Court Opinion

ID: 8191266
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:14:17.371876+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:37.161303
License: Public Domain

Maesiiall, J.
Was the statutory requisite of the way, assuming it to be such as is mentioned in sec. 1636 — 81, Stats., provided by respondent. Applicability of the statute seems to be conceded, and nothing more favorable to appellant as to the duty of respondent is charged. Such statute requires the way to be safe, suitable, and proper, and so as to give proper protection to the life and limbs of the persons employed to use it. It requires a safety rail of wood, properly bolted, secured, and braced, rising at least thirty-four inches above the floor. The statute does not expressly require a second guard rail. It seems clear that defendant complied with the law as to guard rails unless more was required by the general call for safety.
True the statute imposes an absolute duty. No amount of care short of that which will produce the results demanded constitutes adequate performance. The employer, to that extent, is an absolute insurer. Koepp v. Nat. E. & S. Co. 151 Wis. 302, 139 N. W. 179; Kosidowski v. Milwaukee, 152 Wis. 223, 139 N. W. 187. That does not mean that the place of employment must be so safe that an employee cannot become injured. The statute makes the employer an insurer as to furnishing such a place as it requires, but not against injury to employees using the place which has been so furnished. One must distinguish between insurer as to the character of the place, satisfying the calls of the statute, and absolute insurer of safety of employees. True, it was said in Koepp v. Nat. E. & S. Co., supra, “It must be held that the legislature intended to make employers, in the situations dealt with by the statute, absolute insurers of the safety *455of their employees, save in eases of efficient assumption of the risk or contributory. negligencebut this absolute duty of safety is measured by the statutory requirement as to physical condition. The statute, though thus given efficiency in its letter, must yet be restrained within some reasonable limitation so as not to convict the legislature of requiring the impossible. Unsafe or improper conditions are the opposites of safe, suitable, and proper. Safe and proper in that there is no such danger as that which the statute was intended to obviate, within reasonable apjorehension. Safety as regards all reasonable probabilities not all possibilities of personal injury. Safe, suitable, and proper, so far as human foresight devoted to the matter, not with ordinary attention merely, but with a purpose to accomplish just what the legislature intended, a place so safe as to render personal injury so remote as to be, at most, merely within the realm of possibility. That, doubtless, was the idea of the lawmakers. The legislature has gone still further under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and none too far, in responding to the high ideals of the times; but we are dealing with the particular statute applicable to the situation in question.
Now we are not able to see why the court below did not decide right as to whether plaintiff’s working place measured up to the high degree of safety required by the statute as to the particular feature involved; absence of a second guard rail. The legislative standard of safety was substantially followed. It requires one guard rail on either side, firmly fixed, not less than thirty-four inches above the floor. There was such a rail. The legislative distance clearly indicates that no danger was supposed to be within the range of reason of a person falling upon the surface of the walk and rolling under the rail.
The particular circumstances supposed by the jury to require an additional guard rail were a slight want of level of the floor and failure to sand it to remedy the slippery candi*456tion. Tbe want of level was too trifling to be worthy of serious consideration. Tbe floor was only one balf of one per cent, out of level. Not more than tbe ordinary walk and more reasonably an element of safety by facilitating drainage of tbe walk, than one of danger. As to tbe element of sanding, it hardly seems that could, with any fairness, be considered with reference to tbe second guard rail. Moreover, tbe ordinary slipperiness of tbe walk wás a thing as well within tbe anticipation of appellant as of respondent, and, on tbe particular occasion, was much more likely to be within bis knowledge than that of respondent.
Appellant’s counsel appreciates tbe situation last suggested and meets it by saying, appellant is excusable for submitting himself to whatever danger there was, because of bis having gone upon tbe walk by orders of bis superior. There was no such command in this case which would be likely to lull an ordinary person into a sense of security. There was tbe mere supervising direction given by a person who was not so located as to know tbe condition of tbe walk. True, be bad reason to suppose it was slippery, but appellant bad tbe same reason and when be arrived upon tbe walk must have observed tbe fact. In that case, whatever risk there was be assumed it in proceeding to carry out a mere ordinary administrative direction. Where there is a command, under such circumstances as to amount to a species of coercion, or an order, under such circumstances as to lull tbe person directed into a sense of security and so excuse him from failing to observe danger, tbe rule may be different. As said, in effect, in Ives v. Wis. Cent. R. Co. 128 Wis. 357, 107 N. W. 452, a rule that whenever a servant submits himself to conditions which result in bis being injured, be is absolved from all self-responsibility for bis safety would be a judicial abolishment of assumption of tbe risk and contributory negligence. Tbe court has no function, permitting it to thus repeal tbe law. Tbe legislature might have done it at any time for tbe *457more than sixty years after it was adopted by a vote of the people in adopting the constitution, and failed until recent years to attempt to even modify it. Fortunately it has come to appreciate that it is a legislative function, not a judicial one, to change the law of negligence.
There are some detail matters called to our attention as having constituted prejudicial error, but they do not seem to be of sufficient importance to warrant saying more than to indicate that they have not escaped attention. It is considered that the decision of the trial court changing the verdict of the jury in the respects mentioned in the statement and rendering judgment for respondent cannot be disturbed.
By the Oourt. — Judgment affirmed.
TimliN, J. I concur in the result.