by long and harsh experiences, that a more humane and satisfactory system should be erected. On the other hand, if the construction we have indicated be correct, then, when an order of the commission has been made and complied with, the injured workman will receive at once the compensation provided by the law out of the insurance fund. This could result only in doing justice between the parties, becaüse if the employer has complied with the orders of an impartial official commission, after having posted notice to the employe that he was proceeding under the law and subject to the commission’s order, he has done all that in justice should be required. But if he has failed to obey the order or requirement of the commission, made under these general provisions, or has failed to comply with the requirements of .any statute or ordinance defining safety devices or safeguards required to be used, he is by that act guilty of negligence per se and liable to the injured workman as provided in the act. The Variety Iron & Steel Works Co. v. Poak, 89 Ohio St, 297; C., H. & D. Rd. Co. v. Van Horne, 69 Fed. Rep., 139, and Narramore v. C., C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 96 Fed. Rep., 298.

It is significant that none of the many statutes which specifically define safety appliances and require their use were repealed when the Industrial Commission Act was passed. They would be superfluous under the construction of Sections 15 and 16 contended for here.

In the Poak case, and others above cited, the act which constituted the cause of action was the failure to do the specific thing laid down. The method of safety was not left open to be determined after the injury, but was fixed and known before the injury. Under the construction urged here the whole- question as to what constitutes a compliance with the requirement of safety would be left open to be determined after an injury, with all of the annoyances, delays, hostile relations and unsatisfactory results against which the state has sought to protect employes and employers by the enactment of the compensation law and the administration of the beneficent scheme which it provides. Moreover, the provisions of Section 43 make the law criminal in its nature. That section recites that “if any employer, employe or other person shall violate any provision of this act * * * or fail, neglect or refuse to obey any lawful order given or made by the commission * * * for each such violation, failure or refusal such employer or other person shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than one thousand dollars for the first offense and not less than one hundred nor- more than five thousand dollars for each subsequent offense.”

If the proper construction of Sections 15 and 16 is as urged, not only would the civil liabilities be asserted and determined as contended for in this case, but it would be the duty of the prosecuting attorneys to enforce the penal section; and all notwithstanding, and in utter disregard of, any action of the industrial commission in any given case. Full compliance by a defendant employer with the orders and requirements of the commission, which it is authorized by the statute to make and prescribe, would be no defense.

To the contention that an employer who has complied with the compensation law is entitled to some protection against suits for negligence as under the common law, in consideration for the premiums paid by him into the insurance fund, counsel for defendant in error reply that by the Ohio constitutional amendment the legislature was not obliged to take away any right of action — it was simply empowered to do so. This is true, but it is also true that the legislature was by the amendment not obliged to pass a compulsory law compelling employers to contribute to the fund for the benefit of employes. The same sentence and the same permissive phrase which granted the power to compel employers to contribute also granted the power “to take away any and all rights of action.” It is thus disclosed that there was contemplated one complete beneficial industrial scheme intended to result to the mutual advantage of employers and employes and thereby advance the general good of society, while at the same time keeping in mind and safeguarding the rights and securing the protection of the lives, health and safety of employes by the exception contained in the amendment.

We are convinced the term “lawful requirement,” as used in the constitutional amendment and the statutory provisions involved in this case, was not intended to and does not mean a general course of conduct, or those general duties and obligations of care and caution which flow from the relation of employer and employe, and which rest upon each member of the community for the protection of the others.

It is a well-settled rule in the construction of statutes that where possible such construction will be given as will not render them unconstitutional. In this case if the construction contended for should be held to be correct, we would encounter the question whether our statutes were thereby rendered invalid, as being in violation of - the Federal Constitution, because of the taking of the property of the employer, by compelling him to contribute to the state insurance fund, in violation of the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

In Matter of Jensen v. Southern Pacific Co., 215 N. Y., 514, the constitutionality of the compulsory workmen’s compensation law of that state was attacked. The law was passed after the constitution of New York had been amended, effective January 1, 1914. In the opinion, at page 523, the court say:

“We now come to perhaps the most important question in the case. Does the act violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States for taking property without due process of law?

“Much reliance is placed on the decision of this court in Ives v. South Buffalo Ry. Co. (201 N. Y. 271) 1 * * * It is urged that the reasons which constrained the court to declare the act involved in the Ives case unconstitutional are equally cogent when applied to the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first place it is to be observed that the two acts are essentially and fundamentally different. That involved in the Ives case made the employer liable in a suit for damages though without even imputable fault and regardless of the fault of the injured employee short of serious and willful misconduct. This act protects both employer and employee, the former from wasteful suits and extravagant verdicts, the latter from the expense, uncertainties and delays of litigation in all cases and from the certainty of defeat if unable to establish a case of actionable negligence. * * *

“Moreover, upon the' question whether an act offends against the Constitution of the United States the decisions of the United States Supreme Court are controlling. * * * In this case the mutual benefits are direct. Granted, that employers are compelled to insure and that there is in that sense a taking. They insure themselves and their employees from loss, not others. The payment of the required premiums exempts them from further liability. * * *

“A point was made on oral argument that the act was unconstitutional for depriving an employee injured by negligence imputable to the employer of a right of action for the wrong. Of course, the employer cannot be heard to urge the grievance of the employee * * * but exemption from further liability upon paying the required premium into the state fund is an essential element of the scheme, and if the act be unconstitutional as to the employee the employer would be deprived of that exemption and thus would be directly affected by the unconstitutionality of the act in that respect. It is not accurate to say that the employee is deprived of all remedy for a wrongful injury. He is given a remedy. To be sure, the compensation or recovery is limited, and that in a sense may possibly constitute a taking; but if so, it is his contribution to an insurance scheme designed for his benefit, and may be justified on precisely the same grounds as the contribution exacted of the employer has been. When he enters into the contract of employment, he is now assured of a definite compensation for an accidental injury occurring with or without fault imputable to the employer and is afforded a remedy, which is prompt, certain and inexpensive. In return for those benefits he is required to give up the doubtful privilege of having a jury assess his damages, a considerable part of which, if recovered at all after long delay, must go to pay expenses and lawyers’ fees.

“Moreover, the act does not deal with intentional wrongs but only with accidental injuries, and no account is taken of the presence or absence of negligence attributable to the employer.”

The constitutionality of the same New York law was recently upheld by the supreme court of the United States in New York Central Rd. Co. v. White, 243 U. S., 188, decided March 6, 1917. In its opinion the court summarize the provisions of the New York statute and say at page 194: “By section SO, each employer is required to secure compensation to his employees in one of the following ways: (1) by insuring and keeping insured the payment of such compensation in the state fund; or (2) through any stock corporation or mutual association authorized to transact the business of workmen’s compensation insurance in the State; or (3) ‘By furnishing satisfactory proof to the commission of his financial ability to pay such compensation for himself, in which case the commission may, in its discretion, require the deposit with the commission of securities of the kind prescribed in section 13 of the insurance law, in an amount to be determined by the commission, to secure his liability to pay the compensation provided in this chapter.’ If an employer fails to comply with this section, he is made liable to a penalty in an amount .equal to the pro rata premium that would have been payable for insurance in the state fund during the period of noncompliance; besides which, his injured employees or their dependents are at liberty to maintain an action for damages in the courts, as prescribed by section 11.”

These provisions are similar to those in the Ohio law.

The court further say at page 196: “The scheme of the act is so wide a departure from common-law standards respecting the responsibility of employer to employee that doubts naturally have been raised respecting its constitutional validity. The ádverse considerations urged or suggested in this case and in kindred cases submitted at the same time are: (a) that the employer’s property is taken without due process of law, because he is subjected to a liability for compensation without regard to any neglect or default on his part or on the part of any other person for whom he is responsible, and in spite of the fact that the injury may be solely attributable to the fault of the employee; (b) that the employee’s rights are interfered with, in that he is prevented from having compensation for injuries arising from the employer’s fault commensurate with the damages actually sustained, and is limited to the measure of compensation prescribed by the act; and (c) that both employer and employee are deprived of their liberty to acquire property by being prevented from making such agreement as they choose respecting the terms of the employment. * * *

“In considering the constitutional question, it is necessary to view the matter from the standpoint of the employee as well as from that of the employer. For, while plaintiff in error is an employer, and cannot succeed without showing that its rights as such are infringed * * * [citing cases] yet, as pointed out by the court of appeals in the Jensen Case, 215 N. Y. 526, the exemption from further liability is an essential part of the scheme, so that the statute if invalid as against the employee is invalid against the employer(Italics ours.)

On March 6, 1917, the same day on which New York Central Rd. Co. v. White, supra, was decided, the United States supreme court also decided the case of Mountain Timber Co. v. State of Washington, Id., 219. In that case the court likewise summarize the provisions of the statute of the state of Washington, point out that a state fund is maintained by compulsory compensation from employers, and state that the plaintiff in error is raising objections to the act, based upon the constitution of the United States.

In considering these objections, the court say at page 233:

“From this recital it will be clear that the fundamental purpose of the act is to abolish private rights of action for damages to employees in the hazardous industries (and in any other industry at the option of employer and employees), and to substitute a system of compensation to injured workmen and their dependents out of a public fund established and maintained by contributions required to be made by the employers in proportion to the hazard of each class of occupation.

“While plaintiff in error is an employer, and cannot succeed without showing that its constitutional rights as employer are infringed * * * [citing cases], yet it is evident that the employer’s exemption from liability to private action is an essential part of the legislative scheme and the quid pro quo for the burdens imposed upon him, so that if the act is not valid as against employees it is not valid as against employers.’’ (Italics ours.)

Those decisions are directly applicable to the Ohio compensation law.

Of course they do not apply to a compensation law which is not compulsory but is elective or optional. For example the Wisconsin law is elective. The employer has the option not to operate under it, and the Wisconsin decisions have no application that we can see to the question here involved. But it is to be noted that by the elective law of that state, Section 2394-3, it is provided that where the parties are subject to its provisions the right of recovery of compensation pursuant to its provisions shall be the exclusive remedy against the employer, and that his liability for compensation provided for is “in lieu of any other liability whatsoever.”

Ohio was among the first of the states to make the effort, now generally participated in by the states and the national government, to provide a workable plan which should compensate injured workmen in accordance with humane and scientific principles, and offer escape from the evils which were enmeshed in worn-out, mischievous and wasteful methods so long in use.

It seems inconceivable that the framers of the amendment, Section 35, Article II, used the term “lawful requirement” in a sense that would render the statute passed pursuant to it invalid.

The amendment to the Constitution, Section 35, Article II, was adopted, and the Workmen’s Compensation law and the Industrial Commission act were passed, all within a brief period.

Viewed together, and following rules of interpretation which are familiar, and which have been strengthened and sanctioned by long experience, they present a consistent and admirable structure, a plan for the creation of a fund and the distribution of its benefits, in full harmony with the State and Federal Constitutions, and with sane and just provisions for safeguarding the rights of parties in accordance with the letter and the spirit of the amendment; and, finally, provide an administrative agency with plenary power to supervise the industries of the state, to the end that the praiseworthy objects of the people .may be attained.

For the reasons given the judgment will be reversed.

Judgment reversed.

Nichols, C. J., Newman, Jones and Matthias, JJ., concur.

Wanamaker, J.,

dissenting. I dissent from the judgment in this case for the following reasons:

1. It violates the plain provisions of our State Constitution, as amended in 1912.

2. It is contrary to the paramount spirit and purpose of those amendments.

3. It violates the Workmen’s Compensation Act authorized by those amendments.

4. It violates several sections of the Industrial Commission Act authorized by said amendments.

5. It is contrary to the elementary and well-established principles of judicial construction.

6. It not only deprives Schorling, but thousands of working men and working women, and their dependents, of the right of action safeguarded to them by our constitution and laws.

7. Because I still indulge the hope that this pioneer case for this state upon the subjects of “any lawful requirement” and “safe place to work” shall not become in the future the settled law of Ohio, for the reason that this judgment is a big step backward from the humane conservancy policies of this state, as inaugurated in 1912.

Schorling was employed by thé defendant company at a ripsaw. While so employed he was ordered by the company’s foreman to leave his place of employment at the ripsaw (with which he was familiar) and go to another part of said factory to assist other employes in pushing a load of lumber, which was upon a small car in said factory (with which duty he was wholly unfamiliar).

While acting under the directions of the foreman “said car of lumber was thrown or fell over upon plaintiff, burying plaintiff beneath said lumber.”

Schorling pleaded in his petition that the company “well knew” that the place of employment about said lumber was unsafe, the lumber being carelessly piled on the car by the company, and that, therefore, the company was liable for the careless, negligent and unsafe situation into which they had ordered and directed Schorling to labor.

The case was tried to a jury in the court of common pleas, which returned a verdict for $2,000 for Schorling. A motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered on the verdict by the court of common pleas. Error was prosecuted to the court of appeals. That court unanimously affirmed the judgment below. This court now reverses the judgment of both lower courts in favor of Schorling and enters final judgment for the defendant company.

This case was filed in this court in February, 1916. It was argued before this court and submitted May 17, 1916. The court ordered a reargument January 24, 1917, and has just now decided this case. A full year has elapsed since the submission of this case to this court. One of two theories is at once suggested, either unusual delay on the part of the court, or unusual difficulty in arriving at a judgment. There are few who would suggest the former reason, and the latter would more than justify a dissenting opinion upholding both judgments below.

I shall now examine and weigh the premises and principles by which the majority in the syllabus and opinion reverse both judgments below.

The first paragraph of the syllabus uses this language, as the first premise for -the conclusion reached in this case:

“In the construction of amendments to the constitution or to statutes, the body enacting the amendment will be presumed to have had in mind existing constitutional or statutory provisions and their judicial construction touching the subject dealt with.”

I admit the soundness of this legal principle. I deny that it serves to support this judgment, but quite the contrary.

The syllabus avers that the constitution-makers “had in mind

(a) “existing constitutional”

(&) “or statutory provisions”

(c) “and their judicial construction touching the subject dealt with.”

The syllabus does not squarely state whether or not these things the constitutional convention “had in mind” were iox the purpose of continuing them, or for the purpose of changing them. But it is strongly suggested that it was for the purpose of adopting at least the “judicial construction.”

It is a most novel suggestion, to say the least, to assert that constitutional changes presume a desire to continue an existing legal status. It is the general notion that the moving reason for constitutional amendment is to vitally and substantially change the existing legal status.

This proposition of the syllabus presumes that prior to the time of the adoption of these amendments in 1912 there had been a “judicial construction” as to the vital and pertinent parts of them touching the questions involved in this case, to-wit, the language “any lawful requirement” and its application in actions for negligence. This I emphatically deny.

The only case cited in support of this contention is The State, ex rel. Yaple, v. Creamer, Treas., 85 Ohio St., 349.

Now, if that case construes the material language involved here, then I admit that there had been such “judicial construction” and the constitution-makers “had in mind” that construction for some purpose or other.

I call for the reading of the syllabus of that case. It discloses the fact that the only question passed upon in that case was the constitutionality of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1911 as a whole, upon the various challenged grounds. The entire syllabus of that case reads:

“The act entitled ‘An act to create a state insurance fund for the benefit of injured, and the dependents of killed employes,’ etc., 102 O. L., 524, is a valid exercise' of legislative power not repugnant to the federal or state constitutions, or to any limitation contained in either.”

Certainly nothing here even attempts to construe the language in question.

The various grounds upon which it was claimed the oíd act in question was unconstitutional did not include either generally or specifically the language involved in the case at bar, and upon that question I call for a reading of the opinion as well as an examination of the briefs.

It is hard to prove a negative, or the absence of something. But the only language in the opinion even remotely relating to the provision of the Constitution of 1912, and Sections 15 and 16 of the Industrial Commission Act, consists of these words:

“Therefore the only right of action which this statute removes from the employe is the right to sue for mere negligence (which is not wilful or statutory) of his employer, and it is within common knowledge that this has become in actual practice a most unsubstantial thing.”

This language is somewhat hazy. It is, to say the least, unfortunate in the use of the phrase “mere negligence.” One might as well speak of “mere burglary” or “mere murder.” If the negligence of the employer proximately causes injury or death to the employe, it would be difficult to seriously characterize such negligence as “mere negligence.”

But even this language recognizes the fact that the employe, under the old act of 1911, did not lose his “right of action” where the negligence was wilful or statutory, and the opinion does not undertake to say that statutory negligence must be specific negligence, for clearly the statute may be either in general or in particular terms.

A careful reading and analysis of the case, the opinion, the briefs and all, demonstrates beyond the peradventure of a doubt that there was no construction of any language pertinent to this case.

We could hardly expect a conclusion to be any more sound or convincing than the premise upon which it is founded.

But there were certain things and particular “judicial constructions” touching the relation of employer and employe and the rights of the employe in actions of negligence, which the constitutional convention undoubtedly "had in mind," not for the purpose of adopting them but clearly for the purpose of avoiding them.

1. The appalling number of industrial accidents resulting in the death of thousands, and the disability, partial or complete, of a still larger number of workingmen and working women in Ohio.

2. The fact that the large majority of such deaths and injuries were wholly incidental to the natural dangers of the employment, and were not the result of any legal negligence of the employer, and that in such cases the whole loss and burden fell on the employe, who was least able to bear it.

3. That in dealing with the large number of deaths and injuries resulting from negligence of the employer there had grown up a system of technical rules and ancient precedents, 99 per cent, judge-made, and applied under the names of assumed risk, negligence of fellow servant, contributory negligence, etc., with the effect that the employe in many such cases was even denied any relief or compensation whatever for the negligence of his employer.

The old order of dealing with personal injuries and' death in connection with the industrial life of the state had become a byword and shame, for which our courts were largely responsible; and of all the proposals before the constitutional convention none more obviously and unanimously demonstrated the sane and settled purpose of that convention to tear up, root and branches, the old order and substitute therefor a new order than did this, as evidenced by Section 34, overwhelmingly adopted on September 3, 1912. That section reads:

“Laws may be passed fixing and regulating the hours of labor, establishing a minimum wage, and providing for the comfort, health, safety and general welfare of all employes; and no other provision of the constitution shall impair or limit this power.”

Here was a grant of power to the general assembly of Ohio exceeding any other grant of power ever conferred by the people of our state.

It was as broad and comprehensive a grant, touching the safety and welfare of employes, as the amendment was known, as the English language could make it.

Conservation, in a nutshell, was to be the cornerstone for the new industrial system in Ohio. Conservation was no longer to be limited to forests and mines, to fish and game and hogs, but was to be extended to human life, health, safety, and the welfare of the employes of Ohio. Section 34 gave the general assembly the authority to enact the laws for the safety and welfare of the employes, and the general assembly in turn, in 1913,’ within three months from the time the constitutional amendment went into effect, imposed duties upon the employer by virtue of Sections 13, 15 and 16 of the Industrial Commission Act.

With this chart and compass for the safety of ■the employes let us now further consider the interpretation that this court has placed upon these .several sections of the,statutes.

Let us now examine the second paragraph of the syllabus.

With the first half of that paragraph I entirely .agree. With the second half of that paragraph I entirely disagree. The first objectionable language appears as follows:

“The purpose and intent of Sections 15 and 16 of the act was to bring all employers within the scope of the jurisdiction and authority of the commission and to impose on them the obligation to comply with the orders and requirements of the commission when duly made.”

Of course it is necessary for this court to find some “purpose and intent” for Sections 15 and 16. They were evidently intended to accomplish something, and the syllabus says “the purpose and intent” was one of jurisdiction and authority conferred upon the commission. •

The full answer to that claim as to the intention of the legislature grows out of the fact that the legislature itself passed a special section of the statute conferring jurisdiction and authority on the commission to enforce the laws of the state of Ohio as to safe places and safe appliances.

Section 21, only five sections removed from Section 16 and a part of the same act, reads:

“The industrial commission of Ohio is vested with the power and jurisdiction on and after the first day of September, 1913, to have such supervision of every employment and place of employment and of every other building and establishment in this state as may be necessary adequately to enforce and administer all laws and all lawful orders requiring such employment and place of employment or building or establishment, to be safe ” etc.

Had the legislature intended by Sections 15 and 16 to merely confer the jurisdiction, I ask why did they specially enact Section 21 ?

No; these sections mean just what they say, and say just what they mean. They are their own interpreters, notwithstanding the judgment of this court.

I have endeavored to examine these sections in the light of their origin. Whence did they come? An examination of this fact discloses that they are natives of Wisconsin.

Section 2394-48, Wisconsin Law:

“Every employer shall furnish employment which shall be safe for the employes therein and shall furnish a place of employment which shall be safe for employes therein and for frequenters thereof and shall furnish and use safety devices and safeguards, and shall adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render such employment and place of employment safe, and shall do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety and welfare of such employes and frequenters.”

Section 15, Ohio Law:

“Every employer shall furnish employment which shall be safe for the employes therein, and shall furnish a place of employment which shall be safe for the employes therein, and for frequenters thereof, and shall furnish and 'use safety devices and safeguards, and shall adopt and use methods and processes, (follow and obey orders and prescribe hours of labor) reasonably adequate to render such employment and places of employment safe, and shall do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety and welfare of such employes and frequenters.”

Section 2394-49, Wisconsin Law:

“No employer shall require, permit or suffer any employe to go or be in any employment or place of employment which is not safe, and no such employer shall fail to furnish, provide and use safety devices and safeguards, or fail to adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render such employment and place of employment safe, and no such employer shall fail or neglect to do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety or welfare of such employes and frequenters; and no such employer or other person shall hereafter construct or occupy of maintain any place of employment that is not safe.”

Section 16, Ohio Law:

“No employer shall require, permit or suffer any employe to go or be in any employment or place of employment which is not safe, and no such employer shall fail to furnish, provide and use safety devices and safeguards, (or fail to obey and follow orders) or to adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render such employment and place of employment safe, and no employer shall fail or neglect to do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety and welfare of such employes or frequenters; and no such employer or other person shall hereafter construct or occupy or maintain any place of employment that is not safe.”

Section 2394-41, Wisconsin Law:

“The term ‘safe’ and ‘safety’ as applied to an employment or a place of employment shall mean such freedom from danger to the life, health or safety of employes or frequenters as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit

Section 13, Subdivision 11, Ohio Law:

“The terms ‘safe,’ and ‘safety,’ as applied to any employment or a place of employment shall mean such freedom from danger to the life, health, safety or welfare of employes or frequenters as the nature of the employment zvill reasonably permit, * * *.”

The only substantial change in the Ohio statute appears in the words added in parentheses.

We certainly are agreed that remedial provisions of the law must be liberally construed, whether those provisions be in constitution or statute. Under the old common law, no one would question Schorling’s right to sue. How, pray, did he lose that right? If he lost it, it must be by Section 35, Article II of the Constitution, and the statutes enacted pursuant thereto. Section 35, so far as pertinent, reads:

“But no right of action shall be taken away from any employe when the injury, disease or death arises from failure of the employer to comply with any lazuful reqziirement for the protection of the lives, health and safety of employes.”

Now apply this liberal rule to this language, and •then read Sections 15 and 16, and Subdivision 11 of Section 13, and tell me how it can be held that these statutes do not contain “any lawful requirement” within the meaning of the constitution.

This court has not only disregarded this liberal rule of construction, but has applied a strict rule of construction. Yes, it has gone farther; it has applied a rule of “weasel construction,” a construction that sucks out of the constitution and the statute the meat, the vitality, the duties imposed, and leaves it merely an empty shell, a mere skeleton of its former self.

I claim that these sections were put into the statute in order to complete and crown the new order of duty and liability; that they were passed pursuant to the grant of power in Section 34.

The old common-law doctrine of the employer’s duty to his employe had long been measured by the language “ordinary care” or “care that an ordinarily prudent employer would take for the safety of his employe.”

The low-water mark of liability for the employer under the old common law appears in The Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Ry. Co. v. Frye, 80 Ohio St., 289. The syllabus of that case reads:

“In an action by an employe against his employer to recover damages for personal injuries, an instruction that the employer owed to his employe the duty to provide him a reasonably safe place in which to work, is erroneous, in that it imposes upon the employer a higher degree of care than the law requires or exacts of him. * * * but the limit of his obligation and duty in- that behalf is to exercise reasonable and ordinary care, having due regard to the hazards of the service, to provide his employe with a safe place in which to perform his work.”

In short, this is just no duty at all. If the employer exercises the ordinary care used by ordinary employers he has -discharged his ordinary duty and the employe gets his ordinary and usual injury, for which there is no liability, ordinarily. Is it any wonder that the workingmen of Ohio were demanding the dawn of a new day for labor, a day when human life was entitled to something more than “ordinary care?”

Probably no case decided by the supreme court of Ohio within the present generation aroused among the people and the legal profession, as well as among the working class, as much indignation and protest as did this Frye case, not only for its technical hair-splitting, but for its positive lowering of the duty that the employer owed to the employe for the employe’s safety. The decision bears date April 27, 1909.

This decision, and others of a kindred kind, no doubt were “had in mind” by the constitutional convention when they proposed and adopted Section 34 as to safety. This decision, and others of a kindred kind, were “had in mind” by the general assembly of Ohio when they passed the Industrial Commission Act and particularly Sections 15 and 16 and Subdivision 11 of Section 13.

They said in effect that “ordinary care” for the safety of employes was not enough, but that “safe” and “safety” shall mean “such freedom from danger to the life, health, safety or welfare of employes * * * as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit.”

How natural it was for the legislature, under the new order or statute of 1913, to declare and define the new relation between employer and employe, the new rights, the new duties, under the new industrial system, by virtue of Sections 13, 15 and 16, and then by Section 21 confer jurisdiction upon the industrial commission to enforce that relation, those rights, those duties; but not of course to suspend or amend them.

If the construction claimed by the court were sound, would it not have been natural and probable for the legislature to have written into Sections 15 and 16 some such language as “when ordered by the industrial commission” or “subject to any order of the commission.”

Undue importance seems to be attached to the words “follow and obey orders.” I always understood the elementary rules of syntax and interpretation to be that when you add negative words to a statute you subtract from the statute, but when you add positive words you add to and broaden the statute. Yet in some way or other it is claimed here that by'the addition of the words “follow and obey orders” all the remainder of the statute is made subject thereto. A most absurd holding.

Much depends of course upon the point of view. The majority opinion throughout proceeds from the standpoint of the employer, upon the claim that he contributed to the fund and therefore was relieved from his civil liability for negligence by suit at law, and entirely overlooks or ignores the viewpoint of the employe and the employer’s duty to conserve the employe’s life and safety.

Be it remembered that these constitutional amendments, Sections 34 and 35, were initiated largely by labor for the benefit of labor, and they are to be construed with a view of protecting and promoting their humanitarian purposes of safety and welfare of the employe, consistent of course with the language of the amendments and the statutes made pursuant thereto.

I now challenge attention to the last sentence in paragraph 2 of the syllabus:

“The provisions of Sections 15 and 16 are not the lawful requirements referred to by, and within the meaning of, Section 35, Article II of the Constitution.”

Query: When is a lawful requirement not a lawful requirement?

By what species of legal legerdemain is an order of the industrial commission made a lawful requirement within Section 35 of the Constitution, and a statute of the general assembly held not a lawful requirement within said Section 35 ?

It would seem to the ordinary observer that the general assembly’s order as to lawful requirement, by a statute, should be as obligatory upon employers as an order of an industrial commission. It is a new doctrine that the creature is greater than its creator. “Thus saith the constitution” or “thus saith the statute” is of little consequence as compared with “thus saith the court.”

The third paragraph of the syllabus I entirely disagree with. It holds:

“The term ‘lawful requirement’ * * * does not include a general course of conduct, or those general duties and obligations of care and caution which rest upon employers and employes, and all other members of the community, for the protection of life, health and safety.”

Why not? Is it not equally important that the “general course of conduct,” general duties and obligations of care, as expressed in the statutes, relative to the relation of employer and employe, shall be as obligatory upon the employer as when expressed in the terms of the common law, the ordinance, or the order of a commission ?

The term “lawful requirement” did include “a general course of conduct * * * for the protection of life, health and safety” until this court spoke in this case, and every line and letter of the constitutional reservation in Section 35, and of Sections 13, 15 and 16 of the Industrial Commission Act, sustain this view.

This court holds in paragraph 4 of the syllabus, that “an order made by the industrial commission to employers generally * * * with reference to safe employment” is a lawful requirement within the meaning of the constitution and the statutes.

Now, such an order “to employers generally” may include a general course of conduct; the result of which is that an order of the industrial commission may be in general terms, but an order of the general assembly of Ohio in the shape of a statute cannot be in general terms.

By what sort of legal juggling can it be held that an order of the industrial commission in general terms is a lawful requirement within the constitution, but that an order of the general assembly of Ohio in the form of a statute in general terms is not a lawful requirement?

This court- has driven some stakes within the last 60 days that I now desire to vividly call to mind.

There was before it for review the case of The State of Ohio v. Schaeffer, from Lake county, reported ante, 215. Among other questions raised was the validity of the statute, Section 12603, General Code, which made it a crime to operate an automobile “at a speed greater than is reasonable or proper, having regard for width, traffic, use, and the general and usual rules of such road or highway, or so as to endanger the property, life or limb of any person.” That statute was challenged as to its validity, its constitutionality. It was claimed that it was so general in its terms, so broad, sweeping and elastic that it was impossible for the driver of an automobile to know what it meant, to know what was required of him; that the words “reasonable or proper” were too indefinite and uncertain; that the words “so as to endanger the property, life or limb of any person” were likewise too indefinite and uncertain; and that by reason of that indefiniteness and uncertainty the provisions of the statute could neither be observed nor en-< forced. In short, that the statute was a nullity. This court', however, held otherwise; and every judge that concurs in the judgment in the case at bar also concurred in the Schaeffer case.

Now, if the general language of said Section 12603 as to automobilists is sufficient to create a “lawful requirement” as against the automobile driver — sufficient legally to create a criminal liability upon his part, when the strict technical rules of criminal construction are applied — it is hard to understand why the general terms of Sections 15 and 16, under the liberal construction required in statutes of remedial nature, are not legally sufficient to create a “lawful requirement” for civil liability, to which the employer is answerable to his employe. These two holdings are in absolute conflict.

The supreme court of Wisconsin has had before it in a number of cases these identical sections of the statute. The result of the reasoning in those cases should be interesting and illuminating.

One of the earliest and most important cases considering; interpreting and applying these statutes is that of Besnys v. Herman Zohrlaut Leather Co., 157 Wis., 203. The first and fifth paragraphs of the syllabus are as follows:

“1. The duty imposed upon an employer by sec. 1636j and secs. 2394-41 to 2394-71, Stats. 1911, is that the place and the method of carrying on the business in which he is engaged shall be as safe as the nature thereof will reasonably permit as regards safety devices and safeguards, reasonably adequate methods and processes, and any other thing reasonably necessary to protect the life, health, safety, and welfare of the employee, and not to require, permit, or suffer an employee to go or be in any employment or place of employment which is not as safe as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit.
“5. The legislative purpose expressed in secs. 2394-48, 2394-49, Stats. 1911, was to impose upon the employer a liability for all injuries resulting from the hazards, risks, and dangers incident to the methods, processes, and conditions of the business furnished, permitted, or suffered by him, however obvious or open such hazards, risks, and dangers might be to the employee.”

This was shortly followed by the case of Sadowski, Admx., v. Thomas Furnace Co., same volume, page 443:

The syllabus so far as pertinent reads:

“1. Secs. 2394-48, 2394-49, Stats., are a part of a new system relative to industrial accidents, by which it was intended to substitute, in lieu of the ordinary rule requiring the master to come up to the standard of reasonable safety as to working place and conditions, the absolute duty to make the employment and place of employment as safe as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit.
“2. The ordinary rule as to construing legislation in derogation of the common law strictly against a purpose to change it, is not to be applied to efforts to create a new system for dealing with personal injuries to employees, but, the legislative purpose being clear to approach the ideal of affording compensation for loss in substantially all cases of accidental injury to employees in the course of their employment, the language of the statute, where open to construction, should be read liberally in favor of that purpose.”

The learned judge rendering the opinion soundly reasons as follows (page 447) :

“Counsel for appellant contend that the trial court dealt with the cause upon a wrong theory; that the legislative requirements aforesaid, standing alone, do not add to the common-law standard of care, and that they have little or no vitality until the industrial commission acts under its supervisory authority and prescribes what shall and what shall not be done to satisfy them; but it seems to follow from what has preceded that they are wrong. The legislature, quite clearly, intended to substitute for the ordinary rule requiring the master to come up to the standard of reasonable safety as. to working place and working conditions, — often tested by the customary practice under the same or similar circumstances, and efficiency as to all dangers reasonably to be apprehended from the viewpoint of ordinary care, — the absolute duty to make the employment and place of employment of employes, not reasonably safe merely, but as safe as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit. In the plainest of mandatory language that was done by sec. 2394-41, sub. 11, defining the words ‘safe’ and ‘safety’ in connection with sec. 2394-48, followed in like mandatory language by sec. 2394-49, creating the duty of the master to not permit an employee to submit himself to any of the dangers designed to be guarded against; and in like mandatory language creating the duty of the employer to ‘provide and use safety devices and safeguards’ and not to fail to ‘adopt and use methods and processes reasonably adequate to render the employment and place of employment’ ‘as safe as the nature’ thereof ‘will reasonably permit,’ and not ‘to fail or neglect to do every other thing reasonably necessary to protect life, health, safety or welfare of employees’ and not to ‘occupy or maintain any place of employment’ that is ‘not as safe as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit.’
“There is little use in enlarging on the plain words of the statute. They must be taken as meaning just what they express, no attempt being made to minimize in favor of employers because of the heavy burdens, seemingly, by the literal sense of words, cast on them. The language in such sense, is not ambiguous under the circumstances characterizing its use. From the viewpoint of modern conditions, modern needs, and modern conceptions of moral obligations to those engaged as employees in supplying the necessary and legitimate requirements of mankind, and that subjects produced to that end necessarily embody the personal injury losses incident thereto, so that the hand of the employer, in repairing such a loss, is but a link in a chain reaching from the field of production in which it accrued to and terminating with that of consumption, — all cast of unreasonable burden upon employers vanishes and there arises that of legislative recognition of serious faults in the old system, endeavor, as fully as practicable, to remedy them, and intent that efforts in that regard shall be taken as broadly as the language used to express them will reasonably permit and is appropriate to carry out the beneficent purpose. The court has spoken several times before on this subject and endeavored to make it plain that the common rule as to construing legislation in derogation of the common law strictly against a purpose to change it has little or no application to the efforts to create a new system for dealing with personal injuries to employees.. History leaves no fair room for doubt as to the purpose being to approach the ideal of affording compensation for loss in substantially all cases of accidental injury to employees in the course of their employment. Therefore the legislative language, where open to construction, should be read liberally in favor of that purpose.”

It is contended that the fact, “that none of the many statutes which specifically define safety appliances and require their use were repealed when the Industrial Commission Act was passed,” supports the judgment in this case.

This I emphatically deny, for the reason that they are in perfect harmony with the general conservation policy. The same may be said of the criminal statutes that have been left in force. They are also entirely consistent with the conservation policy. All these statutes were put upon the statute books and left upon the statute books to prevent negligence, not to punish it.

The same is the underlying policy of all criminal statutes, whether they relate to the industrial or other fields.

It has been further urged that the legislature, by the enactment of certain laws, put an interpretation upon the language in the constitution. Now, the legislature can define its own language, has a right to be its own interpreter, but certainly it cannot define the language of the constitution in any way to bind this court.

It is further urged “that the convention adopted a phrase which should comprehend the enumerated elements of lawful requirements found in that law, the phrase being substantially the one used by the court.”

Now, it is quite clear that no enumeration has been made “of the elements of lawful requirements.” The only enumeration made is an enumeration of agencies by which such lawful requirement may be imposed, to-wit, by ordinance, by order of the commission, by statute. But the particularity required as to either has been nowhere and nowise defined.

There are many other errors of fact, law and logic that have been urged in support of this judgment, but the reasonable limits of this dissent forbid comment upon any of them.

If the compensation law was the paramount purpose of Sections 34 and 35 of the Constitution and the statutes enacted pursuant to them, and conservation only an incident, then this judgment is clearly right. If, upon the other hand, conservation was the paramount purpose of Sections 34 and 35 and the statutes enacted pursuant to them, and compensation only an incident, then this judgment is clearly wrong.

Clearly the constitution-makers realized that full conservation of human life was vastly more important than partial compensation; for compensation could only be partial under any statute. Human life cannot'be measured in dollars and cents, and no one would deny that $3744, the maximum allowed by statute, is but the smallest fraction of compensation for the less- of human life, especially when it occurs by reason of the negligence of the employer in failing to provide a safe place and safe appliances for the protection of his employe.

The march of inevitable and irresistible events since 1912 has been toward conservation of all resources, but human life and limb and health are to be safeguarded above all other resources.

The constitution and statutes of Ohio to-day say to the employer, “you observe the laws of the state to the measure of duty required, to-wit, make your place as safe ‘as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit,’ and you have discharged your full duty. You are not liable in any suit at law for negligence, and the employe if injured partially or fatally must resort to the compensation fund. But if you do not take that measure of care for the safety of the employe, then it is his option to take under the compensation law or to begin an action at law.”

“Safety First” is the slogan of the day. And if that rule of duty shall be observed, industrial accidents will be greatly reduced, the compensation fund will be less drawn upon, and the humanitarian policies of the law will be best administered.

At the time this dissenting opinion was read to the court, it was announced that certain New York cases would be added to the majority opinion. That having been done, I desire to examine them briefly.

The cases are as follows: In the Matter of Jensen v. Southern Pacific Co., 215 N. Y., 514, and New York Central Railroad Co. v. White, 243 U. S., 188, the latter being in the supreme court of the United States, and both cases involving the constitutionality of the workmen’s compensation law of New York state.

A case is helpful to us in reaching a sound and equitable conclusion exactly in proportion as it involves the same questions as are involved in the case under consideration, and to the degree that the judgment of the court in the cited case is sensible and sound in the course of reasoning pursued.

The sole question in the cases above quoted was the constitutionality of the workmen’s compensation law. There is no such question in the case at bar. The New York cases do not involve in any way a similar constitutional provision to the one involved in the present Ohio case. Neither do they involve any such statutes as Sections 15 and 16, supra.

The error of judgment in this court proceeds from the confusion between a conservation policy and a compensation statute. Section 34, supra, of the Ohio Constitution, places conservation first; then follows Section 35 with compensation, and in that Section 35 there is this particular reservation of rights of action:

“But no right of action shall be taken away from any employe when the injury, disease or death arises from failure of the employer to comply with any lawful requirement for the protection-of the lives, health and safety of employes.”

As before stated, the chief allegation in the petition in this case was that the employer had not provided the employe a safe place to work.

Section 13, Subdivision 11, of the Industrial Commission Act provides that “The terms 'safe’ and 'safety/ as applied to any employment or a place of employment shall mean such freedom from danger to the life, health, safety or welfare of employes or frequenters as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit,” etc.

If this is not a “lawful requirement,” what in the name of common sense is it; especially considered in connection with Sections 15 and 16?

This court holds in effect that it does not become a “lawful requirement” until the industrial commission issues some order in respect thereto. Such never was the intention of the statute. The majority view makes the action of the industrial commission as to lawful requirements superior to a statute of the general assembly of Ohio.

Now, these questions were not involved in the New York cases and cannot by any stretch of the imagination be forced into those cases.

When the employer does his full duty toward conservation of life and limb for the benefit of the employe, under the constitution and the laws, then he is absolved from any further duty than that required by the compensation law; but when he fails in that duty he is liable to the right of action safeguarded to the employe by the very constitution itself, which no legislature or industrial commission may take from him.

But even if the New York cases cited were directly in point, the constitutional provisions and statutes of Ohio were adopted and enacted as humane progressive measures in keeping with the social and industrial spirit of the age. Wisconsin being the home of this policy, which we adopted from that state, I would prefer to follow the progressive humanitarian court of last resort of Wisconsin rather than the conservative court of New York.  